Ross v. Marrero

117 F.3d 160
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 1, 1997
Docket96-30237
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 117 F.3d 160 (Ross v. Marrero) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ross v. Marrero, 117 F.3d 160 (5th Cir. 1997).

Opinion

WIENER, Circuit Judge:

This appeal arises from the bankruptcy proceedings of Dibert, Bancroft & Ross Company, Limited (“the Debtor”). Appellants (“the Ross Group” 1 ) appeal the judgment of the bankruptcy court, as affirmed by the district court, rejecting the Ross Group’s claim and recognizing the claim of the Internal Revenue Service of the United States Department of the Treasury (“the Government”). Specifically, the court awarded to the Government the proceeds of a court authorized sale by the Debtor’s trustee in bankruptcy of property located in Amite, Tangipa-hoa Parish, Louisiana, and at the same time denied the Ross Group’s claim to those proceeds. Agreeing with the Ross Group that its collateral mortgage claim to those proceeds subsists and primes the Government’s tax lien claims, we reverse the ruling of the bankruptcy court that awarded those sales proceeds to the Government, render judgment awarding the proceeds to the Ross Group, and remand the case to that court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I

FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. The Sale and Leaseback Agreement

In 1965, the Debtor entered into an industrial inducement financing arrangement with Tangipahoa Parish (“the Parish”), crafted as a sale-and-leasebaek with right of re- *164 demption (“the Lease”), under the terms of which the Debtor would (1) purchase property in Amite, (2) construct a foundry on it to replace the Debtor’s New Orleans facility that had been badly damaged by Hurricane Betsy, (3) transfer record title of the improved property to the Parish, reserving the right to reacquire record title by exercising a so-called repurchase option and paying a nominal amount to do so, and (4) without ever relinquishing possession, immediately lease the property back from the Parish. 2 Pursuant to the Lease, the Debtor purchased the land and built an iron and steel foundry, pattern shop, and machine shop on it (collectively, “the Foundry”). When construction of the Foundry was completed in 1967, the Debtor transferred record title of the Foundry to the Parish, including in the package all machinery and equipment that the Debtor had relocated on the property. Contemporaneously with its transfer of title to the Parish, the Debtor leased the Foundry back from the Parish, retaining the right to redeem record title at (1) any time during the original term or extended term of the Lease (2) after repayment in full of the Parish’s bond financing.

To raise the funds required to do the long-term financing deal with the Debtor, the Parish issued and sold general obligation bonds, then delivered the proceeds of the bond sale to the Debtor which used them to “take out” its interim construction loans. The bonds were secured by the Parish’s record title to the Foundry and the Debtor’s obligation under the Lease. The rental payments that the Debtor obligated itself to pay to the Parish under the Lease were calculated to amortize these bonds over the course of twenty years.

Section 1901 of the Lease gave the Debtor as lessee the option to extend the Lease beyond the original twenty year primary term for five consecutive extension terms of five years each, at an annual rental of $10,-000. 3 Section 2002 of the Lease spelled out the Debtor’s right of redemption in the form of an option to repurchase the Foundry from the Parish for the nominal sum of $1,000 at any time after the bonds had been retired, provided the Lease was in effect and current at the time of the exercise of the option.

Almost twenty years later, in April 1986, the Debtor made the final payment to the Parish under the initial term of the Lease in a sum sufficient to retire the last of the bonds. Despite having thus entirely repaid the financing arrangement embodied in the Lease, the Debtor nevertheless found it economically advantageous not to reacquire record title to the Foundry immediately but instead to exercise the first of its five year lease renewal options. Thus, at no time— from the Debtor’s original purchase of land in the Parish and construction of the Foundry in the mid 1960’s to the eventual bankruptcy sale of the Foundry to third parties in 1992 — was the Debtor ever out of occupancy and possession of the Foundry property.

B. The Collateral Mortgage

Faced with a cash shortage at approximately the same time in 1986 that it was paying off the last of the “rent” under the initial term of the Lease, the Debtor borrowed approximately $447,000 from the Ross Group. This loan was represented by a *165 Promissory Hand Note. Repayment of that note was secured by the pledge of a “Bearer” collateral mortgage note which was paraphed for identification with and thus secured by a leasehold collateral mortgage (“the Mortgage”) in the amount of $2,000,000. Like the Lease, the Mortgage was duly recorded in the Office of the Recorder of Mortgages for the Parish in December 1986.

The Mortgage encumbered “all of the Debtor’s leasehold interests in and to” the land on which the Foundry was constructed, as well as all the buildings and improvements situated on the premises and all machinery, appliances and equipment, all component parts, all immovables by nature and destination, and all corporeal movables. Also, by its own terms, the Mortgage was made subject to all terms and conditions of the Lease, which was conditionally assigned to the holder of the Mortgage. 4

The Ross Group and its successors in interest have at all times remained in possession, as pledgees, of the collateral mortgage note secured by the Mortgage. Although the Mortgage does not contain an express “after acquired property” clause, 5 it does contain— in addition to a standard “pact de non alienando” by which the Debtor as mortgagor was obligated “[n]ot to sell or transfer the Property without the prior written consent of the Mortgagee [the Ross Group]” — an analogous but more specific covenant in § 11(0(3), which expressly applies “[i]n the event that the Property shall consist of Mortgagor’s interest in a leasehold estate and/or lease.” 6

The Debtor continued to suffer cash shortages, so it borrowed $500,000 from Central Progressive Bank (“CPB”) in 1987 and gave CPB a first mortgage on the Rolling Mill, a facility constructed in the late 1960’s on land owned by the Debtor adjacent to the Foundry. The Rolling Mill was not part of the Foundry sale and leaseback transaction between the Debtor and the Parish and was not encumbered by the Mortgage.

C. The Act of Cash Sale and the Debtor’s Demise

Unable to eliminate its cash-flow problems despite those two borrowings, the Debtor shut down both the Foundry and the Rolling Mill in the summer of 1988. By the end of 1989, these facilities had been closed for more than a year and many employees had been laid off.

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Bluebook (online)
117 F.3d 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ross-v-marrero-ca5-1997.