ARTHUR B. FEDERMAN, Bankruptcy Judge.
The law firm of McDowell Rice Smith & Buchanan ("MRS & B"), as counsel for Debtor Prospect Studios, L.P., has filed an Application for allowance of compensation for services rendered and for reimbursement of expenses incurred for the period of February 13, 2012 through May 16, 2012. MRS & B also seeks authority to draw down on the prepetition retainer it received from the Debtor to pay its fees. Creditor CSFB 2001-CP4 GLADSTONE COMPLEX LLC ("CSFB") objects to the Application, not to the allowability or reasonableness of the fees, but to the Debtor's use of the retainer as a source of payment because CSFB asserts a perfected security interest in such retainer. For the reasons that follow, CSFB's objection to the Application is OVERRULED, and the Application is GRANTED.
Prior to the commencement of this bankruptcy proceeding, the Debtor engaged MRS & B as counsel to represent it in these proceedings. In conjunction with that engagement, the Debtor provided MRS & B with a prepetition retainer of $25,000, which MRS & B placed into its trust account. On February 16, 2012,
On May 23, 2012, MRS & B filed the instant Application for fees and expenses for the period of February 13, 2012 through May 16, 2012. MRS & B seeks $24,671.50 in fees for professional legal services rendered, and $1,356.54 for actual and necessary expenses, for a total of $26,028.04. Counsel stated at the hearing on the Application that MRS & B will not likely seek additional fees in this case.
No one has objected to MRS & B's application for fees per se, and CSFB stated at the hearing that it did not object to the reasonableness of the requested fees. I have reviewed the billing statements attached to MRS & B's Application and find them to be reasonable under 11 U.S.C. § 330(a)(3). Therefore, the Application for fees and expenses in the total amount of $26,028.04 is granted pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 330(a)(1).
As stated, MRS & B wishes to draw down on the entire prepetition retainer towards payment of those fees, and CSFB does object to that request. CSFB is a secured creditor with a Deed of Trust dated July 31, 2001, and recorded August 1, 2001, on the Debtor's premises commonly known as "Prospect Studios," a 200-unit apartment complex located at 2440 NE 68th Street in Gladstone, Missouri. The Debtor is a single asset real estate debtor as defined in 11 U.S.C. § 101(51B),
Inasmuch as essentially all of the Debtor's income comes from rents, it appears to be undisputed that MRS & B's retainer came from post-default, prepetition rents collected by the Debtor from its tenants. The crux of this dispute is the nature of CSFB's interest in those prepetition rents after they were collected by the Debtor and then paid over to MRS & B.
CSFB has maintained, and still maintains, that rather than granting it a security interest in the rents, the assignment of rents is a "pure assignment" — such that CSFB actually owns the rents — and that the Debtor was only able to collect and use the rents under a license granted to it by CSFB. CSFB further asserts that, when the Debtor went into default in about April 2010, the Debtor's license to use the rents was automatically terminated. In other words, CSFB asserts that, under the Deed of Trust and Assignment of Rents, the funds in the MRS & B trust account are its property, and not property of the estate.
However, at an April 2, 2012 hearing on the Debtor's use of cash collateral, I ruled that, despite the loan documents' designation of the assignment as being a "present, absolute and unconditional assignment," and "not an assignment for additional security," the assignment was, in fact, a security interest, primarily because
CSFB asserts alternatively that even if the rents are an asset of the estate, it has a perfected security interest in them and, thus, the retainer. I note here that the Debtor has never expressly agreed on the record that CSFB has a perfected security interest in the rents being collected postpetition, but has proceeded, particularly in connection with cash collateral issues, as if that is true. Since the retainer came from rents, CSFB asserts that the money being held in MRS & B's trust account, which is the proceeds of rents collected prior to the bankruptcy, is also its collateral. Debtor has never conceded that funds representing the proceeds of rents collected prepetition are CSFB's collateral.
CSFB asserted in its Objection to the Application for fees that the retainer constitutes its cash collateral pursuant to § 363, and that it does not consent to the Debtor's use of the cash collateral to pay fees. At the hearing on the Application, MRS & B asserted that the prepetition rents are not "cash collateral," inasmuch as "cash collateral" is a distinctly bankruptcy concept, and the funds involved here came to the Debtor, and were paid to MRS & B, prepetition.
Section 363(a) defines "cash collateral" to mean, in relevant part:
Although counsel for CSFB stated at the hearing that it was not asserting that the retainer constituted "bankruptcy cash collateral" (which appears to be a change in position from that taken in its Objection), courts have held that rents received from a mortgaged property, either before or after a bankruptcy filing, are cash collateral to the extent they are subject to a security interest or lien.
Section 363(a) plainly contemplates that "cash collateral" includes rents, proceeds, and other cash equivalents, "whether existing before or after the commencement of the case," which would include money sitting in a bank account and a prepetition retainer. However, that is true only to the extent that such funds are subject to a security interest or lien. Thus, the threshold issue here is whether CSFB has a perfected lien in the funds constituting the retainer.
As stated, CSFB's claimed interest in the retainer stems from its claimed interest in the rents. In Missouri,
However, unlike other security interests in real estate, an assignment of rents clause "lies dormant until certain steps are taken to activate, or perfect, such assignment."
There has been no evidence, or even a suggestion, that CSFB perfected its security interest in the rents by notifying tenants to pay it directly, or taking any other steps to take possession of the premises, such as the appointment a receiver. To the extent that CSFB asserts a perfected security interest in the rents by virtue of its Deed of Trust and Assignment of Rents, I find that such interest was not fully perfected at the time the petition was filed because CSFB had not taken the activation step.
That being the case, CSFB could have perfected its interest in the funds by filing a UCC Statement concerning proceeds of rents, the Debtor's accounts, or other intangibles in accordance with Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code. CSFB offered no evidence that it has any such UCC Statement on file covering the proceeds of the rents or the Debtor's accounts.
The purpose of perfection of a security interest in any form of property — real, personal or otherwise — is to put third parties on notice of such security interest. Rents present a particular challenge in this regard because they have characteristics of both real property and money. That is why, as I stated above, rents should be viewed differently once they are paid and no longer tied to the real property from which they come. In other words, if a lender wanted to make a loan to the Debtor and take a security interest in the rents owed to it by its tenants, that lender would rightly look to the real property records at the recorder's office to see if someone else had a prior security interest in those rents. If, on the other hand, the lender wanted to take a security interest in the money being held in the Debtor's bank accounts, the lender would logically look to UCC filings, and should not be expected to determine what real property the Debtor owns and then search the real property records to see if someone claims an interest in a bank account representing rents from that real property. Section 544(a) of the Bankruptcy Code puts a bankruptcy trustee or Chapter 11 debtor
Since CSFB's security interest in the rents by virtue of the recorded Assignment of Rents was not perfected, and since it offered no evidence that it has a perfected security interest in the funds by virtue of a UCC filing, it cannot prevail as against a lender without knowledge of its unperfected security interest, regardless whether such a lender actually exists.
ACCORDINGLY, the Application by McDowell Rice Smith & Buchanan for Allowance of Compensation for Services Rendered and for Reimbursement of Actual and Necessary Expenses is GRANTED. The Objection by Creditor CSFB 2001-CP4 GLADSTONE COMPLEX LLC ("CSFB") to such Application is OVERRULED.
IT IS SO ORDERED.