Southern Produce Distributors, Inc. v. D & T Farms, Inc.

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. North Carolina
DecidedMarch 28, 2022
Docket19-00065
StatusUnknown

This text of Southern Produce Distributors, Inc. v. D & T Farms, Inc. (Southern Produce Distributors, Inc. v. D & T Farms, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern Produce Distributors, Inc. v. D & T Farms, Inc., (N.C. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF NORTH CAROLINA SOUTHERN DIVISION

NO. 7:20-CV-53-FL

BLAKE GARY ADAMS; WILLIAM ) GARY ADAMS; KEITH SMITH; D&T ) FARMS, INC.; and WARREN FARMING ) PARTNERSHIP, ) ) Appellants,1 ) ) ORDER v. ) ) SOUTHERN PRODUCE ) DISTRIBUTORS, INC., ) ) Appellee. ) )

This consolidated case is before the court on appellants’ appeals from an interlocutory order of the bankruptcy court entered March 11, 2020. See In re S. Produce Distributors, Inc., 616 B.R. 667 (Bankr. E.D.N.C. 2020) (hereinafter the “bankruptcy court’s order”). Appellee responded in opposition, and appellants have replied. In this posture, the issues raised are ripe for ruling. For the following reasons, the bankruptcy court’s order is affirmed. STATEMENT OF THE CASE The instant appeals arise out of five adversary proceedings commenced within a bankruptcy case, No. 18-002010-5-SWH (E.D.N.C.) (the “bankruptcy case”), in which appellee is the debtor and appellants are unsecured creditors. Appellee’s business operations included purchasing sweet potatoes from growers and packaging and selling them to wholesale and retail

1 The court constructively amends the caption of this order to reflect a stipulation of dismissal with respect to appellant Strickland Farming Partnership (“Strickland”), on February 23, 2021. (DE 25). As a result, the appeal of Strickland is dismissed as moot. vendors. Appellants’ business operations include growing sweet potatoes. To provide context to the bankruptcy court’s order and the issues raised on appeal, the court first summarizes below the procedural history of the bankruptcy case, followed by a summary of the adversary proceedings and the instant appeal. A. Bankruptcy Case

Appellee filed a voluntary petition for relief under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code on April 20, 2018 (the “petition”). Two of the five appellants filed proofs of claims in the bankruptcy case: Warren Farming Partnership (“Warren”) in the amount of $437,404.84; and D&T Farms, Inc., (“D&T”) in the amount of $602,528.13.2 The other three appellants did not file proofs of claims, but they are listed in the petition as having unsecured claims in the following amounts: Blake Gary Adams (“B. Adams”) in the amount of $33,226.48; William Gary Adams (“W. Adams”) in the amount of $78,656.40; and Keith Smith (“Smith”) in the amount of $256,707.40. Four months after the petition date, appellee filed an emergency motion for authority to make interim payments on critical pre-petition grower claims. (Record (DE 26-1) 246) (the

“emergency motion”). The emergency motion explained that appellee could not “continue as an ongoing business operation unless it is able to secure sweet potatoes” from its growers, and most of the growers with available sweet potatoes for sale were the same growers who previously supplied sweet potatoes and held pre-petition claims. (Id. at 247). Further, appellee represented, “most of the [g]rowers will refuse to sell any of their sweet potatoes to [appellee] unless their respective pre-petition claim is paid in full.” (Id.). Accordingly, appellee sought authorization “to make interim payments on the pre-petition grower claims” identified in the motion, where all of

2 Former appellant Strickland filed a proof of claim in the amount of $168,000.00. the appellants were included amongst those identified. (Id. at 248, 250). At hearing on the motion, upon objections raised, appellee amended the relief sought to obtain authorization to make “pre- payments for . . . new purchase contracts” where the amount of each pre-payment “would be based upon a mathematical formula of up to 80% of [each] [g]rower’s unpaid, pre-petition claim” against appellee. (Id. at 254). But such pre-payment was not to be “a payment of any pre-petition amount

owed to any [g]rower.” (Id.). On September 7, 2018, the bankruptcy court entered an order granting the emergency motion, as amended, authorizing appellee to enter into post-petition contracts with growers, including appellants, in which appellee could make “partial pre-payments” for the purchase of new sweet potatoes. (Id. at 256) (hereinafter the “pre-payment order”). The pre-payment order incorporated by reference the requested formula for calculating the amount of pre-payments, and allowed appellee to make such pre-payments out of its “Auxiliary Account or . . . Cash Collateral Account.” (Id.). The pre-payment order also noted that appellee then forecasted a “proposed treatment of a class of Grower claims in a proposed Plan of Reorganization,” whereby growers

would have the option to “recharacterize and convert the full amount of prepayment it has received . . . into a credit and payment in the same dollar amount of pre-petition [g]rower debt.” (Id. at 255). Thereafter, appellee filed a plan of reorganization and amended plans, culminating in a fifth amended plan of reorganization on January 29, 2019. The bankruptcy court confirmed the fifth amended plan of reorganization, on February 14, 2019, as modified at confirmation hearing, and incorporated into the confirmation order (hereinafter, the “confirmed plan” and “confirmation order”). The confirmed plan did not provide for ongoing operations of appellee, but rather provided for the sale of “all operating assets” of appellee, “sale and disposition of . . . remaining Retained Assets,” “payment in full of all secured claims,” and “treatment and payment of all allowed unsecured claims to the extent of available Disposition Proceeds.” (Id. at 269). The confirmed plan defines the “Reogranized Debtor” as appellee, “as reorganized under the terms of this [confirmed plan] and revested with the property which was formerly property of the estate.” (Id. at 268). It also includes a section entitled “Retention of Jurisdiction,” providing

in part that - The Bankruptcy Court shall, after Confirmation, retain jurisdiction of this case . . . to determine any issues . . . in adversary proceedings commenced post- confirmation, including, but not limited to . . . any claims by the Debtor or Reorganized Debtor against any Growers arising from post-petition contract breaches relating to the sale and purchase of produce, recovery of post-petition prepayments made to Growers, damages of any sort arising from any such contract breaches or Grower conduct relating to the same, [and] any claims by Debtor or Reorganized Debtor arising from or pursuant to the provisions of [the pre-payment order]. (Id. at 260). After consummation of asset sales contemplated in the confirmed plan, on May 1, 2019, appellee commenced the five adversary proceedings out of which this appeal arises, one against each appellant, which the court will describe in further detail in the next section of this order. (See Bankr. E.D.N.C. Nos. 19-64-5 (B. Adams); 19-65-5 (D&T); 19-66-5 (W. Adams); 19-67-5 (Smith); 19-69-5 (Warren)).3 Thereafter, on October 16, 2019, appellee filed in the bankruptcy case objections to claims of Warren and D&T, as well as objections to scheduled claims of B. Adams, W. Adams, and Smith. (See Bankruptcy Case Docs. 658, 659, 661-663).4 In appellee’s latest post-confirmation report, filed January 26, 2022, appellee notes the pendency of the

3 Appellee also commenced adversary proceeding, case No. 19-68-5 against Strickland, which as noted previously was subject of a stipulation of dismissal.

4 For bankruptcy case documents not included in the record on appeal filed in this case, the court cites to the docket entry numbers in the bankruptcy case, designated in citations in this order as “Bankruptcy Case Docs.” adversary proceedings, unresolved objections, impasse reached at mediation, and certain real estate sales contemplated by the terms of the confirmed plan to take place in 2022. (Id. Doc. 950). B.

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Southern Produce Distributors, Inc. v. D & T Farms, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-produce-distributors-inc-v-d-t-farms-inc-nceb-2022.