DEFENSES
TO BANKRUPTCY PREFERENCE CLAIMS
Trustees involved in bankruptcies take a shotgun
approach and ask for all money and assets to be “paid back” to the bankruptcy
court if received within ninety days prior to the date of the bankruptcy
filing. Trustees earn a percentage of all monies and assets that flow through
Bankruptcy Court proceedings; consequently, their demands are all inclusive
without any consideration to those circumstances where the creditor is allowed
to retain assets and payments. A debtor
is deemed insolvent ninety days prior to the filing of any bankruptcy. This is
the premise for the Trustees’ demand that preferential payments be paid back to
the Bankruptcy Court for re-distribution. Although somewhat unusual but not
uncommon, the bankruptcy trustee in a Chapter 11 and especially a Chapter 7
treats all payments and transfer of assets during the last ninety days
leading up to the bankruptcy filing as preferential. There are defenses to these bankruptcy preference claims, which
are also known as avoidable preferences.
Avoidable preferences mean that exceptions are allowed and in those
situations a creditor can avoid the “pay back” preference. The most common defenses of bankruptcy
preference claims are as follows:
1.
Payments
made by a debtor in the “debtor’s ordinary course of business.”
2.
New
value considerations including COD transactions, Special Orders and Lien
Rights.
3.
Two-year
statute of limitations.
4.
Application
of the “Necessity Doctrine.”
A creditor who receives a Trustee’s demand to return
a preferential payment has a number of alternatives, which range from
disregarding the demand to acquiescing and returning all of the money. It is our recommendation that in every
instance arguments be advanced to the Trustee that payments made to your
company are not considered preferential. Based on one or more defenses, you
will have to provide the specific particulars and tie them into your
defense. In every situation where we
have passed along information to assist a client in defeating a preferential
claim, there has never been an instance where a Williams & Williams client
has paid 100% of what was being demanded by the bankruptcy Trustee.
A creditor can use the defense that the payment
occurred in the debtor’s ordinary course of business, if it can be shown
through payment history that previous payments were consistently late and
outside terms. This pattern of lateness was the debtor’s established normal
course of business. If there is no
prior evidence of deviation from invoice terms, then the courts will find that
the payment is a preference.
Special orders are considered due and payable when
raw materials are secured. If it can be
shown that end user consumers took deposits, then such transactions would be
considered not only as ongoing new consideration but also application of the
“Necessity Doctrine.”
The Necessity Doctrine is payment favoritism shown
by a debtor because the creditor’s merchandise is considered indispensable and
crucial to the debtor’s business.
Accordingly, the Necessity Doctrine could be applied to a featured name
brand supplier or a seller providing “gallery” inventory and merchandise to a
“gallery” retailer.
New value consideration can be in the form of
additional merchandise being shipped within the 90-day preference period. This amounts to new and additional
consideration tendered to the debtor within the 90-day period and thus any
payments made would be avoidable, as the Bankruptcy doctrine does not
discourage new value consideration to a financially struggling company.
COD transactions are considered new value and since
credit was not extended on the COD transaction, any NSF checks given on a COD
order should be treated as an Administrative Claim in bankruptcy. Attempted payments tendered as COD are considered
a contemporaneous exchange or “new value.” In addition, lien rights that could
be asserted are an acceptable defense of a preference. The existence of Lien
Rights or Artesian Lien Rights at the time of a preference payment in itself is
considered “new consideration,” as payment nullified the need to subsequently
perfect and file a “Claim of Lien.”
Williams & Williams has more detailed
information, if a client wishes to defeat preferential claims made by the
bankruptcy Trustee. The particulars are
available upon request.