Siple & Orrock v. Rechnitzer (In re M.B.K., Inc.)

92 B.R. 429, 19 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1243, 1987 Bankr. LEXIS 2301
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, C.D. California
DecidedOctober 9, 1987
DocketBankruptcy No. LA 85-07714-NCA; Adv. Nos. LA 87-0277-NCA, LA 86-2342-NCA, LA 86-2349-NCA, LA 86-2371-NCA and LA 86-2372-NCA
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 92 B.R. 429 (Siple & Orrock v. Rechnitzer (In re M.B.K., Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, C.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Siple & Orrock v. Rechnitzer (In re M.B.K., Inc.), 92 B.R. 429, 19 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1243, 1987 Bankr. LEXIS 2301 (Cal. 1987).

Opinion

AMENDED MEMORANDUM OF DECISION

CALVIN K. ASHLAND, Bankruptcy Judge.

BACKGROUND

This memorandum pertains to a complaint to enjoin the trustee from prosecuting complaints to recover preferential transfers and four complaints by the trustee to recover preferences. On April 29, 1987 I heard the complaints for preferences and granted the trustee’s motion to dismiss the complaint to enjoin. On the trustee’s complaints the parties filed post-trial briefs.

When dismissing the complaint to enjoin I denied the trustee’s motion for sanctions requested pursuant to Rule 9011. I said [431]*431that the attorney for the plaintiff relied in good faith on In re Newcomb, 744 F.2d 621 (8th Cir.1984) and Guy v. Abdulla, 57 F.R.D. 14 (N.D.Ohio, E.D.1972). I was wrong. I will discuss these cases later.

The trustee brought several complaints to recover preferences, including the four which are the subject of this memorandum. Necessarily, each transferee is a defendant in a separate complaint. Bankruptcy Rule 7004 requires an adversary proceeding to recover money or property. The facts of a transfer are unique to the transferee. Procedurally and administratively, as well, preference actions lend themselves to separate actions against separate transferees. Yet, the plaintiff in the motion to enjoin criticizes the trustee for bringing separate actions alleging that by so doing the trustee “divided and conquered” the transferees.

The plaintiff misunderstands preferences. As creations of Congress they achieve one of the objectives of bankruptcy —equality among creditors. The trustee must prove certain elements. The transferee has certain defenses. Characteristically, preference actions are not answered because the transferee admits the transfer, the transferee remits the amount of the transfer, or the transferee furnishes evidence of a valid defense and the trustee dismisses the complaint. Transferees rarely litigate a defense.

It is axiomatic that an imperfect bulk sale creates preferences. A bulk sale is imperfect when all creditors of the same class do not receive the same percentage payment from assets of the transferee. Strict compliance with a bulk sale law merely protects the transfer and the assets of the transfer from attack as against the transferee.

Bulk transfers, though intended to be fair to creditors of the transferee, can be unfair. In California bulk transfers are not fair. The facts in this case illustrate the unfairness and the reason that an imperfect bulk sale creates preferences.

FACTS

In November 1984, M.B.K., Inc. contracted to sell a restaurant and mini-mart to Larry Stone and Dave Hardy. Two escrows opened on December 19, 1984 to handle the sale of the two liquor licenses involved as required by California Commercial Code § 6106.1 and Business and Professions Code § 24074. The executors of the Jaimie Font estate, deceased owner of M.B.K., received permission from the state court to make this sale on February 11, 1985. The buyers insisted on this approval to clear their title as against the estate. Randolph E. Siple, attorney for the various defendants, and James Johnston, vice president of the debtor, were co-executors of the Font estate.

On February 12,1985 the escrow company published notice of the transfer once in the paper. To illustrate the unfairness, the publication was in a small local newspaper of general circulation unlikely to be read by any creditor. Publication affords creditors the opportunity to file claims.

In March 1985, the state court approved a compromise between Patricia Font, the daughter of Jaimie Font, and the estate. Font excluded his only heir from his will. Patricia Font was paid $120,000, the full amount of the settlement with the Font estate, from assets of M.B.K., Inc. Thereafter, the escrow closed to the buyer’s satisfaction.

The escrows closed on April 15, 1985. At the close, some money was set aside pending the settlement of adversary litigation between M.B.K. and a creditor. This action concluded and the money was returned to escrow on May 10, 1985. Final distributions occurred on May 15, 1985.

The claimants in the mini-mart escrow were paid in full. Those in the restaurant were paid pro-rata. Thus, creditors of M.B.K., Inc. who filed claims were treated unequally. The vast number of creditors uninformed of the sales got nothing.

On June 6,1985, M.B.K. filed bankruptcy under Chapter 11. The case was converted to Chapter 7 on November 18, 1985. Martin A. Rechnitzer was appointed the Chapter 7 trustee.

[432]*432In August 1986, the trustee initiated four adversary actions to avoid preferential transfer under 11 U.S.C. § 547. In Action 1, he sued Siple and Orrock (S & O), a professional corporation, to recover about $4,000. Besides being counsel for M.B.K., Randolph Siple also acts as president for M.B.K., holds a major number of shares in the company, and acts as a principal for S & 0. In Action 2, the trustee sued Chase Brothers Dairies, Inc. seeking about $8,000. In Action 3, he sued Weaver, Leiper, & Ogden for both preferential transfer and fraudulent conveyance. The recovery sought in this action amounted to about $3,200. In Action 4, the trustee sued Star Free Press seeking $652. (Star filed no claim in escrow but was nevertheless paid.)

In each action the trustee alleged the following. The transfers occurred within the 90 day period preceding the bankruptcy filing. The debtor was insolvent at the time the transfers took place, as defined in 11 U.S.C. § 101(26)(A). The transfers covered antecedent debts to the creditors. The transfers enabled the creditors to receive a greater percentage of their debts than they would have received under the estate liquidation.

The creditors all denied the allegations set out above. S & O claimed that the transfers were in accordance with the California Bulk Sales Law, California Uniform Commercial Code § 6101, and following, and the Business and Professions Code § 24070. They also asserted that to require only some creditors to return the money would violate equal protection. S & O claimed that 11 U.S.C. § 348 is unconstitutional since it applies the same 90 day preference period of a Chapter 11 to a case converted to a Chapter 7. S & O claimed the payouts were not adverse to other creditors since under- the UCC they could not have participated anyway. S & O set out the further defense that these transfers were in the ordinary course of business between themselves and M.B.K. The payments also were secured by a UCG-1 financing statement. There appears to be no other evidence of the UCC-1 and what it covers. Randolph Siple represents all four defendants. The defendants responded with the same set of denials and defenses. Weaver, Leiper & Ogden also denied the fraudulent conveyance allegations without asserting any defenses.

The actions were tried at the same time. In February 1987, S & O filed a complaint to enjoin the trustee and to make a determination of the preference transfer rights.

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Bluebook (online)
92 B.R. 429, 19 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1243, 1987 Bankr. LEXIS 2301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/siple-orrock-v-rechnitzer-in-re-mbk-inc-cacb-1987.