Milwaukee Cheese set up a “thrift savings plan” for its employees. The plan offered the convenience of payroll deductions plus an attractive rate of interest; the firm credited long-term employees with additional amounts under an informal profit-sharing plan. Problem: Milwaukee Cheese was not a bank and did not establish a credit union. (It could not have done so; the firm permitted employees’ friends and relatives to participate, spoiling the common bond of employment that is required for a credit union. 12 U.S.C. § 1759.) Funds designated for the “thrift savings plan” were commingled with the corporation’s general revenues rather than held in trust. “Depositors” therefore were unsecured debt investors in the firm. Violations of ERISA and the banking and securities law are too numerous to count.
In 1985 Milwaukee Cheese encountered financial distress. Most of the “depositors” asked for their money and were promptly paid; those who did not were paid anyway. Within 90 days the firm’s creditors placed it into involuntary bankruptcy under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code of 1978. On the date the petition was filed, the firm’s assets were worth about $2 million, and secured creditors held claims exceeding that sum. They were not pleased to discover that this group of unsecured investors had been paid in full. The trustee commenced a preference-recovery action. After 10 years of litigation the district court concluded that the “withdrawals” were indeed preferences, avoidable under 11 U.S.C. § 547(b). The long delay — caused by repeated multi-year periods in which motions were under advisement before bankruptcy and district judges — is exceedingly unfortunate. The firm’s ex-employees were entitled to know, much sooner than they did, what resources they would have to live on. For some the
One line of argument — that Milwaukee Cheese held the balances of the thrift “accounts” in constructive trust for the “depositors,” so that the money was never the debt- or’s property, see 11 U.S.C. § 541(a)(1) — -was rejected by the bankruptcy court and has not been renewed. After Cunningham, v. Brown,
to the extent that such transfer was—
(A)in payment of a debt incurred by the debtor in the ordinary course of business or financial affairs of the debtor and the transferee;
(B) made in the ordinary course of business or financial affairs of the debtor and the transferee; and
(C) made according to ordinary business terms[.]
Judge Clevert (then Chief Judge of the Bankruptcy Court) initially held that the debt had not been “made according to ordinary business terms” (sec.547(c)(2)(C)) because the thrift savings plan violated Wisconsin’s banking laws. Cf. In re Bullion Reserve of North America,
Although the litigants have devoted much energy, and many years, to the fine points of § 547(c)(2)(C), we do not see how transfers under these circumstances could satisfy § 547(c)(2)(B): that the transfers have been “made in the ordinary course of business or financial affairs of the debtor”. Both sides at times confuse the requirement of § 547(c)(2)(C) that transfer be made according to ordinary business terms -with the requirement in § 547(c)(2)(B) that repayment occur in the ordinary course of business. As a result they have not kept the subsections altogether separate. But the trustee’s references to § 547(c)(2)(B) suffice to justify its use as a ground on which to affirm the judgment, even though the bankruptcy court thought this subsection satisfied and the district court did not mention it (though its significance had been argued to that court). See Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co. v. Ludwig,
A sudden payment in full of all debts in a discrete category, in anticipation of bankruptcy and for the purpose of helping a favored class of creditors, is the paradigm of a preference. Section 547 is designed to discourage (by eliminating the fruits of) a race immediately before bankruptcy to get all of one’s own debt repaid, and let the devil take the hindmost — for this race, costly to the runners, can impose even greater costs on other creditors (who must strive to protect themselves, perhaps by filing premature
Nothing about the payments to the “depositors” was remotely ordinary, however. They had made long term investments, and for any one of them to demand repayment in full was abnormal. That is not how Milwaukee Cheese and the “savers” had conducted themselves in the past; withdrawals had been for less than the full balance. Although large withdrawals had been rare, in late 1985 everyone withdrew everything in full. Judge Clevert found that many of the “depositors,” including the Straus and Treder families, did not know about the firm’s impending demise when they asked for their money back; we accept this conclusion, implausible though it is (a “run” on a bank, or a cheese company, comes from at least a fear of insolvency, even if the fear is not well grounded). Section 547(c)(2)(B) is not satisfied just because each creditor perceives the payment to be justified. None of these transactions represented a continuation, into the 90-day period before the petition, of routine transactions between Milwaukee Cheese and the “savers.” Even if these transactions were ordinary from the transferees’ perspectives (they weren’t), they must be ordinary from the debtor’s perspective too, In re Craig Oil Co.,
Appellants tell us that bankruptcy is an equitable doctrine and ask us to bend the rules a little to protect innocent investors. Yet “a bankruptcy court is a court of equity” is not a mantra that makes the Bankruptcy Code dissolve. Other innocent creditors have their own claims, which ought not be diminished so that a judge may express sympathy for a group of unfortunates. Judges are not entitled, in or out of bankruptcy, to favor the litigants they think most worthy, as opposed to those who have the best legal position. Many of our cases reject the position that equitable considerations justify alteration of the Code’s plan of recovery and distribution. E.g., Boston & Maine Corp. v. Chicago Pacific Corp.,
Delay is a reason to award interest, not to avoid interest; the longer the case lasts, the more of the stakes the defendant keeps even if it loses (and the less the victorious plaintiff receives), unless interest is added. Milwaukee v. Cement Division of National Gypsum Co.,
Affirmed.
