Reiber v. Baker (In Re Baker)

48 B.R. 932, 41 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 619, 1985 Bankr. LEXIS 6192
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. New York
DecidedMay 3, 1985
Docket2-15-20008
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 48 B.R. 932 (Reiber v. Baker (In Re Baker)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reiber v. Baker (In Re Baker), 48 B.R. 932, 41 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 619, 1985 Bankr. LEXIS 6192 (N.Y. 1985).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND DECISION

EDWARD D. HAYES, Bankruptcy Judge.

This case was remanded to this Court from the United States District Court, Judge John T. Curtin, to determine whether the documents and circumstances surrounding a loan from the Caccamises to Mr. Baker, the debtor, are sufficient to make the Caccamises secured creditors.

The trustee’s initial adversary proceeding sought to avoid the debtor’s pre-petition fraudulent conveyances of a yacht and interest in real property, void the debtor’s mother and father-in law’s (Caccamises) lien against the yacht, recover insurance proceeds which resulted when the yacht burned, and receive attorney’s fees. This Court held that the transfers were fraudulent pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 548, that the Caccamises were unsecured creditors, that the trustee was entitled to recover insurance proceeds pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 550, and that the trustee was entitled to attorney’s fees. See In re Baker, 17 B.R. 392 (Bankr.W.D.N.Y.1982). The District Court affirmed this Court’s holdings regarding the fraudulent conveyances, insurance proceeds and attorney’s fees. The District Court, however, remanded the question of the existence of the Caccamises’ security interest. Also remanded was the attorney’s fees, but only to consider whether any adjustment of the fees was necessary in view of the continuation of this case in the Bankruptcy Court. See In re Baker, CIV No. 82-735C (W.D.N.Y. Nov. 18, 1983). The trustee’s January 17, 1985 application for additional attorney’s fees was granted by an Order signed on March 26, 1985. A hearing was held in this Court on June 14, 1984 to consider the issues on remand. Briefs were filed by the parties and the case was submitted for decision on October 4, 1984.

The facts pertinent to this decision are as follows. 1 On May 20, 1980, Dr. and Mrs. Samuel A. Caccamise, the debtor’s mother and father-in-law, loaned the debtor $21,-000. To evidence this loan, the debtor prepared a typewritten promissory note with a twelve percent interest rate. The note made no mention of a security agreement. Dr. Caccamise testified that upon reconsidering the interest rate, he felt twelve percent was too steep, so he wrote a new promissory note with an interest rate of ten percent. The handwritten promissory note read as follows:

I promise to pay to Samuel & Mary Caccamise at Rochester, N.Y. on demand the sum of twenty-one thousand dollars ($21,000) at 10% interest per annum. Payment are to be made as follows until the Pearson Boat is sold: Two hundred to be paid monthly on the principal, the 20th every month beginning June 20th. At the end of every 6 months of payments the interest at the rate of 10% to be paid on the balance owed. The first interest will be due Nov. 20, 1980.

Dated: May 20, 1980

/s/ J. David Baker

A UCC-1 financing statement, signed only by the debtor, was filed in the Monroe County Clerk’s Office on May 21, 1980. The UCC-1 lists Mr. Baker as the debtor, Samuel and Mary Caccamise as the secured parties, and the collateral as the “1973 43%c Pearson Boat, Hull # 53, N.Y.Reg. *934 NY 1709 DS, Serial number PEA 470530273, Engine Nos. 51629 & 51627.”

The handwritten promissory note and the UCC-1 were the only two documents submitted to this Court at the September 15, 1981 hearing to prove the Cac-camises’ security interest. From this evidence, the Caccamises were found to be unsecured creditors. Neither the filing of the UCC-1 nor the promissory note conditioned on the sale of the boat created a security interest because no security agreement granting a security interest in the boat had ever been executed as required by New York’s Uniform Commercial Code § 9-203(l)(a). 17 B.R. at 394.

The District Court also found that neither the promissory note nor the financing statement met the requirements of a security agreement. In re Baker, CIV No. 82-735C at 3. The District Court, however, noted that while many courts hold that the financing statement and the security agreement serve quite different and distinct functions, some courts read the documents in combination to create a security agreement. After citing these opposing viewpoints, the District Court made the following statement:

Since the instant case involves neither a disagreement over collateral description nor a discrepancy in the purported intentions of debtor and creditor but only a dispute as to the existence of a security interest in the boat which was adequately described in the financing statement, this case is remanded to the bankruptcy judge to determine whether the documents and the circumstances surrounding the transaction are sufficient to make the Caccamises secured creditors. In re Baker, CIV No. 82-735C at 5.

On March 13, 1984, subsequent to the District Court remand, the debtor filed a new piece of evidence with this Court; a security agreement alleged to have been executed on May 20, 1980. This security agreement was not produced at the § 341 meeting of creditors, at the examination of the debtor, or at the September 15, 1981 trial. At the June 14, 1984 hearing on remand, the debtor introduced into evidence this alleged security agreement dated May 20, 1980. The trustee questions the authenticity of the security agreement and opposes its introduction into evidence.

The first question presented is what weight will be given to the security agreement alleged to have been executed on May 20, 1980 which was not filed in this Court’s initial adversary proceeding but was only produced as evidence subsequent to the District Court’s decision to remand.

The second question presented is whether the documents and circumstances surrounding the loan from the Caccamises to their son-in-law are sufficient to make the Caccamises secured creditors.

If the security agreement filed with this Court subsequent to the District Court’s remand is accepted as authentic, when added to the properly filed UCC-1 financing statement, the Caccamises clearly would hold a perfected security interest. 2 The trustee, however, has questioned the authenticity of this newly filed security agreement.

Mr. Baker testified that this agreement was found on the weekend before this Court’s September 15, 1981 hearing. The *935 debtor claims he found this document in a file relating to the sale of his boat and gave it to the Caccamises on the eve of the September 1981 hearing. Neither Mr. Baker nor the Caccamises, however, produced the document at the September hearing. Not producing this document at trial is quite astounding given the fact that Mr. Baker, as an attorney, 3 must have known how important such a security agreement would be to establish a valid security interest.

It is also interesting that only Mr. Baker was able to testify that the document was executed in May of 1980. Both Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
48 B.R. 932, 41 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 619, 1985 Bankr. LEXIS 6192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reiber-v-baker-in-re-baker-nywb-1985.