C & S Grain Company, a debtor in bankruptcy, appeals from a decision of the district court affirming a bankruptcy court’s orders pertaining to the disposition of its grain reserves. Because we find no justification for disturbing the decisions below, we affirm.
C & S Grain was formed for purposes of buying, selling, and storing grain. During the months preceding its bankruptcy, C & S Grain struggled to maintain the debt-to-equity ratio that was required under the conditions of its grain dealer’s and warehouseman’s licenses. After unsuccessfully attempting to improve its weakening financial position, C & S Grain finally surrendered its grain licenses to the Illinois Department of Agriculture (“Department”) on December 13, 1993. Upon surrender of a grain license, the Department is entitled to liquidate immediately the unlicensed dealer’s grain reserves. 20 ILCS 205/40.23. The Department decided, however, to allow C & S Grain a week in which to either remedy its financial situation or find a suitable successor to continue operation of the grain facility. Instead, on December 20,1993, C & S Grain filed for bankruptcy under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code, thereby temporarily staying any action by the Department to liquidate its grain reserves.
The Department sought and obtained an order relieving it from the provisions of the automatic stay on January 6, 1994, after the bankruptcy court determined that the creditors were better protected if the Department were to liquidate the debtor’s grain assets. The court also granted motions made by several parties each of whom had entered into so-called “to arrive” contracts with C & S Grain and each of whom, in light of the bankruptcy, sought to be excused from the remaining obligations of those contracts. These contracts required the moving parties to sell grain to C & S Grain at a specified price at a future date. Finding that upon relinquishment of its license, C & S Grain was no longer authorized to perform such contracts, the court declared the contracts void for illegality. In so holding, the court denied C & S Grain’s request to appoint the Department as a limited trustee with the power to assume or reject the “to arrive” contracts. The district court affirmed the bankruptcy court’s decision in all respects.
C & S Grain wishes to handle the disposition of its grain assets on its own by assuming the “to arrive” contracts and assigning them to entities capable of performing their underlying obligations. By doing so, C & S Grain believes that it will earn substantial revenues from which it can pay its creditors. To aid it in this endeavor, C & S Grain asks that we reverse three decisions of the bankruptcy court: the denial of C & S Grain’s motion requesting a limited trustee, the granting of the several motions for rejection of the “to arrive” contracts, and the granting of the Department’s motion for relief from the automatic stay.
Although we review a bankruptcy court’s factual findings for clear error, we evaluate its legal decisions
de novo. In re West,
We consider next the court’s decision on the rejection of the “to arrive” contracts. C & S Grain sought to assume and assign the contracts to licensed grain dealers who would be willing to perform C & S Grain’s obligations under the contracts and who would pay C & S Grain for that right. C & S Grain claims that as long as its assignee could provide adequate assurance of future performance, namely that the debtor’s contract partner would receive the benefit of its bargain under the contract, C & S Grain was entitled to assign profitable executory contracts for performance by third parties. 11 U.S.C. § 365(a), (f)(2).
The Bankruptcy Code does indeed allow debtors to assume and assign executory contracts with court approval. 11 U.S.C. § 365(a), (f)(1). 2 A threshold matter, however, is whether the contracts were in fact executory. For if the “to arrive” contracts were either completed or terminated before the bankruptcy filing, C & S Grain could not have assumed them.
For purposes of the Bankruptcy Code, an executory contract is one in which the obligations of each party remain substantially unperformed.
In re Chicago, Rock Island & Pac. R.R. Co.,
In Illinois, once a statute imposes licensure as a precondition for operation and provides a penalty for its violation, a contract for the unlicensed performance of that act is void.
See T.E.C. & Assocs., Inc. v. Alberto-Culver Co.,
This analysis supports the decisions rendered in this case. The parties with whom C & S Grain had contracted were relieved of their duties to perform when C & S Grain relinquished its licenses. No longer executo-ry, their contracts could no longer be assumed by C & S Grain, and therefore, the bankruptcy court’s decision to grant the motions to excuse their performance on the “to arrive” contracts was correct.
Left for our consideration then is the court’s decision granting the Department relief from the automatic stay. Section 362(a) establishes that the filing of a bankruptcy petition serves to stay proceedings
In situations where a debtor in bankruptcy holds grain assets, the perishability of those assets makes time a critical factor. See 11 U.S.C. § 557 (permitting the bankruptcy court to provide for an expedited determination of interests in grain assets). In this instance, the court determined that unless C & S Grain was able to regain its license, it would be unable, on its own, to liquidate its rapidly perishing grain assets. Its chances of getting relicensed hinged, in turn, on C & S Grain’s ability to reorganize. At the time the court rendered its decision, C & S Grain had done nothing to suggest that its prospects for reorganization were imminent. The bankruptcy court therefore granted the Department’s motion.
Upon the failure of a grain dealer or warehouser, Illinois law vests the Department with the power to liquidate the failed dealer’s grain assets on behalf of those claimants who hold a statutory lien in those assets. 20 ILCS 205/40.23. C & S Grain contends that the filing of the bankruptcy petition preempts state law and concludes that therefore, the Department’s right to liquidate under state law was irrelevant.
This argument mischaracterizes the nature of the decision. In granting the motion, the bankruptcy court was not simply applying the state law without regard for the tenets of the federal bankruptcy statute. Rather, the court was assessing whether there was “cause” for lifting the stay under section 362(f)(1) of the Bankruptcy Code itself. In determining whether cause exists, the bankruptcy court should base its decision on the hardships imposed on the parties with an eye towards the overall goals of the Bankruptcy Code.
See In re Opelika Mfg., Corp.,
Unpersuaded by C & S Gram’s arguments, we conclude that the bankruptcy court’s disposition in this matter was proper in all respects. In light of the foregoing, the decision of the district court affirming the orders of the bankruptcy court is also
Affirmed.
Notes
. Section 1104(c) states in relevant part:
If the court orders the appointment of a trustee or examiner, ... then the United States trustee, after consultation with parties in interest, shall appoint, subject to the court's approval, one disinterested person other than the United States trustee to serve as trustee or examiner, as the case may be, in the case.
11 U.S.C. § 1104(c).
. Though section 365 consistently speaks of a trustee’s rights and obligations in assuming and assigning executory contracts, it is clear that a debtor in possession may also exercise the rights of a Chapter 11 trustee. 11 U.S.C. § 1107(a).
