Wayne Glenn Holland and Misty Jo Holland

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Idaho
DecidedJuly 3, 2019
Docket18-40986
StatusUnknown

This text of Wayne Glenn Holland and Misty Jo Holland (Wayne Glenn Holland and Misty Jo Holland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Idaho primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wayne Glenn Holland and Misty Jo Holland, (Idaho 2019).

Opinion

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT DISTRICT OF IDAHO

In Re:

Wayne Glenn Holland and Misty Jo Bankruptcy Case Holland, No. 18-40986-JMM

Debtors.

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION

Appearances: Robert J. Maynes, MAYNES TAGGART, PLLC, Idaho Falls, Idaho, Attorney for Debtor.

Gregory L. Crockett, HOPKINS RODEN CROCKETT HANSEN & HOOPES, PLLC, Idaho Falls, Idaho, Attorney for creditor Bank of Idaho.

Gary L. Rainsdon, Twin Falls, Idaho, Chapter 7 Trustee.

William M. Humphries, Assistant United States Attorney, Boise, Idaho, Attorney for creditor Farm Service Agency.

Introduction and Procedural History On October 27, 2018, debtors Wayne Glenn Holland and Misty Jo Holland (“Debtors”) filed a chapter 121 petition. Dkt. No. 1. On March 22, 2019, they filed an

1 Unless otherwise indicated, all chapter and section references are to the Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. §§ 101-1532, and all rule references are to the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure, Rules 1001-9037. MEMORANDUM OF DECISION ̶ 1 amended chapter 12 plan, Ex. 100 (the “Plan”). A supplement to the Plan was filed on April 3, 2019. Dkt. No. 94. Objections to the Plan as proposed were filed, Dkt. Nos. 97,

107, and 116, and stipulations were subsequently entered which modified the Plan, resolving the objections of creditors Diversified and Farm Service Agency, Dkt. Nos. 126, 129. Only the objections of creditor Bank of Idaho (“BOI”) remain. The Plan then came before the Court on confirmation. The Court conducted an evidentiary hearing regarding confirmation on April 23, 2019. Dkt. No. 133. Post-hearing briefing was submitted, Dkt. Nos. 138, 141, and the

matter was thereafter deemed under advisement. After considering the briefing, exhibits, and testimony presented, as well as the applicable law, the Court hereby resolves the issues surrounding confirmation. Fed. R. Bankr. P. 7052; 9014. Facts

In 2012, Debtors purchased a ranch located near Malta, Idaho. It consists of 1,600 deeded acres and 2,800 acres leased from the State of Idaho (“Malta Ranch”). There are numerous springs on the property, and part of the acreage is irrigated such that Debtors can raise cattle during the winter and can grow hay. The Malta Ranch also includes a 990-head certified feedlot. Debtors purchased the Malta Ranch for $1,190,000, financed

by BOI. Dkt. No. 23, Schedule D; Claim Reg. 2-1, Part 9. Debtors and representatives of BOI testified that the collateral for the loan was the Malta Ranch, cross-collateralized

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION ̶ 2 with livestock, hay, fixtures, irrigation equipment, accounts receivable, inventory, government payments and programs, and equipment (“Personal Property Collateral”).

Later, in 2017, Debtors obtained a Farm Service Agency (“FSA”) loan in the amount of $300,000 (“FSA Loan”). Ex. 111. To secure the FSA Loan, they executed a promissory note in favor of FSA which required annual payments in the amount of $24,904; the full amount was due seven years from the date of the note. Ex. 116. The FSA Loan was secured by the Malta Ranch along with certain water rights and irrigation equipment. Id. FSA also executed a loan guarantee in favor of BOI. Id. at ¶ 2. By this

instrument, FSA guaranteed up to ninety percent of the debt on the Malta Ranch. Id. This guarantee was later sold to Farmer Mac. In 2015 Debtors purchased a second ranch, near Montpelier, Idaho, for $1,700,000 (“Montpelier Ranch”). Debtors borrowed an additional $150,000 to make improvements, and thus the principal loan amount was $1,850,000. The Montpelier Ranch consists of

2,610 deeded acres, plus 1,280 acres leased from the State of Idaho and 800 acres leased from the Bureau of Land Management. Exs. 112, 113. The leases are 20-year leases, and that leased property is “checkerboarded” in with the deeded acres, meaning there are private pieces surrounded by leased ground. As such, it is understood that the leased parcels and the deeded land need to stay together with the same owner/lessee. Upon

purchasing the Montpelier Ranch, Debtors renovated the home, which was uninhabitable at purchase, and fixed the fencing, added corrals, troughs, an irrigation pivot, and 7,500 feet of irrigation water mainline. MEMORANDUM OF DECISION ̶ 3 Debtors testified the Montpelier Ranch has several hundred acres of flood- irrigated meadow, seventy-seven acres of land irrigated by the pivot they installed, and

several hundred additional acres that are irrigated using ditches. The water gravity feeds from a reservoir above the ranch into the pivot when the water is high; otherwise they pump water to the pivot. The remainder of the ditches and flood irrigation is exclusively gravity fed. Debtors own eighty-five percent of the water from the reservoir, and all parties agree that there is more than enough water available to sustain the ranching activities, which include growing hay, barley, and alfalfa on some of the land. Debtors

testified they could grow crops on more of the acreage, but because they raise beef cattle, they prefer to use much of the ground for pastureland. The Montpelier Ranch principal loan amount was $1,850,000. The purchase was 100% financed, and therefore BOI collaterized the loan with both the Malta and Montpelier Ranches, along with the Personal Property Collateral, in order to use the

equity in the Malta Ranch to get the loan to value. David Moe, a senior credit officer at BOI, testified that BOI typically will only finance sixty-five percent of an agricultural loan with regard to the value of the property, and thus it needed to include the Malta Ranch in the collateral. Debtors obtained a line of credit from BOI to purchase the Montpelier Ranch.

Their plan was to ultimately roll the line of credit into their existing long-term real estate loan which they had used to purchase the Malta Ranch. But the cattle market declined somewhat during this time, and BOI decided not to merge the line of credit into the MEMORANDUM OF DECISION ̶ 4 existing real estate loans. Thus, the line of credit needed to be paid down by a date certain, and Debtors understood they would not be able to come up with the necessary

funds. BOI gave them an extension, but all parties agreed that Debtors needed to sell one of the ranches. Debtors put both the Malta and Montpelier Ranches on the market, initially with their own realtor, and later with one suggested by BOI. The Montpelier Ranch was listed for sale from January 2017 to January 31, 2018. In the Fall of 2017 their realtor asked if they would accept $3,000,000, but it was unclear if there was even a buyer. Debtors

counteroffered for $3,650,000, which was the appraised value at the time, but their counteroffer was rejected. The listings have now expired. Debtors also explored short- term, high interest financing, but never heard back after submitting their application documents. Ultimately, they opted for the bankruptcy filing in an attempt to preserve their ranch.

As of April 1, 2019, BOI estimates Debtors’ indebtedness to it as $3,875,612.86, which is the sum of the principal balance of $3,667,156.45 plus accrued interest in the amount of $208,456.41, with interest continuing to accrue at the rate of $574.74 per day. Dkt. No. 138. Debtors similarly estimate BOI’s allowed secured claim as totaling $3,911,383.87. Dkt. No. 141.

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