The question on this appeal is whether a debtor in possession under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code of 1978 is entitled to an order, under §§ 542 or 543 of the Code, requiring the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) to turn over tangible assets of the debtor on which the IRS had levied pursuant to § 6331
et seq.
of the Internal Revenue Code (IRC). This question has created much conflict among bankruptcy judges and district courts throughout the nation.
1
The only other court of appeals that has considered the issue has answered it in the negative,
Cross Electric, Inc. v. United States,
Whiting Pools, Inc. (Whiting), the debtor, was in the business of selling, installing and servicing swimming pool equipment and supplies. On January 14, 1981, the IRS, acting pursuant to IRC § 6331, seized all of Whiting’s tangible property, including equipment, vehicles, inventory, office equipment and supplies, at its place of business in the Western District of New York. The estimated worth of the seized property in the hands of Whiting as a going concern was $162,876. The lien of the IRS was for some $92,000, plus interest, in unpaid withholding and Federal Insurance Contributions Act taxes. Testimony taken before
On the day following the IRS levy Whiting filed a petition under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code and was continued as a debtor in possession, § 1101(1). A month later the United States initiated an adversary proceeding under § 362(d) .of the Code in which it sought a determination that the automatic stay provisions of § 362 were inapplicable to it or, in the alternative, for relief from the stay to permit it to sell the property. It alleged that storing the property was costing. $2,500 per month. Whiting’s answer contained a counterclaim asking that the IRS be required to turn over the property pursuant to § 542 of the Bankruptcy Code.
Bankruptcy Judge Hayes, after holding hearings, delivered an opinion,
We set forth in the margin the sections of the Bankruptcy Code which must be construed in deciding that question.
3
Although Whiting had sought a turnover under
The district court,
I. Section 54S
The definition of “custodian” in § 101(10) finds an antecedent in § 2(a)(21) of the former Bankruptcy Act, which required, under certain circumstances, delivery of property by “receivers or trustees appointed in proceedings not under this Act, assignees for the benefit of creditors, and agents authorized to take possession of or to liquidate a person’s property.” The definition of custodian in § 101(10) appears in H.R. 8200, 95th Cong., 1st Sess., as reported by the House Committee on the Judiciary on September 8, 1977, H.R.Rep. No. 95-595, U.S. Code Cong. & Admin.News 1978, p. 5787, with a comment which we reproduce in the margin. 6 The same definition and comment can be found in S. 2266, 95th Cong.2d Sess. and in S.Rep.No. 95-989, p. 23, U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 1978, pp. 5787, 5809. These shed little light on the meaning of the phrase “or agent under applicable law, or under a contract” etc.
Since § 101(10)(A) and (B) include two of the categories described in § 2(a)(21) of the previous Act, § 101(10)(C) must have been intended to include and possibly broaden what had been covered by § 2(a)(21)’s phrase, “agents authorized to take possession of or to liquidate a person’s property”. Seemingly it embraces the case of an agent appointed or authorized by a debtor to take charge of property for the purpose of enforcing a lien of a particular creditor, but see,
contra, In re Lewis,
Here there is no doubt that the IRS is “authorized to take charge of property of the debtor for the purpose of enforcing a lien against . .. property” of the debtor. However, the definition of “custodian” does not include anyone who is so authorized but only a person who acts as a trustee, receiver, or agent. Admittedly the IRS is not a trustee or receiver. No one would characterize it as the taxpayer’s agent as a matter of ordinary English speech. The Restatement of Agency 2d, § 1 (1958) defines agency as “the fiduciary relation which results from the manifestation of consent by one person to another that the other shall act on his behalf and subject to his control, and consent by the other so to act.” See also Restatement of Agency 2d, § 1, Comment, at pp. 8-9 (1958). Seizure of property by the IRS under IRC § 6331 is not pursuant to a consensual relationship but is imposed by law irrespective of and generally contrary to the taxpayer’s desires. It is true that a person may be an agent under § 101(10)(C) when the relationship is created by law rather than by contract, but it would be a strained reading to interpret this as including the IRS, the archetypical “adverse claimant”, see
Phelps v. United States,
Beyond this, in determining the meaning of “custodian” as used in § 543, it is necessary to consider the other provisions of the Code. One of these is § 543(c), which requires the bankruptcy court to provide a custodian with “reasonable compensation for services rendered and costs and expenses incurred.” We can think of no reason why Congress would have chosen to provide the IRS with reasonable compensation, as distinguished from reimbursement of expenses, see IRC § 6342(a)(1), for its efforts to dismember the debtor’s estate in its own interest. Moreover, as Bankruptcy Judge Hayes noted below,
We therefore conclude that the district judge correctly decided that § 543 afforded no basis for a turnover order, and must consider whether he was also correct in his earlier ruling in
In re Avery Health Center, Inc., supra,
II. Section 542 — Turnover Generally
Determination whether § 542 is here applicable requires consideration of several sections of the Code. Section 542 requires the turnover “of property that the trustee may use, sell or lease under section 363. . . . ” Section 363(c)(1) directs that in a Chapter 11 proceeding the trustee, without notice or a hearing, may use, sell or lease “property of the estate” in the ordinary course of business, but § 363(e) requires that “on request of an entity that has an interest in property used, sold, or leased, or proposed to be used, sold, or leased, by the trustee, the court shall prohibit or condition such use, sale, or lease as is necessary to provide adequate protection of such interest.” Section 541(a)(1) provides that, with exceptions not here relevant, an estate is comprised of “all legal or equitable interests of the debtor in property as of the commencement of the case.”
The Government argues that the plain meaning of these sections mandates an answer in its favor. Relying on several decisions in the district and bankruptcy courts, see footnote 1,
supra,
the Government finds in § 541’s definition of “property of the .estate” a distinction between a debtor’s
interests in property
and
property in which the debtor has an interest.
The Government, Brief at 17, then advances the following general interpretation of the Code’s turnover provision: “the ‘property of the estate’ which must be delivered to the trustee ... by virtue of Section 542(a) consists only of any interests in property belonging to the debtor as of the time of its filing of a petition” in bankruptcy. The Government concludes that, at the commencement of the
Although there is some force in the Government’s construction of §§ 542, 541 and 363, we ultimately must reject it. Justice Cardozo, interpreting one of the predecessors of the Code in
Duparquet Huot & Moneuse Co. v. Evans,
The Government’s general interpretation of the interplay of § 542 and § 541(a)(1)’s definition of “property of the estate” would have a far-reaching effect on reorganizations by denying to debtors or trustees in reorganization not only the power to obtain the turnover of property of the debtor levied upon by the IRS, but also that repossessed prior to bankruptcy by secured creditors or held by pledgees after a default. In all these instances the secured creditor would have rightful possession of the property. Typical statutes recognize the debtor as having only limited “rights” in the property — notice of sale, redemption prior to sale, and receipt of surplus proceeds, see pp. 157-158 infra and note 8 supra. Thus, under the Government’s reading of the statute, only these limited interests in property would constitute “property of the estate”. The trustee therefore could obtain turnover only of these interests, which he has without benefit of a turnover order, not the property itself.
The results dictated by the Government’s interpretation of § 542 would be a significant departure from the treatment of reorganization proceedings under the former Bankruptcy Act. In Chapter X reorganization cases under that Act a bankruptcy court had broad power to order secured creditors in possession following the debt- or’s default to turn over their collateral. In the leading case of
Reconstruction Finance Corporation v. Kaplan,
In contrast with the provisions of law relating to straight bankruptcy, Chapter X, like its earlier counterpart § 77B, . . . contemplates the rehabilitation of financially ailing business corporations under plans of reorganization which may deal with claims of creditors, secured as well as unsecured, and embrace all of the debtor’s property, however encumbered with outstanding security interests. In keeping with this objective, appropriate broad powers are conferred upon the reorganization court.
The court also wrote that:
The second sentence of § 257 may not specifically authorize a turnover order displacing the ordinary possessory lien of a pledgee of collateral or other personal property; but it seems in substance to cover the kind of security interest which RFC had in the inventory under its statutory factor’s lien. In other words, RFC’s lien on the inventory had the characteristic of a chattel mortgage, with possession, and the right to possession, remaining in the borrower until default. But there is no need to rest on the second sentence of § 257, which is not the broad basic section conferring upon the court jurisdiction over ail the debtor’s property wherever located; it appears rather to be a specific provision inserted out of abundance of caution to make clear the inapplicability under Chapter X of Tuttle v. Harris, 1936,297 U.S. 225 ,56 S.Ct. 416 ,80 L.Ed. 654 , a case decided under § 77B. (Emphasis added.)
Id. at 795. 11
The First Circuit’s conclusion in
RFC v. Kaplan, supra,
was also reached in a number of other cases, some preceding and others following it. See
Grand Boulevard Investment Co. v. Strauss,
The Government’s reading of § 541 would have the effect of reversing this settled law in reorganization proceedings under Chapter 11 of the Code. We see no evidence that any such drastic change was intended. As Justice Douglas put it, in interpreting the old Bankruptcy Act in
Emil v. Hanley,
Indeed an examination of the legislative history antedating 1977 compels a broad view of § 542’s turnover power. Section 542 was a relatively late addition to the Code. It did not appear in the early drafts of the proposed legislation,
14
and was first
H.R. 6 was the product of the House Judiciary Committee, which prepared the bill after the Subcommittee on Civil and Constitutional Rights had conducted extensive hearings on earlier drafts. 15 H.R. 6 was prepared with the intent of resolving problems that had been identified during these hearings. 124 Cong.Rec. H 11690, 11701; Klee, Legislative History of the New Bankruptcy Code, 54 Am.Bankr.L.J. 275, 280 (1980). Since § 542 first appeared in H.R. 6, it is important to consider what was said at those hearings regarding the turnover of collateral from secured creditors in possession.
The House and Senate subcommittee hearings contain a number of statements regarding the bankruptcy court’s turnover power. The following pattern emerges from the testimony: Witnesses said it was clear that the bankruptcy courts were intended to have (and should have) the authority to order the turnover of collateral from secured creditors in possession. Concern was expressed, however, that the language of early drafts of the proposed legislation failed to set forth the basis for such a turnover power in sufficiently explicit detail; consequently, redrafting of the legislation on this point was urged. Witnesses also suggested that turnover be preceded by the provision of adequate protection for secured creditor’s interests. We are not aware that any witness opposed a broad turnover power if this was accompanied by proper provisions for protection.
The following excerpts from the congressional hearings illustrate the above summary. One witness told the House subcommittee:
I believe that it is almost beyond argument that in the new bankruptcy legislation collateral in the possession of secured creditors should be subject to the jurisdiction of the bankruptcy court, except, perhaps, where the bankruptcy is directed toward liquidation and the property has already been taken into custody by another court of competent jurisdiction. . . .
In rehabilitative proceedings it is proper for the court to be able to control under the injunctive power liquidation procedures by secured creditors in possession and under adequate safeguards to compel the surrender of collateral for use in the rehabilitation process. While recognizing the wish of this Committee that witnesses not comment on the specific language of the proposed legislation at this time I note that the power of the court to compel the surrender of collateral has been left largely to inference in both of the Bills presently before Congress. Leaving this issue to case by case development is, in my opinion, undesirable in light of the present judicial uncertainty on the point and I believe that the legislation should expressly deal with the question of when and under what standards displacement of the secured creditor or its agent should be permitted.
Subcommittee on Civil and Constitutional Rights of the House Committee on the Judiciary, Bankruptcy Act Revision, 94th Cong., 1st Sess., Hearings on H.R. 31 and 32, Part I, at 439 (1976) [hereinafter House Hearings] (prepared statement of Patrick A.
Another witness, testifying on behalf of the American Bankers Association, said:
A related change in both bills would extend the jurisdiction of the Bankruptcy Court to secured creditors in possession of property of the bankrupt, which would, with appropriate safeguards, permit the Bankruptcy Court to force the secured creditor to surrender that property to the debtor or trustee even in a straight bankruptcy case. Assuming that adequate safeguards of the rights of secured creditors are contained in the legislation, we would support this change recognizing that it is a power that is present in reorganization cases under existing law [citing §§ 256 and 257 of Ch. X and §§ 506 and 507 of Ch. XII and RFC v. Kaplan.]. It should be made clear by statute, however, that the Bankruptcy Court would have no power to administer any secured creditor’s collateral unless (1) there is an equity for the benefit of creditors or unless such administration is necessary to effect a rehabilitation under Chapter VI or VII of the Commission’s Bill or Chapters VI, VII, or VIII of the Judge’s Bill, and (2) it is clear that the value of the secured creditor’s claim against the collateral will be preserved.
Id. at 1023 (prepared statement of Walter W. Vaughn).
The National Bankruptcy Conference expressed the same view of the matter:
However, the NBC [National Bankruptcy Conference] noted that there is no provision either in the reorganization chapter or elsewhere comparable to existing Section 257 of Chapter X. This section authorizes the Court to require a mortgagee or other secured creditor to turn over to a trustee property in his possession. In view of the expanded jurisdiction of the Bankruptcy Court under the proposed bills, it is also clear that this power should continue in the Court and the NBC concluded that it should be extended to liquidation cases.
The following principles are therefore recommended: (1) The right to gain possession from a secured creditor should exist in both liquidation and reorganization cases. (2) Some standard or guidelines, even if only of a general nature should be established as to the occasions when such rights should be exercised. (3) The standards or guidelines in liquidation cases should be those contained in Section 5-203 and in reorganization cases those in Section 7 -203 [the forerunner of the current adequate protection section].
Id.
at 1838-39.
16
See also
id.
at 1756-57 (prepared statement of Robert J. Grimmig,
Commentary on the proposed bankruptcy legislation reflected the same understanding. One article, Murphy, Use of Collateral in Business Rehabilitation: A Suggested Redrafting of Section 7-208 of the Bankruptcy Reform Act, 63 Calif.L.Rev. 1483 (1975), said:
Two questions are presented: (1) does the court have the power to stay the secured creditor from commencing or continuing a foreclosure action; and (2) does the court have the power to order a secured creditor in possession to surrender the property for use in the rehabilitative process? Section 7-203 of the Proposed Act contemplates the use of collateral but fails to deal with the initial question of obtaining the property from a secured creditor in possession. Section 2-201 of the Proposed Act is clearly intended to extend the jurisdiction of the court to property of the estate wherever located and, when read with section 4-501, would permit the court to stay a secured creditor in possession even in straight bankruptcy proceeding — clearly a change from existing law. However, neither the Proposed Act nor the Judge’s Bill deals expressly with the recovery of property from secured creditors in possession.
Id. at 1497 (footnotes omitted). The article continued:
Expanded jurisdiction under section 2-201, in combination with the broad definition of “property of the estate” under section 4-601, indicates that the Commission intended to give the court power to deal with collateral in the possession of secured creditors. This should be clarified, however, in the general part of the legislation, Chapter IV of the Proposed Act, rather than in Chapter VII, in order for the court to have comprehensive power in liquidation proceedings and in the rehabilitative chapters.
Id. at 1497-98. See also Coogan, Comments on Some Reorganization Provisions of the Pending Bankruptcy Bills, 30 Bus.Law. 1149, 1169-78 (1975); Murphy, Restraint and Reimbursement: The Secured Creditor in Reorganization and Arrangement Proceedings, 30 Bus.Law 15 (1974).
Shortly after the uncontradicted statements regarding the bankruptcy court’s turnover power, cited above, were made to the House and Senate subcommittees, § 542, the Code’s general turnover provision, was added to the proposed legislation. Following this addition, the provision was incorporated in all later drafts of the bill, and the turnover question, which had attracted substantial attention in the 1975 and 1976 hearings, was not mentioned in subsequent legislative history. This sequence of events compels the inference that § 542 was added to the Code to make clear — as a number of witnesses had explicitly urged — that the turnover power approved in RFC v. Kaplan was to be incorporated in the new statute. This inference becomes all the more compelling when one considers that if § 542 did not authorize compelling turnovers by secured creditors in possession, apparently its only use would be to authorize obtaining property from persons in wrongful possession following theft or conversion. Given the circumstances surrounding the inclusion of the section in the Code, the more natural reading of § 542 is that it was intended to codify RFC v. Kaplan, and possibly, although we need not decide the question, also extend the turnover power to straight bankruptcy cases.
For the foregoing reasons, we reject the Government’s reading of §§ 542, 541 and 363 in the present context of a Chapter 11 proceeding, and hold that in such a case
III. Federal Tax Levies
On the basis of a mere reading of the IRC provisions, the argument is unpersuasive. Comparison of relevant statutes indicates that an IRS levy on tangible property pursuant to § 6331 et seq. is virtually indistinguishable from the ordinary repossession and foreclosure procedures followed by secured creditors, except for the fact that the IRS can make its own levy without need of the assistance of a sheriff, marshal or similar officer. Compare § 6331 et seq. of the IRC with §§ 9-207, 9-501 to 507 of the UCC and with N.Y.Lien Law §§ 200-05 (public sales), N.Y.Lien Law §§ 206-210 (levy) and with §§ 1301 et seq. of the New York Real Property Actions and Proceedings Law. In these instances as under IRC § 6331 et seq., the statutes give the debtor the right, and only the right, to notice, an opportunity for redemption, and surplus proceeds.
The Government’s argument for a sharp distinction between an IRS levy and a secured creditor’s repossession is based primarily on
Phelps v. United States,
The Supreme Court agreed with the Seventh Circuit. It reasoned that, following the levy, the assignee held the $38,000 on behalf of the United States as an adverse claimant. The Court then applied the settled rule that “where possession is assertedly held not for the bankrupt, but for others prior to bankruptcy ... the holder is not subject to summary jurisdiction.”
Phelps, supra,
It is plain that the
holding
in
Phelps
does not assist the Government here.
Phelps
was one in the line of cases applying the distinction between summary and plenary jurisdiction that had evolved under the 1898 Act with respect to ordinary bankruptcy, see
Taubel-Scott-Kitzmiller Co. v. Fox, supra,
Moreover Phelps did not decide that a bankruptcy court would not have had power in a Chapter X proceeding under the former Act to direct a turnover on facts such as there presented. As we have previously developed, the constraints against a bankruptcy court’s exercising summary jurisdiction with respect to property of the bankrupt not in the debtor’s actual or constructive possession had never applied under the reorganization provisions, §§ 77 and 77B, and Chapters X and XII. Rather, “the reorganization court [could] bring its authority to bear upon creditors in situations not possible in ordinary bankruptcy.” 6 Collier on Bankruptcy ¶ 3.03, at 412 (14th ed. 1977). In such cases
when possession of the debtor’s property is held by a creditor, such as a pledgee or mortgagee, whose claim is not in dispute and who does not dispute the debtor’s title but claims the right to hold the property and use it as security, the courts have generally ruled that this possession is not sufficient to defeat the reorganization court’s summary jurisdiction either to enjoin the use of the security as by sale or to retake possession thereof.
6 Collier on Bankruptcy ¶ 3.05, at 431 (14th ed. 1977). See Reconstruction Finance Corporation v. Kaplan, supra, and cases cited at pp. 151-152, supra. As shown above the framers of the Code intended to preserve this jurisdiction.
The Government is thus forced to argue that after an IRS levy, as distinguished from levies by other secured creditors, a debtor loses not only possession but ownership. This position finds scant support in the language of IRC § 6331 ei
seq.
Looking only at the statute, we would see no basis for doubt that at the commencement of the Chapter 11 proceeding Whiting had title to the goods the IRS had seized. Under the statute ownership is extinguished not by the levy and seizure but only by a subsequent sale. Thus, § 6335(a) requires that written notice of seizure be given “to the owner of the property (or, in the case of personal property, the possessor thereof)” or be left at his usual place of abode or business. Section 6335(b) requires that, as soon as practicable after the seizure, notice of sale be given to “the owner”. Section 6336, relating to perishable goods, again requires notice to the “owner of the property”. The IRS’s certificate of sale of personal property shall “transfer to the purchaser all right, title, and interest of the party delinquent in and to the property sold”, § 6339(a)(2), and its deed of real property “shall be considered and operate as a conveyance of the right, title and interest the party delinquent had in and to the real property thus sold at the time the lien of the United States attached thereto.” § 6339(b)(2). By the very language of the statute, it is the delinquent party’s interest, not an interest already acquired by the Government as a result of the levy, that is conveyed. Nothing in these sections prohibits the delinquent party, after the levy and pending the sale, from exercising the most fundamental right of ownership, namely, to transfer title, subject, of course, to the continuing right of the United States to proceed with the sale unless the property has been redeemed under § 6337(a). Such a transfer could well occur when the tax
What preceded the sale was merely preliminary, and, independently of the sale, worked no divestiture of title.
The title was “forfeited” by the levy only in the sense that “it became subject to be vested in the United States, and upon public sale, became actually vested in the United States or in any other purchaser, but not before such public sale.”
In the face of all this the Government relies on two statements in the
Phelps
opinion. One,
The other statement in
Phelps
on which the Government relies is in footnote 8,
In any event, the pre-bankruptcy levy displaced any title of Chicagoland [the taxpayer], and § 70(a)(8) is therefore inapplicable.
The footnote cited no authority for the proposition that the levy as distinguished from the sale “displaced” the title of Chica-goland, which the receiver had conceded to be nonexistent because of the prior conveyance to the assignee, and any such view, if applied generally, would run directly counter to
Bennett v. Hunter, supra.
The remark just quoted must be read as addressed to the particular circumstances of the
Phelps
case, where the tax claim vastly exceeded the amount of the levy and the seizure was of cash which did not need to be sold. See
United States v. Pittman,
Eiland involved the levy upon an intangible indebtedness rather than upon corporeal property as here and we would hesitate to extend its holding. Such a step is not necessary to the decision of this case.
property recovered by the trustee under section 542 of proposed title 11, if the property received was merely out of the possession of the debtor, yet remained property of the debtor,
and that
The debtor’s interest in property also included “title” to property, which is an interest, just as are a possessory interest, or a leasehold interest, for example.
Despite the Government’s assertions to the contrary, our conclusion that an IRS levy on tangible property in which the debtor has an equity does not strip the debtor of all property interests and transfer full title to the Government is entirely consistent with the statements in the House and Senate Reports, H.R.Rep.No.95-595, supra, at 367-68; Sen.Rep.No.95-989, supra, at 82, U.S. Code Cong. & Admin.News pp. 5787, 5868, 6323, see also 124 Cong.Rec. H 11096 (daily ed. Sept. 28, 1978), that the Code was “not intended to expand the debtor’s rights against others more than they exist at the commencement of the case” and that the trustee “could take no greater rights than the debtor himself had.” Whiting has not asked us to invalidate the tax lien. It has asked only to have the use of the property, on which the IRS had levied but which it had not yet sold, in what Whiting believed and the bankruptcy judge found might be a successful rehabilitation, to the advantage of the Government as well as other interested parties. Here we must give some weight to the purpose of the Code, announced by Representative Edwards, a member of the Commission on the Bankruptcy Laws of the United States, who presented the bill to the House, 124 Cong.Rec. H 11089 (daily ed. Sept. 28, 1978):
The amendment also encourages business reorganizations by a streamlined new commercial reorganization chapter. . .. It will protect the investing public, protect jobs, and help save troubled businesses.
There can be no doubt that allowing the government to strip a failing company of all its tangible property would impact seriously on this goal. 19
We recognize that, as said in
Bull v. United States,
Here the bankruptcy judge purported to do just that, see note 5, supra, and we would have little doubt that the conditions he developed would be sufficient except for one point not apparent on the face of his opinion. The opinion of the district court reveals that, in addition to the turnover order of April 28, 1981, here before us, the bankruptcy judge made an order on April 30, 1981, directing Bankers Trust Company to pay certain levied funds to the IRS and further directing that such funds 21 be considered as partial payment of the $20,000 which Whiting was required to pay the IRS under the order here under review. The district judge vacated the April 30 order and directed the bankruptcy court to reconsider it. We are not clear what the effect of this was. There is nothing to indicate whether Whiting had appealed from the April 30 order, and the direction that the Bankers Trust funds be considered as partial payment of the $20,000 on the turnover of the tangibles would fade away if the April 28 order were vacated as the district court directed. The April 30 order is not before us and perhaps may never be. We also have no idea what has been happening in the year since the levy and the filing of the Chapter 11 petition. Under the circumstances we think it best simply to reverse the order of the district court insofar as it held that the tangible assets were not subject to a turnover order, and remand to it with instructions to vacate its own order to that effect and remand to the bankruptcy court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. In such proceedings the bankruptcy court should consider whether a turnover order is appropriate under present circumstances and, if it decides in the affirmative, what protection should be afforded to the United States.
It is so ordered.
Notes
. Decisions of bankruptcy and district courts denying the turnover power include:
In re Avery Health Center, Inc.,
Decisions of bankruptcy and district courts upholding the power include:
In re Alpa Corp.,
. These are:
§ 362(d) On request of a party in interest and after notice and a hearing, the court shall grant relief from the stay provided under subsection (a) of this section, such as by terminating, annulling, modifying, or conditioning such stay—
(1) for cause, including the lack of adequate protection of an interest in property of such party in interest; or
(2) with respect to a stay of an act against property, if—
(A) the debtor does not have an equity in such property; and
(B) such property is not necessary to an effective reorganization.
. § 361. Adequate protection
When adequate protection is required under section 362, 363, or 364 of this title of an interest of an entity in property, such adequate protection may be provided by—
(1) requiring the trustee to make periodic cash payments to such entity, to the extent that the stay under section 362 of this title, use, sale, or lease under section 363 of this title, or any grant of a lien under section 364 of this title results in a decrease in the value of such entity’s interest in such property;
(2) providing to such entity an additional or replacement lien to the extent that such stay, use, sale, lease, or grant results in a decrease in the value of such entity’s interest in such property; or
(3)granting such other relief, other than entitling such entity to compensation allowance under section 503(b)(1) of this title as an administrative expense, as will result in the realization by such entity of the indubitable equivalent of such entity’s interest in such property. § 363(b) The trustee, after notice and a hearing, may use, sell, or lease, other than in the ordinary course of business, property of the estate.
(c)(1) If the business of the debtor is authorized to be operated under section 721, 1108, or 1304 of this title and unless the court orders otherwise, the trustee may enter into transactions, including the sale or lease of property of the estate, in the ordinary course of business, without notice or a hearing, and may use property of the estate in the ordinary course of business without notice or a hearing.
(2) The trustee may not use, sell, or lease cash collateral under paragraph* (1) of this subsection unless—
(A) each entity that has an interest in such cash collateral consents; or
(B) the court, after notice and a hearing, authorizes such use, sale, or lease in accordance with the provisions of this section.
(3) Any hearing under paragraph (2)(B) of this subsection may be a preliminary hearingor may be consolidated with a hearing under subsection (e) of this section, but shall be scheduled in accordance with the needs of the debtor. If the hearing under paragraph (2)(B) of this subsection is a preliminary hearing, the court may authorize such use, sale, or lease only if there is a reasonable likelihood that the trustee will prevail at the final hearing under subsection (e) of this section. The court shall act promptly on any request for authorization under paragraph (2)(B) of this subsection.
(4) Except as provided in paragraph (2) of this subsection, the trustee shall segregate and account for any cash collateral in the trustee’s possession, custody, or control.
(e) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, at any time, on request of an entity that has an interest in property used, sold, or leased, or proposed to be used, sold, or leased, by the trustee, the court shall prohibit or condition such use, sale, or lease as is necessary to provide adequate protection of such interest. In any hearing under this section, the trustee has the burden of proof on the issue of adequate protection.
§ 541. Property of the estate
(a) The commencement of a case under section 301, 302, or 303 of this title creates an estate. Such estate is comprised of all the following property, wherever located:
(1) Except as provided in subsections (b) and (c)(2) of this section, all legal or equitable interests of the debtor in property as of the commencement of this case.
§ 542(a) Except as provided in subsection (c) or (d) of this section, an entity, other than a custodian, in possession, custody, or control, during the case, of property that the trustee.may use, sell, or lease under section 363 of this title, or that the debtor may exempt under section 522 of this title, shall deliver to the trustee, and account for, such property or the value of such property, unless such property is of inconsequential value or benefit to the estate.
§ 543(b) A custodian shall—
(1) deliver to the trustee any property of the debtor transferred to such custodian, or proceeds of such property, that is in such custodian’s possession, custody, or control on the date that such custodian acquires knowledge of the commencement of this case; and
(2) file an accounting of any property of the debtor, or proceeds of such property, that, at any time, came into the possession, custody, or control of such custodian.
§ 101(10) “custodian" means—
(A) receiver or trustee of any of the property of the debtor, appointed in a case or proceeding not under this title;
(B) assignee under a general assignment for the benefit of the debtor’s creditors; or
(C) trustee, receiver, or agent under applicable law, or under a contract, that is appointed or authorized to take charge of property of the debtor for the purpose of enforcing a lien against such property, or for the purpose of general administration of such property for the benefit of the debtor’s creditors.
. Section 257 provided:
The trustee appointed under this chapter, upon his qualification, or if a debtor is continued in possession, the debtor, shall become vested with the rights, if any, of such prior receiver or trustee in such property and with the right to the immediate possession thereof. The trustee or debtor in possession shall also have the right to immediate possession of all property of the debtor in the possession of a trustee under a trust deed or a mortgagee under a mortgage.
. 1. That the debtor-in-possession pay IRS as adequate protection under 11 U.S.C. § 361 the sum of $20,000 before the turnover occurs, and
2. That the debtor shall pay to IRS the sum of $1,000 a month until the tax is paid, and
3. That during this period of time IRS shall retain its lien upon the property seized, and
4. That if the debtor fails to make the payments required when IRS turns over the property, the stay shall be lifted....
. Paragraph (10) defines “custodian.” There is no similar definition in current law. It is defined to facilitate drafting, and means prepet-ition liquidator of the debtor’s property, such as an assignee for the benefit of creditors, a receiver of the debtor’s property, or a liquidator or administrator of the debtor’s property. The definition of custodian to include a receiver or trustee is descriptive, and not meant to be limited to court officers with those titles. The definition is intended to include other officers of the court if their functions are substantially similar to those of a receiver or trustee.
. The bankruptcy judge and Whiting seek to draw support for the conclusion that the IRS is a “custodian” under § 543 from cases arising under Chapter X of the Bankruptcy Act, most
Several bankruptcy courts have held that an ordinary secured creditor in possession is a “custodian” under the Code, and therefore subject to § 543’s turnover requirement,
Smitty's Inc. v. Southeast National Bank,
1 C.B.C.2d 366 (Bankr.Ct.M.D.Fla.1979) (writ of replevin);
In re Gunder,
. According to the Government, these were: a right to notice of the seizure and the sale, § 6335(a) and (b); a right to redemption prior to the sale, § 6337(a), and, in the case of real property, for 120 days thereafter, § 6337(b); and a right to surplus proceeds, § 6342(b).
. For example, the Government directs our attention to the following remarks by Representative Edwards:
[O]nly the debtor’s interest in such property becomes property of the estate. If the debtor holds bare legal title or holds property in trust for another, only those rights which the debtor would have otherwise had emanating from such interest pass to the estate under section 541.
124 Cong.Rec. H 11,096 (Sept. 28, 1978), reprinted in [1978] U.S.Code Cong. & Ad.News 6455.
. Indeed, the immediate legislative history contains language inconsistent with the rigid reading of “property of the estate” urged by the Government. The House Report accompanying the Bankruptcy Code, after noting that the “scope of [§ 541(a)(1)] is broad”, states that property of the estate “includes all kinds of property, including tangible or intangible property, causes of action (see Bankruptcy Act section 70a(6) and all other forms of property currently specified in section 70a of the Bankruptcy Act § 70a, as well as property recovered by the trustee under section 542 of proposed title 11, if the property recovered was merely out of the possession of the debtor, yet remained ‘property of the debtor’ ”. Report of the Committee on the Judiciary, House of Representatives, To Accompany H.R. 8200, H.R. Rep. No. 95-595, 95th Cong., 1st Sess., at 367, U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 1978, p. 5787 at 6323 (1977). This discussion indicates that § 541(a)(1) was not intended to narrow the old Act’s definition of “property of the estate”, as the Government’s reading of the statute would require, but rather to preserve or enlarge it.
. The fears of Congress with respect to
Tuttle v. Harris,
.There was some uncertainty as to the scope of the bankruptcy court’s turnover power in Chapter XI proceedings under the former Act. According to one commentator:
Probably the single greatest area of uncertainty with respect to the exercise of Chapter XI jurisdiction concerns the secured creditor in possession of property of the debtor. It is at present unclear whether the court has the power to prevent a secured creditor in possession from enforcing its lien and whether the court has the power to force that creditor to surrender property to the debtor.
Murphy,
Restraint and Reimbursement: The Secured Creditor in Reorganization and Arrangement Proceedings,
30 Bus.Law. 15, 39 (1974). A number of recent decisions affirmed a turnover power in Chapter XI cases similar to that under Chapters X and XII, e.g.,
In re George W. Schultz,
50 Am.Bankr.L.J. 185 (Bankr.Ct.D.Okla.1975);
In re Roebling Steel & Wire Corp.,
. See the remarks of Representative Edwards quoted in text at p. 159, infra. According to Chairman Rodino, of the House Judiciary Committee, “[f]or business, the bill facilitates reorganizations, protecting investments, and jobs.” 123 Cong.Rec.H. 11,697 (daily ed. Oct. 27, 1977).
. By early we mean H.R. 10,792, introduced Oct. 4, 1973; S. 2565, introduced Oct. 11, 1973; H.R. 16,643, introduced Sept. 12, 1974; H.R. 31; H.R. 32; S. 235; and S. 236. See Klee, Legislative History of the New Bankruptcy Code, 54 Am.Bankr.L.J. 275, 280 (1980).
The provision that came the closest to creating a general turnover power was § 4-603, which was a “custodian” turnover section similar to what is now § 543:
Sec. 4-603. EFFECT OF FILING OF PETITION ON PRIOR CUSTODIAN OF DEBTOR’S PROPERTY.—
(a) APPLICABILITY OF SECTION. — If when a petition is filed under this title the property of the debtor is in the possession of—
(1) a receiver, trustee, or other officer of a nonbankruptcy court, or
(2) an assignee under a general assignment for the benefit of creditors, or
(3) a trustee or agent under a statute or contract who is appointed or authorized totake charge of the property for the purpose of enforcing a lien against the property of the debtor or of a general administration of the debtor’s property for the benefit of creditors, the custodian’s rights and duties respecting the property shall be governed by this section.
(b) DUTY OF CUSTODIAN TO DELIVER PROPERTY AND MAKE ACCOUNTING — A custodian of the debtor’s property to whom this section applies shall deliver the property in his possession to the trustee of the debt- or’s estate under this title and shall account to the administrator for the disposition of the property received as such custodian unless—
(1) the prior custodian took possession of the property for the purpose of general administration of the debtor’s estate more than three months prior to the filing of a petition for relief under chapter V of this title;
H.R. 31, § 4-603. H.R. 32, S. 235, and S. 236 all contained almost identical provisions.
. The House hearings involved some 100 witnesses, whose testimony fills some 2,800 pages plus appendices.
. The revision suggested by the National Bankruptcy Conference would have amended § 4-603 of H.R. 31 and 32 (quoted at note 14, supra) as follows:
Section 4-603. Effect of Filing of Petition on Prior Custodian of Debtor’s Property and Creditor in Possession.
(a) Applicability of Section. If when a petition is filed under this Act [the] property of the debtor is in the possession of:
(1) a receiver, trustee, or other officer of a nonbankruptcy court, or
(2) an assignee under a general assignment for the benefit of creditors, or
(3) a trustee or agent under a statute or contract, who is appointed or authorized to take charge of the property for the purpose of enforcing a lien against the property cf the debtor or of a general administration of the debtor’s property for the benefit of creditors, or
(4) a creditor,
the custodian’s or creditor’s rights and duties respecting the property shall be governed by this section.
(b) Duty of Custodian or Creditor to Deliver Property and Make Accounting. A custodian [of the debtor’s property] or creditor to whom this section applies [shall] may be directed by the court to deliver the property in his possession to the trustee of the debtor’s estate under this Act [and] for the purpose of sale under section 5-103 in a case under Chapter V, for the purpose of returning the property to the debtor subject to any relief from the stay prescribed by section 4-501 in a case under Chapter VI, or for the purposes of use pursuant to section 7-203 or disposition pursuant to section 7-104, 7-205, or 7-303(9) in a case under Chapter VII or ¡X.
A Note prepared by the NBC to accompany the proposed change read:
The proposed addition to the title of the Commission’s § 4-603 and the proposed addition of clause (4) to subsection (a) are designed tomake clear that the section applies to a mortgagee or other creditor in possession of some or all of the property of the debtor as do §§ 257 and 507 of the present Act. In re Colonial Realty Investment Co., 516 F.2d 154 (1st Cir. 1975); In re Franklin Garden Apartments,124 F.2d 451 (2d Cir. 1941).
. We emphasize the word “power” since it is hard to see what proper purpose a turnover would have in straight bankruptcy on the facts of Phelps.
. The Government relies also on cases in the courts of appeals to support its thesis that a levy under § 6331 e£
seq.
strips the debtor of ownership despite the contrary implications of the statutory language and
Bennett v. Hunter, supra.
The general thrust of the decisions, as distinguished from some of the language, is to the contrary.
In re Brewster-Raymond Co.,
. For the impact of IRS levies upon businesses seeking to reorganize, see Nowak, Turnover Following Prepetition Levy of Distraint Under Bankruptcy Code § 542, 55 Am.Bankruptcy L.J. 313, 313-14 (1981) (citing findings of Senate subcommittee investigation of IRS collection efforts).
. The judges must also vigilantly monitor the results of business operations and the progress of attempts at reorganization.
. The Government tells us, Brief at 5, fn. 3, that these amounted to nearly $15,000. It objects to the consideration of such funds, which it deems to be its own, as part of the down payment.
