Still v. United Pipe & Supply Co. (In Re W.L. Jackson Manufacturing Co.)

50 B.R. 498, 1985 Bankr. LEXIS 5997
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Tennessee
DecidedJune 7, 1985
DocketBankruptcy No. 1-81-01952, Adv. No. 1-82-0532
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 50 B.R. 498 (Still v. United Pipe & Supply Co. (In Re W.L. Jackson Manufacturing Co.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Still v. United Pipe & Supply Co. (In Re W.L. Jackson Manufacturing Co.), 50 B.R. 498, 1985 Bankr. LEXIS 5997 (Tenn. 1985).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

RALPH H. KELLEY, Bankruptcy Judge.

W.L. Jackson Company (Jackson) was a manufacturer of water heaters and water pump tanks. It filed a petition for reorganization under chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code and continued in business as debt- or-in-possession. While Jackson was operating as debtor-in-possession, it sold water pump tanks to the defendant, United Pipe and Supply Co., Inc. (United Pipe). When United Pipe failed to pay for the tanks, Jackson brought this action to collect the debt. Subsequently, C. Kenneth Still was appointed trustee in bankruptcy and replaced Jackson as plaintiff in this action. Jackson’s case was converted from reorganization under chapter 11 to liquidation under chapter 7.

Before Jackson filed its chapter 11 petition, United Pipe had regularly honored the claims of its customers under Jackson’s warranty and had been reimbursed by Jackson. In the 90 days before Jackson filed its bankruptcy petition, it reimbursed United Pipe on a number of warranty claims but still owed United Pipe on other claims.

During Jackson’s chapter 11 United Pipe continued to honor warranty claims and seek reimbursement from Jackson, but it *500 was not reimbursed before Jackson’s case converted to chapter 7.

The trustee seeks to recover the full purchase price of the tanks United Pipe bought from Jackson during the chapter 11 and he also alleges that Jackson’s reimbursement of United Pipe in the 90 days before filing of the chapter 11 petition was a preferential transfer that he can recover.

United Pipe contends that it is entitled to set off or recoup its reimbursement claims by reducing its debt for the water tanks. United Pipe also denies that the reimbursement in the 90 days before Jackson’s filing was a preference.

The parties stipulated the following facts.

Jackson filed its chapter 11 petition on October 5, 1981.

Jackson sold water pump tanks to United Pipe at various times from March 12, 1982 through June 14, 1982. The sales were on “open account”. The unpaid balance of the account is $43,272.92.

Jackson’s chapter 11 case was converted to a chapter 7 liquidation case on March 3, 1983.

United Pipe has submitted certain warranty claims to Jackson with respect to tanks it bought from Jackson. Jackson has not honored the claims.

Jackson and United Pipe had an established warranty claims procedure that was followed over the entire course of their dealings, which began long before Jackson’s chapter 11 petition and continued afterward. A distributor, such as United Pipe, was required to inspect an allegedly defective tank. As proof that the inspection was done, the distributor was required to remove the serial number tag from the tank and attach it to the “returned goods” form that was used to document warranty claims against Jackson.

Some of the warranty claims in question include the serial number tags. Other claims do not show that the tag was included.

The stipulation actually says that the tanks are subcategorized by date of manufacture as determined from the serial numbers. The chart, however, says date of sale. The date of manufacture does not appear to be relevant but the date of sale may be. The court believes that the parties agreed to treat the date of manufacture as the date of sale or the stipulation inaccurately describes the chart, which correctly categorizes the tanks by date of sale.

During the 90 day period immediately before the date of filing of Jackson’s chapter 11 petition, Jackson honored warranty claims presented by United Pipe. Jackson did so by granting United Pipe credits against its debt to Jackson on the open account. The credits totaled $11,299.32. Out of this amount, $3,828.63 was credited within 45 days after United Pipe satisfied the customer’s warranty claims. All of the tanks were sold at least 45 days before failure. The parties after diligent effort were unable to determine the exact dates of failure.

The stipulation as to how United Pipe’s account was credited in the 90 days before the Chapter 11 began may not be exactly correct. Rather than crediting United Pipe’s account, Jackson apparently delivered additional tanks to United Pipe without charge. This appears from the agreed amendments to the complaint and answer, which were submitted after the stipulation. The amendments are as follows:

The warranty claims are categorized in the following chart.

Summary of Warranty Claims Presented

I.

Claims Presented Before Chapter 11 (Before 10-5-1981)

With Tags_Without Tags_Total

Tanks Sold -0- $ 575.47 $ 575.47 Before Chapter 11

*501 ii.

Claims Presented During Chapter 11 (on or after 10-6-1981 and before 3-3-1983)

With Tags Without Tags Total

Tanks Sold Before Chapter 11 $50,216.42 $ 2,226.75 $52,443.17

Tanks Sold During Chapter 11 $ 3,939.63 $ 177.65 $ 4,117.28

$54,156.05 $ 2,404.40 $56,560.45

III.

Claims Presented After Conversion to Chapter 7 (on or after 3-3-1983)

Tanks Sold Before Chapter 11 $16,873.23 177.65 $17,050.88

Tanks Sold During Chapter 11 $ 754.30 -0- $ 754.30

$17,627.53 177.65 $17,805.18

The Complaint ... is amended to allege that the Defendant ... received preferences avoidable under Section 547 of the Bankruptcy Code as a result of transfers ... to Defendant, without charge, of water pump tanks having a value of $11,299.32 for or on account of antecedent debts owed by Debtor to Defendant, which transfers occurred while Debtor was insolvent and were made on or within 90 days before the date of filing of the petition and that such transfers enabled Defendant to receive more than Defendant would have received if the case were a case under Chapter 7, the transfers had not been made, and Defendant received payment on such warranty claims to the extent provided under the Bankruptcy Code. Said Complaint is further amended to demand of Defendant payment of such alleged preferential transfers in the sum of $11,-299.32.

The Answer filed by the Defendant ... is amended to admit that Defendant received from Debtor while Debtor was insolvent transfers of water pump tanks having a value of $11,299.32 during the-90 days immediately preceding October 5, 1981, the date the chapter 11 petition was filed by Debtor, but to otherwise deny that the transfers of such water pump tanks constituted a preference avoidable under Section 547 of the Bankruptcy Code.

Discussion

The trustee argued that each of United Pipe’s claims is a breach of warranty claim that arose when United Pipe bought the defective water tank. The stipulated facts do not support the trustee’s argument.

United Pipe honored its customers’ claims as claims against Jackson, under Jackson’s warranty, for which Jackson would reimburse it, provided it submitted the proper forms and the serial number tags.

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50 B.R. 498, 1985 Bankr. LEXIS 5997, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/still-v-united-pipe-supply-co-in-re-wl-jackson-manufacturing-co-tneb-1985.