From the Bankruptcy Courts: Compelling a Senior Lienor to Pursue Remedies Against a Guarantor-A Misapplication of the Marshaling Doctrine

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Maurice A. Deane School of Law at Hofstra University Scholarly Commons at Hofstra Law Hofstra Law Faculty Scholarship 1985 From the Bankruptcy Courts: Compelling a Senior Lienor to Pursue Remedies Against a Guarantor-A Misapplication of the Marshaling Doctrine Benjamin Weintraub Alan N. Resnick Maurice A. Deane School of Law at Hofstra University Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarlycommons.law.hofstra.edu/faculty_scholarship Recommended Citation Benjamin Weintraub and Alan N. Resnick, From the Bankruptcy Courts: Compelling a Senior Lienor to Pursue Remedies Against a Guarantor-A Misapplication of the Marshaling Doctrine, 18 UCC L.J. 178 (1985) Available at: https://scholarlycommons.law.hofstra.edu/faculty_scholarship/877 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by Scholarly Commons at Hofstra Law. It has been accepted for inclusion in Hofstra Law Faculty Scholarship by an authorized administrator of Scholarly Commons at Hofstra Law. For more information, please contact lawcls@hofstra.edu.

From the Bankruptcy Courts Benjamin Weintraub* and Alan N. Resnick** COMPELLING A SENIOR LIENOR TO PURSUE REMEDIES AGAINST A GUARANTOR-A MISAPPLICATION OF THE MARSHALING DOCTRINE Assume that a creditor is owed $100,000 and has a senior security interest in the debtor's equipment valued at $100,000, as well as a personal guarantee of another entity secured by a lien on the guarantor's assets also valued at $100,000. Another creditor who is owed $25,000 has a junior security interest in the same equipment owned by the debtor, but has no personal guarantee. Upon the debtor's liquidation in bankruptcy, if the senior lienor proceeds against the debtor's equipment without proceeding against the guarantor, it is easy to see that the junior lienor would be considered an unsecured creditor in the bankruptcy case and there would be no equity in the equipment left for general creditors. But if the senior lienor fully recovers from * Counsel to the law firm of Levin & Weintraub & Crames, New York City; member of the National Bankruptcy Conference. ** Benjamin Weintraub Distinguished Professor of Bankruptcy Law, Hofstra University School of Law, Hempstead, New York; associate member of the National Bankruptcy Conference. the personal guarantor, the junior lienor would be treated as a fully secured creditor and, upon liquidation, general creditors would share in the $75,000 remaining equity in the equipment. This scenario raises two important questions: (1) whether the junior lienor may compel the senior lienor to exhaust its remedies against property owned by the personal guarantor based on the doctrine of the marshaling of assets and (2) whether the trustee may compel the senior lienor to exhaust its remedies against the guarantor's assets based on the marshaling doctrine, so as to maximize recovery by unsecured creditors. Although affirmative answers to both these questions are supported by the 1979 decision of the Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit in In re Jack Green's Fashions for Men-Big & Tall, Inc., 1 compelling the senior lienor to pursue the guarantor's assets is a misapplication of the marshaling of assets doctrine. 178 Marshalling in Principle The marshaling doctrine may be stated as follows: If a senior I 597 F.2d 130 (8th Cir. 1979).

\ 1 ' I ' FROM THE BANKRUPTCY COURTS lienor has a lien that exfends to business ~ssets tof a. corporate and covers two funds or potential debtor, as well as liens on reap funds owned by the debtor, and if estate ~wned by the 'Controlling a junior lienor has recourse to 'shareholders of' the. corporation' only one of those funds to satisfy and their wives who. were guaranthe debt due t<i him, the senior tors of th corpo~ate.obligation. lienor may be required to qhaust The trustee in the,. corporllt'ion' s "' the fund available to him exclu- bankruptcy case sought an 'order" sively before proceeding against compelling the bank to exhaust. fts " the fund that is also available to remedips against the real estate the junior lienor. 2 The principle owned by the guarantors,bef01;e underlying-this. doctrine was de-, resorting, to the corporation:'s scribed py the Supreme Court in business assets. Of course, th,e Meyer v. United States 3 : trustee was attempting to,maximize corporate! assets available [T]he equitable doctrine of marshaling [sic] rests upon the principle for distribution to unsecured that a creditor having two funds to creditors by forcing the. bank to satisfy his debt, may no~bybis application of them to his demand, ' were unavailale to the bankruptcy obtain payment from assets, that defeat another creditor, who may estate. Without extensive discus-, resort to only one of the funds. (Citation sion, except for reference to' the omhted.) district court's unpubli'shed opin ion, the court of appt<.a,ls affirmetl * * * the decisions of the 'lower courts"" [M]arshaling is not bottomed on granting the trus,~ee's 1llarshalfng' the law of contracts or liens. It is founded instead in equity, being designed to promote fair dealing and justice... It deals with the rights of all who have an interest in property involved and is applied only when it can be equitably fashioned as to all of the parties. 4 In the Jack Green 1 s case, a bank had a security interest in the request. In this case i~ would be in the highest degree inequitable to <Vlow the Bank to exhaust the business assets of the corporate bankrupt without first looking to the real >estafe mortgaged to it. T,o permit such a course would leave the general creditors of the business with nothing.5 2 See, e.g., DuPage Lumber & Home Improvement Center Co., Inc. v. Georgia-Pacific Corp/" 34 Bankr. 737 (N.D. Ill. 1983); In re McE1waney, 40 Bankr. 66 (M.D. Ga. 1984); In re United Retail Corp., 33 Bankr. 150 (D. Hawaii 1983). 3 '375 u.s. 233 (1963). 4 /d. at 236-237. J'hree Criticisms of fack Green's. The holding in Jack Green's i~ stili alive in the Eighth Circuit, but it is not doing 'Yell in other ' s 597 F.2d at 133. 179

,UNIFORM COMMERCIAL.CODE LAW JOURNAL ' ' \ courts. 6 Th~e ar'e three reasons why the ~ourt \ misapplied the marshaling of assets doctrine and why other; courts have rejected the holding of that case. First, the doctrine applies when there are two or more lien creditors. U~secured creditor~ have no right to compel a secured creditor 'to resort to certain collateral as opposed to.other collateral. In Jack Greefl's, the bank was the only secured creditor and it was the trustee, as representative of the unsecured creditors, who sought the 1 marshaling order. Apparently, although not expressly stating it, the cou'rt recogpized the trustee as having judicial lien creditor status pursuant to Section 70(c) of the former Bankruptcy Act. 7 However, many courts have rejected the notion that the trustee, as a hypothetical lien creditor 6 See, e.g., In re Computer Room, Inc., 24 Bankr. 732 (N.D. Ala. 1982); DuPage Lumber & Home Improvement Center Co., Inc. v. Georgia-Pacific Corp., 34 Bankr. 737,(N.D. Ill. 1983); see also Karasik It Kolodney, "The Doctrine of Marshaling Under the Bankruptcy Code,'' 89 Com. L.J. 102 (1984). 7 See also In re Spectra Prism Indus., Inc., 28 Bankr. 397 (9th Cir. App. Panel 1983), holding that the trustee may use its lien creditor status under 544(a) to block a marshaling order requested by a junior lienor. The Spectra Prism case was criticized by the authors in Weintraub & Resnick, "Marslialirig of Assets in Bankruptcy' Cases: The ~pecter of Constance v. Harv~y Appears Again," 16 U.C.C.L.J. 1384 (1984). Nonetheless, the recent case of In re Center W)lolesale, Inc., 759 F.2d' 1440 (9th Cir. 1985) follows the majority opiniorr of In re Spectra Prism Indus., supra. [VOL. 18 : 178 1985] under Section 70(c) of the former Act or Section 544(a) of the present Bankruptcy Code, has standing to compel the marshaling of assets. As hoted by the bankruptcy court in In re McElwaney, 8 '~[t]o 'allow the Trustee to invoke the marshaling doctrine, by vir,tue of his status as a hypothetical lien creditor would be a use of the strong-arm clause not contemplated by Congress." Another court, in In re Larry's Equipment Service, Inc., 9 had commented: 180 Marshaling is not equitable if applied for the benefit of a ttustee to the detriment of a se~ured and properly Qerfectedjunior lien creditor. To permit marshaling in the manner sought by the trustee, in this case, would frustrate the objective of the Bankuptcy Code and conflict with the doctrine itself by prejudicing the rigbts of a superior class of creditors. 10 The second criticism of the Jack Green's decisipn focuses on the so-called common debtor requirement. na necessary element for imposing the marshaling doctrine is that one debtor has two funds and that one secured creditor has liens on both funds while a junior lienor has a lien on oflly one fund: 11 When a creditor has a lien on assets owned by the principal 8 40 Bankr.,66, 70-71 (M.D. Ga. 1984). 9 23 Bankr. 132 (D. Me. 1982). 10 Id. at 134; see also In re Computer Room, Inc., 24 Bankr. 732 (N.D. Ala. 1982). 11 See, e.g., In re Childers, 44 Bankr. 23 (N.D. Ala. 1984); In re Maimone, 41 Bankr. 974, 984 (D.N.J. 1984) ("This doc-

debtor, and a lien,on as ets owned by a guarantor, the "common debtor'' requirement is missing. In DuPage Lumber & Home Improvement Center Co., Inc. v. Georgia-Pacific Corp., 12 a district court emphasized the importance of adhering to the common debtor requirement: The requirement that both funds be in the hands of a common debtor is not merely a formal or technical requirement; rather, it limits marshaling to cases for which the marshaling doctrine purports to provide the rule of decision. The marshaling doctrine embodies and implements a judgment as to the proper distribution of one debtor's assets, as among a senior mortgagee, a junior mortgagee, and the debtor's general creditors. When guarantors and other debtors are added to the picture, then new questions arise. The marshaling doctrine simply does not purport to provide a rule for deciding whether a junior mortgagee can require the senior mortgagee to satisfy its claim out of the assets of a second debtor. 13 The third critfcism of the Jack Green's decision is that the court overlooked or minimized the et' fects of the added expense and inconvenience that the marshaling order would cause the secured creditor by having to pursue remedies against the guarantors' real estate. Courts have held that trine obviously cannot be applied, however, when the other asset is also owned or liened by 'parties other than the debtor.''). 12 34 Bankr. 737 (N.D. Ill. 1983). u Id. at 740-741. FROM THE BANKRUPTCY COURTS{.., marshaling is not applicable where there.will b~ 'prejudice to the senior creditot, such~ as delay and increased expenses. 1 4 In the usual case, pursl)ing guarantors. requires the, commencement of separate litigation, foreclosure proceedings, and other expensive and time-consuming procedures. It would be ironic, as well t as inconsistent with the Unifor~ Commercial Code's policy of giving secured partie:; cumulative, remedies, 15 for a secured Jentle~ to be prevented or delayed in recovering agaj~st the principal debtor solely because it took the extra precaution of obtaining a personal guarantee. Conclusion Except in rare cases Wher~ fraud or other inequitable'conduct justifies piercing the corporate veil so as to treat a corporate debtor and a shareholder guaran~ tor as the same entity, 16 the mar~ shaling of assets doctrine should 14 See, e.g., In re Urtited Retail Corp., 33 Bankr. 150 (D. Hawaii 1983); In re Leonardo, 11 Bankr. 453 ()V.D.N.Y. 1981). 15 See U.C.C. 9-501(1). 1 6 "Facts sufficient to sustain a piercing of the corporate veil may establish independent and separate equities which may overcome a deficiency in the common debtor requirement." In re Rich Supply House, Inc., 43 Bankr. 68, 70 (N.D. Ill. 1984); see also In re United Medical Research, Inc., 12 Bankr. 941 (C.D, Cal. 1981); Karasik & Kolodney, "The Doctrine of Marshaling Under the Bankruptcy Code," 89 Com. L.J. 102 (1984). 181

UNIFORM COMMERCIAL COD&LAW JOURNAL [VOL. 18 : 178 198~] not be used to +compel a se- trustee such. standing goes well cured "creditor to pursue temedies.. beyond the policy of 'Section against a guarantor's assets. Ap- 544(a), which is to allow the plication <?f,~the marshaling doc- trustee. to avoid,secret or unpertrine tb compel foreclosure on a fected security interests. The ap-. -guadmtor.'s :property.violates 1he plication of the marshaling doccommon debtor requirement and trine in bankruptcy cases should imposes on " the senior lienor addi- be limited to situations where tiona~ e'xpenses and undue delay there are two actual1ien creditors in obtaining payment. In any and where the seni~r creditor has event, the trustee as a hypotheti- liens on two funds owned by the cal lien creditor under Section debtor, while the junior creditor 544(a) sh9uld pot have standing has.a lien on only one of those t.6 seek marshaling. Giving the funds. I 182