Rent-A-Center v. Shelby (In Re Shelby)

127 B.R. 682, 15 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 584, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 673, 1991 WL 78871
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Alabama
DecidedMarch 28, 1991
Docket19-70190
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 127 B.R. 682 (Rent-A-Center v. Shelby (In Re Shelby)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rent-A-Center v. Shelby (In Re Shelby), 127 B.R. 682, 15 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 584, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 673, 1991 WL 78871 (Ala. 1991).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION

GEORGE S. WRIGHT, Chief Judge.

This matter came before the court on Creditor and Movant, Rent-A-Center’s Statement of Claim and Motion to Terminate the Section 362(a) Stay, as well as its Objection to Confirmation of the Shelbys’ Chapter 13 plan. Rent-A-Center’s motion and objection sought to have the court declare that a 78-week contract that conveyed possession of a color television to the debtors was an executory contract and did not create a security interest or constitute a credit sale. The court has heard the evidence at hearing, and reviewed the record in the context of applicable law. It is the judgment of the court that Rent-A-Center’s motion is due to be DENIED and its objection to claim is due to be OVERRULED.

FINDINGS OF FACT

On Saturday, January 12, 1991, Billy Wayne Shelby, who with his wife, is the debtor in this bankruptcy case, executed a written agreement with Rent-A-Center by which the Shelbys acquired possession of a used Zenith console color television (rental agreement filed with Claim No. 4 of Rent-A-Center).

The contract itself generally describes the transaction as a rental but provides that the Shelbys would own the television free and clear after paying $18.99 per week *684 for “78 successive weeks,” without paying any additional purchase price. The agreement says that payments are due on Saturday of each week and purports to give Rent-A-Center the right to charge a “reinstatement fee” of $5.00 when payments are as much as two days late. The Shelbys made an initial payment of $29.38: $18.99 rental payment, $1.59 in tax and a $7.50 “processing charge.”

The more pertinent parts of the written agreement provide the following:

3. OWNERSHIP
A. We own the property described herein. You do not own the property, and will not acquire any ownership rights therein unless you have, at your option, complied with the ownership terms of this agreement.
B. If you renew this agreement for 78 successive weeks, you will pay a total of $1,481.22, or if you renew this agreement for N/A successive months, you will pay a total of $ N/A, and will own the property.

Paragraph 2 gives further indication of the parameters of the relationship between Rent-A-Center and the Shelbys:

2. OTHER CHARGES: Reinstatement Pee. If you fail to make a rental payment by the due date, this Agreement automatically terminates, and we are entitled to return of the property; PROVIDED, you may reinstate this Agreement, within two (2) days if you are renting the property on a weekly basis, or within five (5) days if you are renting on a monthly basis, by paying all missed rental renewal payments, plus a reinstatement fee of $5.00. You must return the property to us during the reinstatement period if we ask you to do so. If you return the property as requested during the reinstatement period, you will have a right to reinstate, the Agreement for thirty (30) additional days, without losing any rights or options previously acquired under this Agreement. Upon reinstatement, we will provide you with the same property you are presently renting, or substitute property of comparable condition or quality.

Staffon White, Rent-A-Center account representative, told the court at a March 5, 1991 hearing that if the Shelbys had chosen to return the television they would have had no further obligation to his company beyond costs for the time it was in their possession. At the same hearing, Billy Wayne Shelby testified “it never was clarified” whether the television could be returned without further obligation in his January 12, 1991 transaction with White.

On Monday, January 14, or Tuesday, January 15, 1991 (following the Saturday the television was rented), Billy Wayne Shelby testified that he learned that the local law firm of Dishuck, LaCoste & Black, P.C., was initiating garnishment of his paycheck for an obligation to DCH Regional Medical Center. It was at that point, he testified March 5, 1991, that he consulted an attorney and decided to file a Chapter 13 petition. The attorney told him to bring her all his bills, Shelby said, so she could draft a Chapter 13 plan. He did, including the new obligation to Rent-A-Center. The Shelbys proposed to pay Rent-A-Center 100 percent of the obligation due under the contract, listing it as a secured creditor.

The Chapter 13 petition was filed January 22, 1991, with a hearing on the Shelbys’ Chapter 13 plan originally set for March 1, 1991. The court that same day entered a deduction order against Billy Wayne Shelby’s paycheck so payments could begin flowing into the Chapter 13 Trustee’s Office. (DCH subsequently filed Claim No. 3 in this case for $767.16.)

At the point the Shelbys filed bankruptcy, Billy Wayne Shelby was employed at Sherman Utilities Structures in Tuscaloosa and reported net earnings of $210.00 weekly, according to the Chapter 13 statement in this case. The Shelbys have two sons: a six-month-old and a two-month-old. Billy Wayne Shelby listed his gross income for the last calendar year at $8,000-$9,000. Mrs. Shelby was not working.

Counsel for Rent-A-Center filed both an objection to the Shelbys’ confirmation and a document entitled Statement of Claim and Motion to Terminate Section 362(a) stay on February 22, 1991. Both were *685 based on the contention that Ala. Code § 8-25-1 et seq. controlled, making this transaction an executory contract, and that it was not a credit sale as defined in Ala. Code § 5-19-1(4). Both documents said: “It is the contention of this listed .creditor that the agreement which is the subject of this claim is in fact a rental agreement and not a credit sale.” Documents filed by the creditor did not refer to Ala. Code § 7-1-201(37) which defines “security interest” for secured credit transactions under Alabama’s Uniform Commercial Code.

Rent-A-Center also filed Claim No. 4 on February 22, 1991. Writing in one blank of the claim form said: “This is a lease — rent- to-own — with no equity.” and in another place on the form, “No title was transferred. This is a rental agreement — Attached.” In the blank for the fair market value of the collateral, “$1,481.22” was written in. This is the exact obligation of the 78-week contract, if all payments were made. It seems doubtful this is an actual appraised value on the used television which is at issue. For the “Present Amount Due” on the form of $1,451.84 is computed by deducting the $29.38 payment the Shelbys had made from the $1,481.22 “Principal Amount” of the contract. Whatever the intent, the creditor listed the “Principal Amount” of the contract as the value of the used TV.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
127 B.R. 682, 15 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 584, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 673, 1991 WL 78871, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rent-a-center-v-shelby-in-re-shelby-alnb-1991.