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In a Case of First Impression, 11th Circuit Rules “New Value” Can Be Both Preference Defense and Administrative Claim

By Scott Riddle on August 2, 2022
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In Auriga Polymers, Inc. v. PMCM2, LLC, as Liquidating Trustee, No. 20-14647, 2022 WL 2800195 (11th Cir. July 17, 2022) (click here for .pdf) the creditor, Auriga, received transfers of more than $2.2 million in the 90 days before the Debtor, Beaulieu Group, LLC, filed its Bankruptcy case on July 16, 2017.  During the 90 day preference period, Auriga had also delivered to the Debtor over $3.523 million of goods, with at least $694,502.00 of the goods delivered within 20 days of the Petition Date.

Auriga filed two claims in the case: 1) a general unsecured claim in the amount of $3.596 million, and 2) an administrative claim in the amount of $694,502.00 pursuant to §503(b)(9) of the Bankruptcy Code for the value of the goods delivered within 20 days of the Petition Date.  After confirmation of the Debtor’s Plan, which gave authority to the Liquidating Trust to pursue avoidance actions, the Liquidating Trustee filed a proceeding against Auriga to avoid and recover the $2.2 million Pre-Petition Transfers under §547(b), to reclassify any portion of Auriga’s § 503(b)(9) request that was included as part of its new value defense as a general unsecured claim, and to disallow any claims by Auriga until it disgorged any amounts successfully avoided by Trustee. Auriga counterclaimed seeking a declaratory judgment that (1) its use of the new value defense under § 547(c)(4) does not preclude it from using the same value to recover under § 503(b)(9), and (2) the Trustee cannot use 11 U.S.C. § 502(d) to disallow Auriga’s § 503(b)(9) request for administrative expense treatment.

Auriga and the Trustee subsequently stipulated that the payments made to Auriga in the preference period were avoidable preferences, and the new value defense protected all but $421,119.00 of the preferential transfers.  “That $421,119 in value conveyed by Auriga to Beaulieu was part of Auriga’s $694,502 § 503(b)(9) request; the parties dispute Auriga’s ability to also use that $421,119 value as part of its § 547(c)(4) new value defense. The parties agreed, however, that Auriga had an allowed § 503(b)(9) claim for $273,382 (the difference between the total request for $694,502 and the $421,119 disputed portion).”

On summary judgment, the Bankruptcy Court entered an Order that, inter alia, held that “funds held in reserve to pay § 503(b)(9) claims are ‘otherwise unavoidable’ transfers for purposes of a § 547(c)(4) defense and cannot be used to offset preference liability. Click here for .pdf; see also In re Beaulieu Grp., LLC (“Fabric Sources”), 616 B.R. 857 (Bankr. N.D. Ga. 2020) (wherein the Bankruptcy Court previously ruled on this issue). In other words, using the same “value” as both an administrative claim and a new value defense was, in essence, a double recovery for the creditor.

Auriga appealed to the District Court, which stayed the case for immediate direct appeal to the Eleventh Circuit.

The precise question warranting direct appeal is:

whether a Liquidation Trustee’s post-petition reservation of funds sufficient to pay a defendant’s administrative expense claim under § 503(b)(9) amounts to an “otherwise unavoidable transfer” within the meaning of § 547(c)(4) such that it precludes the use of such new value as part of the defendant’s affirmative defense of subsequent new value under § 547(c)(4) of the Bankruptcy Code.

The Court first noted that it had previously held that new value need not remain unpaid for a valid §547(c)(4) defense. In re BFW Liquidation, LLC, 899 F.3d 1178 (11th Cir. 2018).

On appeal, Auriga argues that there has been no “transfer” at all because the funds held in reserve have not been paid. Auriga further argues that, even if there were a “transfer,” the statute’s silence is not dispositive, and the text and context of § 547(c)(4) cannot support the bankruptcy court’s interpretation. As to Auriga’s contention that no transfer has occurred, we agree with the bankruptcy court that there has been a “transfer.” But, for these reasons, we agree with Auriga that such transfers made post-petition will not affect a creditor’s new value defense.

Next, the Court applied a rule of statutory construction that words bear the same meaning throughout a text –

The statute [§ 547(c)(4)] uses the word “transfer” three times. The first two uses must refer to transfers that qualify as preferences, as the only preferences that can be avoided “under this section,” §547, are “preferences,” which by definition are pre-petition transfers. See § 547(b) (“[M]ade … on or within 90 days before the date of the filing of the petition ….”). We should likewise read the third use of “transfer” to refer to preference transfers, which necessarily occur pre-petition.

Additional factors in support of the Court’s decision –

  • The statute’s title – “Preferences” – also suggests that it concerns pre-petition transactions during the preference period.
  • Most case law has concluded that new value provided post-petition does not increase the creditor’s new value defense, so it logically follows that post-petition payments to the creditor also do not affect the preference analysis.
  • The statute of limitations for preference actions begins to run on the petition date (See 11 U.S.C. §§ 301(b), 546(a)), so if §547(c)(4)(B) is read as allowing post-petition payments to defeat a new value defense, “the calculation of preference liability could change depending on when the preference avoidance action was filed.”
  • The fact that Congress imposed a temporal limit in §547(c)(5) does not indicate that it intended to omit such a limit in § 547(c)(4).
  • Bankruptcy policy does not support the Trustee’s position and there is no risk if a “double payment” (i.e, the administrative claim and new value defense). “To clarify, asserting a new value defense does not result in any payment to the creditor; it merely prevents disgorgement of monies previously paid… Congress chose to afford creditors who ship goods to a debtor within twenty days of a bankruptcy filing with statutory priority.

Scott Riddle’s practice focuses on bankruptcy and reorganization. Scott has represented businesses and other parties in Bankruptcy cases for almost 30 years.  You can contact Scott at 404-815-0164 or scott@scottriddlelaw.com.  For more information, click here.

 

 

Photo of Scott Riddle Scott Riddle

Scott Riddle has over twenty years’ experience in Bankruptcy and business and real estate litigation and has represented individuals and businesses throughout Georgia and several other states. Scott graduated from The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill with a BSBA in 1987…

Scott Riddle has over twenty years’ experience in Bankruptcy and business and real estate litigation and has represented individuals and businesses throughout Georgia and several other states. Scott graduated from The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill with a BSBA in 1987 and received his JD, with honors, in 1991 from the UNC School of Law. After graduation from law school, Scott served as a judicial law clerk for Judge W. Homer Drake, Jr., United States Bankruptcy Judge for the Northern District of Georgia. He then spent several years in the Bankruptcy and litigation sections of a large international law firm based in Atlanta prior to starting his own firm.

Scott is admitted to practice before the Supreme Court of Georgia, Georgia Court of Appeals, Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals, and U.S. District and Bankruptcy Courts for the Northern, Middle and Southern Districts of Georgia. He has also been admitted to practice pro hac vice in the courts of several other states.

Scott has spoken at several continuing education seminars, and in the community, has been a member of the Kiwanis Club, Buckhead Business Association, Rotary Club and North Point Community Church. He has been cited in several publications, including the Wall Street Journal Online, Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Atlanta Business Chronicle, Fulton County Daily Report, and CNN.com. Scott is a member of the State Bar of Georgia (Bankruptcy and Litigation Sections), served several terms on the Board of Directors of the Bankruptcy Section of the Atlanta Bar Association, and is a member of the Georgia Chapter of the Turnaround Management Association and the American Bankruptcy Institute.

Away from the office, Scott is very active in his community. In addition to volunteering with local charities, Scott has participated and led mission and relief trips to orphanages in Russia and Romania, conducted English camps in Romania and Poland, participated in earthquake relief projects in Haiti, and participated in, and helped organize, an earthquake relief trip to Chile. He also supports Lighthouse Family Retreats, and participates in weekend retreats for children suffering from cancer and their families.

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  • Posted in:
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  • Blog:
    Georgia Bankruptcy Blog
  • Organization:
    The Law Office of Scott B. Riddle
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