Webster v. Harris Corp. (In Re NETtel Corp.)

319 B.R. 290, 2004 Bankr. LEXIS 2177, 2004 WL 3130543
CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedDecember 9, 2004
DocketBankruptcy No. 00-01771. Adversary No. 02-10128
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 319 B.R. 290 (Webster v. Harris Corp. (In Re NETtel Corp.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Webster v. Harris Corp. (In Re NETtel Corp.), 319 B.R. 290, 2004 Bankr. LEXIS 2177, 2004 WL 3130543 (D.D.C. 2004).

Opinion

SUPPLEMENTAL DECISION RE PLAINTIFF’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT 1

S. MARTIN TEEL, JR., Bankruptcy Judge.

The plaintiff, Wendell W. Webster, 2 seeks to avoid pursuant to 11 U.S.C. *293 § 547(b), the payment under a contract (“Contract”) of $127,400.00 on August 4, 2000, by one of the debtors, NETtel Corporation, Inc., to the defendant Harris Corporation (“Harris”), and seeks to recover a judgment under 11 U.S.C. § 550(a) for the amount of the avoided transfer. The court will grant Webster’s motion for summary judgment as to all but $3,184.58 of the $127,400.00 payment for the following reasons.

The parties are in agreement that the elements of § 547(b) have been established to make the transfer an avoidable preference unless it comes within an exception under § 547(c). The only issues are:

(1) whether the payment to Harris is excepted from § 547(b) by § 547(c)(4) based on new value conferred on the estate from its continued enjoyment of its rights under the Contract in the period after the preferential transfer and prior to the filing of NETtel’s petition,
(2) whether Harris has asserted a valid recoupment defense based on the value of the estate’s continued enjoyment of its rights under the Contract after the commencement of the case, and
(3) whether Harris has established its entitlement to recover on a counterclaim based on Webster’s alleged breach of his obligation to return or certify destruction of all Harris software on the Harris equipment NETtel had purchased.

I

The material facts necessary to largely dispose of this proceeding by way of summary judgment are not in genuine dispute. The background facts follow.

In March 1999, NETtel Communications, Inc., and Harris entered into the Contract 3 under which the parties agreed that Harris would sell NETtel Communications, Inc., certain equipment, license to it certain software, and provide it maintenance and consulting services. The schedules filed by the debtors reveal that NET-tel Communications, Inc. was a holding company owning all of the shares of NET-tel Corporation, Inc., and it was that latter entity that used the system in running its own telecommunications network for various customers. Webster and Harris have viewed both NETtel entities as liable for the debts arising under the Contract, and thus for ease of discussion the court will generally refer to “NETtel” without the necessity of differentiating between the two debtors.

The Contract called for installation of two separate systems — a primary system in Washington, D.C., and a back-up system in Houston, Texas — but the back-up system was never shipped to Houston. Although the parts for the back-up system were shipped to Washington, D.C., NETtel never operated the back-up system. Harris shipped and installed the primary system equipment well prior to the preferential payment.

The full Contract amount was $815,705.00, and substantial installment payments were made as various benchmarks were met. After the final benchmark had been met (via NETtel’s acceptance of the system in March 2000), Harris billed the final unpaid balance of $254,800 with payment due by May 6, 2000.

*294 On August 4, 2000, NETtel paid Harris $127,400 (the preferential transfer at issue), leaving an unpaid overdue balance in the like amount of $127,400. NETtel Corporation, Inc. and NETtel Communications, Inc., filed petitions commencing cases under chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code on the respective dates of September 28, 2000, and October 16, 2000, and the court subsequently ordered joint administration of the two cases. The cases were converted to chapter 7 on October 23, 2000, and Webster was appointed trustee.

Webster continued to operate the debtors’ business until the end of December 2000. The court granted Webster’s motion to reject the Contract with Harris by an order entered on December 26, 200, but effective as of the date of signing, December 20, 2000.

II

Harris claims that any amount of a preference should be eliminated or reduced under 11 U.S.C. § 547(c)(4) by reason of subsequent new value provided by Harris to NETtel. Webster responds that (1) Harris failed to plead § 547(c)(4) as an affirmative defense; (2) Harris extended no new credit to NETtel subsequent to the preferential transfer, such that § 547(c) is inapplicable; and (3) Harris has not established the amount of any new value conferred upon the estate.

A.

Although § 547(c)(4) was not specifically pled, Harris did assert setoff and recoupment as a defense, and made clear in discovery it believed it was entitled to a credit for services rendered after the preferential payment.

Accordingly, Harris would be allowed to amend its answer to plead § 547(c)(4) as an affirmative defense, and the court will address the remaining issues as though Harris had properly pled § 547(c)(4) as a defense.

B.

Webster’s first response regarding the merits of the § 547(c)(4) defense is that the defense is inapplicable because Harris provided no new credit to NETtel beyond that provided by the original Contract. Stated differently, he urges that there was no value “aside from that covered by NETtel’s original debt on the Contract, all of which came due prior (and not subsequent) to the preferential transfer at issue.” Harris admits that it provided nothing to NETtel beyond what had been originally contracted for between the parties. Furthermore, Harris has not cited any legal authority addressing this issue.

However, it makes no sense as a matter of bankruptcy policy that payment of a debt-come-due for future services gives rise to an avoidable preference even when the future services are performed. 4 Con *295 trary to Webster’s implicit assumption, new value is not limited to extensions of new credit. “New value” is defined in relevant part in § 547(a)(2) as:

money or money’s worth in goods, services, or new credit, ... but does not include an obligation substituted for an existing obligation.

[Emphasis added.] As stated in Collier on Bankruptcy, ¶ 547.04[4][c] at p. 547-68.4 (15th ed. as revised March 2003):

New value involving the provision of services is deemed given on the date the personal services are rendered. [Citing Excel Enters., Inc. v. Sikes, Gardes & Co. (In re Excel Enters., Inc.), 83 B.R. 427, 431 (Bankr.W.D.La.1988).]

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319 B.R. 290, 2004 Bankr. LEXIS 2177, 2004 WL 3130543, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webster-v-harris-corp-in-re-nettel-corp-dcd-2004.