Winthrop Old Farm v. New Bedford Savings ( 1995 )


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  • April 3, 1995
    United States Court of Appeals
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    For the First Circuit
    No. 94-2025
    IN RE WINTHROP OLD FARM NURSERIES, INC.,
    Debtor.
    WINTHROP OLD FARM NURSERIES, INC.,
    Appellant,
    v.
    NEW BEDFORD INSTITUTION FOR SAVINGS, ET AL.,
    Appellees.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
    [Hon. Richard G. Stearns, U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Selya, Boudin and Stahl,
    Circuit Judges.
    ERRATA SHEET
    ERRATA SHEET
    Please make  the following change to  the opinion  issued on March
    22, 1995.
    Page 3, first full paragraph, line 3 - change "far" to
    "fair"
    United States Court of Appeals
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    For the First Circuit
    No. 94-2025
    IN RE WINTHROP OLD FARM NURSERIES, INC.,
    Debtor.
    WINTHROP OLD FARM NURSERIES, INC.,
    Appellant,
    v.
    NEW BEDFORD INSTITUTION FOR SAVINGS, ET AL.,
    Appellees.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
    [Hon. Richard G. Stearns, U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Selya, Boudin and Stahl,
    Circuit Judges.
    Stephen E.  Shamban with whom Ann  Brennan and  Stephen E. Shamban
    Law Offices, P.C. were on brief for appellant.
    Richard M.  Peirce with whom Roberts, Carroll, Feldstein & Peirce,
    Inc. was on brief for appellees.
    March 22, 1995
    STAHL, Circuit Judge.   Chapter 11 debtor  Winthrop
    STAHL, Circuit Judge.
    Old  Farm Nurseries, Inc.  ("Winthrop"), appeals the district
    court order  affirming the bankruptcy  court's decision that,
    to determine  the status of the claim  of undersecured junior
    mortgagee  New  Bedford  Institution  for   Savings  ("NBIS")
    pursuant to 11 U.S.C.   506(a), Winthrop's real property (the
    "Property")  should be valued at  its fair market  value.  We
    affirm.
    I.
    I.
    BACKGROUND
    BACKGROUND
    Winthrop   operates  a   retail  garden   shop  and
    commercial landscaping business on  the Property, located  at
    462 Winthrop Street in  Rehoboth, Massachusetts.  On February
    2, 1993, Winthrop  filed a petition for  relief under Chapter
    11 of the  Bankruptcy Code (the  "Code").  On July  16, 1993,
    Winthrop   filed  its  Disclosure   Statement  and   Plan  of
    Reorganization (the "Plan").  The Plan provides that Winthrop
    will  retain all of its assets except for the Property, which
    is to be transferred to a new entity apparently controlled by
    Winthrop's principal,  which will  in turn lease  it back  to
    Winthrop.  Thus, under the Plan, Winthrop effectively retains
    control of the Property and its use.
    The Property  is encumbered by a  first mortgage in
    the  amount of $287,000 held by  Northeast Savings, F.A., and
    by tax liens of approximately $20,000.  NBIS, the holder of a
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    junior  mortgage  on  the  Property,  is  owed  approximately
    $576,000.   The parties stipulated to a liquidation value for
    the Property of $300,000 and a fair market value of $400,000.
    Winthrop's Plan would transfer the Property to the new entity
    free  and clear of all liens except for the Northeast Savings
    mortgage.  The Plan  would "strip down" the NBIS  mortgage to
    the liquidation  value of the Property,  leaving NBIS's claim
    entirely  unsecured.  The  Plan proposes  a payout  of twenty
    cents on  the dollar  over a  four-year  period to  unsecured
    creditors,    whose    claims,   including    NBIS's,   total
    approximately $756,761.
    NBIS  objected  to  the  Plan,  claiming  that  the
    Property  should   be  valued  at  fair   market  value,  not
    liquidation  value.  If the Property is valued at fair market
    value,  NBIS  would have  a secured  claim  in the  amount of
    approximately  $100,000,  with  the  remainder  of its  claim
    unsecured.
    The  bankruptcy  court,  citing  a  line  of  cases
    holding  that  fair  market or  going  concern  value is  the
    appropriate standard in valuing  collateral that a Chapter 11
    debtor proposes to retain and  use, granted NBIS's motion and
    valued  the  Property  at   $400,000.    The  district  court
    affirmed, and Winthrop now appeals.
    II.
    II.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    -3-
    3
    "In  an  appeal from  district  court  review of  a
    bankruptcy  court   order,   we  independently   review   the
    bankruptcy court's decision, applying the ``clearly erroneous'
    standard  to   findings  of  fact  and  de   novo  review  to
    conclusions of law."  Grella v. Salem Five Cent Sav. Bank, 
    42 F.3d 26
    ,  30 (1st Cir. 1994).   Thus, our review  is de novo.
    The bankruptcy court's interpretation  of   506(a) presents a
    question  of  law.   Its application  of  the statute  to the
    particular facts of this  case poses a mixed question  of law
    and fact,  subject to the clearly  erroneous standard, unless
    the  bankruptcy  court's  analysis  was  "infected  by  legal
    error."    Williams v.  Poulos, 
    11 F.3d 271
    , 278  (1st Cir.
    1993).
    III.
    III.
    DISCUSSION
    DISCUSSION
    Section 506(a) governs the determination of whether
    any portion of a  creditor's claim should be classified  as a
    secured claim:
    (a)  An  allowed  claim  of   a  creditor
    secured  by a lien  on property  in which
    the estate  has an  interest, or  that is
    subject  to setoff  under section  553 of
    this  title, is  a secured  claim to  the
    extent  of the  value of  such creditor's
    interest in the estate's interest in such
    property, or  to the extent of the amount
    subject  to setoff, as  the case  may be,
    and is  an unsecured claim to  the extent
    that   the   value  of   such  creditor's
    interest  or  the  amount  so  subject to
    setoff  is less  than the amount  of such
    allowed  claim.    Such  value  shall  be
    -4-
    4
    determined in light of the purpose of the
    valuation and of the proposed disposition
    or  use   of   such  property,   and   in
    conjunction  with  any  hearing  on  such
    disposition or use or on a plan affecting
    such creditor's interest.
    11  U.S.C.   506(a) (emphasis  added).  The  statute does not
    direct courts to choose  any particular valuation standard in
    a  given  type  of case.    As  evidenced  by the  emphasized
    language   in  the   statute's   second  sentence,   Congress
    apparently did  not intend  that  courts would  use either  a
    liquidation  or  fair  market  value   standard  exclusively,
    envisioning instead a flexible approach by which courts would
    choose  a  standard  to  fit  the  circumstances.    Relevant
    legislative history buttresses this notion.  The House Report
    states:
    Subsection  (a) of  [  506]  separates an
    undersecured  creditor's  claim into  two
    parts-he  has  a  secured  claim  to  the
    extent of the value of his collateral; he
    has an undersecured claim for the balance
    of  his   claim.     "Value"   does   not
    necessarily  contemplate  forced sale  or
    liquidation value of the  collateral; nor
    does it imply a full going concern value.
    Courts will  have to determine value on a
    case-by-case  basis, taking  into account
    the facts of each  case and the competing
    interests in the case.
    H.R.  Rep.  No.  595,  95th  Cong.,  1st  Sess.  356  (1977),
    reprinted in 1978 U.S.C.C.A.N.  5787, 6312 (emphasis  added).
    The  Senate  Report's  commentary  on     506  offers  little
    insight, but its commentary on   361 -- the Code section that
    provides   for  adequate   protection  payments   to  secured
    -5-
    5
    creditors in  some circumstances -- is  further evidence that
    Congress  intended   that   courts  would   sometimes   value
    collateral at something greater than its liquidation price:
    Neither  is  it  expected  that  the
    courts  will construe  the term  value to
    mean,   in   every   case,  forced   sale
    liquidation value or  full going  concern
    value.   There  is wide  latitude between
    those two extremes  although forced  sale
    liquidation value will be a minimum.
    In any particular case, especially a
    reorganization case, the determination of
    which  entity should  be entitled  to the
    difference  between   the  going  concern
    value  and the liquidation  value must be
    based on equitable considerations arising
    from the facts of the case.
    S. Rep. No. 989, 95th Cong., 2d Sess. 54 (1978), reprinted in
    1978 U.S.C.C.A.N. 5787, 5840 (emphasis added).  Although this
    commentary is not specifically  addressed to   506(a), it  is
    nevertheless relevant,  since a valuation for    361 purposes
    necessarily  looks to    506(a)  for  a determination  of the
    amount  of   a  secured  claim.1     Indeed,  since  adequate
    protection payments immediately deplete the estate's assets -
    - even before it  is certain that a reorganization  plan will
    be confirmed -- one would expect that the  valuation standard
    used to determine whether  such payments are justified should
    be extremely conservative.  See In re Case, 
    115 B.R. 666
    , 670
    1.  See United Sav. Ass'n of Tex. v. Timbers of Inwood Forest
    Assoc., 
    484 U.S. 365
    , 371-72 (1988)  (stating that statutory
    construction is  a "holistic endeavor" and  defining value of
    "entity's   interest  in   property"  entitled   to  adequate
    protection  under    361 and 362 in light of meaning of value
    of "creditor's interest" in property under   506(a)).
    -6-
    6
    (Bankr. 9th Cir. 1990) (stating in dictum that in a valuation
    for  adequate protection purposes,  "forced liquidation would
    be  assumed  and  a  deduction for  selling  costs  would  be
    logical").  Nevertheless,  the Senate language  suggests that
    even in a    361 context, a  court might value  collateral at
    something more than its liquidation value.
    We have  not previously  considered this issue.   A
    number  of  courts, however,  including four  Circuit Courts,
    have adhered to this clear expression of congressional intent
    and declined to  value collateral that  a debtor proposes  to
    retain  based  on a  hypothetical  foreclosure  sale.   These
    courts reason that because  the reorganizing debtor  proposes
    to retain  and use the collateral, it should not be valued as
    if it were being liquidated;  rather, courts should value the
    collateral  "in light of" the debtor's  proposal to retain it
    and ascribe to it its going-concern or fair market value with
    no deduction for hypothetical costs of sale.2
    2.  See,  e.g., In re McClurkin,  
    31 F.3d 401
    ,  405 (6th Cir.
    1994)  (holding that   506(a)  "does not require  or permit a
    reduction  in the  creditor's  secured claim  to account  for
    purely  hypothetical costs  of sale"  of Chapter  13 debtor's
    residence); Matter  of Rash,  
    31 F.3d 325
    ,  329-31 (5th  Cir.
    1994) (holding that truck to be retained by Chapter 13 debtor
    must  be  valued  at   replacement  cost  to  debtor  because
    foreclosure value fails to  account for debtor's proposed use
    of collateral);  Lomas Mortgage USA v. Wiese,  
    980 F.2d 1279
    ,
    1284-86 (9th  Cir. 1992) (holding  that second sentence  of
    506(a) precludes  deduction of hypothetical costs  of sale in
    valuing Chapter 13 debtor's  real property to be  retained by
    debtor), cert. granted and judgment vacated on other grounds,
    
    113 S. Ct. 2925
      (1993) (remanding  for reconsideration  in
    light  of Nobleman  v. American  Sav. Bank,  
    113 S. Ct. 2106
    -7-
    7
    Other courts, however, have chosen to read   506(a)
    as requiring in virtually all cases a valuation of collateral
    limited to the net amount a secured creditor could recover if
    it  seized or foreclosed on the collateral and disposed of it
    in accordance with  applicable state law.3   These courts tie
    (1993));  In re  Balbus, 
    933 F.2d 246
    ,  252 (4th  Cir. 1991)
    (same); In re Case, 
    115 B.R. 666
    , 670 (Bankr. 9th Cir. 1990)
    (holding  that for  Chapter  12 plan  confirmation  purposes,
    hypothetical costs  should not  be deducted from  fair market
    value  in valuing collateral to be retained by debtor); In re
    Arnette, 
    156 B.R. 366
    , 368 (Bankr.  D. Conn. 1993)  (holding
    that  motor  vehicle  to be  retained  by  chapter  13 debtor
    "should be valued at the price the debtor could get for it in
    a  free and open market, i.e.  its fair market value"); In re
    Green, 
    151 B.R. 501
      (Bankr. D. Minn.  1993) (valuing car to
    be retained  by  Chapter 13  debtor  at retail,  rather  than
    wholesale  value);  Matter of  Savannah  Gardens-Oaktree, 
    146 B.R. 306
    , 310 (Bankr. S.D. Ga. 1992) (using fair market value
    to value apartment complex  in Chapter 11 adequate protection
    context);  In re  Usry, 
    106 B.R. 759
    ,  762 (Bankr.  M.D. Ga.
    1989)  (in light  of  fact that  Chapter  11 and  Chapter  12
    debtors plan to retain  collateral to produce income, secured
    claim equaled amount of  stipulated fair market value without
    deduction  for  hypothetical liquidation  costs);  cf. In  re
    Davis, 
    14 B.R. 226
      (Bankr. D. Me. 1981) ("Where  a confirmed
    chapter 11  reorganization plan contemplates retention of the
    collateral  by the  debtor for  use in  its ongoing  business
    operations, collateral  .  . .  should be  ascribed its  fair
    market  value[,]" but  reasonable costs  of sale  deducted in
    valuing security interest) (Cyr, J.).
    3.  See, e.g., In re Demakes Enters., Inc., 
    145 B.R. 362
    , 365
    (Bankr.  D. Mass.  1992)  (valuing meat  processing plant  at
    liquidation  value); In re Ledgemere Land Corp., 
    125 B.R. 58
    ,
    61  (Bankr. D.  Mass. 1991)  (bank's mortgage  on  Chapter 11
    debtor's  real property  that debtor  intended to  retain and
    eventually develop "is worth  only what [property] will bring
    at foreclosure"); In  re Robbins,  
    119 B.R. 1
    ,  5 (Bankr.  D.
    Mass. 1990) (valuing Chapter 11  debtor's investment property
    at foreclosure value); In  re T.H.B. Corp., 
    85 B.R. 192
    , 196
    (Bankr. D. Mass. 1988) ("The fact that the  Debtor is a going
    concern  is no reason to value the collateral under the going
    concern standard  unless it  appears likely that  the secured
    party will  actually receive  that value from  its collateral
    -8-
    8
    their  interpretation  to the  first  sentence  of    506(a),
    reasoning that even if the debtor proposes to retain and make
    profitable  use   of  the  collateral   in  the   reorganized
    enterprise,   the  statute   commands  a  valuation   of  the
    "creditor's interest" in the property -- i.e., of the lien --
    and  that value can only  reflect what the  creditor would be
    entitled to recover from  the collateral under non-bankruptcy
    law.    Thus, if  the collateral  is  subject to  the Uniform
    Commercial  Code, the creditor's  interest would reflect what
    it could  recover from  a commercially reasonable  sale under
    the U.C.C.;  if real  estate, then from  a foreclosure  sale,
    perhaps with some value  added if the creditor has  the right
    and the  wherewithal to bid-in, hold and  resell the property
    on the open market.  See, e.g., In re Tenney Village Co., 
    104 B.R. 562
    , 567 (Bankr. D.N.H. 1989) (valuing property  at fair
    market value because  mortgage holder had  ability to bid  in
    and obtain fair market value through later private sales); In
    re  Robbins,  
    119 B.R. 1
    ,  5-6  (Bankr.  D.  Mass.   1990)
    (recognizing  second  mortgage  holder's  bid-in  rights  but
    declining to  ascribe any  value to them  where circumstances
    make it "unreasonable to  expect" creditor to exercise them);
    see generally James F.  Queenan, Jr., Standards for Valuation
    of  Security Interests  in Chapter  11, 92  Com. L.J.  18, 60
    through a pending sale.")
    -9-
    9
    (1987) (real estate  mortgage holder's bid-in rights  "should
    be valued as an inherent part of his property interest").
    We  are  persuaded that  the  first  line of  cases
    correctly  interprets the statute.  This interpretation gives
    meaning to both sentences of   506(a), and enables bankruptcy
    courts  to exercise  the flexibility  Congress intended.   By
    retaining collateral,  a Chapter  11 debtor is  ensuring that
    the very event Winthrop proposes to use to value the property
    -- a  foreclosure sale -- will  not take place.   At the same
    time,  the debtor  should  not be  heard  to argue  that,  in
    valuing the  collateral, the court should  disregard the very
    event that, according to the debtor's plan, will take place -
    - namely, the debtor's  use of the collateral to  generate an
    income stream.   In ordinary circumstances  the present value
    of  the income stream would be equal to the collateral's fair
    market  value.   Under  such circumstances,  a court  remains
    faithful  to  the  dictates  of     506(a)   by  valuing  the
    creditor's  interest  in  the  collateral  in  light  of  the
    proposed post-bankruptcy  reality:   no foreclosure sale  and
    economic benefit  for the debtor derived  from the collateral
    equal to or greater than its fair market value.  Our approach
    allows the bankruptcy  court, using  its informed  discretion
    and applying historic principles of  equity, to adopt in each
    case  the   valuation  method  that  is   fairest  given  the
    prevailing circumstances.
    -10-
    10
    The interpretation championed by the second line of
    cases  renders  the second  sentence  of    506(a)  virtually
    meaningless.  Moreover, it  would allow a reorganizing debtor
    to  reap a windfall by stripping down the lien to liquidation
    value  and  quickly selling  the  collateral  at fair  market
    value, thus pocketing equity  that would have been completely
    beyond reach save  for the filing of the bankruptcy petition.
    Cf.  Butner  v.  United  States,  
    440 U.S. 48
    ,  55  (1979)
    (bankruptcy  law should  "prevent  a party  from receiving  a
    windfall merely by reason of the happenstance of bankruptcy")
    (quotation  omitted).  It is true that the debtor's intention
    to reorganize under  Chapter 11 is what  gives the collateral
    its going-concern value.   And  while it is  also true  that,
    absent a reorganization plan,  the creditor might not recover
    the difference -- assuming that there is in fact a difference
    -- between the  collateral's fair market value and the amount
    recoverable  through  its  state  law rights,  we  would  not
    characterize this additional recovery  as a "windfall" to the
    creditor,  and  certainly  not  one that  will  spur  secured
    creditors  to eschew their state law remedies and seek refuge
    in the comfortable confines of the bankruptcy courts.
    We   find  that  the  bankruptcy  court  correctly
    interpreted   506(a) as  according it flexibility in choosing
    among possible  standards of valuation,  and properly applied
    the statute to the  particular facts of this case.   Winthrop
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    11
    proposes  in its Plan to  retain control of  the Property and
    continue  using it in its nursery and landscaping business to
    generate  income.    In  light  of  this  proposed  use,  the
    bankruptcy court  committed no error in  valuing the Property
    at its stipulated fair market value.
    -12-
    12
    IV.
    IV.
    CONCLUSION
    CONCLUSION
    For  the  foregoing  reasons,  the  order  of   the
    district court is
    Affirmed.
    Affirmed
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