Skinner's Furniture Store of Greenville, Inc. v. McCall (In Re McCall)

62 B.R. 57, 1 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 1323, 1985 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15220
CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Alabama
DecidedOctober 4, 1985
DocketCiv. A. 84-T-256-N
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 62 B.R. 57 (Skinner's Furniture Store of Greenville, Inc. v. McCall (In Re McCall)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Skinner's Furniture Store of Greenville, Inc. v. McCall (In Re McCall), 62 B.R. 57, 1 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 1323, 1985 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15220 (M.D. Ala. 1985).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

MYRON H. THOMPSON, District Judge.

This appeal from the bankruptcy court’s denial of appellant Skinner’s Furniture Store’s claimed purchase money security interest in certain household goods of ap-pellee Freddie P. McCall raises a single issue: Whether the store's purchase money security interest in the property it sold to McCall was destroyed when it made an additional sale under the same agreement. The bankruptcy court held that the store’s purchase money security interest was destroyed. For the reasons stated below, this court is of the opinion that the store’s purchase money security interest was not destroyed and that the decision of the bankruptcy court is therefore due to be reversed.

I.

On May 14, 1982, McCall entered into an agreement to purchase several pieces of furniture from Skinner’s Furniture for a total price of $3,182.40. McCall agreed to pay for voluntary credit life insurance and property insurance and further agreed to pay a finance charge calculated according to the balance due at the end of each month. On May 18, 1982, McCall made an additional credit purchase from the store under the same agreement and sent monthly installment payments totalling $1,050.00 over a fourteen month period. McCall missed several scheduled payments.

On August 1, 1983, McCall filed a chapter seven bankruptcy petition, claiming a personal exemption for the furniture under 11 U.S.C.A. § 522(f) and 1975 Alabama Code § 6-10-6. Skinner’s Furniture objected to the claimed exemption, arguing that under 1975 Alabama Code § 7-9-107 it held a purchase money security interest in the goods that was superior to all other liens and McCall’s claimed personal exemption. McCall responded that the store’s interest in the property was a non-purchase money security interest and was therefore avoidable. After a hearing on the store’s objection, the bankruptcy court held that McCall’s claimed personal exemption was valid. The court reasoned that her initial purchase created a purchase money security interest in the furniture, but that her May 18, 1982, credit purchase of additional property automatically transformed the store’s interest into a non-purchase money security interest.

II.

While much of the discussion of purchase money security interests tends to be highly technical, its significance to both buyers and sellers is basic and fundamental. The ability to create and maintain a purchase money security interest will very often determine the type and quantity of credit sellers can offer to buyers.

A purchase money security interest is like an insurance policy. It offers the seller a number of protections. See generally Note, Preserving the Purchase Money Status of Refinanced or Conmingled Purchase Money Debt, 35 Stan.L.Rev. 1133, 1154 (1983) (hereinafter cited as Note, Preserving Purchase Money Status). The most important protection is that the seller’s interest in the goods is generally guaranteed even if the buyer files for bankruptcy. The seller who has a purchase money security interest in goods holds a powerful trump card in any bankruptcy proceeding. The buyer for the most part cannot ask for an exemption under any of the Bankruptcy Act’s provisions, and the seller’s interest is automatically superior to the claims of rival creditors who might be fighting for the same property.

This special protection afforded by the creation of a purchase money security interest benefits the buyer as well. Since the seller’s risk is significantly reduced by this “insurance”, he can offer credit at a lower rate to the buyer. Note, Preserving Purchase Money Status at 1154.

However, any system is open to abuse. Sellers have often overreached by consol- *59 ¡dating more than one purchase under the same purchase money credit agreement and arranging the transaction in such a way that they retain title to all of the goods until the last item has been paid off. This practice, which allows sellers to keep goods under a purchase money security interest long after the buyer has made payments equalling the value of individual items, has serious adverse consequences for the buyer. In a bankruptcy proceeding, the seller can reclaim all of the goods he sold even though the buyer has made substantial payments towards some of them.

Faced with such abuses, courts have held that the seller’s original purchase money security interest is automatically “transformed” into a regular security interest when additional purchases are added on to the first sale. In In re Manuel, 507 F.2d 990 (5th Cir.1975), for example, the buyer purchased 7 pieces of furniture on credit and later added a television to the same agreement. That agreement provided that “[s]eller’s security interest in the goods sold shall remain perfected until full payment for said goods sold shall be made.” Id. at 992. The Former Fifth Circuit held that, on those facts, the second sale “transformed” the seller’s original purchase money security interest into an ordinary security interest. In so holding, it stressed that the agreement’s central flaw was that it “failed to indicate the order in which purchases were paid off, and the amounts still due on each item.” Id. at 991-992. However, it left open the possibility that an agreement that allocated payments according to a first-in, first-out schedule might lead to a different result. Id. at 993.

Since Manuel, courts have recognized that a purchase money security interest can survive an “add-on” sale when express contractual language allocating payments is present. See Note, Preserving Purchase Money Status at 1145 & n. 49. Instead of seeing an additional sale as causing a total transformation of the interest, courts recognize that the seller can still hold a purchase money security interest in the goods “to the extent” those goods secure their own price. However, to the extent those goods have been released from the credit agreement by the application of monthly payments, the seller cannot claim a purchase money security interest. 1 This approach, which recognizes that an additional purchase does not always cause a total transformation of the interest, has come to be known as the “dual status” rule. The Eleventh Circuit recently noted in dicta that this dual status rule might apply when a seller “contractually provides some method for determining the extent to which each item of collateral secures its purchase money.” Southtrust Bank v. Borg-Warner Acceptance Corp., 760 F.2d 1240, 1243 (11th Cir.1985).

III.

In the present case, the issué reserved in both Manuel and Southtrust is squarely presented: Whether inclusion of express contractual language allocating payments according to a first-in, first-out schedule will allow the seller’s purchase money security interest to survive.

The store’s purchase credit agreement contains just the sort of express contractual language contemplated in Manuel and

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Bluebook (online)
62 B.R. 57, 1 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 1323, 1985 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/skinners-furniture-store-of-greenville-inc-v-mccall-in-re-mccall-almd-1985.