MEMORANDUM OPINION
A junior lien creditor who financed a chapter 11 debtor’s automobile dealership seeks to enhance its distribution from the proceeds of the sale of the debtor’s business. To accomplish this, the junior creditor has filed a complaint with three counts relating to the recovery from the senior lien creditor of an allegedly preferential transfer and one count for equitable subordination of the senior creditor’s lien. Because this Court concludes that the junior creditor lacks standing to bring the preference action and fails to state a claim for equitable subordination, the senior creditor’s motion to dismiss has been granted and the junior creditor’s motion to prosecute complaint has been denied.
SRJ Enterprises, Inc. (the “Debtor”) owned and operated a Nissan automobile dealership. NBD Park Ridge Bank (“NBD”) financed the Debtor’s new vehicle inventory with a loan of approximately $1,400,000 in March, 1991. NBD took and perfected a security interest that purportedly covered all of the Debtor’s assets. As additional security, the Debtor’s president guaranteed the NBD loan. Later, the Debtor borrowed an additional $900,000 from Success National Bank of Lincoln-shire (“Success”) and Success claims a perfected lien on assets of the Debtor already subject to NBD’s lien. The NBD loan agreement required that the Debtor receive and hold all of its inventory, and the proceeds from inventory sales, in trust. By this agreement, NBD also required the Debtor to keep a separate account of each item of inventory, to segregate the sales proceeds held in trust and to pay the proceeds to NBD. Using the jargon of the automobile financing industry, NBD provided “floor planning” financing and employed a “trust receipt” repayment device. According to Success, however, NBD failed to enforce its agreement with the Debtor and the Debtor, withheld approximately $600,000 of trust proceeds, from NBD. NBD, Success argues, allowed the Debtor to become “out of trust” in an effort to salvage NBD’s loan and business relationship with the Debtor.
As of the date of the bankruptcy petition, the Debtor owed NBD in excess of $1,400,-000, an amount that Success complains would have been less had NBD enforced its loan agreement with the Debtor. The Debtor, as a chapter 11 debtor in possession, sold its assets and franchise rights, free and clear of all lien rights, for an amount less than $1,400,000. To the extent valid and enforceable, the lien rights of NBD and Success attached to the proceeds of the sale.
In connection with this sale, NBD filed an adversary proceeding against the Debt- or and Success to determine the validity and priority of NBD’s lien. The Debtor asserted several affirmative defenses and also filed a counterclaim against NBD, seeking to void NBD’s lien as a preference and recover all monies paid by the Debtor to NBD within one year of the bankruptcy filing. The Debtor, however, voluntarily dismissed its counterclaim against NBD based on the Debtor’s belief that it could not prove insolvency under § 547(b) of the Bankruptcy Code. Success, too, filed a counterclaim against NBD. Count' I alleges a voidable preference under § 547(b); Count II seeks to recover the property transferred preferentially under § 550; Count III seeks to disallow NBD’s claim under § 502(d) and Count IV seeks to equitably subordinate NBD’s claim. Success also filed a separate motion to prosecute Counts I, II and III of its counterclaim on the ground that the Debtor has refused to prosecute these claims. NBD objected to Success’ motion to prosecute and filed the instant motion to dismiss Success’ counterclaim based on lack of standing (Counts I and II) and failure to state a claim upon which relief may be granted (Counts III and IV).
II. ANALYSIS
A. Derivative Standing
Section 547(b) provides that “the trustee may avoid any transfer of an interest of the debtor in property” that meets the conditions of that section (emphasis added). Further, § 1107(a) states, with certain exceptions, that a debtor in possession shall have the powers, rights and duties of a trustee. Therefore, the debtor in possession or the trustee may avoid a preference.
Success, however, argues that it, too, has standing to avoid a preference because the Debtor, as debtor in possession, failed to bring suit. Success’ argument is refuted by the text of § 547(b). A fundamental canon of statutory interpretation is that all such efforts “must begin[ ] with the language of the statute itself.”
U.S. v. Ron Pair Enter., Inc.,
Notwithstanding the lack of conferring language (or even an ambiguity) in § 547(b), courts have allowed individual creditors to use trustee avoiding powers in the name of the trustee for the benefit of the estate.
2
For example, in
Matter of Shelby Motel Group, Inc.,
Perhaps courts have resorted to § 1109(b) because of the perceived inequity of depriving creditors of the benefit of the trustee’s avoiding powers. But it is
equity,
not the Code, that is the basis for allowing derivative standing to pursue the trustee’s powers. Granting derivative standing on equitable principles is not new. In
Glenny v. Langdon,
98 U.S. (8 Otto) 20, 27,
The issue then is to determine under what circumstances, if any, it is appropriate for bankruptcy courts to resort to the equitable remedy of derivative standing. “[Wjhatever equitable powers remain in the bankruptcy courts must and can only be exercised within the confines of the Bankruptcy Code.”
Norwest Bank Worthington v. Ahlers,
The debtor in possession is vested with essentially the same fiduciary duties as the trustee,
Commodity Futures Trading Comm’n. v. Weintraub,
Although a court may determine that a debtor in possession breached its fiduciary duty, the breach arguably may not be significant enough to constitute “cause” under § 1104(a)(1).
See Dalkon Shield Claimants v. A.H. Robins Co, Inc.,
If appointed pursuant to § 1104(a)(1) or (a)(2), the trustee would be obligated to bring the action, absent a change in circumstances. It should be a rare case where a court will find cause to order the appointment a trustee (such as a breach of fiduciary duty), have a trustee appointed and then face a trustee who refuses to bring the action that formed the basis for appointment in the first instance. Even then, the creditor has additional remedies, such as petitioning the court to compel the trustee to act, to sanction the trustee for contempt, or to remove the trustee and request appointment of another.
If grounds for the appointment of a trustee are not apparent, creditors may request the appointment of an examiner pursuant to § 1104(b)(1) to investigate allegations of misconduct that, if proven, could constitute cause for the appointment of a trustee. Furthermore, § 1106(b) expressly authorizes the court to allow the examiner to perform other duties of the trustee that the court orders the debtor in possession not to perform. This provision permits the court to carve away from the debtor in possession’s authority granted under § 1107(a), without the need for appointment of a trustee and its concomitant effects on the administration of the estate. This broad grant of authority may include allowing the examiner the discretion to avoid a preference 6 .
The court, however, only should order the appointment of an examiner pursuant to § 1104(b)(1) when the appointment is in the interest of the estate. When the court is making this determination (or determining whether to order appointment of a trustee under § 1104(a)(2)), it may make some sense to talk in terms of a cost-benefit analysis.
See e.g., In re Cardinal Industries, Inc.,
Unfortunately, some courts have conferred derivative standing upon a showing that the debtor in possession unjustifiably refused to bring suit, without a meaningful discussion of why the remedial provisions of the Code do not provide sufficient remedies.
See e.g. First Capital Holdings,
Applying the foregoing, Success cannot maintain Counts I, II and III of its counterclaim against NBD. Success asserts that it should be able to stand in the shoes of the Debtor to pursue a voidable preference against NBD because the Debt- or voluntarily dismissed its preference action against NBD. Success does not allege that Debtor breached its fiduciary duty in doing so. In fact, Success admits that “it is impossible for creditors to determine whether the Debtor’s abandonment of its own adversary proceeding is justified where the Debtor fails to comply with dis-covery_” (Success’ Reply Memorandum at 8). Success feels that maybe there is a cause of action out there that could be asserted for its benefit. So, in order to “see if a fire rages” (Success’ Reply Memorandum at 12), Success filed Counts I, II and III. To Success, it may appear as though it is caught in a procedural catch-22. It has no standing because it cannot show that Debtor unjustifiably refused to bring a voidable preference action — but, it cannot seek discovery on Counts I, II and III to prove such unjustified refusal if it has no standing. Success has a remedy, however. Success is entitled to file a motion for the appointment of an examiner pursuant to Bankruptcy Rules 2007.1(a) and 9014. Therefore, Success lacks standing to bring Counts I and II and, because Count III depends upon Counts I and II, fails in Count III to state a claim upon which relief may be granted.
B. Equitable Subordination
Count IV of Success’ counterclaim alleges a claim for equitable subordination under § 510. The Seventh Circuit has ruled that creditor standing under § 510 is not derivative; “individual creditors have an interest in subordination sepa
While Success initially alleged that NBD was a party to fraudulent conduct by the Debtor, Success has limited its allegation to mere “overreaching”. (Success’ Reply Memorandum at 11.) NBD’s overreaching, according to Success, occurred when NBD refrained from enforcing the trust receipt provisions of NBD’s loan agreement with the Debtor. Paragraph 20 of Count IV alleges that “NBD’s actions in allowing the Debtor to become ‘out of trust’ and to allow the amount converted by the Debtor to grow allowed NBD to gamble the value of the Debtor’s business, and Success’s equity cushion, in an attempt to salvage NBD’s own feared losses or loss of the [sic] NBD’s business relationship with the Debtor.” Success alleges that it had a right to rely on NBD’s enforcement; but, NBD permitted the Debtor to fall delinquent.
If it is not overreaching to enforce security interests upon default,
EDC,
Illinois U.C.C. § 9-205 buttresses this conclusion. This section reverses the rule pronounced in
Benedict v. Ratner,
Success is urging this Court to disregard the lack of any agreement between NBD and Success. Given that Success is deemed aware of § 9-205 and that Success failed to bargain otherwise with NBD, there would be nothing equitable in subordinating the priority of NBD’s lien. Therefore, Count IV fails to state a claim upon which relief may be granted.
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, by separate order NBD’s Motion to Dismiss has been granted and Success’ Motion to Prosecute Countercomplaint has been denied.
Notes
.Success also argues that standing is implied by § 503(b)(3)(B), which allows as administrative expenses amounts incurred by "a creditor that recovers, after the court's approval, for the benefit of the estate any property transferred or concealed by the debtor." Success similarly argues that a creditor’s right to object to a claim under § 502(a), coupled with the right to bring an adversary proceeding to recover money or property under Rule 7001(1), confers standing to bring a preference action. But § 503(b)(3)(B) does not confer standing; it only authorizes recovery of expenses to a creditor who successfully recovered property, which is to say, a creditor who had standing in the first place. Further, the trustee or debtor in possession first must obtain a judgment under § 547 and § 550 before a creditor may object to a claim on the ground that the creditor has not returned an avoidable transfer.
See In re Prime Motor Inns, Inc.,
.
See
cases cited in
In re New York Intern. Hostel, Inc.,
. Section 1109(b) provides that "[a] party in interest, including the debtor, the trustee, a creditors' committee, an equity security holders’ committee, a creditor, an equity security holder, or any indenture trustee, may raise and may appear and be heard on any issue in a case under this chapter."
. In
Perkins,
the court cited
Louisiana World Exposition v. Federal Ins. Co.,
. Indeed, the Code answers the rhetorical questions asked by the Shelby court before it granted an individual creditor derivative standing: "Who could be better to prosecute such claims on behalf of the debtor under § 1109(b) than a badly harmed creditor? If not First Alabama, who?" Shelby at 103. The answer: a trustee.
.
See Williamson v. Roppollo,
.
STN Enterprises
suggested that allowing derivative standing can save the estate attorneys' fees and trustee's compensation and protect a meaningful reorganization from disruption. These "benefits" are unclear. Fees and expenses may be deemed recoverable under § 506(c), or interested creditors may volunteer their funds upfront,
Vitreous Steel,
. Although the Seventh Circuit stated that "it is not necessarily required that the creditor be found to have engaged in misconduct”,
Vitreous Steel
