BANK OF AMERICA, N.A., Creditor-Appellant, v. ALEX D. MOGLIA, Trustee-Appellee.
No. 02-2517
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
ARGUED JANUARY 21, 2003—DECIDED JUNE 2, 2003
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 02 C 110—Marvin E. Aspen, Judge.
POSNER, Circuit Judge. Outboard Marine Corporation is in Chapter 7 bankruptcy, and among its holdings are the assets, currently worth some $14 million, in what is known as a “rabbi trust.” Bank of America, as the agent of Outboard‘s secured creditors, claims a security interest in these assets, while the trustee in bankruptcy claims them for the unsecured creditors. The security agreement on which Bank of America relies covers all Outboard‘s “general intangibles,” a term of great breadth in commercial law, see
A rabbi trust, so called because its tax treatment was first addressed in an IRS letter ruling on a trust for the benefit of a rabbi, Private Letter Ruling 8113107 (Dec. 31, 1980); see also IRS General Counsel Memorandum 39230 (Jan. 20, 1984), is a trust created by a corporation or other institution for the benefit of one or more of its executives (the rabbi, in the IRS‘s original ruling). See, e.g., Westport Bank & Trust Co. v. Geraghty, 90 F.3d 661, 663-64 (2d Cir. 1996); Hills Stores Co. v. Bozic, 769 A.2d 88, 99 (Del. Ch. 2000);
But as the IRS explained in the letter ruling, unless an executive‘s right to receive money from the trust is “subject to substantial limitations or restrictions,” rather than being his to draw on at any time (making it income to him in a practical sense), the executive must include any contribution to the trust and any interest or other earnings of the trust in his gross income in the year in which the contribution was made or the interest obtained. See McAllister v. Resolution Trust Corp., 201 F.3d 570, 572-73, 575 (5th Cir. 2000). The “substantial limitations or restrictions” condition was satisfied in the transaction on which the IRS ruled. The trust agreement provided that the rabbi would not receive the trust assets until he retired or otherwise ended his employment by the congregation. Until then the corpus of the trust and any interest on it would be owned by the congregation, see Maher v. Harris Trust & Savings Bank, 75 F.3d 1182, 1185 (7th Cir. 1996); Goodman v. Resolution Trust Corp., 7 F.3d 1123, 1125 (4th Cir. 1993), so the rabbi would have neither legal nor equitable right to the money. Cf.
The word “creditors” is not defined either in the IRS‘s letter ruling or in the trust agreement in this case; but a
Outboard is conceded to have established a bona fide rabbi trust, so that its contributions to the trust and the income that those contributions generated were not includible in the executives’ gross income. Therefore, if the validity of a rabbi trust depends on its assets’ being reserved for the employer‘s unsecured creditors, we can stop right here and affirm; the Bank of America, as a secured creditor, would have no right to the assets—otherwise the trust‘s beneficiaries would not have received the favorable tax treatment accorded the beneficiaries of a rabbi trust, and they did receive it. But it is uncertain whether such a reservation actually is essential to the favorable tax treatment of a rabbi trust. All that the tax law requires is that there be substantial limitations on the beneficiaries’ access to the trust assets, and a reservation of the assets in the event of bankruptcy to both the secured and the unsecured creditors of the settlor, rather than to the unsecured creditors, might well be thought
We say that a limitation to all, rather than just to the unsecured, creditors “might be” rather than “would be” substantial enough to satisfy the Internal Revenue Service because executives often are creditors of their firm; if they were secured creditors and their security interest embraced the assets of the trust, their claims to those assets would be superior to those of the firm‘s unsecured creditors, which would tend to make the limitation that is fundamental to the favorable tax treatment of the rabbi trust—that the creditors have a superior claim to the beneficiaries—illusory. But the trust instrument in this case took care of that concern by providing that Outboard‘s executives could not obtain a security interest in the trust‘s assets.
Even if the executives would not have sacrificed their favorable tax treatment had the trust instrument reserved the assets of the trust for all the company‘s creditors, secured and unsecured alike, in the event of bankruptcy, the instrument did not do this; it reserved those assets for the unsecured creditors. It states (we italicize the key terms) that the “Trust Corpus . . . shall remain at all times subject to the claims of the general creditors of [Outboard].
This couldn‘t be clearer: secured creditors have no claim to the trust assets. And judges usually interpret written contracts (the instrument creating the rabbi trust in this case was an agreement nominally between Outboard and the trustee of the trust, Northern Trust Company, but realistically between Outboard and the executives who were the beneficiaries of the trust, see Westport Bank & Trust Co. v. Geraghty, supra, 90 F.3d at 663-64) according to the conventional meaning of their terms, that is, literally. This is especially appropriate in the case of a negotiated contract involving substantial stakes between commercially sophisticated parties, as in this case, who know how to say what they mean and have an incentive to draft their agreement carefully. Such a style of interpretation protects the parties against the vagaries of the litigation process—a major reason for committing contracts to writing—without too great a risk of misinterpretation. But literal interpretation of written contracts, even when the parties are sophisticated and the stakes substantial, is merely presumptively the right approach to take. Even sophisticated lawyers and businessmen sometimes stumble in their use of language, or use language that is specialized to their trade and departs from normal usage, or fail to anticipate contingencies that may make the language of the contract yield absurd results if it is read literally, and if these circumstances are evident to the court the contract
This argument is not negligible but neither is it sufficiently compelling to rebut the presumption in favor of literal interpretation to which we referred. Rather the contrary. The language of the Model Rabbi Trust would make it natural for Outboard to assume that to create a valid rabbi trust it would have to reserve the trust‘s assets for its general creditors, which undoubtedly it would understand to mean its unsecured creditors. The assumption may have been incorrect, more precisely may have been excessively cautious; but it provides the best guide to the meaning that Outboard and the executives ascribed to the agreement. The executives in particular would tend to favor the cautious approach rather than jeopardize their tax benefits for the sake of Outboard‘s secured creditors. And though they might benefit indirectly, and Outboard directly, from the company‘s being able to pledge more of its assets to secure a loan to the company, this benefit—since the assets in a rabbi trust are likely to be only a small fraction of the company‘s total assets—would probably be outweighed by the risk of forfeiting favorable tax treatment by departing from the template of the Model Rabbi Trust.
Bank of America has a second string to its bow: it argues that Illinois law, which the parties agree governs the interpretation of the trust agreement, will enforce a contractual antiassignment provision, such as the provision in the trust instrument that forbids assigning a security interest in the assets of the rabbi trust to creditors, against an assignee only if the provision states that the assignor has no power, and not merely no right, to assign. So, the argument continues, because the trust instrument does not say in so many words that any attempt by Outboard to
Clauses in conveyances, or in other instruments contractual or otherwise that create property rights, that forbid the recipient of the property to sell it free and clear—or in legal jargon that create a “restraint on alienation“—are traditionally disfavored. Gale v. York Center Community Co-op., Inc., 171 N.E.2d 30, 33 (Ill. 1961); Avon Avalon, Inc. v. Collins, 643 So. 2d 570, 574 (Ala. 1994). Sometimes this is because they are thought to create monopoly, concentrate wealth, or cater to “the capricious whims of the conveyor.” Gale v. York Center Community Co-op., Inc., supra, 171 N.E.2d at 33. But more often and more realistically it is because they can increase transaction costs by preventing subsequent purchasers or assignees from knowing what they are getting. Cf. Gregory S. Alexander, “The Dead Hand and the Law of Trusts in the Nineteenth Century,” 37 Stan. L. Rev. 1189, 1258-60 (1985). A legal requirement that the restraint be express, recorded, or otherwise readily ascertainable by potential purchasers and assignees minimizes, and often eliminates, those additional costs, cf. Noblesville Redevelopment Comm‘n v. Noblesville Limited Partnership, 674 N.E.2d 558, 562-63 (Ind. 1996); if the recipient‘s purchaser knows exactly what he is (not) getting, a refusal to enforce the restriction merely confers a windfall on him.
The requirement of express and readily ascertainable notice is satisfied here. When Bank of America made its
Illinois‘s approach implements the modern view, expressed in
The Bank of America has one last argument, this one thoroughly frivolous—that the trustee under the trust agreement, who, remember, was in the event of Outboard‘s solvency to seek directions from a court concerning the disposition of the trust assets, was an “account debtor” of Outboard, that is, someone who owed Outboard money.
Bank of America, a large, responsible, and well represented enterprise, should not have made the account-debtor argument. Nor should it have treated a district court decision (Lomas Mortgage U.S.A., Inc. v. W.E. O‘Neil Construction Co., 812 F. Supp. 841 (N.D. Ill. 1993)) as an authoritative
AFFIRMED.
A true Copy:
Teste:
Clerk of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
USCA-02-C-0072—6-2-03
