Thompson v. Citicorp Person to Person Financial Center, Inc. (In Re American Motor Home Rentals, Inc.)

10 B.R. 53
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Missouri
DecidedApril 3, 1981
Docket18-43095
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 10 B.R. 53 (Thompson v. Citicorp Person to Person Financial Center, Inc. (In Re American Motor Home Rentals, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thompson v. Citicorp Person to Person Financial Center, Inc. (In Re American Motor Home Rentals, Inc.), 10 B.R. 53 (Mo. 1981).

Opinion

FINDINGS OF FACT, CONCLUSIONS OF LAW, AND FINAL JUDGMENT FOR PLAINTIFF IN THE SUM OF $10,-550.64

DENNIS J. STEWART, Bankruptcy Judge.

This is an action brought by the plaintiff trustee in bankruptcy to recover sums which the defendant 1 had listed as credits to the debtor on a certain account with the *54 debtor. After the joining of the issues by the pleadings, the trial of the merits of this action was conducted by the court of bankruptcy on the dates of September 24, 1980, and October 16, 1980. The plaintiff appeared personally and as his own counsel on both occasions. The defendant appeared by Douglas L. Bowen, Esquire, its counsel.

The evidence which was adduced by the parties to this action depicts a comparatively simple and straightforward situation. According to the testimony of Stanley A. Leber, the branch manager of the defendant, the subject matter of this action is called a “dealer reserve fund” and consists only of “paper transactions” listing the amounts which are allocated by the defendant (and its assignor) as credits to a given salesman or retailer (such as, according to the testimony of Mr. Leber, the debtor was in relation to the defendant) and which are simply “paper credits” which were never intended to be paid to the debtor. Rather, according to Mr. Leber’s testimony, the account now sued upon by the trustee in bankruptcy is simply a statement of certain debits and credits which the defendant allocates for service charges and the like on the various rental units which are sold by the particular salesman or retailer. If the total of the account exceeds the amount allotted for the service charges, the debtor retailer was obligated by the contract between the parties to pay the excess to the defendant. This is demonstrated by a written contractual provision (as well as by Mr. Leber’s uncontradicted and unobjected-to testimony). In this regard, the contract which the debtor executed in favor of Nationwide Financial Corporation, the defendant’s predecessor, 2 relevantly provides as follows:

“If for any reason you (the defendant) discontinue purchasing contracts from us, you may hold and apply all reserves .. . to any indebtedness due or to become due from us to you until all contracts purchased by you from us have been liquidated.”

It is the defendant’s contention, however, that there is no explicit provision in the contract for payment of the excess in the reserve account to the dealer or retailer (as noted above, the position which the debtor occupied in relation to the defendant). According to the testimony of Mr. Leber, the reason for this omission is that the reserve account here in suit does not represent or contain any contribution of money by the dealer and, in this respect, materially differs from a “loss reserve” account which is composed of the dealer’s money.

This interpretation tends to be contradicted by the express wording of the governing contract between the parties to the following effect:

“The excess, if any, of the finance charge included by us in each contract over your charges therefor shall be credited by you to an account or accounts maintained on your books and records designated as our Regular Reserve and our Hold Reserve.”

From this, and from the other documents adduced in evidence in this action indicating that the dealer reserve account here in question is the “Hold Reserve” account referred to in the above paragraph, it appears that the account is supplied from finance charges exacted by the dealer over and above those which were to be taken by defendant or its predecessor. It would seem, even in the absence of an express contractual provision, the natural end result of these provisions that any amounts not paid out of the denominated reserve accounts should be paid to the dealers unless, in accordance with the provisions first quoted above, the monies in the funds should be paid over to the defendant.

But the contract which has been adduced in evidence by the defendant as the governing instrument in this action has at least one explicit and specific provision governing disposition of the funds in the Hold Reserve Account. It is to the effect that:

“Accumulated credits to our Hold Reserve Account in excess of $4,000 of the then aggregate total of payments of all contracts purchased by you from us shall be paid to us monthly as of fiscal 25th month end.”

*55 It would appear from the clear letter of this provision that, as of the 25th of any month, the debtor was entitled to have any and all of the excess in the Hold Reserve fund over the amount of $4,000. It further appears that, on the date of the order for relief in this ease, October 12, 1979, the balance in the Hold Reserve account was the sum of $10,550.64. As of the 25th of the prior month, it would appear that the balance was the same. Thus, according to the literal provisions of the governing contract, it would appear that, as of the date of the petition for relief in this case, the debtor had a clear contract right to at least the sum of $6,550.64, which constituted the excess in the Hold Reserve Account. And thus, under the provisions of section 541 of the Bankruptcy Code, vesting in the debt- or’s trustee in bankruptcy and his bankruptcy estate “all legal or equitable interests of the debtor in property as of the commencement of the case,” this sum of $6,550.64 should be regarded as the property of the estate.

II

It is a basic contention of the defendant, however, that, even if the court should find that some or all of the Hold Reserve Account is due and owing to the bankruptcy estate, it is entitled to a setoff on account of a $13,500 loss which it sustained on the repossession and resale of a mobile home which had been sold by the debtor to Robert E. and Janet M. Bair. In this regard, in its posttrial brief, the defendant states as follows:

“Citicorp presented evidence of a loss sustained from a particular contract purchased from the debtor. Citicorp showed that misrepresentations by the debtor to the Bairs exposed Citicorp to a potential liability by claims made by the Bairs on the basis of the debtor’s conduct. A settlement was reached and Citicorp obtained a release of claims by the Bairs and obtained possession of the unit and held a private sale to subsequently establish an approximate $13,500.00 deficiency balance. Demand was unsuccessfully made upon the debtor for repurchase of the contract for the remaining balance ...”

But there was no direct evidence of any misrepresentation of the debtor to the Bairs which resulted in the $13,500 loss in this regard. All that was shown by the defendant in this regard is that it repossessed the Bair unit and resold it at a loss of $13,500. Otherwise, only the most conclusionary contentions were stated as to the basis for the debtor’s responsibility for the loss. Therefore, the court set an adjourned hearing specially for the purpose of granting the defendant an opportunity to demonstrate the liability of the debtor for the $13,500 loss.

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Bluebook (online)
10 B.R. 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-citicorp-person-to-person-financial-center-inc-in-re-mowb-1981.