This appeal by the defendant in an adversary proceeding brought by a trustee in bankruptcy requires us to interpret section 542 of the Bankruptcy Code. In September 1992, Carlton, Fields, a Florida law firm, was retained by Paul Davis, the owner of an
One who during a bankruptcy proceeding is “in possession, custody, or control” of property belonging to the debtor’s estate “shall deliver to the trustee, and account for,' such property or the value of such property,” 11 U.S.C. § 542(a), unless the possessor “has neither actual notice nor actual knowledge of the commencement of the [bankruptcy] case.” § 542(c). The law firm argues that (1) the $125,000 that Davis wired to the law firm and later retrieved from it was not property of the estate; (2) the law firm never had possession, custody, or control of the money; (3) the firm cannot be required to return property that it no longer has; and (4) the firm has a nonstatutory equitable defense to section 542(a) based on its lack of knowledge that the $125,000 was the property of the debtor rather than Davis’s own property. If any of these arguments fly, the law firm wins.
1. The first argument borders on the frivolous. The money transferred to the law firm came out of a money-market account of Diversified, the debtor to be. It is irrelevant that, as the law firm points out correctly on the authority of
Citizens Bank v. Strumpf,
— U.S. -, -,
2. The law firm had control of the $125,000 during the bankruptcy proceeding. We know this because it exercised control by deducting the attorney’s fee that was owed it
3. But by the time the trustee got around to demanding the money from the law firm, the law firm no longer had it, so how could it deliver it to the trustee? The statute, however, requires the delivery of the property or
the value of
the property. Otherwise, upon receiving a demand from the trustee, the possessor of property of the debtor could thwart the demand simply by transferring the property to someone else. That is not what the statute says,
In re Gailey, Inc.,
4. Some cases, it is true, illustrated by
In re DeBerry,
If we are right that subsection (a) imposes on the possessor a legal duty to deliver up the value of the property that he possessed even if he no longer possesses it, the draftsmen could not have intended that knowledge of the bankruptcy alone would trigger the duty. (Maybe the bankruptcy had been widely publicized, so that everyone in the financial and legal community knew about it.) For then persons, connected with a bankrupt would become financial lepers, unable to engage in any transaction because anyone dealing with them would fear that they were spending money actually belonging to the debtor. On a literal reading of subsection (c), if a bank knows that
X
has declared bankruptcy, and
Y
deposits in the bank and later withdraws from it $1 million that in fact belongs to
X,
though the bank neither knew
If Carlton, Fields did not know that the $125,000 belonged to Diversified, which it knew to be in bankruptcy, at least it knew enough to place a reasonable person on notice, requiring the firm to conduct a reasonable inquiry to determine whose property the $125,000 was. For it had received the money from Diversified’s owner for use in defending Diversified, along with Diversified’s owner and the owner’s wife, against a lawsuit. It was more likely that Diversified was advancing the money to defend all three and to pay a settlement terminating their liability than that the corporation’s owner was putting up his own money to defend a corporation about to declare bankruptcy (and the law firm knew that the bankruptcy had followed immediately upon the wire transfer). More likely, not certain, because Diversified’s assets may already have been depleted to the point where the only real exposure was that of the other defendants. And it is true that when Davis told the firm about the bankruptcy, one of the firm’s lawyers asked him whose money it was holding and Davis said it was his. But remember that the test is notice of circumstances that would cause a reasonable person to inquire further. Knowing that the corporation was bankrupt, and given Davis’s obvious incentive to recharacterize corporate assets as his own, the firm should not have been satisfied with Davis’s oral assurance. The firm argues that actual knowledge (indeed, “affirmative and unequivocal knowledge”) should be required for liability, but the statute, as we have emphasized, is contrary — and rightly so, for otherwise the opportunities for dissipating a corporation’s assets on the eve of bankruptcy would be rich. The trustee is entitled to the $125,000 from the law firm, as the bankruptcy judge and the district judge held.
Affirmed.
