HALL, Bankruptcy Judge.
Before the Court is the appeal of Appellant Kenneth A. Rushton, Trustee ("Trustee"),
This Court has jurisdiction over the instant appeal under 28 U.S.C. § 158(b) because: the appeal was timely made pursuant to Rule 8002(a) of the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure; the challenged order is a final order; and no party has elected to have the appeal heard by the district court as required by 28 U.S.C. § 158(c).
"The applicable standard of review for orders granting summary judgment is de novo, and this Court is required to apply the same legal standard as was used by the bankruptcy court to determine whether either party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law."
The pertinent facts in this case are undisputed as set forth more fully in the bankruptcy court's findings of fact.
Debtor C.W. Mining Company ("Debtor") operated a coal mine. To finance the purchase of certain equipment, Debtor entered into three loan agreements ("Debtor Loans") with Bank. Debtor executed promissory notes for each loan agreement (the "Notes"). The interest rate was in excess of 4.31 percent. The Notes were secured by the purchased equipment, and all of the Notes contained cross-collateralization provisions.
In August 2007, Debtor entered into a letter of credit transaction with Bank in order to obtain an irrevocable standby letter of credit in favor of the Utah Department of Natural Resources Division of Oil, Gas, Mining, and Office of Surface Mining ("DOGM"). Pursuant thereto, Debtor deposited $362,000 with Bank, and Bank in turn issued a certificate of deposit ("CD") with a 4.31 percent interest rate. Debtor also executed a promissory note in favor of Bank in the amount of $362,000 with an interest rate of 6.75 percent (the "CD Note"). Debtor's obligation under the CD Note was secured by an assignment of the CD, and the CD Note also contained a cross-collateralization provision.
On January 8, 2008, an involuntary Chapter 11 petition was filed against Debtor.
Subsequently, Bank did not renew the letter of credit.
Trustee brought his complaint against Bank on September 14, 2010, seeking a money judgment for $383,099 on two claims: (1) avoidance of the Transfer under 11 U.S.C. § 549
The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment.
Trustee's complaint seeks relief on two claims: (1) avoidance of the Transfer under 11 U.S.C. § 549 and for recovery of $383,099 under 11 U.S.C. § 550; and (2) a declaration that the liquidation of the CD is void as a violation of the automatic stay pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 362(a) and that Trustee is entitled to the CD as an asset of the bankruptcy estate. Both claims ask that Bank be required to pay Trustee $383,099 free and clear of Bank's lien.
Trustee's first prong of attack is that the Transfer, if not deemed void under § 362, is avoidable as an unauthorized post-petition transfer under § 549. Thus, Trustee contends he is entitled, under § 550, to a money judgment for the value of the CD. Trustee argues that Bank does not have a
Under his second prong, Trustee insists that Bank's liquidation of the CD was void, that is without legal effect, and that the CD remained property of the bankruptcy estate. Because the CD represents an obligation of Bank to the bankruptcy estate, and it is as if the liquidation and offset never occurred due to the automatic stay, then Bank, as a matter of law, still owes a debt to the bankruptcy estate. Consequently, Bank should be required to turnover the value of the CD to Trustee under § 542. Trustee's argument goes even further and posits that Bank no longer enjoys the position of a secured creditor, because through its own poor business decisions and no fault of anyone else, it sold the Debtor Loans to PPMC.
Trustee contends that the bankruptcy court erred when it denied his motion for summary judgment. He argues that the bankruptcy court erroneously concluded it would be pointless to order turnover of the CD or its value because Bank was a secured creditor and would be entitled to have its lien recognized. Trustee rejects the bankruptcy court's conclusion that granting relief for Trustee would be tantamount to stripping Bank of its lien, would be punitive in nature, and would create an inequitable windfall for the bankruptcy estate. Finally, Trustee also rejects the bankruptcy court's conclusion that relief under either of Trustee's claims would be pointless because it would not benefit the bankruptcy estate.
Bank counters that Trustee's claims under § 362 and § 549 are mutually exclusive but, regardless, Trustee cannot prevail under either theory of recovery for several reasons. First, with respect to the §§ 549 and 550 claim, § 550(a) explicitly requires that any recovery by Trustee be for the benefit of the bankruptcy estate. Bank contends there would be no benefit to the bankruptcy estate because it would remain a secured creditor if the Transfer were avoided since doing so would return the parties to the status quo before the Transfer was made. If the pre-Transfer status quo were re-imposed, then Bank not only would have an obligation to Debtor by virtue of the CD, but Bank would also have a secured interest in the CD since its lien would be revived. In that instance, administering the CD through the bankruptcy estate would not result in any augmentation of the bankruptcy estate. More importantly, the only party in interest that would recognize any true financial gain from avoidance and recovery would be Trustee.
Next, Bank claims that adopting Trustee's argument that its lien would not be revived — that it no longer has a valid secured position because it sold its Debtor Loans to PPMC after the Transfer — would constitute an unconstitutional taking. Indeed, under Trustee's argument, Bank would no longer be considered even an unsecured creditor because it is no longer the holder of the Notes, and the net result would be a windfall to the bankruptcy estate.
With respect to Trustee's §§ 362 and 542 claim, Bank submits that the bankruptcy court's powers to fashion remedies for violations of the automatic stay are circumscribed by the Bankruptcy Code itself and include remedial measures in only limited circumstances not otherwise applicable. Bank further asserts that Trustee's requested relief under § 362 would only be
The bankruptcy court concluded that Trustee's requested relief (under either §§ 549 and 550 or under §§ 362 and 542) would "effectively `strip' the Bank's lien from its collateral and deprive the Bank of the amount it was legally entitled to at the time of the $383,099 Transfer.... The result does not return the parties to the status quo, is unrelated to any damages, is clearly punitive in nature, and creates a windfall for the bankruptcy estate."
In reaching this conclusion, with respect to the §§ 549 and 550 claim, the bankruptcy court determined that a transfer by a fully secured creditor may not be avoided under § 549 without reviving the secured creditor's lien. The bankruptcy court then concluded that Trustee could not recover any money judgment under § 550 because there would be no benefit to the bankruptcy estate from avoidance and recovery, a requirement of the plain meaning of § 550.
As to Trustee's §§ 362 and 542 claim, the bankruptcy court characterized § 362 as a "prohibitory statute, not a remedial one."
Painstakingly, the bankruptcy court then parsed the meaning of "void" and concluded that declaring the Transfer void for violating the stay would necessitate returning the parties to the status quo before the Transfer was made. Returning the parties to the status quo, however, would require not only returning the CD and/or its value to Trustee but also reviving Bank's lien on the CD and would, therefore, be an exercise of futility. Moreover, the relief requested by Trustee (turnover of the value of the CD without reviving Bank's lien) was not supported by § 362(a) (or § 105 (although Trustee did not seek relief under such section)). Without any proof of damages from the stay violation, Trustee failed to state a cause of action under § 362(a).
The bankruptcy court separately addressed Trustee's turnover claim under § 542(a), concluding that Bank was not subject to turnover because the CD was of inconsequential value or benefit to the estate. Even if Bank was ordered to turnover the CD, as a fully secured creditor, Bank would be entitled to adequate protection and eventual distribution of the value of its secured claim. As such, Bank would be entitled to receive exactly what it would be forced to turnover to the bankruptcy estate, a procedure that would be pointless. As noted by the bankruptcy court, money would simply flow into the estate,
With this analysis in mind, the bankruptcy court granted summary judgment in favor of Bank and against Trustee.
Section 549 provides:
Section 549 is meant "to ensure that similarly situated pre-petition creditors are treated even-handedly."
While § 549 allows a trustee to avoid a post-petition transfer, § 550 contains the statutory mechanism to recover the asset transferred or, as in this case, its value. Section 550(a) provides that:
Section 549(a) and § 550(a) cannot be viewed in isolation.
Rather, the Bankruptcy Code provides a comprehensive process for avoidance, recovery and protection of a transferee's claim priority and status. Section 549 addresses avoidance; § 550 addresses recovery; and § 502(h) addresses protection of a claim's status and priority. Trustee's arguments run contrary to the plain language of the Code and the overall purpose of the avoidance-recovery-claim protection scheme. It was with this complete statutory scheme in mind that the bankruptcy court concluded Bank was entitled to summary judgment on the post-petition transfer claim.
The bankruptcy court correctly followed the line of cases holding that it is pointless to avoid, under § 549, a post-petition transfer to a secured creditor in satisfaction of all or part of the secured claim
Ordering avoidance and recovery under these circumstances is pointless because the secured creditor would simply pay money over to the bankruptcy estate or trustee who, in turn, would then be required to return to the secured creditor the value of its secured claim.
The same analysis applies equally to recovery under § 550(a). As the bankruptcy court noted, the purpose of § 550 is to restore the estate to the financial condition in which it would have been had the transfer not been made.
Trustee contends that the bankruptcy estate would gain the benefit of the value of the Transfer, which would be available to distribute to the unsecured creditors, because Bank no longer has a secured claim by virtue of its sale of the Debtor Loans to PPMC. A similar argument was made by the liquidating agent and unsecured creditors' committee in Fleet National Bank v. Gray (In re Bankvest Capital Corp.).
By virtue of the plain language of § 502(h)
Furthermore, the First Circuit rejected the argument that the bank had to remain the owner of the lien to be treated as having a secured claim under § 502(h) (notwithstanding the post-transfer sale of the underlying indebtedness). It explained more fully that:
Under § 502(h), the critical time for determining whether a creditor holds a secured claim or a priority claim is, unequivocally, the date the petition is filed, not any subsequent post-petition date. Herein, there has been no assertion, or even a suggestion, that Bank did not have a valid pre-petition secured claim against Debtor. Bank's later sale of the Debtor Loans to PPMC is immaterial to deciding if Bank is entitled to a § 502(h) secured claim; Bank was a secured creditor with a valid secured claim on the petition date. Thus, if forced to return the value of the Transfer to Trustee, Bank would be entitled to the protection of its lien under § 502(h) — which is the value of the Transfer. Accordingly, the bankruptcy court correctly reasoned that avoiding the Transfer and ordering return of the value of the Transfer to Trustee would be pointless.
Trustee cites to two cases supporting his position, Hopkins v. SunTrust Mortgage, Inc. (In re Ellis)
The First Capital case cited by Trustee can be readily distinguished as well. It dealt with an unsecured creditor seeking to impose trust status on a recovered transfer for the benefit of the transferee. The First Capital court concluded that it was inconsistent with the Bankruptcy Code or its policies to impress recovered funds with a trust.
A corollary point must also be made concerning the plain language of § 550, which states that a trustee may recover an avoided transfer "for the benefit of the estate."
There is split of authority concerning how broadly to interpret "for the benefit of the estate." However, this Court has already established that the phrase should be construed broadly, rather than narrowly, to include indirect benefits.
In this case, it is relatively easy to conclude that there would be no benefit to the estate since the recovery of the avoided Transfer would inure to Bank as the secured creditor. Other cases are factually distinguishable.
Indeed, the bankruptcy court recognized that administering the value of the Transfer would truly only benefit Trustee since his compensation is statutorily tied to funds distributed from the bankruptcy estate. One bankruptcy court remarked under similar circumstances that:
The Court believes that the only benefit to be seen by avoidance and recovery of the Transfer is to Trustee. Funneling the value of the CD through the bankruptcy estate would drive up administrative costs, which is not a benefit to the bankruptcy estate. Certainly, this Court does not condone secured creditors unilaterally making post-petition transfers only to later claim there would be no benefit to the bankruptcy estate from avoidance and recovery of such transfers. On the other hand, the Court cannot encourage trustees to run unauthorized post-petition transfers through estates simply to return the same value to the secured creditor later. Such would be a tacit endorsement of fee churning which is unacceptable.
Trustee asserts that Bank is limited to defenses listed in § 550(e). That section provides:
According to Trustee, Bank cannot be considered a "good faith transferee" because it made the Transfer with knowledge that the automatic stay was in effect. Trustee cites Ellis to support his proposition, but this Court concludes that Ellis is not persuasive. Among other things, the court in Ellis was considering 11 U.S.C. § 549(c) which provides a defense for a "good faith purchaser," not § 550(e). Also, and most importantly, nothing in Ellis or any other authority suggests that the sole remedy for Bank is found in § 550(e), or more aptly, that Trustee is entitled to strip Bank's lien under the guise that Bank's only possible defense to an avoidance of a post-petition transfer is § 550(e). This Court rejects such argument.
Trustee further contends that the bankruptcy court mistakenly prejudged the outcome of the administration of the bankruptcy estate, i.e. the bankruptcy court erroneously accepted that the Bank would ultimately be determined to hold a secured claim secured by the CD, that there would be no funds flowing from recovery of the Transfer to unsecured creditors and that Bank would comply with the prerequisites outlined in 11 U.S.C. § 502(d) and Rule 3002(c)(3) of the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure.
Accordingly, the bankruptcy court correctly determined that it would be pointless to require Bank to return the CD to Trustee as the estate had no equity in the CD and the return would not benefit the bankruptcy estate and would be a waste of judicial and estate resources. The bankruptcy court properly surmised that adopting Trustee's position would effectively strip Bank's lien for which no statutory authority exists. As a result, there is no error in the bankruptcy court's decision to grant summary judgment in favor of Bank and against Trustee on his claim under §§ 549 and 550.
Both parties agree that the stay was violated when the Transfer was made without first obtaining relief from the automatic stay. The question is whether the bankruptcy court correctly held that, even though there was a technical violation of the stay, the remedy sought by Trustee — essentially stripping Bank of its lien — was an impermissible remedy. For the following reasons, the Court affirms the bankruptcy court on this claim as well.
Section 362(a)(3) of the Bankruptcy Code states that the filing of a petition operates as a stay of — "any act to obtain possession of property of the estate or of property from the estate or to exercise control over property of the estate."
The automatic stay is intended to allow the debtor to attempt to repay his debts or reorganize his financial affairs by virtue of a respite from demanding creditors. It also protects creditors by prohibiting the dismembering of the bankruptcy estate. Thus, the automatic stay maintains the status quo so as to ensure that there is an orderly distribution of estate assets.
The Tenth Circuit authority emphasizes that the goal of remedying a violation of the automatic stay is to restore the status quo for
Section 362 does not, as Trustee asserts, provide a basis for stripping an otherwise valid and enforceable lien. "`Although the automatic stay protects a debtor from various collection efforts over a specified period, it does not extinguish or discharge any debt.'"
Trustee's argument that the Transfer is void but that the voidness only affects one side of the Transfer is, as the bankruptcy court found, illogical.
Section 542(a), likewise, does not provide a mechanism for voiding Bank's pre-petition lien on the CD. Section 542(a) requires delivery of estate property to the trustee.
On the petition date, Bank held an oversecured claim secured by, among other things, the CD. Turnover of the CD would not, therefore, provide any benefit to the estate. The lack of a benefit is a defense to a demand for turnover under § 542.
The only Bankruptcy Code provision addressing remedies for stay violations, 11 U.S.C. § 362(k), provides that, "an individual injured by any willful violation" of the automatic stay "shall recover actual damages, including costs and attorneys' fees, and, in appropriate circumstances, may recover punitive damages."
Based on the well-established precedent of this Court and other circuits, and the plain language of § 362(k), the Court concludes that a trustee acting on behalf of the estate, which is an artificial entity, cannot recover damages under § 362(k) for a violation of the automatic stay.
Although this conclusion is sufficient grounds to affirm the bankruptcy court, there is another basis for the Court to affirm the bankruptcy court. The bankruptcy court accurately noted that Trustee could have sought sanctions pursuant to the bankruptcy court's civil contempt powers under 11 U.S.C. § 105(a), but did not. Trustee did not make a claim for contempt, but even if he had, the bankruptcy court properly concluded that the relief Trustee has repeatedly sought — stripping Bank of its lien — would be improper.
The Tenth Circuit has held that bankruptcy courts have civil contempt powers pursuant to § 105(a).
In the instant action, the relief requested by Trustee, turnover of the value of the CD free and clear of Bank's undisputed lien thereon, is far from remedial in nature. Seen for what it is, it is lien stripping, a substantive remedy not granted in § 362 or any other applicable provision of the Bankruptcy Code. In fact, fully secured creditors whose liens are not avoided are entitled to have their claims paid in full or have their liens pass through bankruptcy unaffected.
Not only would stripping Bank of its lien be impermissibly punitive and prohibited by established law, but also the bankruptcy estate has suffered no harm which would be remedied by stripping Bank's otherwise valid lien for its stay violation. Although the Court does not endorse actions that violate the automatic stay, the end result of the Transfer is that Bank got that to which it was entitled, the value of its lien on the CD, no more or less. This was the same conclusion reached by the bankruptcy court in Adams
In light of (1) no proven injury to Trustee or the bankruptcy estate as a result of
Upon review of the record, and upon conducting a de novo review of the bankruptcy court's decision, this Court hereby AFFIRMS the bankruptcy court's decision to grant summary judgment in favor of Bank and against the Trustee.
11 U.S.C. § 502(h). A creditor who has a transfer avoided under § 549 is entitled under the terms of 11 U.S.C. § 502(d) and (h) to file a proof of claim for the amount of the avoided transfer. 11 U.S.C. § 502(d) and (h).