Indian Motoeycle Associates III Limited Partnership, a chapter 7 debtor, appeals from a district court order reversing a bankruptcy court decision denying appellee Massachusetts Housing Finance Agency’s (“MHFA”) motion to compel the chapter 7 debtor to restore diverted cash collateral to the chapter 7 estate. We vacate the district court order and remand to the bankruptcy court for further proceedings.
I
BACKGROUND
A. The Regulatory Agreement
In 1987, MHFA loaned Indian Motoeycle Associates Limited Partnership (“Indian Mo-tocycle”) $8.6 million to develop low-income housing in Springfield, Massachusetts [hereinafter: “the Project”]. Under a program authorized by the National Housing Act (“NHA”), 12 U.S.C. §§ 1701, 1709, 1716k et seq. (1994); 24 C.F.R. § 260.1 (1994), the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (“HUD”) eoinsured the non-recourse mortgage loan. 1 In order to qualify for HUD coinsurance, Indian Motocy-cle signed a “Regulatory Agreement,” obligating it to comply with pertinent HUD regulations and conditions whereby the individual Indian Motoeycle partners assumed personal liability “for funds or property of the Project which come into their hands and which they are not entitled to retain; and ... for their own acts and deeds or acts and deeds of their authorized agents that are in violation of the provisions of this Agreement.” The Regulatory Agreement is incorporated into the mortgage by express reference.
In addition to conveying a first mortgage on all real property belonging to the Project, Indian Motoeycle assigned all its Project leases, rents, profits and income to MHFA “for the purpose of discharging the [note].” See Mortgage ¶ 4; 12 U.S.C. § 1715k(d)(2)(A). MHFA in turn authorized Indian Motoeycle to collect and apply Project rents to enumerated purposes, including loan repayments and “reasonable expenses necessary to the operation and maintenance of the Project.” Regulatory Agreement ¶ 3(b). Indian Motoeycle’s right to collect Project rents terminated upon default. See Mortgage ¶ 4. In the event the debtor were to breach the Regulatory Agreement, MHFA or HUD would be entitled to seek specific performance, injunctive relief, or the appointment of a receiver for the Project. See Regulatory Agreement ¶¶ 17-18. The mortgage and Regulatory Agreement were duly recorded by MHFA.
In 1989, Indian Motoeycle transferred its ownership interest in the Project to Indian Motoeycle Associates III Limited Partnership, which assumed the MHFA note and *1248 mortgage; in August 1992, it defaulted. MHFA promptly tendered notice of default but took no immediate steps to acquire possession of the Project (as by foreclosure) or the rents (as by appointment of a receiver). Meanwhile, Indian Motocycle Associates III Limited Partnership had withdrawn $65,000 from the rents on deposit in the Project operating accounts, with which, inter alia, it retained counsel in contemplation of the commencement of a voluntary chapter 11 proceeding ($35,000 retainer) and an accountant (Coopers & Lybrand) to prepare a prepetition audit of the Project ($20,000). 2 On December 15, 1992, following these disbursements, Indian Motocycle Associates III Limited Partnership (hereinafter: “debtor”) filed its chapter 11 petition and continued to operate the Project as a debtor in possession. 3 Pursuant to the Regulatory Agreement, MHFA filed a motion to compel the debtor “to restore [the $65,000 in cash collateral] improperly diverted from the [chapter 11] estate in violation of Title II of the [NHA].” 4
B. The Bankruptcy Court Decision
The bankruptcy court ruled that the unauthorized prepetition transfer of MHFA cash collateral to retain chapter 11 counsel violated the Regulatory Agreement.
In re Indian Motocycle Assocs. III Ltd. Partnership,
During the bankruptcy court proceedings, MHFA had relied on case law to the effect that a debtor’s unauthorized prepetition disbursement of rents securing an NHA-insured loan warrants postpetition relief compelling the debtor and/or its attorneys to restore the encumbered funds to the debtor estate. Id. The bankruptcy court reasoned, however, that the requested relief would undermine the Bankruptcy Code distribution scheme by entitling $65,000 of the HUD/MHFA unsecured claim against the chapter 11 estate to “super priority” status.
On intermediate appeal, the district court reversed and remanded to the bankruptcy court for entry of an order compelling the “[d]ebtor to restore the distributions diverted from the estate.”
Massachusetts Hous. Fin. Agency v. Indian Motocycle
Assocs.
Ill Ltd. Partnership (In re Indian Motocycle Assocs. III Ltd. Partnership),
II
DISCUSSION
The debtor contends that the bankruptcy court correctly determined that it lacked authority under Bankruptcy Code § 105(a) to order a chapter 11 debtor — even one who concedes that it improperly diverted a secured creditor’s collateral shortly before fil *1249 ing its chapter 11 petition — to return the collateral (or its monetary equivalent) to the chapter 11 estate. The debtor argues that it no longer retained a property “interest” in, or control over, the diverted collateral on the date it filed its chapter 11 petition and, accordingly, the collateral never became property of the chapter 11 estate amenable to administration. See Bankruptcy Code § 541(a)(1), (6), 11 U.S.C. § 541(a)(1), (6) (providing that estate is comprised of “all legal or equitable interests of the debtor in property as of the commencement of the case,” including “rents ... from [real] property of the estate”) (emphasis added). Further, the debtor says, its diversion of the encumbered rents did not alter the amount of MHFA’s claim against the debtor estate, which remained the balance outstanding on the note at the date of the chapter 11 petition. Finally, the debtor argues that the bankruptcy court correctly declined to follow those courts which have ordered chapter 11 debtors in possession to restore to the debtor estate diverted NHA-encumbered rents, see infra Section II.A.2, since those cases did not involve a non-federal agency like MHFA, nor did those courts cite to legislative history indicating that Congress intended that NBA policy override the debtor protection policy underlying the Bankruptcy Code, including the right to utilize monies in the debtor’s possession to fund prepetition retainers of chapter 11 counsel.
A. Injunctive Relief
We review challenged rulings of law by the district court
de novo
and contested findings of fact by the bankruptcy court for clear error.
See In re LaRoche,
1. Injury
Although the bankruptcy court ruled that the debtor’s prepetition transfer of MHFA’s cash collateral constituted a conversion, it concluded that injunctive relief was unwarranted since the amount owed MHFA by the chapter 11 estate remained the same. To the extent this ruling suggests that MHFA sustained no cognizable injury, we disagree. Since there is no indication that MHFA’s claim was over-secured, the conversion by the debtor of the $65,000 cash collateral reduced MHFA’s secured claim by that amount, leaving MHFA with an unsecured claim for $65,000. See Bankruptcy Code § 506(a), (b), 11 U.S.C. § 506(a), (b); see also id. § 541(a)(6) (“Such estate is comprised of ... [proceeds, product, offspring, rents, or profits of or from property of the estate [viz., the Project]”) (emphasis added).
The advantage to holding a secured claim to these rents in the chapter 11 proceeding is not to be underestimated. Since the rents constituted “cash collateral” securing the MHFA note, id. § 363(a) (“cash collateral” includes “cash ... whenever acquired in which the estate and an entity other than the estate have an interest and includes ... *1250 rents_”); cf. id. § 552(b) (governing enforceability of prepetition security interest against postpetition rents), the rents could not have been expended or transferred without MHFA consent, id. § 363(c)(2)(A), and bankruptcy court authorization conditioned on “adequate protection” for MHFA’s security interest, id. §§ 363(c)(2)(B), 361, 363(e). Thus, restoration of the converted cash collateral to the chapter 11 estate would have represented neither an empty judicial exercise, nor a windfall or “super priority” to MHFA, but appropriate recognition of the valuable legal advantage enjoyed by the holder of a secured claim in a bankruptcy proceeding.
Nevertheless, we do not think the bankruptcy court ruling should be interpreted simply as a determination that secured NHA lenders in these circumstances neither sustain cognizable injury nor have any recourse for recovering their collateral, but rather as a determination that MHFA 'prematurely sought extraordinary injunctive relief against the wrong party — the chapter 11 debtor— without first attempting to exhaust other available remedies against nondebtors.
2. “Irreparability” of Injury; Adequacy of Remedy at Law
Every court which has considered the question has determined that the NHA empowers HUD to enforce its prepetition rights under a Regulatory Agreement notwithstanding the initiation of a chapter 11 proceeding by or against the NHA borrower.
See, e.g., In re EES Lambert Assocs.,
First, the debtor’s own partners are the parties principally benefited by the prepetition diversion of the HUD collateral — most notably in this case the fees for retaining professional assistance in fending off any MHFA foreclosure, thereby safeguarding their personal financial
investments
7
at the expense of low-income Project residents — the intended principal beneficiaries of the NHA.
See In re Garden Manor,
Second, the assignment-of-rents provision in the Regulatory Agreement is not merely a term in a private loan agreement, but a contractual precondition to coinsurance which Congress expected HUD to enforce
in the public interest. See
12 U.S.C. §§ 1709, 1715k, 1715v(c)(4) (listing numerous restrictions on NHA mortgagors). Permitting partnership debtors, or their individual partners, to divert public funds with any degree of impunity threatens significant depletion of the treasury,
see In re Garden Manor,
Third, these cases point out that there is no inherent inconsistency between the policies of the NHA and the Bankruptcy Code, in that the partnership debtor, and its individual partners, remain free to retain chapter 11 counsel provided they do not fund then-retainers with the NHA lender’s cash collateral.
Id.
at 482, 486;
In re TWO-KMF,
Notwithstanding the strong judicial support for these general policy considerations, however, we are given great pause at the prospect of fashioning extraordinary injunc-tive relief absent either demonstrated compliance with the explicit requirements of the enabling provision in the Bankruptcy Code, see 11 U.S.C. § 105(a), or some clear indication in the NHA that Congress envisioned such an accommodation between the NHA and the Bankruptcy Code. Thus, we think it is not enough simply to point to the importance of safeguarding the integrity of the NHA loan program, where neither the NHA, the Regulatory Agreement entered into pursuant to the NHA, nor the Bankruptcy Code itself so much as intimates that a bankruptcy court may fashion the extraordinary “reimbursement” relief sought by MHFA.
No matter how compelling the public policy reasons for formulating such extraordinary relief, it must be recognized that the right and remedy are
judge-made.
Bankruptcy courts must be especially cautious about embarking upon a lawmaking exercise in circumstances where the injured party has neither demonstrated that it has exhausted, nor even
pursued,
efficacious alternative forms of relief which, if available, might well preclude a finding that the relief sought from the bankruptcy court is either “necessary or appropriate to carry out the provisions of [the Bankruptcy Code].” Bankruptcy Code § 105(a), 11 U.S.C. § 105(a).
See generally Lopez v. Garriga,
B. Alternative Remedies
MHFA has not demonstrated that it is without other viable remedies against the debtor’s general partners, chapter 11 counsel, and/or its accounting firm, for restoring the diverted collateral or its equivalent.
1. The General Partners
Whether or not it perfected its hen in the prepetition rents,
see infra
Section II.B.2, MHFA could have sued the debtor’s general partners for the value of the diverted collateral (or, at the very least, for any deficiency between the value of its collateral and any amount recovered by MHFA on its $65,000 unsecured claim against the chapter 11 estate), based on the Regulatory Agreement provision that expressly obligates the partners “for funds or property of the Project which come into their hands and which they are not entitled to retain; and ... for their
*1252
own acts and deeds or acts and deeds of their authorized agents that are in violation of the provisions of this Agreement.”
See, e.g., Austin v. Unarco Indus., Inc.,
2. Chapter 11 Counsel
a) Perfection of MHFA Lien
In order to obtain any meaningful relief against the debtor or the transferees of the $65,000 in other venues, of course, MHFA would have to demonstrate that it held a perfected hen or security interest in the diverted rents; otherwise, as property of the chapter 11 estate,
see
Bankruptcy Code § 541(a)(6), any unperfeeted lien on the rents would be subject to avoidance by the debtor in possession pursuant to its “strong arm” powers.
See id.
§§ 544(a) (“strong arm powers”), 1107(a);
see generally In re Ryan,
Although the prepetition perfection of a security interest in property of the estate normally is determined in reference to applicable
state law, see Butner v. United States,
Moreover, even if it were to be assumed that federal common law does not govern the perfection of MHFA’s security interest,
see supra
note 11, the same result would obtain under Massachusetts law.
13
In
Prudential Ins. Co. of Am. v. Boston Harbor Marina Co.,
b) Law Firm
MHFA concedes that it can proceed against the debtor’s counsel in the bankruptcy court only if the $35,000 in diverted cash collateral, intended as a prepetition “retainer,” remains property of the estate, presumably as a fund held “in trust” for the debtor. MHFA cites several so-called “collateral reimbursement” decisions,
see supra
Section II.A.2, in which
debtor counsel
have been directed to surrender to the bankruptcy estate monies diverted to fund prepetition retainers.
See, e.g., In re Westwood Plaza Apartments,
The question whether the $35,000 “retainer” is subject to turnover cannot be resolved on the present record, since it may ultimately turn on the precise terms of any “retainer” agreement between the debtor and its counsel.
See, e.g., In re McDonald Bros. Constr., Inc.,
On the other hand, a “security” retainer is held by counsel to secure payment of anticipated legal services yet to be rendered. Under the ethical rules applicable in most jurisdictions, these monies remain property of the client until applied by counsel in payment of legal services actually performed.
See In re McDonald,
Of course, if the $35,000 transfer constituted a “security” retainer, counsel would be required to file a section 330 fee application to withdraw the retainer.
In re Burnside Steel Foundry Co.,
We need not resolve the precise contours of the potential bankruptcy court remedies available to MHFA against the debtor’s law firm. Rather, it was MHFA’s burden to demonstrate the unavailability of any alternative remedy for recovering its collateral. See supra Section II.A.2. Even if the $35,-000 retainer is not property of the chapter 7 estate, hence not subject to chapter 7 administration, MHFA has suggested no plausible basis for concluding that it cannot trace and recover the diverted collateral in a nonbank-ruptcy lawsuit directed against the debtor’s chapter 11 counsel (which is not protected by the automatic stay, see Bankruptcy Code § 362) to foreclose upon its prior lien on the rents. On the other hand, if the retainer remains property of the chapter 7 estate, MHFA may pursue its bankruptcy court remedies against the nondebtor chapter 11 counsel.
3. Accounting Firm
At oral argument, MHFA conceded that the debtor made its $25,000 prepetition payment to Coopers & Lybrand for audit services which were completed
prior to
the chapter 11 petition.
See supra
Section I.A. Consequently, the debtor retained no legal or equitable “interest” in these monies as of the date of the chapter 11 petition; and no right to, or interest in, these monies ever became property of the chapter 11 estate.
See
Bankruptcy Code § 541(a)(6). MHFA could point to no conceivable basis upon which the bankruptcy court, at this point in time, could direct Coopers & Lybrand to turn over any part of its $25,000 retainer to the chapter 7 estate.
See id.
§ 542, 11 U.S.C. § 542 (third party, in possession of property of estate, may be compelled to turn it over to trustee);
*1256
United States v. Whiting Pools, Inc.,
In all events, MHFA may have a direct cause of action against Coopers & Lybrand
outside the bankruptcy court. Cf. In re Indian Motocycle Assocs. III Ltd. Partnership,
Ill
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we decline MHFA’s invitation to fashion extraordinary judicial relief under Bankruptcy Code § 105(a), absent a showing that the judicial lawmaking it inevitably entails is either “necessary or appropriate to carry out” any provision of the Bankruptcy Code in the circumstances presented. Accordingly, we vacate the district court decision entitling MHFA to an order directing the debtor to turn over to the chapter 7 trustee the diverted MHFA cash collateral or its monetary equivalent. MHFA shall not be entitled to further relief in these chapter 7 proceedings, except on order of the bankruptcy court, after appropriate notice and hearing.
The district court order is vacated and the case is remanded to the bankruptcy court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion; costs to appellant.
Notes
. NHA coinsurance permits the private lender to assign its note and mortgage to HUD if unable to collect from the borrower. See 12 U.S.C. § 1710.
. An additional $5,000 was used to retain counsel to prepare and file a proof of claim in behalf of Indian Motocycle Associates III Limited Partnership in an unrelated bankruptcy case. Another $5,000 was transferred to a business owned by a principal of the debtor's managing general partner, for a purpose not disclosed in the appellate record. See infra notes 18 & 20.
. The chapter 11 proceeding has since been converted to chapter 7, see Bankruptcy Code § 1112, 11 U.S.C. § 1112, and a chapter 7 trustee has been appointed, id. § 702.
. At the same time, MHFA sought to sequester all postpetition rents. Thereafter, on June 23, 1993, prior to denying the MHFA motion to compel, the bankruptcy court granted an interim MHFA motion for relief from the automatic stay. See Bankruptcy Code § 362(d), 11 U.S.C. § 362(d). MHFA represents that it has since foreclosed upon all collateral except the monies at issue on appeal.
.The bankruptcy court traced the source of the contested monies directly to Project rents, as distinguished from individual partner advances as suggested by the debtor. Id. at 867. On the other hand, the court mistakenly characterized the entire $65,000 distribution as a retainer fee for legal services. Id. at 865; see infra note 6.
. On appeal, neither party challenges the bankruptcy court findings that (1) the entire $65,000 was disbursed as a retainer for legal services, and (2) the entire disbursement breached the Regulatory Agreement. Although this first finding is not an accurate reflection of the record evidence,
cf. supra
note 2 & accompanying text; note 5, it does not infect the legal conclusions reached by the bankruptcy court, nor our decision on appeal. Nor need we address the bankruptcy court ruling that
these
disbursements, as a matter of law, did not constitute "reasonable expenses necessary to the operation and maintenance of the Project.”
In re Indian Motocycle Assocs. III Ltd. Partnership,
. The NHA allows HUD to coinsure non-recourse mortgages under which the partners are relieved from individual liability for the partnership obligation under the note. But the NHA conditions that relief on the partners' agreement to assume personal liability “for funds or property of the Project which come into their hands and which they are not entitled to retain; and ... for their own acts and deeds or acts and deeds of their authorized agents that are in violation of the provisions of this Agreement.”
See In re HitCrest Apartments,
. Of course, federal courts may be expected to engage in lawmaking where Congress "ambiguously addresses” an issue in general terms, but deliberately leaves "an interstice" to be filled by the courts in conformity with the purposes of the statute.
See Conille v. Secretary of Hous. and Urban Dev.,
.Following appointment of the chapter 7 trustee, see supra note 3, all avoidance powers resided exclusively in the trustee, not in the debtor. See Bankruptcy Code § 1107(a), 11 U.S.C. § 1107(a). We assume arguendo that the chapter 7 trustee would attempt to avoid MHFA's lien in order that the net proceeds could be applied to claims against the estate, including any MHFA claim. For present purposes, however, we confine ourselves to an assessment of the debtor's avoidance powers at the time of the bankruptcy court ruling; that is, during the chapter 11 proceeding.
.Butner,
a Bankruptcy Act case, remains viable precedent under the Bankruptcy Code.
See Wolters Village Ltd. v. Village Properties, Ltd. (In re Village Properties, Ltd.),
.Like the district court, we see no policy basis for distinguishing the instant case simply because MHFA, a state agency, rather than HUD, is the party presently seeking return of the collateral. Under the NHA coinsurance regime, MHFA will
*1253
assign the note to HUD in return for payment of any unrecovered deficiency.
See
12 U.S.C. § 1710;
see also supra
note 1. In all events, given our determination,
infra,
that MHFA's security interest was perfected under
both
federal
and
Massachusetts law, the distinction is inconsequential.
See Conille,
. We note that the debtor’s opening appellate brief did not challenge the district court .ruling that the MHFA security interest in rents had been perfected. Issues presented for the first time in a reply brief normally are deemed waived.
See Clarke v. Kentucky Fried Chicken,
. Although MHFA concedes that it did not file a financing statement, the law in most states, in-eluding Massachusetts, classifies an assignment of rents as an interest in
real property.
Thus, parties with security interests in future rents generated from encumbered real property need not comply with the Uniform Commercial Code.
See
Mass.Gen.L.Ann. ch. 106, § 9-104(j) (excluding assignments of rent from Massachusetts U.C.C.);
see also, e.g., Commerce Bank v. Mountain View Village,
.The "possession” theory rejected in Prudential, supra, had essentially sounded the knell for most security interests in rents in the bankruptcy context, since the holder of a secured claim is precluded by the automatic stay from taking the very steps required to reduce rents to possession. See, e.g., Bankruptcy Code § 362(a)(1), (a)(3), (a)(4).
.
See In re Park at Dash Point L.P.,
. Though not retroactively applicable to this case,
see In re Barkley 3A Investors,
. For present purposes, we assume arguendo that the chapter 7 trustee would be amenable to MHFA's request that the* trustee prosecute a § 542 turnover action against the transferees, since the commensurate reduction in MHFA’s unsecured claim could increase the recoveries of other holders of unsecured claims. See supra note 9.
. The same rationale would apply to MHFA's recovery of the $5,000 which the debtor advanced to retain bankruptcy counsel in an unrelated bankruptcy case. See supra note 2.
. Some courts have held that debtor counsel may use these two types of retainers without first filing a fee application under Bankruptcy Code § 330.
See, e.g., In re McDonald,
. The same rationale would appear to preclude an order compelling turnover of the $5,000 payment the debtor made to the principal of its managing general partner, which might otherwise have been voidable as a preferential transfer to an "insider.” See Bankruptcy Code § 547; see also supra note 2.
