Williams v. M. Bruenger & Co. (In re Brannan)

532 B.R. 834
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Kansas
DecidedJune 25, 2015
DocketCase No. 13-12834; Adv. No. 14-5068
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 532 B.R. 834 (Williams v. M. Bruenger & Co. (In re Brannan)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. M. Bruenger & Co. (In re Brannan), 532 B.R. 834 (Kan. 2015).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Robert E. Nugent, United States Chief Bankruptcy Judge

Is the chapter 13 Trustee barred from avoiding a secured creditor’s liens post-confirmation when she did not object to confirmation? Does it matter whether the Trustee signed an Agreed Order providing for the creditor’s claims to be treated as [836]*836secured or that she did so before the claims bar date and didn’t have an opportunity to see, far less object to, the creditor’s claim before confirmation? And if the orders bar her efforts, does § 502(j) reconsideration of the claims leave the trustee another source of relief?

Section 1327(a) binds the debtor and each creditor to a confirmed plan’s provisions whether the plan treats the claim or not and whether the creditor objects, accepts, or rejects it.1 Section 502(j) provides for the reconsideration of a claim that has been allowed or disallowed, upon a showing of cause and based upon the equities of the case.2 Even though ■ the plan was confirmed before the claims bar date, the Trustee signed an agreed order providing for the secured creditor’s treatment and recommended that the debtor’s plan be confirmed. That treatment binds her under § 1327(a) and effectively bars the Trustee’s adversary proceeding to avoid the creditor’s lien under § 544(b).3 Even § 502(j) does not save the Trustee because she did not show cause why the secured creditor’s claims should be reconsidered.

Finally, even if confirmation did not bar the complaint or if she had demonstrated cause to reconsider, her cause of action fails on the merits. Although the debtor did not execute a form security agreement that contained words of grant, reading all of the documents between the debtor and the creditor as a composite transaction makes it clear that the parties intended that the creditor would sell the debtor the trucks while retaining a purchase money security interest in them. The creditor’s liens attached to the collateral under KaN. Stat. Ann. § 84-9-203 (2014 Supp.).4

Jurisdiction

This adversary proceeding is a core proceeding over which the Court may exercise subject matter jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1334 and § 157(a) and (b)(1).5

Facts

The debtor Laura Brannan is an over-the-road trucker who was formerly employed by M. Bruenger & Co. (MBC), a Wichita trucking concern. For a long time, MBC has made a practice of locating and selling semi-tractors (trucks) to its drivers. The drivers purchase the trucks and drive loads provided by MBC. MBC deducts the drivers’ weekly installment payment from their pay or fees and purportedly retains a security interest in the trucks until the sale price is paid in full. The idea is to incentivize the drivers by giving them ownership of their unit while making them independent contractors of MBC as opposed to its employees. MBC sold two semi-tractors to Ms. Brannan utilizing this financing program.

In Ms. Brannan’s case, MBC documented its two transactions by the parties executing a series of documents, beginning with a Weekly Installment Agreement.6 That agreement described the truck being sold, the purchase price, the date of sale, and the weekly installment payment. Both Brannan and a representative of MBC signed it. MBC then made a Bill of Sale over to the buyer, again describing the truck by vehicle identification number, [837]*837make, and year, and showing the purchase price.7 MBC next' assigned to the buyer its certificate of title for the truck, its representative executing the assignment section on the title’s reverse side, assigning the truck and title to Brannan.8 In this assignment section, Brannan checked a box indicating that the truck is subject to MBC’s lien and signed a statement affirming that lien as the title form requires. As the new owner of the truck, Brannan then obtained a Title and Registration Receipt from the Kansas Division of Vehicles indicating MBC’s liens on the trucks.9 MBC followed this process for both of the trucks Brannan purchased — a 2007 Kenworth purchased in October of 2012 and a 2009 Cascadia Freightliner purchased two months later in December.

Ms. Brannan filed her chapter 13 case on November 1, 2013.10 The nongovernmental creditor bar date was set for March 4, 2014. She filed an amended chapter 13 plan in December in which she proposed to make 60 monthly payments of $l,437.00.11 Because she had purchased the trucks within a year of filing, her plan provided for treating MBC under the two truck purchase agreements as “one year loan creditors” under § 1325(a)(5)’s hanging paragraph.12 She proposed minimum monthly payments on both trucks and to pay them in full. On December 27, the trustee objected to Brannan’s plan for several reasons, but did not question whether MBC’s claims were secured claims.13 On January 2, 2014, MBC objected to confirmation, too, noting that the plan did not provide for a third truck, but specifically not objecting to the proposed treatment of the two trucks described above.14

On February 3, the parties presented an Agreed Order that resolved MBC’s confirmation objection by providing for the surrender of the unmentioned truck and setting forth an agreement about the values and payment terms concerning the two trucks Brannan sought to retain.15 The Trustee approved this Agreed Order along with counsel for debtor and MBC. The Agreed Order specifies that “Bruenger shall have a general secured claim” as to both vehicle transactions, that “it shall be allowed a general unsecured claim for any deficiency balance,” and that “Bruenger shall retain its liens with respect to its secured claims....”16 The amended plan was confirmed and a confirmation order entered on February 19.17 MBC filed its proofs of claim on March 4, 2014.18 After the Trustee reviewed the proofs of claim, she filed this adversary proceeding under § 544 to avoid and preserve what she alleges to be an unattached security interest in each of the trucks. The parties provided pre- and post-trial briefs and the Court held a trial on March 17, 2015.

[838]*838 Analysis

The Trustee claims that MBC’s purported security interests in the two trucks never attached because Laura Brannan never “authenticated” a security agreement as is required by Kan. Stat. Ann. § 84-9-203(b), Kansas’ version of revised Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code. MBC responds that while no form security ' agreement was made, a reading of all the transaction documents makes clear that the parties intended to and did create security interests that attached to the Freightliner and Kenworth to secure MBC’s claims. But MBC also claims that the Trustee’s execution of the Agreed Order resolving MBC’s objection to confirmation and the Confirmation Order itself bar the Trustee’s lien avoidance action.

Section 1327(a) Finality

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Bluebook (online)
532 B.R. 834, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-m-bruenger-co-in-re-brannan-ksb-2015.