KARLIN, Bankruptcy Judge.
This case poses the question, "how ordinary is ordinary?" The ordinary course of business defense, set out in 11 U.S.C. § 547(c)(2)(A), protects the creditor of a debtor who has filed bankruptcy from an action by a trustee to recover, as a preference, payments made by the debtor prior to bankruptcy as long as the creditor can meet two requirements. First, the creditor must show that the alleged preferential payment was made "in payment of a debt incurred by the debtor in the ordinary course of business" of the debtor and the creditor. The creditor must then also show that the payment itself was "made in the ordinary course of business" of the debtor and the creditor.
This appeal is from a bankruptcy court order applying the ordinary course of business defense to a payment made by Debtor C.W. Mining Company ("C.W. Mining") to Creditor SMC Electrical Products, Inc. ("SMC") within 90 days of C.W. Mining being placed in involuntary bankruptcy. The Chapter 7 Trustee challenged the payment as a preferential transfer, but after full discovery, the bankruptcy court granted SMC's motion for summary judgment based on unchallenged material facts that it held demonstrated SMC was entitled to the ordinary course of business defense.
The Trustee/Appellant argues that the bankruptcy court erred in both its conclusions that: (1) the debt between SMC and C.W. Mining was incurred in the ordinary course of business of SMC and C.W. Mining, and (2) the debt payment that the Trustee seeks to avoid was a payment made in the ordinary course of these two businesses. We conclude both that C.W. Mining incurred the debt from SMC in an effort to increase the production of its coal mining operations, which was C.W. Mining's primary business, and that the transaction was a typical arms-length creation of debt on the open market. The bankruptcy court did not err when it found that the debt was incurred in the ordinary course of business. In addition, the evidence supports the bankruptcy court's finding that the challenged debt payment was made in the ordinary course of both businesses. Applying the clearly erroneous standard of review, the bankruptcy court had adequate factual support in the record to conclude that SMC carried its burden of proof to show that the debt payment was incurred and made in the ordinary course of both businesses. As a result, we AFFIRM.
The following facts were established by an affidavit filed by SMC, which the Trustee essentially elected not to challenge. In mid-2007, C.W. Mining sought to purchase a longwall electrical system from SMC.
In June 2007, SMC and C.W. Mining agreed that SMC would provide C.W. Mining the equipment, service, and training for a longwall electrical system. The provision of longwall electrical controls, and the service and training on longwall electrical systems, are within the normal scope of products and services that SMC provides. In July 2007, SMC provided C.W. Mining with a quotation (Quotation 70312.3) that reflected the June 2007 agreement. Prior to the 2007 purchase, C.W. Mining had no relationship of any kind with SMC.
Quotation 70312.3 did not specify due dates for payments by C.W. Mining, but it did provide that additional charges could be applied to any amount not paid within thirty days of the invoice date. In addition, Quotation 70312.3 required progress payments as follows: 15% due within 7 days, 25% due upon issuance of submittals, 25% due upon release of manufacturing, 25% due upon completion of testing, and 10% due upon completion of commissioning. The payment terms between SMC and C.W. Mining were typical of the progress payment terms SMC had with its other customers. This "pay as you go" or "progress payment" schedule was typical for longwall system purchases at the time.
On September 18, 2007, SMC issued to C.W. Mining an invoice for $805,539.75, representing the cost of the majority of the equipment and services it had provided or was to provide. That invoice, as well as other invoices SMC issued to C.W. Mining, indicated the terms of payment as "special," to reflect the fact that C.W. Mining was to make progress payments as it received invoices from SMC. Although the Trustee argues the term "special" is itself reflective that this transaction was not "ordinary," he introduced no expert or other testimony in opposition to demonstrate that this term meant anything other than what SMC claimed.
For its customers, like C.W. Mining, who were making progress payments, SMC prepared and maintained two different sets of invoices, one internal and one external. The internal invoices were used for internal accounting purposes only, and were not typically issued to a customer. On October 16, 2007, C.W. Mining made payment by wire transfer, in the amount of $200,000, on the September 18, 2007 external invoice. SMC credited this payment to its internal invoice.
The October 2007 payment was one of five wire transfer payments made between September 27, 2007 and October 23, 2007, and applied to the September 18, 2007 invoice. The five payments came from three different sources: C.W. Mining's own account, the account of C.W. Mining's accounts payable service provider, and the account of Standard Industries, another company doing business with C.W. Mining, using proceeds from the coal mined by C.W. Mining. It was not unusual for SMC's customers to make multiple payments on a single invoice, particularly when an invoice exceeded $250,000. It was also not unusual for SMC to receive payment from entities affiliated with or directed by its customers. Other than the terms of the purchase contract between SMC and C.W. Mining, SMC was not aware of how or why C.W. Mining decided to make multiple payments on the September 18, 2007 invoice. Further, SMC had no knowledge of how or why C.W. Mining decided to have payments made to SMC from multiple entities.
The payment C.W. Mining made in October 2007 was made twenty-eight days after SMC issued the September 18, 2007 invoice. In SMC's experience, payment within this time frame was typical for its
The bankruptcy court specifically found that neither early payment nor partial payment was inconsistent with the agreement SMC and C.W. Mining had made. The bankruptcy court also found that the October 2007 payment was made in accordance with the longwall system purchase agreement between SMC and C.W. Mining. Finally, the bankruptcy court found that SMC did not engage in any coercive collection activity with regard to the October 2007 payment.
On January 8, 2008, several months after C.W. Mining had purchased the longwall electrical system from SMC and just under 90 days since it made the October 2007 payment, C.W. Mining was involuntarily placed into bankruptcy. The involuntary bankruptcy was precipitated by a judgment obtained by Aquila, Inc. against C.W. Mining on October 30, 2007.
The parties have never disputed that the transfer was a preference, instead only disputing whether the § 547(c)(2) ordinary course of business defense applied.
This Court has jurisdiction to hear timely filed appeals from "final judgments, orders, and decrees" of bankruptcy courts within the Tenth Circuit, unless one of the parties elects to have the district court hear the appeal.
This Court reviews the bankruptcy court's legal conclusions de novo and its findings of fact under the "clearly erroneous" standard of review.
SMC, as the transferee of the payment from C.W. Mining, bears the burden of proving the ordinary course of business defense.
The sole issue on appeal is the application of the ordinary course of business defense of 11 U.S.C. § 547(c)(2). That subsection states:
The purpose of the preference statute is to both "prevent[ ] creditors from exerting undue pressure on struggling debtors" and to "discourage `unusual action' that might `favor certain creditors or hasten bankruptcy by alarming other creditors and motivating them to force the debtor into bankruptcy to avoid being left out.'"
Although "ordinary course of business" is not defined in the Bankruptcy Code, the statute clearly has two prongs: whether the debt was incurred in the ordinary course of business of the debtor and creditor, and whether the debt payment was made in the ordinary course of business of the debtor and creditor. The first prong is focused on the original transaction between C.W. Mining and SMC when the debt was created. Regarding the "incurred" part of the § 547(c)(2) question, a leading bankruptcy treatise states:
This Court must decide, therefore, whether the bankruptcy court was correct to conclude that the debt for the longwall electrical system was incurred by C.W. Mining in the ordinary course of both the business of C.W. Mining and of SMC.
The Trustee argues that because the debt arose from C.W. Mining's purchase from SMC of a longwall electrical system of mining — a type of mining different from the type of mining C.W. Mining had previously used — the debt could not have been incurred in the ordinary course of business. In other words, the Trustee argues that the debt could not have been incurred in the ordinary course of C.W. Mining's coal mining business because the debt was for a longwall coal mining system, not to support a continuous coal mining system. The Trustee also argues that the longwall electrical system purchase was itself extraordinary, because C.W. Mining sought to build the longwall system from refurbished parts — a task for which it had no prior experience.
Decisions from the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals have not discussed the "incurred" prong of the ordinary course of business defense. However, in an oft-cited bankruptcy court opinion addressing this prong, Huffman v. New Jersey Steel Corp. (In re Valley Steel Corp.),
The decisions of those circuits addressing the "incurred" prong of the ordinary course of business defense have used similar reasoning to that expressed in Valley Steel Corp. The Sixth Circuit concluded that the "incurring of long-term consumer debt that is a `normal financial relation' and that is not `unusual action'" met the requirement that debt be incurred in the ordinary course of business.
The Trustee does not dispute either that C.W. Mining was a mining company or that SMC is a mining equipment vendor. The Trustee also does not dispute that C.W. Mining incurred the debt from SMC in an effort to increase its coal mining production, i.e., its primary business purpose. Although we acknowledge that the ordinary course of business defense "should be narrowly construed,"
The second prong of the ordinary course of business defense — whether a debt payment is made in the ordinary course of business — requires that the creditor asserting that the payment was made in the ordinary course of business "establish that the disputed payment was `ordinary'... as between the parties."
Here, the Trustee asserts the payment was not ordinary because the five payments made from C.W. Mining to SMC came from different C.W. Mining-related accounts. The Trustee also asserts error because the amounts that were paid from C.W. Mining to SMC did not precisely correspond to an invoice amount or a progress payment. The Trustee claims these facts show that the amounts and sources of tender differed from past practice, and that as a result, C.W. Mining engaged in unusual payment activity. Finally, the Trustee claims the bankruptcy court erred in not considering that shortly after C.W. Mining made the October, 2007 payment to SMC, Aquila received a substantial money judgment against C.W. Mining.
We must again note that the Trustee did not challenge the affidavit SMC used to support the facts upon which it based its claim for summary judgment. That affidavit established that the payment terms between SMC and C.W. Mining were typical of SMC's progress payment terms with other customers, and that the "pay as you go" schedule was typical for long-wall electrical system purchases. The invoice from SMC to C.W. Mining was large, and SMC established that it was not at all unusual for its customers to make multiple payments on a single invoice, particularly with invoices over $250,000. Further, SMC's affidavit established that the payments by C.W. Mining from multiple accounts were not unique; SMC specifically stated that it was not unusual to receive payment from entities affiliated with or directed by its customers. SMC's affidavit also established that the October 2007 payment was made 28 days after receiving the invoice upon which it was based, and that in SMC's experience, payment within this time frame was typical for its customers.
It is also important that SMC established it did nothing to solicit the October 2007 payment from C.W. Mining. The bankruptcy court specifically found that other than negotiate the original contract terms reflected in Quotation 70312.3, SMC did not provide any instructions to C.W. Mining or its representatives or affiliates regarding the form, manner, or time of payments, nor did SMC make demands of any kind upon C.W. Mining related to payment. The bankruptcy court specifically found that SMC did not engage in
We have previously noted that although a payment for "significantly less than the total due" was an indication that a transaction was not subjectively ordinary, the facts that "[t]here was no collection activity with respect to the disputed payment, no pressure put on Debtor to pay, nor any other apparent change in the parties' dealings with respect to [the] payment" indicated a transaction was subjectively ordinary.
The evidence clearly supports the bankruptcy court's finding that the October 2007 payment was made in the ordinary course of business of C.W. Mining and of SMC. There is nothing about the terms of that payment, or the parties' interactions surrounding the payment, that make the October 2007 payment unusual or extraordinary. Further, there was no implicit or explicit pressure put on C.W. Mining by SMC. Applying the clearly erroneous standard of review, the factual record supports the bankruptcy court's conclusion that SMC carried its burden of proof to show that the October 16, 2007 payment was incurred and made in the ordinary course of business of C.W. Mining and SMC.
Because we conclude that the bankruptcy court properly applied the ordinary course of business defense of 11 U.S.C. § 547(c)(2)(A) to the facts of this case, we affirm the bankruptcy court's order entering judgment for SMC.