In re Koro Corp., Bankruptcy No. 81-00117-HL

Decision Date28 April 1981
Docket NumberBankruptcy No. 81-00117-HL,Adv. No. A81-0186.
Citation10 BR 767
CourtU.S. Bankruptcy Court — District of Massachusetts
PartiesIn re KORO CORPORATION, Debtor. PLASTIC DISTRIBUTING CORPORATION, Plaintiff, v. KORO CORPORATION, Defendant.

David J. Gass, Waltham, Mass., for plaintiff.

Joanne M. Neale, Craig & Macauley, P.C., Boston, Mass., for defendant.

Herbert C. Kahn, Boston, Mass., for S. Shore Bank.

FINDINGS AND RULINGS ON MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

HAROLD LAVIEN, Bankruptcy Judge.

Findings of Fact

At the hearing on Defendant's Motion for Summary Judgment, the following were the only material facts, all of which were uncontested.

On January 27, 1981, the Plaintiff, Plastic Distributing Corporation (hereinafter P D C) sold the Defendant Debtor, Koro Corporation, 13,900 pounds of 350 Natural ABS plastic pellets, in what was intended by all parties to be a cash transaction. The pellets were delivered on January 27 and manufactured by Koro into plastic sheet for resale to a third party on the same day. At the time of the delivery, P D C accepted Koro's check for $11,745.50 as payment in full for the pellets. On January 28, 1981, an involuntary bankruptcy was filed against Koro by three of its unsecured creditors.1 On February 4, 1981, Koro's check was dishonored when presented for payment by P D C. On February 6, the Vice-President of P D C telephoned Koro's plant manager and demanded that Koro return the plastic pellets to P D C. P D C never made a written demand for the return of the pellets on Koro.

On February 6, Koro could not return the pellets since they had already been converted by Koro's manufacturing process into plastic sheets and the bulk of which had already been sold and delivered to a third party bona fide purchaser. The remaining plastic sheets were also subsequently sold to a third party bona fide purchaser. Koro refused to pay for the pellets and while P D C sought to claim the proceeds, it was concededly unable to trace any proceeds attributable to the pellets.

The South Shore Bank had a long standing valid security interest in the Debtor's inventory, receivables and after acquired property including inventory, receivables, and proceeds.

Discussion

I believe that 11 U.S.C. § 546(c) was intended to apply to "any statutory right or common law right of a seller . . . to reclaim . . ." with no express distinction between credit and cash sales. To the extent that 11 U.S.C. § 546(c)2 is applicable to this cash transaction, the remedy of reclamation is not available to the Plaintiff since Plaintiff made no written demand on Koro and, therefore, failed to comply with § 546(c)(1).

2. To the extent that Mass.Gen. Laws Ch. 106 § 2-7033 applies to this cash transaction, 11 U.S.C. § 546 was intended to avoid the previous conflicting decisions and supplanted that section and, therefore, the lack of a written demand is fatal.

3. To the extent that neither Mass. Gen.Laws Ch. 106 § 2-702 nor § 546 of the Bankruptcy Code applies because this is a cash transaction,4 Plaintiff still cannot recover under Mass.Gen.Laws Ch. 106 §§ 2-507(2),5 or 2-511(3),6 since there was no property to reclaim. The property sought to be reclaimed was not in existence in its original form on February 6, 1981 and the bulk of the manufactured new product had already been sold to a third party bona fide purchaser (the day on which Plaintiff made its oral demand).

P D C would then have the Court recognize a claim to the proceeds; however, even if the fact that the pellets themselves were not sold but integrated and assimilated in a new manufactured product did not present a short answer, the only basis of looking to the proceeds would be on some trust theory which by definition requires a trust res and here admittedly no such tracing of funds was made. See A.W. Scott, The Law of Trusts, (3rd ed. 1967), §§ 507-722.7

Moreover, South Shore Bank having a valid security interest with an after acquired clause in all the Debtor's receivable inventory and proceeds, would have a superior right to the proceeds. In re Daley, 17 U.C.C.Rep. 433 (Bkrtcy.Ct.D.Mass.1975).

In Szabo v. Vinton Motors, Inc., 630 F.2d 1 (1st Cir. 1980), the Court answered the argument that in a cash transaction, seller would be remediless because it would not know of buyer's "bad check" until after 10-day period had expired, by simply suggesting if this was the creditor's concern, the seller should have required a certified check. In fact, in this case, P D C did know within the 10-day period of Koro's bad check (February 4), and could have made a written reclamation demand.

Motion for Summary Judgment allowed.

1 The case was converted to a Chapter 11 on February 2, 1981.

2 11 U.S.C. § 546(c) provides:

(c) The rights and powers of the trustee under sections 544(a), 545, 547, and 549 of this title are subject to any statutory right or common-law right of a seller, in the ordinary course of such seller's business, of goods to the debtor to reclaim such goods if the debtor has received such goods while insolvent, but —

(1) such a seller may not reclaim any such goods unless such seller demands in writing reclamation of such goods before ten days after receipt of such goods by the debtor; and

(2) the court may deny reclamation to a seller with such a right of reclamation that has made such a demand only if court

(A) grants the claim of such a seller priority as an administrative expense; or

(B) secures such claim by a lien.

3 Mass.Gen.Laws Ch. 106 § 2-702 provides:

(1) Where the seller discovers the buyer to be insolvent he may refuse delivery except for cash including payment for all goods theretofore delivered under the contract, and stop delivery under this Article (section 2-705).

(2) Where the seller discovers that the buyer has...

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