MARGARET A. MAHONEY, Bankruptcy Judge
This matter is before the Court pursuant to the motion of Heritage First Bank to prohibit the Debtor's use of cash collateral in the case of John W. McCombs Jr. The Court has jurisdiction to hear this matter pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 157 and 1334 and the Order of Reference of the District Court. This is a core proceeding pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2), and the Court has authority to enter a final order. For the following reasons, Heritage First Bank's motion is due to be DENIED.
On February 16, 2007, John W. McCombs Jr. ("Debtor") borrowed $1,233,000.00 from Heritage First Bank ("Heritage"). In conjunction with the loan, the Debtor executed a mortgage and promissory note in favor of Heritage, which, in part, granted Heritage a security interest in six rental properties located in Baldwin County, Alabama. The mortgage also contained a rider that purported to assign all rents accrued from the Baldwin County properties to Heritage. In its first paragraph, the rider states that it is "incorporated into and shall be deemed to amend and supplement the Mortgage, Deed of Trust, or Security Deed....to secure Borrower's Note to Heritage First Bank....." The assignment of rents clause, located in section H of the rider, states, in pertinent part, the following:
Jimmy Conyers Jr. ("Mr. Conyers"), Heritage's vice president and commercial loan officer, originated the Debtor's loan. He testified at trial that the mortgage and assignment of rents were recorded with the Baldwin County Probate Court. Mr. Conyers further testified that, at some point, the Debtor defaulted under the terms of the mortgage. Heritage notified the Debtor of the default by letter on March 29, 2011. In the letter, Heritage explained that, pursuant to the assignment of rents clause, it contacted the tenants of the six rental properties and requested that all future rent payments be paid directly to Heritage. Mr. Conyers testified that any rents received by Heritage would be applied to reduce the Debtor's loan balance. In response to the request, Heritage received only one rental payment from a tenant, in the amount of $700.00.
The Debtor filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on March 31, 2011. In response to the filing, Heritage sent a second set of letters to the Debtor's tenants requesting that future rental payments be made to the Debtor or his attorney. Heritage also returned the $700.00 payment detailed above. Mr. Conyers testified that Heritage's action were due to the bankruptcy filing and pursuant to advice of legal counsel.
On April 1, 2011, the Debtor offered to pay Heritage $1,350.00 per month during the pendency of the case as adequate protection for its interests. Mr. Conyers testified that Heritage never responded to the Debtor's adequate protection offer because Heritage felt that the offered amount was too low. Mr. Conyers testified that Heritage received a $6,750.00 payment from the Debtor in August of 2011. $6,750.00 is the equivalent of five months of $1,350.00 payments, but Heritage never indicated that it accepted the payment as adequate protection.
The Debtor has managed and maintained the six rental properties since the filing of his bankruptcy case, including collection of rent. The Debtor testified that he has collected $14,300.00 in rent since the filing. Of that money, $6,750.00 went to pay Heritage and the remainder was used to maintain the properties. The Debtor testified that he has conducted repairs and paid various bills (waste, water, sewer, electric) since the inception of the case. Further, at least two of the properties are currently vacant, but require upkeep expenses. The Debtor testified that he has not personally taken any management fees since the bankruptcy filing. Instead, he has secured other employment to support himself.
The Debtor testified that he has been in the business of managing rental properties in Orange Beach and Gulf Shores, Alabama for the last twenty years. At trial, he offered his opinion as to the current value of the six rental properties. He testified that the current loan balance owed to Heritage is $1,192,000.00 and that, in his opinion, the fair market value of the properties is $404,575.00. He explained that the properties were worth closer to the value of the indebtedness at the time the loan was made, but that recent events along Alabama's Gulf Coast, i.e., the B.P. oil spill, have severely depressed their value. The Debtor also testified that his valuations were lower than Heritage's most recent appraisals of the properties and that he expects values to decrease even further in the next six months.
On July 12, 2011, Heritage filed a motion to prohibit the Debtor's use of the rental proceeds. Heritage asserted that the collected rent was cash collateral and that the Debtor was using it without permission from this Court or Heritage. The Debtor responded by questioning the effectiveness of the assignment of rents clause. The Court conducted a trial on August 30, 2011. At trial, Heritage asserted that it was, and continues to be, entitled to 100% of the rental proceeds because the assignment of rents clause in the mortgage constituted an absolute assignment. The Debtor argued that the assignment of rents clause merely effectuated a security interest and that the Debtor provided, and was willing to provide additional, adequate protection to Heritage. The Court asked the parties to brief the issue and took this matter under advisement.
The issue before the Court is whether the assignment of rents clause incorporated into the parties' loan agreement is an absolute assignment or a security interest in rents, i.e., a collateral assignment.
Few Alabama cases squarely address the distinction between an absolute assignment and a collateral assignment. However, Alabama's highest court considered the issue in the case of Homecorp v. Secor Bank, 659 So.2d 15 (Ala. 1995). In Homecorp, the court was presented with an apartment complex mortgage containing an assignment of rents clause. The issue was whether the mortgagee was entitled to preforeclosure rental income from the apartment complex pursuant to the assignment of rents clause. The court affirmed the trial court's determination that the assignment of rents clause was an absolute assignment that became absolute, entitling the mortgagee to immediate possession of the rents, after notice was given of an uncured event of default. Id. at 20. The trial court found, and the Supreme Court agreed, that the following language sufficiently revealed the parties true intent that the rents be absolutely assigned and not merely serve as additional security:
Id. at 18-20.
In In re Turtle Creek, LTD, 194 B.R. 267 (Bankr. N.D. Ala. 1996) the bankruptcy court applied Alabama law to distinguish a collateral assignment from an absolute assignment of rents. In doing so, the bankruptcy court compared the language of the assignment of rents clause in Homecorp to the one before the bankruptcy court in Turtle Creek stating the following:
Id. at 278-79 (internal citations and quotations omitted).
In this case, the assignment of rents clause effectuated an absolute assignment of rents rather than a collateral assignment. This conclusion is based on the parties' intent as revealed by the assignment language. The assignment language here mirrors the language in the assignment of rents clause in Homecorp. In particular, the phrase "This assignment of Rents constitutes an absolute assignment and not an assignment for additional security only" speaks specifically to the intention of the parties. The Homecorp court found very similar language to be dispositive of the parties' intent and held accordingly. Therefore, based upon this Court's duty to follow Alabama law as to the extent of the Debtor's interest in property, this Court finds that the assignment of rents between the Debtor and Heritage was absolute.
Further, a direct result of this holding is that the rental proceeds from the Debtor's rental properties are not property of the bankruptcy estate. Under the terms of the assignment of rents clause, Heritage was entitled to the rents from the day the assignment was executed. Therefore, the Debtor retained no proprietary interest in the rents that would have passed to the bankruptcy estate, pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 541, on the day the Debtor filed his petition. This result is not altered by the fact that the Debtor was allowed, pursuant to the assignment of rents clause, to collect the rents. The terms of the clause merely gave the Debtor the right to collect rents on behalf of Heritage so long as the Debtor acted in line with the terms of the mortgage. However, once a default occurred and was communicated to the Debtor by Heritage, Heritage had the right to instruct the Debtor's tenants to deliver the rents directly to it, or its agent, going forward.
The Court is mindful of the growing number of cases from other jurisdictions analyzing this question somewhat differently. See e.g. In re Buttermilk Towne Center, LLC, 442 B.R. 558 (B.A.P. 6th Cir. 2010) (detailing cases from various jurisdictions addressing the issue). In determining whether an assignment of rents was absolute or collateral, those courts considered the substance of the clause as a whole to give effect to the parties' intent, rather than taking isolated statements as dispositive. As stated by the Buttermilk court:
Id. at 564. Under that line of reasoning, for example, the fact that a so-called absolute assignment terminates upon the extinguishment of the underlying debt weighs against patent statements of the parties' intent that conflict with the true nature of the assignment as a security interest. See In re McCann, 140 B.R. 926, 927 (Bankr. D. Mass. 1992). To the Court, this result is truer to the true intent of these documents. However, Alabama law dictates the result in this case and this Court is bound to follow state law on issues of state law about what constitutes property of a bankruptcy estate.
Therefore, it is ORDERED that: