MEMORANDUM OF OPINION
Before the Court is a motion for summary judgment filed by defendant U.S. Relocation Services, Inc., now known as SIRVA Relocation LLC (“USRS”), and a cross-motion for summary judgment filed by plaintiffs 360networks (USA), Inc. and the Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors of 360networks (USA), Inc. and affiliated debtors (collectively, the “Debtors”). The parties dispute whether certain payments made by one or more of the Debtors to USRS may be avoided and recovered as preferential transfers pursuant to §§ 547 and 550 of the Bankruptcy Code.
Background
The Debtors were providers of telecommunications services. USRS is a relocation management company that handles the relocation of approximately 15,000 employees of client companies each year. In September 2000, USRS and one of the Debtors entered into an Agreement for Relocation Services (the “Agreement”) pursuant to which the Debtors retained USRS to administer their employee relocation benefits plan. Under the Agreement, the Debtors designated employees for whom USRS agreed to provide a specific range of relocation services, including services relating to home marketing, mortgage financing, temporary living, buying and renting assistance, and household goods management. Under the Agreement, USRS could not make any independent determinations as to the benefits an employee was entitled to receive or the nature of the services that the Debtors specified for their eligible employees.
In furtherance of its obligations under the Agreement, USRS performed some of the services itself and hired vendors to carry out other aspects of the relocation process. It charged the Debtors service fees related to its subcontracts with these vendors. In addition, the Agreement provided for the Debtors to pay USRS a specified fee for relocating each employee. The terms of the Agreement provided that USRS could advance relocation benefits to the employees or pay vendors for the benefits, and then invoice the Debtors for reimbursement. The Agreement recites, “It is expressly understood that USRS shall be advancing on behalf of the Company significant sums of money under this Agreement,” and that if USRS deemed itself “insecure concerning the repayment by the Company of monies under this Agreement,” it could suspend any further advances until it received evidence of fi *198 nancial security. (Agreement, sec. 7.) 1
The Debtors’ employees continued to perform throughout the period that the Debtors were making payments to USRS on their behalf. The names of the same employees show up on multiple invoices as recipients of relocation benefits, indicating that USRS would (for example) advance or pay the costs of an employee’s house-hunting trip to a new location and later advance or pay the costs relating to the emplоyee’s sale of a former residence. It appears that employees were obligated to work for the Debtors for one year after their relocation or to repay all or a part of the expenses incurred to relocate them. (Aff. of Jeffrey Margolis, Senior Counsel at USRS, ¶ 18.) 2 If USRS advanced certain costs to an employee—an advance in contemplation of the sale of the employee’s old residence, for example—it would be entitled to reimbursement from the proceeds of the sale of that residence, which it was contractually obligated to return to the Debtors if they had already fronted the expense. (Agreement, Ex. A, sec.D.)
USRS’ relationship with the Debtors lasted from September 2000 until April 2002, during which time USRS administered relocation benefits for approximately 100 employees. (Aff. of John Buckley, Senior Accountant at USRS, ¶ 6.) USRS billed the Debtors on a monthly basis, issuing a total of ten invoices. During the 90 days preceding the Debtors’ voluntary bankruptcy filing on June 28, 2001, the Debtors made six payments to USRS under the Agreement in the aggregate sum of $2,684,090. Of this sum, $1,984,090 constituted payment of eight invoices that the Debtors had issued in that amount. 3 In addition, at the insistence of USRS, on May 20, 2001, the same day it paid the February and March invoices, the Debtors advanced $700,000 to prepay the purchase price of a home of a high-level employee and, apparently by mistake, advanced an additional $121,048.91, which was applied to the payment of subsequent invoices. In the complaint, the Debtors are seeking to recover $1,836,014.09 (the “Payments”), which nets out the additional $121,048.91 that was advanced on May 20, 2001. The Debtors are thus not attempting to recover either the advance of $121,048.91 or the advance of $700,000. 4 USRS has calculated that of the $1,984,000 paid on the eight invoices, $1,820,315.03 reimbursed USRS for funds paid or advanced on behalf of the Debtors’ employees, while $128,783.41 constituted fees charged by USRS аnd $34,991.56 constituted interest charged by *199 USRS on the funds that it had previously advanced to or for the benefit of the employees and the Debtors.
There is clear evidence in the record that during the period prior to the Debtors’ bankruptcy, USRS put pressure on the Debtors, including commencing collection efforts, in an attempt to induce the Debtors to pay the invoices that were overdue. For example, prior to the first of the contested invoice payments on April 24, 2001, USRS demanded that payments be made by wire transfer and required the Debtors to fax copies of checks so that USRS could verify that payments were en route. By email dated April 26, 2001, the USRS controller confirmed its refusal to advance funds for the purchase of the home of a high-level Debtor officer based on “payments from 360 havfing] not occurred in a timely manner” and “the recent financial news surrounding 360.” Later, on June 6, 2001, USRS sent an email to the Debtors stating, “I hope that we can wrap up the financial issue to a mutually agreeable plan as soon as possible, so that services are not disrupted for too long.” (Aff. of Jayne Hart, Exs. C, D, E.) (emphasis added).
After the Debtors’ chapter 11 petitions were filed, the parties continued to perform under the Agreement. There is no indication in the record that the Debtors’ employees failed to relocate in accordance with their commitments or to provide valuable services to the Debtors. It also appears that during the post-petition period USRS, in accordance with the Agreement, refunded to the Debtors $689,598 that represented the proceeds of the sales of the residences of three executives who had relocated. On October 2, 2002, the Debtors confirmed a plan of reorganization that provided, among other things, that certain executory contracts not previously assumed would be rejected. In accordance therewith, the Agreement was rejected as of the confirmation date.
On May 6, 2003, the Plaintiffs commenced this adversary proceeding seeking the avoidance, recovery and turnover of the Payments as preferential transfers under Bankruptcy Code §§ 547 and 550.
Discussion
In accordance with Bankruptcy Rule 7056, which incorporates Fed.R.Civ.P. 56, summary judgment may be granted “if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R.Civ.P. 56(c); see
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
It is the Debtors’ position that the Payments constitute preferential transfers that prima facie may be avoided under § 547 and recovered under § 550 of the Bankruptcy Code. USRS has raised three defenses: (i) USRS, acting as an agent of the Debtors in paying relocation expenses, functioned as a mere “conduit” in passing the Payments along to the Debtors’ employees and cannot be deemed an “initial transferee” for purposes of § 550(a)(1); (ii) the Debtors received contemporaneous new value within the meaning of § 547(c)(1) for each Payment in the form of their employees’ continued services; and (iii) the Payments were made and received in the ordinary course of business under § 547(c)(2). 5
Each of USRS’ defenses is dealt with below. In addition, USRS asserts that it has no liability because it is not a “creditоr,” and that the transfer was not to or for the benefit of a creditor as required by § 547(b)(1). USRS relies on
Official Comm, of Unsecured Creditors v. U.S. Dep’t of Labor (In re Dairy Stores),
I. Conduit Defense
“The trustee of a bankrupt estate has broad powers under the Bankruptcy Code to avoid certain transfers of property or assets made by the debtor either after or shortly before the filing of the bankruptcy petition.”
Christy v. Alexander & Alexander of New York, Inc. (In re Finley, Kumble, Wagner, Heine, Underberg, Manley, Myerson & Casey),
*201 eral express defenses. As noted above, two are invoked by USRS: an otherwise preferential transfer may not be avoided to the extent it constitutes (i) a contemporaneous exchange of new value to the debtor or (ii) a payment in the ordinary course of business. 11 U.S.C. § 547(c)(1) and (2). In addition to the defenses specified in § 547(c), courts have implied several other defenses, one of which, the conduit defense, arises out of the relationship between § 547 and § 550 of the Bankruptcy Code and is raised by USRS.
Section 550 allows the trustee to recover the transferred property or its value to the extent the trustee has successfully invoked the avoidance powers of § 547.
8
Section 550(a)(1) provides that either an “initial transferee” or “the entity for whose benefit such transfer was made” is liable for an avoided transfer. 11 U.S.C. § 550(a)(1); see
In re Moskowitz,
The Bankruptcy Code does not define the term “transferee,” much less “mediate” or “initial transferee,” and the legislative history is not helpful.
Bonded Fin.,
In
Finley, Rumble,
the Circuit Court adopted the reasoning of the Seventh Circuit in the
Bonded Financial
case, noting that the “logic” of
Bonded Financial
had been widely accepted. See
Finley, Rumble,
Although USRS argues that it was a “mere conduit” of funds intended to benefit the employees, the record demonstrates that, with the exception of the $121,048.91 it advanced on May 20, 2001 (and that the Debtors have not demanded in the complaint), it provided and paid for the relocation benefits
prior to
receiving the Payments and therefore had complete dominion and control over the Payments, and the right to apply them as it wished, upon receipt. The very term “conduit” indicates that USRS cannot sustain that defense as to Payments that it received from the Debtors in reimbursement for advances it had already made and for which it gave credit to the Debtors. USRS was not a conduit to any third party with respect to such funds. If it chose, it had the right, in the words of
Bonded Financial,
to invest these proceeds in lottery tickets or uranium stocks. It was not under any contractual or other obligation to use them for the benefit of the Debtors’ employees. Moreover, the conduit cases emphasize that a conduit does not intend to and does not give credit to the debtor, a factor that is usually a hallmark of a transaction that can be avoided as a payment on an antecedent debt and a preferenсe under § 547. See
Dairy Stores,
The foregoing is not to say that exercise of any dominion and control over transferred funds precludes an entity from invoking the conduit defense. In the words of the
Bonded Financial
Court, dominion and control is the
“minimum requirement”
for qualifying as an initial transferee.
Bonded Fin.,
In
Nordberg v. Societe Generate (In re Chase & Sanborn Corp.),
USRS has failed to identify any funds it passed directly on to employees as a “conduit,” except for the funds that were prepaid on May 20, 2001 and are not demanded in the complaint. Accordingly, the conduit defense is not available to USRS with respect to the Payments it received from the Debtors reimbursing it *204 for funds already expended on behalf of the employees. 11
II. Contemporaneous Exchange for New Value Defense
Section 547(c)(1) of the Bankruptcy Code provides that:
The trustee may not avoid under this section a transfer—
(1) to the extent that such transfer was—
(A) intended by the debtor and the creditor to or for whose benefit such transfer was made to be a contemporaneous exchange for new value given to the debtor; and
(B) in fact a substantially contemporaneous exchange.
Three elements are necessary: (i) the transfer must be for new value given to the debtor; (ii) the transfer must be intended to be a contemporaneous exchange; and (iii) the transfer must be in fact a substantially contemporaneous exchange. 11 U.S.C. § 547(c)(1); see
Stevenson v. Leisure Guide of Am., Inc. (In re Shelton Harrison),
We will consider, first, whether new value was given to the Debtors and second, whether the Payments were intended to be and were in fact substantially contemporaneous with the alleged “new value.”
A. New Value
The first question is whether new value was provided to the Debtors in exchange for the Payments. New value is
*205
defined in § 547(a)(2) to mean “money or money’s worth in goods, services or new credit... but does not include an obligation substituted for an existing obligation.” Forbearance alone does not constitute new value.
In re Mid Atlantic Fund, Inc.,
In the instant case, the “new value” was provided by the Debtors’ employees, not USRS, but there is no requirement in § 547(c)(1) that the new value be provided to the debtor by the preference defendant, and it may be provided by a third party. See
Jones Truck Lines,
The “new value” Jones received for paying current wages and benefit contributions during the ninety-day preference period werе the services its employees continued to provide.... There are countless transactions in which a debtor transfers property to a creditor in exchange for contemporaneous new value provided “to the debtor” by a third party.
Nevertheless, as noted above, forbearance does not constitute new value. The Debtors argue that in
Jones Truck Lines,
the payments were for current benefits, the new value was the employees’ current performance, and the employees’ current services did not constitute new vаlue for past due amounts. Indeed, in
Jones Truck Lines
the Court explicitly considered the question whether the alleged new value provided by the employees merely constituted forbearance or new value in the form of services. It found that if the employer had paid past due benefits, responding to a strike threat, “that transfer [would not be] for new value” because there would only have been forbearance from striking on the part of the employees.
The principle that new value is not provided if the contract party merely forbears from canceling or ceasing performаnce under a contract has been applied under circumstances that are very similar to those in the present case. In
Drabkin v. A.I. Credit Corp.,
As discussed above, both parties have moved for summary judgment on the “contemporaneous exchange for new value” defense, but the record is not sufficient to demonstrate whеther the employees provided “new value” to the Debtors in exchange for the challenged Payments to USRS. It is alleged that there was an obligation on the employees to work for the Debtors for a year in order to retain their relocation benefits, implying that their performance was locked in by an agreement. If so, under Drabkin, the employees’ failure to repudiate the contract would not constitute new value. On the other hand, neither party has provided much information on the employees’ agreement, and if the employees continued to provide services and to relocate, as long as USRS continued to be paid, it might plausibly be argued that the employees’ relocation constituted “new value” for the Payments. 14
It is impossible to state on this record whether the Debtors received new value or only the rights to which they were already contractually entitled. Both motions for summary judgment must be denied.
B. Substantially Contemporaneous
Assuming that new value was provided by the Debtors’ employees, the second question is whether that new value was and was intended to be substantially contemporaneous with the challenged Payments. At first glance, it seems obvious that USRS’ performance was not and was not intended to be a contemporaneous exchange. As the Debtors assert and the record indicates, USRS and the Debtors intended that USRS would advance relocation benefits to or on behalf of the Debtors’ employees, and the Payments were in fact credit transactions as far as USRS and the Debtors were concerned. Courts have consistently held that payments on account of an antecedent debt are not contemporaneous exchanges. See
Sapir v. Keener Lumber Co. (In re Ajayem Lumber Corp.),
The answer to the question whether USRS can rely on the employees’ performance and intentions in connection with its § 547(c)(1) defenses is seemingly provided by the words of the statute. Section 547(c)(1) provides that a transfer must be intended by the debtor and the creditor “to or for whose benefit such trаnsfer was made” to be a substantially contemporaneous transfer, and that it must be in fact a substantially contemporaneous exchange, (emphasis added). The statute speaks in the disjunctive, requiring intent from the debtor and either the creditor to whom the transfer was made or the creditor for whose benefit the transfer was made. By the plain words of the statute, the defense ought to be available if either USRS as the transferee
or
the Debtors’ employees as the parties for whose benefit the transfers were made can raise the defense. As the Court stated in
Jones Truck Lines,
with respect to the “new value” aspect of the § 547(c)(1) defense, the “analysis is the same whether the creditor claiming § 547(c)(1) protection is the employee who continued to work in exchange for current wages, or the employee benefit fund to which current benefits were paid on the employee’s behalf.”
The conclusion that the contemporaneous exchange defense should be available on the same terms to a creditor to or for whose benefit a transfer was made is bolstered by the relationship between § 547 and § 550. As discussed above in another context, § 550(a)(1) provides that a transfer that is avoided under § 547 can be recovered from either the initial transferee or the entity “for whose benefit such transfer was made.” The liability of these two parties is coextensive. See
Levit v. Ingersoll Rand Fin. Corp. (In re Deprizio Constr. Co.),
Were the employees creditors for whose benefit the transfers were made? The most obvious example of such an entity is a guarantor. See
Bonded Fin.,
In this case the continuing tripartite relationship among the Debtors, USRS and the employees demonstrates that the employees were parties for whose benefit the transfers were made. The employees were direct and not merely incidental beneficiaries of the Agreement.
18
On the other hand, the record is not at all clear whether the employees’ performance was intended to be and was in fact a substantially contemporaneous exchange for the Payments. As mentioned above, success on a contemporaneous exchange defense requires a finding that the debtor and the transferee or third-party beneficiary intended a substantially contemporaneous exchange for new value. See
Harrah’s Tunica Corp. v. Meeks (In re Armstrong),
USRS argues that there is no requirement that a “contemporaneous exchange” be an instantaneous exchange, and performance on one side may take place at the end of a contractual period. See
Everlock Fastening Sys. v. Health Alliance Plan (In re Everlock Fastening Systems, Inc.),
Nevertheless, as the Debtors point out, none of the above cases involved as long a period of time as between the invoicing by USRS and the payment by the Debtors of the invoices—in some cases four months later. For example, the alleged preferences in Bridge Information Systems were made in fairly close proximity in time to the payments to the employees, and the Court did not consider the fact pattern raised in this case, where the preference defendant explicitly agreed to advance costs for the benefit of the employees for a cognizable period of time. Similarly, in Jones Truck Lines, also relied on by USRS, the Court distinguished between payments to the union trust made on account of current obligations and payments made for past due obligations.
As with the “new value” aspect of the defense, the record is not adequate to determine whether the challenged Payments were intended to be simultaneous with the employees’ performance. The record does not indicate whether the employees had any knowledge of the Debtors’ Payments to USRS or whether the Payments relieved the employees of an obligation to reimburse USRS for the benefits. Both motions for summary judgment on this issue must be denied, with one excep *210 tion. USRS has apparently raised the contemporaneous exchange of new value defense only with respect to that portion of the Payments that reimbursed it for payments to or for the benefit of the employees, and not with respect to that part of the Payments that represented its fees and interest. (Mem. of Law in Support of Motion, at 13.) It is clear that USRS would not be able to sustain a contemporaneous exchange defense with respect to its own fees and charges for interest, and that portion of the Payments is not protected by § 547(c)(1).
III. Ordinary Course of Business Defense
The final defense raised by USRS is that the Payments were made and received in the ordinary course of business. Section 547(c)(2) provides:
(c) The Trustee may not avoid under this section a transfer—
(2) to the extent that such transfer was—
(A) in payment of a debt incurred by the debtor in the ordinary course of business or financial affairs of the debtor and the transferee;
(B) made in the ordinary course of business or financial affairs of the debtor and the transferee; and
(C) made according to ordinary business terms 19
The burden is on the preference defendant to prove each element of § 547(c)(2) by a preponderance of the evidence. See 11 U.S.C. § 547(g);
Lawson v. Ford Motor Co. (In re Roblin Industries, Inc.),
In determining whether a transfer is made in the ordinary course of business under § 547(c)(2), courts typically consider factors such as (i) thе prior course of dealing between the parties, (ii) the amount of payment, (iii) the timing of payments, (iv) circumstances surrounding the payments, (v) the existence of any unusual debt collection practices, and (vi) changes in the means of payment. See
Official Comm, of Unsecured Creditors of Cyberrebate.com, Inc. v. Gold Force Int’l, Ltd. (In re Cyberrebate.com, Inc.),
The record on these cross motions for summary judgment is adequate to demonstrate that the Payments to USRS do not fall within the definition of ordinary course of business as it has been construed. See
Jacobs v. Matrix Capital Bank (In re AppOnline.com, Inc.),
USRS argues that the foregoing did not constitute payment pressure but rather were simply “steps to protect its interests without harming” the Debtors. (USRS Reply Br. at 7.) Lack of harm is not the standard for determining applicability of the ordinary course of business exception in § 547(c)(2). It is undisputed that USRS interrupted its efforts and suspended the relocation of the Debtors’ employees as a result of the Debtors’ failure to make timely payments under the Agreement. The recоrd also indicates that USRS’ actions created concern over the implication of nonpayment on the employees’ relocation commitment. This concern gives some life to USRS’ contemporaneous exchange defense but is inconsistent with the ordinary course of business defense.
The parties focus much attention on whether the Payments were timely made in comparison to their pre-preference course of conduct and the Debtors’ pattern of paying two invoices at once in contravention of the Agreement. The Court need not reach this issue. Even if the timing of the Payments was consistent with the Debtors’ payment of invoices during the pre-preference period, USRS’ pressure tactics detailed above remove the Payments from the scope of the ordinary course of business defense. See
Florida Steel Corp.,
In light of the cases that uniformly hold that an ordinary course of business defense cannot be sustained in the face of a creditor’s use of pressure to induce a debt- or to pay, USRS’ motion for summary *212 judgment on this issue is wholly without merit. Conversely, there is enough evidence in the record establishing USRS’ pressure to grant the Debtors’ cross motion for summary judgment striking USRS’ defense under § 547(c)(2).
Conclusion
For the reasons set forth above, USRS’ motion for leave to assert a § 547(c)(1) defense is granted; its motion for summary judgment is denied. The Debtors’ motion for summary judgment striking USRS’ defense under § 547(c)(1) is granted solely with respect to that portion of the Payments that USRS received on account of its charges for fees and interest. The Debtors’ motion for summary judgment striking the § 547(c)(2) and the conduit defenses is granted. Further proceedings are required to determine whether USRS’ § 547(c)(1) defense is viable as to that portion of the Payments that reimbursed USRS for amounts it had paid to or for the benefit of the Debtors’ employees.
In the further proceedings that will be required herein, the parties are also directed to consider the effect, if any, of the refunds that the Debtors were paid post-petition by USRS.
The Debtors are directed to settle an appropriate order on ten days’ notice.
Notes
. Based on the record, it appears that USRS’ practice of advancing funds on behalf of relocating employees is typical in the employee relocation industry.
. See also Dep. of Jayne Hart, the Debtors’ Vice President for Human Resources, at 42-43, 51. Nevertheless, there is no evidence in the record as to an employee's obligation to repay to USRS any amounts advanced by USRS to the employee that the Debtors failed to pay.
. The invoices were dated and paid as follows: (i) invoices for December 2000 and January 2001 in the aggregate amount of $394,814.33 were both paid on April 24, 2001; (ii) invoices for February and March 2001 in the aggregate amount of $566,551.09 were overpaid ($687,600.00) on May 20, 2001; (iii) invoice for April 2001 in the amount of $263,369.89 was partially paid ($246,118.50) on June 8, 2001; (iv) invoice of May 2001 in the amount of $270,263.97 was partially paid ($179,432.61) on June 13, 2001; (v) first June invoice in the amount of $252,487.40 was partially paid ($238,062.28) on June 18, 2001; and (vi) second June invoice in the amount of $236,603.32 was slightly overpaid on June 21, 2001 ($238,-062.28).
.USRS claims that the Debtors are seeking the additional $121,048.91, but the Debtors’ complaint does not seek this amount, and the complaint governs.
. USRS raises no issue with respect to the Debtors' insolvency, which is presumed under § 547(f).
. Debtors in possession, such as the Debtors, exercise the avoidance powers of a trustee. 11 U.S.C. § 1107(a). In this case, the Committee was authorized to pursue the avoidance claims of the Debtors. See
In re STN Enterprises,
. Section 547(b) provides in pertinent part: [T]he trustee may avoid any transfer of an interest of the debtor in property:
(1) to or for the benefit of a creditor;
(2) for or on account of an antecedent debt owed by the debtor before such transfer was made;
(3) made while the debtor was insolvent
(4) made—
a. on or within ninety days before the date of the filing оf the petition; or
b. between ninety days and one year before the date of the filing of the petition, of such creditor at the time of such transfer was an insider; and
(5) that enables such creditor to receive more than such creditor would receive if—
*201 a. the case were a case under chapter 7 of this title;
b. the transfer had not been made; and
c. such creditor received payment of such debt to the extent provided by the provisions of this title.
. Section 550(a) provides in pertinent part:
[T]he trustee may recover, for the benefit of the estate, the property transferred, or, if the court so orders, the value of such property, from—
(1) the initial transferee of such transfer or the entity for whose benefit such transfer was made; or
(2) any immediate or mediate transferee of such initial transferee.
. Other cases that have adopted the mere conduit test include
Bowers v. Atlanta Motor Speedway (In re Southeast Hotel Properties L.P.), 99
F.3d 151 (4th Cir.1996);
Rupp v. Markgraf,
. The Debtors also cite a clause in the Agreement that states that USRS was not an agent of the Debtors and claim that this clause precludes USRS from arguing that it was a mere conduit. This is not correct. As
Finley, Rumble
makes clear, an initial recipient’s status as an agent is not dispositive in determining whether the recipient is a conduit or an initial transferee. The Second Circuit explained that whatever the relationship between the debtor and the initial recipient pri- or to the transfer at issue, it is the nature of the initial recipient's role in the transaction between the parties that is determinative of its liability.
Finley, Rumble,
.
A fortiori,
the "mere conduit” defense is unavailable to USRS with respect to the portion of the Payments constituting its own fees аnd interest. The Court in
Finley, Kumble
left open the question whether a conduit would be liable for that portion of payments it received that it did not pass through to a third party but retained on its own account,
. USRS did not initially plead "contemporaneous exchange” as an affirmative defense in its answer to the complaint. The Debtors have objected to its motion to amend its answer, arguing that any such amendment would be "futile” because the defense has no merit. For the reasons stated hereafter, it cannot be determined on these motions whether the defense has merit. Since the Debtors havе not demonstrated any cognizable prejudice from allowing the amendment, and Rule 15 provides that leave to amend "shall be freely given when justice so requires,” the motion to amend is granted.
U.S. v. Continental Illinois Nat’l Bank & Trust Co.,
. The result would be different if the finance company had been fully secured.
Schwinn Plan Comm. v. Transamerica Ins. Fin. Corp. (In re Schwinn Bicycle Co.),
. New value involving the provision of services is given on the date when the services are performed.
Webster v. Harris Corp. (In re NETtel Corp., Inc.),
.
Deprizio
was followed by many other courts. See
Mendelsohn v. Sequa Fin. Corp. (In re Frank Santora Equip. Corp.),
. This is also the general rule in the area of suretyship, where a defense available to a principal obligor may be raised by a guarantor, who is subrogated to the rights of the principal obligor to the extent it has not waived any such defenses. See
Rhode Island Hospital Trust Nat’l Bank v. Ohio Casualty Co.,
. In re Fuel Oil Supply & Tenninaling Inc. is instructive. It involved a tripartite situation where two banks had issued letters of credit to the debtor's gasoline supplier and had taken a security interest in certain of the debtor's collateral. The letters named the supplier as the beneficiary and the banks were fully secured. The supplier provided gasoline to the debtor and instead of calling on the letter of credit, the supplier accepted payment directly from the debtor during the preference period, with every dollar the debtor paid to the supplier releasing a dollar of collateral that had been pledged to the banks. The Court found that the supplier had a valid "contemporaneous exchange” defense, where the banks gave new value in the form of the reduction of their lien, which was contemporaneous with the challenged payment, noting that the parties intended that "the fulfillment of [the debt- or’s] obligation to [the supplier] would result in the Banks' contemporaneous release of [the debtor's] assets.” Id. at 228.
.Except for that portion of the Payments that reimbursed USRS for its fees and interest charges, the Payments are considered income to the employees, not USRS, for tax purposes.
. Section 547(c)(2) has been revised by the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005, Pub.L. No. 109-8, effective October 17, 2005. However, § 547(c)(2), as revised, is inapplicable as this case was filed before the effective date of the new Act. See Pub.L. No. 109-8, § 1406(b)(1).
