ROBERT H. JACOBVITZ, Bankruptcy Judge.
THIS MATTER is before the Court on the Motion to Allow Priority Administrative Expense filed by Bane Machinery, Inc. ("Bane Machinery"), by and through its attorney of record, Puccini Law, PA (Louis Puccini). See Docket No. 135 (the "Motion"). Debtor Pettingill Enterprises, Inc. ("PEI") opposes the Motion. See Objection to Motion to Allow Bane Machinery Priority Administrative Expense, Docket No. 178; Supplemental Objection to Motion to Allow Bane Machinery Priority Administrative Expense, Docket No, 218 (together the "Objection"). The Court held a final evidentiary hearing on the Motion on November 7, 2012 and took the matter under advisement.
Bane Machinery asks the Court to allow, as a priority administrative expense and a superpriority administrative expense, charges in the amount of $233,687.54 for PEI's post-petition use of Bane Machinery's construction equipment, damage to the equipment, and hauling costs. After
PEI is a family-owned corporation organized under the laws of the State of New Mexico. PEI engages in various excavation and construction activities. In November and December of 2010, PEI entered into three lease agreements with Bane Machinery for the rental of construction equipment (together the "Rental Contracts" and individually a "Rental Contract"). The same form was used for the first page of each Rental Contract. A separate Rental Contract was executed for the lease by Bane Machinery to PEI of each of the following pieces of equipment: (1) a Kobelco Excavator SK480LCVI (the "Kobelco 480") at a rental rate of $6,918.19 per month (2) a Kobelco Excavator SK485LCVIII (the "Kobelco 485") at a rental rate of $6,918.19 per month; and (3) a Kawasaki Wheel Loader (the "Kawasaki") at a rental rate of $5,870.82 per month. Under each Rental Contract, rent is payable in advance.
The Rental Contracts require PEI to maintain the equipment in the same condition as received except for normal wear. See Bane Machinery's Exhibits B, D, and F. PEI inspected the equipment at the beginning of the lease terms and did not object to the condition of the rental equipment at that time. The Kawasaki Rental Contract includes a page on the reverse side titled "General Conditions of Rental" (the "Terms and Conditions"). See Bane Machinery's Exhibit B. The Terms and Conditions contain detailed provisions about the maintenance, repair, and removal of the rental equipment. Pursuant to the Terms and Conditions, PEI is required to: (1) return all equipment to Bane Machinery's warehouse and/or pay all expenses incidental to the removal of the equipment; (2) pay Bane Machinery a pro rata portion of the applicable rental rate for any use of the equipment above 160 hours in a four-week period ("Excess Hours Charges"); and (3) pay for repairs or replacements of all parts damaged by misuse, improper maintenance, or for all other extraordinary damage done. See Bane Machinery's Exhibit B. The first page of the Rental Contracts for the Kobelco 480 and the Kobelco 485 in evidence refer to general conditions which appear on the reverse side of each form. The reverse sides of those Rental Contracts are not in evidence. The same form was used for the front side of each Rental Contract, which includes the language "lessee agrees to general conditions on reverse side." Two of the Rental Contracts were executed on the same date. The third Rental Contract was executed about a
On February 14, 2012, PEI filed a voluntary petition under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code (the "Petition Date"), thereby commencing this Chapter 11 case (the "Chapter 11 Case"). In early March, 2012, Bane Machinery sent a representative to inspect the three pieces of rental equipment. The representative did not testify at the final hearing. Nor was the report of the results of the inspection proffered in evidence. Scott Bane, the President of Bane Machinery, testified that the representative orally reported to him that the equipment had been damaged. The extent of that damage is unclear from the record. Mr. Bane assumed that if the equipment had sustained substantial damage the representative would have reported it to him after visiting PEI's worksite.
Prior to the Petition Date, PEI had been experiencing trouble with the internal pins that held the track of the Kobelco 480 together. Although PEI regularly replaced the pins, they continued to break. On March 7, 2012, a track on the Kobelco 480 stopped working. The Kobelco 480 was functional but could not be moved; it therefore provided no benefit to PEI for two months. PEI initially contacted Bane Machinery to request a new track. Bane Machinery agreed to repair the track for $25,000, but PEI declined. It took approximately two months for PEI to solicit price quotes from different businesses and repair the track. David Pettingill, the co-owner of PEI, contacted various suppliers in Texas and New Mexico regarding the repair. The delay in obtaining an acceptable bid resulted from PEI seeking a price to repair the track that was lower than the price quoted by Bane Machinery. Mr. Bane testified that Bane Machinery could have repaired the track within one week. As a result of the broken track, the Kobelco 480 was out of service between March 7, 2012 and May 7, 2012.
On May 25, 2012, Bane Machinery filed a motion to compel PEI to either assume or reject the Rental Contracts, as well as a motion to compel PEI to abandon Bane Machinery's equipment. The Honorable James Starzynski entered an Order Providing Interim Adequate Protection to Bane Machinery on July 3, 2012 (the "Adequate Protection Order").
After repossessing the equipment, Bane Machinery hauled the equipment to its headquarters in Dallas, Texas at its own expense. Bane Machinery employed a moving company to haul the Kobelco 480 and the Kobelco 485 from Oklahoma to Dallas. Bane Machinery was not able to haul those pieces of equipment either because it did not have the proper permits to haul heavy equipment in Oklahoma or because it did not have equipment suitable to
When Bane Machinery repossessed the equipment, it was substantially damaged. All of the machines were dented and scratched. Both buckets on the Kobelco excavators were missing teeth, and the bucket on the Kobelco 485 was cracked. At some point PEI used a bungee cord to fasten a broken exterior panel to the engine of the Kobelco 485. Bane Machinery repairs equipment for customers in the ordinary course of business. Bane Machinery performed various repairs in order to restore the rental equipment to its previous condition. Including labor charges and excluding tax, the repair charges were: (1) $57,189.20 for the Kobelco 485; (2) $40,879.21 for the Kobelco 480; and (3) $10,059.92 for the Kawasaki. These charges were calculated as if Bane Machinery had repaired the equipment for a retail customer. PEI also incurred $3,169.93 in post-petition Excess Hours Charges in connection with the Kobelco 485 and $3,990.83 in post-petition Excess Hours Charges in connection with the Kawasaki. Bane Machinery calculated the Excess Hours Charges by multiplying the hourly rental rate by the number of hours PEI used the rental equipment over 160 hours. Bane Machinery multiplied that figure by the number of four week periods that PEI rented the equipment.
Section 503 of the Bankruptcy Code establishes criteria for the allowance of administrative claims. Pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 503(b)(1)(A), "the actual, necessary costs and expenses of preserving the estate" shall be allowed as administrative expenses. Administrative expenses allowed under Section 503(b) are entitled to priority under 11 U.S.C. § 507(a)(2).
Generally, the party claiming entitlement to a priority administrative expense under Section 503(b) has the burden of proving the following:
Peters v. Pikes Peak Musicians Ass'n, 462 F.3d 1265, 1268 (10th Cir.2006); In re Mid Region Petroleum, Inc., 1 F.3d 1130, 1132 (10th Cir.1993) (noting that the party claiming entitlement to a priority administrative expense has the burden of proof). Administrative priorities should be narrowly construed "because the presumption in bankruptcy cases is that the debtor's limited resources will be equally distributed among [the] creditors." In re Amarex, 853 F.2d 1526, 1530 (10th Cir.1988).
Bane Machinery asks the Court to allow all post-petition rental charges as a priority administrative expense. Pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 365(d)(2), an unexpired lease of non-consumer personal property may generally be assumed or rejected in a Chapter 11 case at any time before confirmation of a plan of reorganization. Unless and until the personal property lease is assumed or rejected, a debtor-in-possession in a Chapter 11 case is required to perform all obligations owing under the lease, including the obligation to pay rent, first arising on or after 60 days after the order for relief, unless the Court orders otherwise. 11 U.S.C. § 365(d)(5). Section 365(d)(5) provides, in relevant part:
11 U.S.C. § 365(d)(5).
The provisions in Section 365(d)(5) were added to the Bankruptcy Code in 1994 to make it easier for lessors of personal property to recover post-petition lease payments before the debtor in possession assumes or rejects the lease.
A majority of courts, including the Tenth Circuit Bankruptcy Appellate Panel, have held that Sections 365(d)(3) and (d)(5) give rise to an automatic administrative expense claim for certain rental obligations accruing under a post-petition lease regardless of whether the rental property provided a benefit to the estate under Section 503(b). See In re Furr's Supermarkets, Inc., 283 B.R. 60, 65 (10th Cir. BAP 2002) ("[L]essors, as opposed to typical administrative expense claimants under § 503(b)(1), are not required to establish value or prove a benefit to the estate to establish the amount of their claim, but rather are entitled to current payment of the amounts required under their leases.").
PEI commenced its Chapter 11 case on February 14, 2012 and rejected the Rental Contracts on July 12, 2012. The 60th day after the Petition Date was April 14, 2012. PEI contends that it is entitled to offset a portion of the rental charges because the Kobelco 480 was out of service between March 7, 2012 and May 7, 2012. Under Section 365(d)(5), however, Bane Machinery is not required to prove that the leased equipment actually benefitted the estate to recover rental charges accruing on or after the 60th day following the Petition Date. See supra, note 7. The fact that the Kobelco 480 was out of service on or after April 14, 2012 therefore has no bearing on Bane Machinery's administrative expense claim. Bane Machinery is automatically entitled to recover, as an administrative expense, all rental charges accruing from April 14, 2012 through July 12, 2012 ($58,210.51).
In order to recover rental payments that accrue during the first 59 days after the petition date under a pre-petition lease of non-consumer personal property in Chapter 11 cases, the lessor must show that the debtor in possession gained some benefit from the property under Section 503(b). See In re Furley's Transport, Inc., 263 B.R. 733, 741 (Bankr.D.Md.2001) (holding that lessor may recover rental payments under Section 503(b) during the first 59 days after of a case).
PEI used the Kobelco 485 and the Kawasaki continuously during the first 59 days after the Petition Date. PEI used the machines to excavate rock, which it later sold. The Court is satisfied that the actual use of those machines provided a tangible benefit to the estate under Section 503(b). Furthermore, PEI did not provide evidence that the rate in any of the Rental Contracts exceeded the reasonable rental value to the estate for its use of the equipment. Bane Machinery is therefore entitled to recover all of the rental charges in connection with the Kobelco 485 and the Kawasaki that accrued during the first 59
Although PEI initially used the Kobelco 480 after the Petition Date, the track broke on March 7, 2012. The Kobelco 480 was out of service between March 7, 2012 and May 7, 2012. "Because a benefit to the estate results only from use of the leased property," In re Mid Region Petroleum, Inc., 1 F.3d at 1133, Bane Machinery is not entitled to recover rental payments, as an administrative expense, accruing between March 7, 2012 and April 13, 2012 (the 59th day after the Petition Date). However, for the reasons described above, Bane Machinery may recover rental charges in connection with the Kobelco 480 that accrued between February 14, 2012 and March 6, 2012 ($5,203.62).
PEI also seeks to offset Bane Machinery's administrative expense claim with the amount of consequential damages it suffered as a result of lost profits during the two-month period it could not use the Kobelco 480. PEI argues that it lost approximately $100,000 in revenue as a result of the Kobelco 480 being out of service. A party claiming entitlement to consequential damages under a contract must prove that: (1) a breach occurred; (2) it suffered losses beyond the breaching party's failure to perform under the contract; and (3) the losses were reasonably foreseeable upon entering into the contract. See generally Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 347 (1981).
Because PEI has not demonstrated that Bane Machinery breached the lease, it is not entitled to recover consequential damages. The Rental Contracts require PEI, not Bane Machinery, to maintain the equipment. They also provide that "the equipment is deemed used and is leased on an `as is, where is' basis." See Bane Machinery's Exhibit B. It is possible that Bane Machinery breached the Rental Contracts by leasing defective equipment or that the repair to the Kobelco 480 track was an extraordinary repair not necessitated by misuse or lack of maintenance to be made by Bane Machinery under the Rental Contract. However, PEI did not establish such a breach or extraordinary repair. Mr. Pettingill testified that PEI had been experiencing problems with a track on the Kobelco 480 for some time. It is unclear from the record whether, and to what extent, the damage to the track occurred as result of PEI's failure to maintain the equipment. PEI is therefore not entitled to offset Bane Machinery's administrative expense claim with consequential damages stemming from Bane Machinery's alleged breach of the Rental Contracts.
Next, Bane Machinery contends that it is entitled to recover, as an administrative expense, post-petition Excess Hours Charges in connection with PEI's use of the Kobelco 485 and the Kawasaki.
The Court therefore concludes that Bane Machinery is entitled to recover the full amount of Excess Hours Charges ($7,160.76) as an administrative expense.
Bane Machinery also seeks allowance of the cost of repairing the equipment as an administrative expense. Bane Machinery charged: (1) $57,189.20 to repair the Kobelco 485; (2) $40,879.21 to repair the Kobelco 480; and (3) $10,059.92 to repair the Kawasaki.
The Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals has not addressed the issue of whether repair costs associated with a debtor's post-petition use of leased equipment constitute administrative expenses. However, a number of courts have held that such costs are entitled to administrative priority under Section 503(b). In In re United Trucking, Service, Inc., 851 F.2d 159, 160-162 (6th Cir.1988), for example, the debtor entered into a pre-petition equipment lease which provided that the debtor would maintain the trailers in good condition and make all necessary repairs at its own expense. After commencing the bankruptcy case and rejecting the lease, the debtor returned the equipment to the lessor in poor condition. Id. at 160. The lessor asserted that it was entitled to an administrative claim for, among other things, the cost of repairing the damaged equipment. Id. The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals held that post-petition damage claims may be treated as administrative expenses. Id. at 162. The court reasoned that by failing to repair the equipment in accordance with the lease terms, the debtor was able "to use the money saved and not paid for [the creditor's] benefit ... to continue its operations." Id.
The Court agrees that repair costs stemming from PEI's post-petition damage to the equipment, if any, should be treated as
In order to collect such repair charges, however, Bane Machinery must prove that the repair costs arose from post-petition damage to the leased property.
Bane Machinery has failed to demonstrate that any particular damage to the equipment occurred after the Petition Date. Although Bane Machinery sent a representative to inspect the equipment shortly after the Petition Date, the representative did not testify at the final hearing; nor was any inspection report proffered in evidence. Mr. Bane assumed that the representative would inform him if any substantial damage had occurred. However, there is no evidence about any affirmative oral report by the representative about the condition of the equipment or about specific damage the representative observed at the inspection.
The Court therefore concludes that Bane Machinery is not entitled to an administrative expense claim for the costs it incurred in repairing the leased equipment.
Finally, Bane Machinery asks the Court to allow the hauling charges it incurred in removing the equipment from PEI's worksite as an administrative expense. Pursuant to Section 365(d)(5), PEI is obligated to "perform all of the obligations... first arising from or after 60 days after the order for relief in a case under chapter 11 of this title under an unexpired lease of personal property ... until such lease is assumed or rejected." 11 U.S.C. § 365(d)(5) (emphasis added). It is undisputed that Bane Machinery incurred the hauling charges more than 60 days after the Petition Date; Bane Machinery
Several courts have concluded that lessors are not entitled to recover charges associated with hauling and repossessing equipment as an administrative expense. See, e.g., Jartran, Inc., 886 F.2d 859, 871 (7th Cir.1989) (affirming bankruptcy court's denial of administrative claim for hauling costs because lessor "acted in its own interest in repossessing its own equipment" rather than in the interest of the estate); In re Robinson, 225 B.R. 228, 232 (Bankr.N.D.Okla.1998) (noting that costs associated with repossessing a vehicle were not administrative expenses because such expenses provided no benefit to the estate under Section 503(b)). The Court agrees that, under Section 503(b), it's not entirely clear whether the hauling costs provided any actual benefit to the bankruptcy estate. However, because PEI is obligated to pay such costs under the terms of the Rental Contracts and because they accrued more than 60 days after the Petition Date and prior to the rejection of the Rental Contracts, Bane Machinery is automatically entitled to recover the hauling charges under Section 365(d)(5).
The Court therefore concludes that Bane Machinery is entitled to recover the full amount of the hauling charges ($14,441.18) as an administrative expense claim under Section 365(d)(5).
Based on the foregoing, the Court will grant, in part, and deny, in part, Bane Machinery's Motion. Bane Machinery is entitled to an administrative expense in the amount of $110,402.98, of which $6,992.92 is entitled to super-priority administrative status, for: (1) post-petition rent; (2) charges in connection with excess hours of use of the equipment; and (3) hauling charges
The Court will enter an order consistent with this Memorandum Opinion.
The Rental Contracts also require PEI to deliver the equipment to Bane Machinery's warehouse upon the expiration of the leases.