This is an appeal from the District Court’s affirmance of the Bankruptcy *1137 Court’s dismissal of appellant’s Chapter 11 petition. Winshall Settlor’s Trust (hereinafter referred to as the Trust) was created in 1960, from which time it operated (the Civil Center Garage located at 440 East Congress in Detroit, Michigan. In 1980, it obtained a $300,000 mortgage loan from City National Bank to pay off two outstanding mortgages and renovate the building’s structure. In 1981, it entered into a land contract for the sale of the garage. In 1982, following the default of the vendees to the land contract, the trust defaulted on its mortgage payments. There followed a foreclosure and after expiration of the Trust’s right of redemption in 1983 a sale of the property. The Trust then filed a petition for protection under Chapter 11, allegedly for the purpose of setting aside the foreclosure as a voidable transfer pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 548(a)(2)(A). The Bankruptcy Court dismissed the petition on the grounds that the debtor had failed to prove that it was a business trust and hence was not entitled to be a debtor under 11 U.S.C. § 109(d), and for the further reason that there was no res or business being conducted at the time of filing. After denial of the Trust’s motion for rehearing, appeal was taken to the District Court, which found that the Trust was a qualified debtor under § 109(d), but upheld the dismissal on the ground that Chapter 11 was not intended to be available to entities that had neither assets nor an ongoing business to protect. The trust filed a motion for rehearing or in the alternative amendment of the judgment to allow it to convert to a Chapter 7 liquidation proceeding. Upon denial of this motion, the Trust appealed.
The purpose of Chapter 11 reorganization is to assist financially distressed business enterprises by providing them, with breathing space in which to return to a viable state.
See In re Dolton Lodge Trust No. 35188,
Nor did the District Court err in refusing to amend its judgment to permit the Trust to convert its petition to one under Chapter 7. The court has the option, in the-best interests of the creditors, either to convert or dismiss under § 1112(b). The only significant assets of the Trust are contingent — a chose in action against the vendee in breach on the land contract, and the possibility of setting aside the foreclosure sale as a fraudulent conveyance.
*1138
With respect to the breach of contract suit, dismissal does not impair the rights of the Trust’s unsecured creditors, and since it has no other assets to distribute, conversion to Chapter 7 would be futile. Similar reasoning was applied by the court in
In re Oak Winds,
nor would it serve any useful purpose to consider a conversion of this case into a liquidating case under Chapter 7 simply because there are no free assets which could be liquidated for the benefit of the general unsecured creditors_ Moreover, [their] rights are not impaired by this conclusion at all ... since the debtor is already asserting whatever claim it has against Oak Winds in now pending state court litigation and its position could in no say [sic] be enhanced by maintaining this proceeding in this Court under any chapter of the Code. [4 B.R. at 531 ]
The Trust does contend, however, that it would be in a better position in bankruptcy court than it would be in state court (and thereby unsatisfied creditors as well as the Trust’s beneficiaries would be better off) with respect to setting aside the foreclosure sale. 1 The garage was sold for $400,-000. The Trust contends its value was between $1 and 1.8 million. Although petitioner concedes that it could not succeed in having the sale set aside in state court, 2 it contended that under 11 U.S.C. § 548(a)(2)(A) the sale was for less than “reasonably equivalent value” as a matter of law (presuming its alleged valuation of the property is accurate) and could be set aside. The District Court expressed doubt that bankruptcy law would alter the state law of fraudulent conveyances under these circumstances, and its instinct was correct.
In
Durrett v. Washington National Insurance Co.,
In holding that a foreclosure sale was a transfer, the
Durrett
court relied on the broad definition set out in 11 U.S.C. § 1(30) of the old Bankruptcy Act. The court in
In re Madrid,
Even if the sale in question were a transfer subject to § 548, the better view is that reasonable equivalence for the purposes of a foreclosure sale under § 548(a)(2)(A) should be consonant with the state law of fraudulent conveyances. The Bankruptcy Appellate Panel in
In re Madrid,
“The cloud created over mortgages and trust deeds by making foreclosure sales subject to being voided by a bankruptcy trustee will naturally inhibit a purchaser other than the mortgagee from buying at foreclosure. This tends to depress further the prices of foreclosure sales and thus increase the potential size of the deficiency in each foreclosure....”
Abramson,
Notes
. It could not simply file a new Chapter 7 petition for this purpose at this time, because the period predating the petition within which the trustee could attempt to set aside voidable transfers would have expired with respect to the foreclosure sale, and the subsequent petition would not relate back to the date of the first filing.
See In re Arrington,
. "An inadequate sale price, in and of itself, is an insufficient ground for setting aside a foreclosure sale by advertisement under Michigan law.... In order for such a sale to be set aside, there must be both a grossly inadequate sale price and some other defect such as fraud, mistake, unfairness, or irregularity.”
Gottlieb v. McArdle,
.This section reads as follows:
For the purposes of this section, a transfer is made when such transfer [becomes so far] is so perfected that a bona fide purchaser from the debtor against whom [such transfer could have been] applicable law permits such transfer to be perfected cannot acquire an interest in such property of the transferee, but if such transfer is not so perfected before the commencement of the case, such transfer [occurs] is made immediately before the date of filing of the petition.
11 U.S.C. § 548(d)(1) (as amended by the Bankruptcy Amendments and Federal Judgeship Act of 1984, Pub.L. 98-353, § 463(c)(1), 98 Stat. 333, 379 (deleting bracketed language and adding italicized language)).
Section 548(a) was also amended by § 463(a) of the Bankruptcy Act of 1984 to insert the following italicized languages: "The trustee may *1139 avoid any transfer of an interest of the debtor in property ... if the debtor voluntarily or involuntarily — ... (2)(A) received less than a reasonably equivalent value_” One commentator has suggested that by this language Congress sided with the view in Durrett on the question of transfer. See Jackson, Avoiding Powers in Bankruptcy, 36 Stan.L.Rev. 725, 780 n. 175 (1984).
There is no reference whatsoever to the amendments of § 548 of the Code in the scant legislative history of the 1984 Bankruptcy Amendments. Contrary to the commentator’s suggestion, however, focusing on § 548(a), the amended wording does not weaken the interpretation of the Madrid court, which regarded § 54.8(d)(1) as determinative of when a transfer of a secured interest occurred.
. The court in Richardson makes the argument that
[s]tate law’s sanction of exchanges in foreclosures which are not reasonably equivalent gives effect to state contract and foreclosure policy but may overlook the interests of other creditors of the debtor. The determination of reasonable equivalence should not be controlled by state law. Rather, reasonable equivalence should be determined in light of the function of Section 548 in fostering an equitable distribution of the debtor’s property. [23 B.R. at 447 (footnote omitted) ]
While the power of the trustee to avoid certain preferential transfers was clearly intended to assure the equitable distribution of a debtor's assets among unsecured creditors, it can hardly be argued that Congress intended the rights of such creditors necessarily to override those of good faith purchasers at state foreclosure sales or the policy judgments of states in balancing the interests of parties thereto.
Cf. Kapela v. Newman,
. Although the court in
Richardson
draws numerous analogies in arguing that "there is nothing novel in avoiding transfers under bankruptcy law which are valid under state law.”
