United States v. Nielson (In Re Nielson)

97 B.R. 269, 1989 Bankr. LEXIS 327, 1989 WL 22354
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. North Carolina
DecidedMarch 2, 1989
Docket19-10017
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 97 B.R. 269 (United States v. Nielson (In Re Nielson)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Nielson (In Re Nielson), 97 B.R. 269, 1989 Bankr. LEXIS 327, 1989 WL 22354 (N.C. 1989).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

GEORGE R. HODGES, Bankruptcy Judge.

This matter is before the court on the United States’ complaint objecting to the dischargeability of debts related to several transactions: sale of the debtors’ 1987 apple crop; the 1985 transfer of a hay baler, rake and loaders; and the 1987 transfer of two tractors. Also at issue is whether certain items are property of the debtors’ estate or property of Nielson * Development Corporation. For the reasons stated below, the court finds that debts in the following amounts are non-dischargeable: $5,700 of the proceeds from the 1987 apple crop; $500 from the 1985 transfer of the hay baler, rake and loaders; and $2,000 from the 1987 transfer of the tractors. The court further finds that Nielson Development Corporation is the alter ego of the debtors. Therefore, all contested items are property of the estate.

FACTS

The Farmer’s Home Administration (hereinafter “FmHA”) is a creditor of these Chapter 12 debtors (hereinafter “the Niel-sons” or “the debtors”), with a secured claim in the principal amount of $795,-610.38, plus interest in the amount of $260,-631.44 as of September 9, 1987, plus accrued interest thereafter at the daily rate of $175.8565. The debt owing to FmHA is secured by various deeds of trust covering land in Henderson County, North Carolina, and by perfected security agreements dated April 14, 1983, May 2, 1984, and April 11, 1985, which cover all farm machinery and equipment “now owned or hereafter acquired” and crops then growing, stored, or to be grown on farms listed on the security agreements. The following items, covered by the security agreements, are in issue:

A. Proceeds from the 1987 Apple Crop.

In addition to FmHA’s security interest, the proceeds from the debtors’ 1987 apple crop were addressed in this court’s order of February 1, 1988:

The Debtors have represented that they presently hold an inventory of unsold apples valued at approximately $12,-000.00, and that they will pay the gross proceeds of the sale of those apples to the trustee, who shall hold said proceeds pending further order of the court.

A.J. Nielson, Sr., the male debtor, (hereinafter “Mr. Nielson”) testified that the Nielsons were operating an experimental juicer. When the debtors processed the apples, the resulting juice had an “off color and off taste.” Mr. Nielson testified that no grocery store would buy the juice, and that he finally sold it to Stout Sales, a “fire sale” house in Rock Hill, South Carolina. The Nielsons received a total of only $5,700 from juice sales instead of the $12,000 figure in the court order. All of the apples were converted to juice except for 10-15 boxes, which eventually were dumped after going bad.

Mr. Nielson admitted that the $5,700 was not paid to the trustee as provided for in the court order. Instead, the money was paid to secured creditors First Union National Bank and First Federal Savings and Loan to keep their notes current. Mr. Niel-son had no explanation for his failure to pay the proceeds to the trustee pursuant to the court order other than by calling it a “misunderstanding,” and stating that he was “under the impression” he could use the proceeds to bring the First Union and First Federal notes current.

*271 B.The Hay Baler, Hay Rake and Hay Loaders

On May 1, 1984, James P. Bailes, Jr., Assistant County Supervisor in FmHA’s Henderson County office, conducted an appraisal at the Nielson farm. Among the items of equipment covered by the perfected security agreements were the following items, and the value assigned them by Mr. Bailes:

IHC Hay Baler 430 $1,000
IHC Hay Rake 9 ft. 1,000
Truck-pulled hay loader 200
Electric hay loader 200

At Mr. Nielson’s deposition of June 20, 1988, Mr. Nielson testified that this hay equipment was worn out, and Mr. Nielson had determined that it would cost more to repair the equipment than the equipment was worth. Mr. Nielson sold the equipment to two of his sons for $500.00, and the sons traded the equipment in on a new rake and a new hay baler. The new rake and hay baler were titled in the sons’ names, and subsequently were repossessed for nonpayment. Mr. Nielson admitted in his deposition that he did not account to FmHA for any proceeds from the sale to his sons. Further, he admitted that he did not receive FmHA’s consent to sell the property..

Mr. Nielson testified that Mr. Bailes knew of the transfer because Mr. Bailes was present at the Nielson farm the day the new equipment arrived. John Nielson, the debtors’ son, testified that the new equipment eventually showed up on his FmHA security agreements. On a September 15, 1987 appraisal admitted into evidence, Mr. Bailes had noted beside the hay equipment on the list the following: “no value — were traded in on another baler and rake in sons’ name.”

C.The Tractors

On the September 15,1987 appraisal, Mr. Bailes appraised two tractors, both of which were listed on FmHA security agreements: an Allis-Chalmers model 160, appraised at $800; and an Allis-Chalmers 170, appraised at $1,200. (However, the appraisal sheet prepared by Mr. Bailes did not indicate whether he saw the tractors at the Nielson farm, or at another location.)

At the trial, Mr. Nielson testified that in the early summer of 1987 the tractors had been taken to a local shop for repair. Mr. Nielson testified that he instructed the shop not to begin repairs until he could be sure he had the money to pay for the repairs. As late as December 1988, Mr. Nielson testified, he thought the tractors were still at the shop.

Mr. Nielson also testified that in October or November 1987, his son, Fred Nielson, traded the tractors in on a Deutz-Allis tractor in Fred Nielson’s name. Mr. Niel-son testified that he did not discover the tractor transfer until December 1988. He testified that he and Fred Nielson were not working “that closely together.” Mr. Niel-son testified that he had been in poor health during 1987 and that he had been in the hospital from approximately June 1, 1987, until just before his bankruptcy case was filed (September 9, 1987). After his release from the hospital, Mr. Nielson testified he spent most of his time in the juicing plant.

The Nielsons’ proposed plan, filed on December 7, 1987, states that “One son, Fred, age 24, lives on the Nielson farm and is involved with its operation.” In his June 20, 1988, deposition, Mr. Nielson testified that he owned the tractors, was in possession of the tractors, and that they were “junked, so to speak.”

D.“Corporate” v. “Personal” Property

The debtors assert that certain items of personal property located at their farm are the property of Nielson Development Corporation. The items are as follows:

one Cherry-Burrell Rotary Bottle Filler
one Hyskaom Bottle Capper
one TIFCO 30-foot Conveyor
one MRM Bottle Labeler
two TIFCO Cooling Tanks

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Related

Ziegler v. Ziegler (In Re Charles W. Ziegler)
109 B.R. 172 (W.D. North Carolina, 1989)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
97 B.R. 269, 1989 Bankr. LEXIS 327, 1989 WL 22354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-nielson-in-re-nielson-ncwb-1989.