Court Opinion

ID: 9895253
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-11-06 16:10:47.940263+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:11:48.613349
License: Public Domain

[Cite as Wulco, Inc. v. O'Gara Group, Inc., 2023-Ohio-4023.]

                                     IN THE COURT OF APPEALS

                           TWELFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT OF OHIO

                                            BUTLER COUNTY

 WULCO, INC.,                                           :

        Appellee,                                       : CASE NOS. CA2023-03-033
                                                                    CA2023-03-034
                                                        :
     - vs -                                                         OPINION
                                                        :            11/6/2023

 THE O'GARA GROUP, INC., AND                            :
 MONROE CAPITAL PARTNERS FUND
 LP,                                                    :

        Appellants.

          CIVIL APPEAL FROM BUTLER COUNTY COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
                            Case No. CV 2022 03 0460

Dressman Benzinger LaVelle psc, and Justin L. Knappick and Jon V. Connor, for appellee.

Taft Stettinius & Hollister LLP, and Alex E. Wallin, for appellant, The O'Gara Group, Inc.

Frost Brown Todd LLP, and Kevin R. Carter and Simon Y. Svirnovskiy, for appellant Monroe
Capital Partners Fund LP.

        S. POWELL, P.J.

        {¶ 1} Monroe Capital Partners Fund LP, an interested party, and The O'Gara

Group, Inc., the defendant, appeal the order of the Butler County Common Pleas Court

awarding funds garnished from O'Gara to Wulco, Inc., the plaintiff, a judgment creditor of
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O'Gara. For the reasons discussed in this opinion, we reverse.

                             I. Facts and Procedural History

      {¶ 2} O'Gara manufactures tactical vehicles for the U.S. military. Wulco and its

various corporate divisions supply armor components and assemblies for military platforms,

specialized tooling, and industrial crates.   During December 2021 and January 2022,

O'Gara purchased goods from Wulco and failed to pay for those purchases.

      {¶ 3} O'Gara was in financial trouble, and not only could it not pay Wulco but it could

not make payments on tens of millions of dollars in loans. After O'Gara failed to respond to

Wulco's written request for assurance of payment, Wulco filed suit for breach of contract

and unjust enrichment. O'Gara failed to defend, and on June 8, 2022, the trial court entered

a default judgment to Wulco, awarding Wulco the principal sum of $565,527.70, storage

costs of $2,940 (accumulating at $980 per month), interest, and costs.

      {¶ 4} On June 21, 2022, the court issued an order and notice of garnishment to

JPMorgan Chase Bank, where O'Gara maintained bank accounts. The notice ordered

JPMorgan to complete and return the "Answer of Garnishee" "together with the amount

determined in accordance with the answer of the garnishee" to the Butler County Clerk of

Courts.     The notice stated that the total probable amount due on the judgment was

$568,937.74. Upon receipt of the garnishment order, JPMorgan delivered $568,937.74

from one of O'Gara's accounts to the clerk (received on July 13, 2022) with a notice stating

that the funds "may be subject to claims which may reduce the amount available to the

judgment creditor, including * * * [:] rights of third parties asserting an interest in the

account."

      {¶ 5} On July 21, O'Gara filed a request for a garnishment hearing, disputing

Wulco's right to garnish the funds in its JPMorgan account. O'Gara contended that the

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funds were subject to a perfected security lien held by Monroe, making Monroe a secured

creditor with a higher-priority lien and giving Monroe a superior interest in the funds. The

next day, Monroe filed a motion to intervene to raise its defense to garnishment. The trial

court granted the motion in part and denied it in part. The court limited Monroe's intervention

to participating in a garnishment hearing and allowing it to provide evidence of its claimed

security interest in the funds.

       {¶ 6} The evidence presented by Monroe shows that in June 2011 Monroe and

O'Gara executed a Credit Agreement and a separate Security Agreement under which

Monroe, sometimes in combination with other lenders, began to make a series of secured

loans to O'Gara to help restructure its debt and provide working capital. A year later, O'Gara

began defaulting on the loans. Monroe, and the other lenders, agreed to waive these

defaults, and the parties entered into a series of amendments to the Credit Agreement.

Finally, O'Gara's senior secured lender triggered liquidation proceedings, hiring a

restructuring officer to wind down the business. In May 2022, O'Gara closed its doors. By

then, O'Gara owed Monroe more than $47 million.

       {¶ 7} The Security Agreement granted Monroe a continuing security interest in

(among other things) all O'Gara's "Deposit Accounts," which included those it maintained

with JPMorgan. In October 2020, Monroe became a party to an "Amended and Restated

Blocked Account Control Agreement" along with UMB Bank (O'Gara's senior lender at the

time), O'Gara, and JPMorgan. The expressed purpose of the Control Agreement was to

give UMB Bank and Monroe "control over the Account within the meaning of Section 9-104

of the Uniform Commercial Code." Since then, UMB Bank has been paid off in full, making

Monroe the senior lender.

       {¶ 8} At a discovery conference in the garnishment action, the parties and the court

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agreed that the parties would brief the issue of lien priority. A garnishment hearing was

held on January 23, 2023. Monroe argued that it had proved that it has an earlier-in-time,

perfected security interest in O'Gara's deposit account, established by the Security

Agreement, Credit Agreement, and Control Agreement. Wulco argued that Monroe did not

prove its security interest and that neither O'Gara nor Monroe raised a valid defense to the

garnishment. Wulco also argued that, even if Monroe had a perfected security interest, it

was stripped when the funds were delivered to the clerk under R.C. 1309.332(B), Ohio's

codification of Section 9-332 of the Uniform Commercial Code ("UCC"), which provides: "A

transferee of funds from a deposit account takes the funds free of a security interest in the

deposit account unless the transferee acts in collusion with the debtor in violating the rights

of the secured party." The parties agreed at the hearing that the trial court would decide

two questions: whether Monroe had met its burden to prove that it has a perfected security

interest, and whether R.C. 1309.332(B) applied to strip the security interest.

       {¶ 9} On February 27, 2023, the trial court overruled Monroe's objection to the

garnishment and awarded the garnished funds to Wulco. The court agreed with Wulco that

Monroe had failed to present a valid defense to the garnishment, instead making a lien-

priority attack on the judgment. The court also agreed that the clerk was a "transferee of

funds from a deposit account" and that R.C. 1309.332(B) had stripped the funds of any

security interest that Monroe had.

       {¶ 10} Monroe and O'Gara appealed.

                                         II. Analysis

       {¶ 11} The sole assignment of error alleges:

       {¶ 12} "The trial court erred by rejecting the defenses of appellants Monroe Capital

Partners Fund LP and The O'Gara Group, Inc. to appellee Wulco, lnc.'s garnishment of

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O'Gara's deposit-account funds and by ruling that the garnished funds should be paid to

Wulco instead of Monroe."

      {¶ 13} Monroe argues that the trial court erred in determining that it failed to present

a valid defense to garnishment and in determining that the clerk of courts was a "transferee"

under R.C. 1309.332(B) such that Monroe's security interest in the funds has been stripped

and the funds could be used to satisfy O'Gara's debt to Wulco. Monroe asserts that these

are errors of law. We review alleged errors of law de novo. See Ohio Bell Tel. Co. v. Pub.

Util. Comm., 64 Ohio St.3d 145, 147 (1992).

                                 A. Wulco's garnishment

      {¶ 14} When Wulco's order of garnishment of property and notice was served on

garnishee JPMorgan, the order bound the property of judgment-debtor O'Gara that was in

JPMorgan's possession. See R.C. 2716.13(B). That property was attached, and a lien was

imposed in favor of judgment-creditor Wulco. See Marinik v. Cascade Group, 103 Ohio

Misc.2d 18, 23 (M.C.1999) ("Attachment occurs when the order of garnishment of property

* * * is served upon the garnishee in possession of the property of the judgment-debtor").

The property that Wulco sought to garnish was not the funds themselves that O'Gara had

deposited in the bank but O'Gara's contractual right to receive them. See Goralsky v.

Taylor, 59 Ohio St.3d 197, 198 (1991) (stating that "where the depositor is a judgment

debtor and the bank is a garnishee, the property being garnished is, strictly speaking, not

the funds themselves, but the debtor's contractual right to receive them"). In other words,

Wulco's judgment lien attached to an "obligation," JPMorgan's obligation to pay O'Gara's

demand for its deposited funds. The garnishment order and notice instructed JPMorgan to

pay the probable amount due Wulco to the Butler County Clerk of Courts. See R.C.

2716.13(B); R.C. 2716.21. Which JPMorgan did.

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        {¶ 15} Notice of the garnishment was sent to O'Gara stating that it had the right to

object to the garnishment and to dispute Wulco's right to garnish its property on the basis

that Wulco should not be given O'Gara's property held by JPMorgan because the property

is "exempt" or the "order is improper for any other reason."         R.C. 2716.13(C)(1)(a).

Accordingly, O'Gara was given the opportunity to "attempt to defeat the garnishment order

by establishing an exemption or other defense to garnishment." E. Liverpool v. Buckeye

Water Dist., 7th Dist. Columbiana Nos. 11 CO 41 and 11 CO 42, 2012-Ohio-2821, ¶ 39.

O'Gara filed an objection arguing, in essence, that garnishment of the funds was improper

because Monroe had a security interest in them. The trial court permitted Monroe to

intervene to prove its alleged security interest in the funds.

        {¶ 16} At the conclusion of the garnishment hearing, the court had to determine what

amount of O'Gara's funds in its deposit account with JPMorgan could be used to satisfy the

debt.   See R.C. 2716.13(C)(5).       The hearing, then, was for the limited purpose of

considering the amount of the funds that could be used to satisfy O'Gara's debt to Wulco.

See Liverpool at ¶ 39. The trial court determined that all the funds could be used to satisfy

the debt. The court found that Monroe had failed to present a valid defense. According to

the trial court, Monroe had improperly attacked the default judgment, and regardless, any

security interest that Monroe had in the funds was stripped under R.C. 1309.332(B) when

the funds were paid to the clerk.

                B. Did Monroe present a valid defense to garnishment?

        {¶ 17} The first issue here is whether Monroe presented a valid defense to

garnishment. We conclude that it did.

        {¶ 18} Monroe's defense was that its earlier-in-time, perfected security interest in

O'Gara's deposit account defeated Wulco's interest. This defense raises the question which

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creditor—the judgment creditor or the secured creditor—has priority to the debtor's funds.

A security interest in specific property is "superior" to a judgment lien over that property if

the judgment lien attached after the security interest was perfected.               See R.C.

1309.317(A)(2)(a). Accordingly, if the secured creditor establishes that, under the law, it

has priority to the garnished funds, the garnishor judgment creditor's claim to the funds is

defeated. Thus, Monroe presented a valid defense to garnishment, because if established,

the bank account funds cannot be used to satisfy O'Gara's debt to Wulco.

       {¶ 19} Where the trial court went wrong was in its reliance on Liverpool v. Buckeye

Water Dist. The court, in its order, quoted from Liverpool:

              By following the procedures delineated in Chapter 2716 of the
              Revised Code, a judgment creditor may garnish the property of
              the judgment debtor, even if that property is in the possession
              of a third party, such as a bank. R.C. 2716.01(B). When a bank
              receives a garnishment notice, it looks to the name on the
              account to determine whether garnishment of that account is
              proper. "If the judgment debtor has a contractual right to
              demand payment of the funds, then those funds held for the
              benefit of the judgment debtor may be subject to garnishment."
              Leman v. Fryman, Hamilton App. No. C-010056, at ¶15. Thus
              in garnishment proceedings, the court is not concerned with who
              actually owns the property subject to garnishment as it is with
              who possesses it.

Liverpool, 2012-Ohio-2821 at ¶ 43, quoting Dovi Interests, Ltd. v. Somerset Point Ltd.

Partnership, 8th Dist. No. 82788, 2004-Ohio-636, ¶ 12. The trial court emphasized the last

sentence in the above quotation and said that "its [Monroe's] lien-priority argument cannot

defeat the possessory clause of the statute." The problem is that Liverpool was talking

about commingled funds in a bank account.           The appellate court was supporting its

conclusion that "[c]ommingled funds which belong to a third party, but which are deposited

in an account which names the judgment debtor, may be garnished." Id. Monroe's defense

had nothing to do with commingled funds in O'Gara's bank account.

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                 C. Did Monroe have a security interest in the funds?

       {¶ 20} The next question is whether Monroe established that it has a security interest

in the funds, which would make garnishment improper. We consider whether Monroe had

a prior security interest in the funds and, if so, whether the security interest was stripped

when the funds were paid to the clerk.

                        1. Security interests in deposit accounts

       {¶ 21} Security interests are generally governed by R.C. Chapter 1309, Ohio's

version of Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code ("UCC"). When interpreting Ohio

statutes based on the UCC, the Ohio Supreme Court has relied on the UCC's Official

Comments as well as case law in other jurisdictions, because "'it is desirable to conform

our interpretations of the Uniform Commercial Code to those of our sister states.' Relying

on the Official Comments to the UCC helps to achieve this uniformity, as does reviewing

case law that has previously interpreted particular provisions." Casserlie v. Shell Oil Co.,

121 Ohio St.3d 55, 2009-Ohio-3, ¶ 18, quoting Edward A. Kemmler Mem. Found. v. 691/733

E. Dublin-Granville Rd. Co., 62 Ohio St.3d 494, 499 (1992).

       {¶ 22} A "security interest" is "an interest in" property that "secures payment or

performance of an obligation."       R.C. 1301.201(B)(35) (defining "security interest").

"Collateral" is "the property that is subject to a security interest." R.C. 1309.102(A)(12)

(defining "collateral"). It can include "proceeds," R.C. 1309.102(A)(12)(a), which, pertinent

here, can be "[r]ights arising out of collateral." R.C. 1309.102(A)(64) (defining "proceeds").

"Cash proceeds" are "proceeds that are money, checks, deposit accounts, or the like." R.C.

1309.102(A)(9) (defining "cash proceeds"). And a "deposit account" is pertinently defined

as a "demand, * * * savings, * * * or similar account maintained with a bank."

R.C. 1309.102(A)(29).

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          {¶ 23} A security interest is created by a "security agreement" in favor of a "secured

party."     R.C. 1309.102(A)(74) (defining "security agreement"); R.C. 1309.102(A)(73)(a)

(pertinently defining "secured party"). A "debtor" is "[a] person having an interest, other

than a security interest or other lien, in the collateral." R.C. 1309.102(A)(28)(a) (defining

"debtor").     A security agreement is generally effective between the parties, against

purchasers of the collateral, and against creditors. R.C. 1309.201(A).

          {¶ 24} Attachment and perfection are two key events connected to a security

interest. When a security interest "attaches" to collateral, it becomes enforceable against

the debtor. R.C. 1309.203(A). To obtain protection against the claims of third parties who

acquire interests in the collateral, a secured party must "perfect" the security interest. See

R.C. 1309.317.

2. Monroe has an attached security interest in O'Gara's JPMorgan deposit accounts

          {¶ 25} A security interest attaches to a collateralized deposit account only if: (1) value

has been given; (2) the debtor has rights in the deposit account or the power to transfer

rights in the account to a secured party; and (3) the debtor has signed a security agreement

that identifies the collateral or the secured party has control of the deposit account under

R.C. 1309.104 pursuant to the security agreement. R.C. 1309.203(B)(3)(a) and (d).

          {¶ 26} Here, the deposit accounts at JPMorgan secured O'Gara's payment or

performance of loans that Monroe made to O'Gara. Monroe's security interest attached to

the deposit account in 2011 as a result of Monroe's loans to O'Gara under the Credit

Agreement and the Security Agreement. There is no question that Monroe gave O'Gara

value for a security interest in the accounts. The Credit Agreement plainly shows that

Monroe agreed to loan O'Gara money in exchange for the security interest, as the first two

"Recitals" state:

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             WHEREAS, Borrowers desire that Lenders extend a revolving
             and term credit facility to Borrowers to fund the repayment of
             certain indebtedness of Borrower, to provide working capital
             financing for Borrower, and to provide funds for other general
             corporate purposes of Borrowers; and

             WHEREAS, Borrowers desire to secure all of its Obligations (as
             hereinafter defined) under the Loan Documents (as hereinafter
             defined) by granting to Agent, for the benefit of Agent and
             Lenders, a security interest in and lien upon substantially all of
             its assets[.]

There is also no question that O'Gara had rights in the deposit accounts. Lastly, O'Gara

signed the Security Agreement that describes the collateral as "all personal property and

other assets, whether now owned by or owing to, or hereafter acquired by or arising in favor

of" O'Gara, including:

             (viii) all Deposit Accounts, including the Disbursement Account,
             all lockboxes and lockbox accounts and all other bank accounts
             and all deposits therein;

             (ix) all money, cash, or cash equivalents; [and]

             ***

             (xii) to the extent not otherwise included, all Proceeds * * * and
             other rights to payments not otherwise included in the foregoing
             * * *.

      {¶ 27} We reject Wulco's argument that Monroe failed to prove that it had a security

interest because it did not present a promissory note. Wulco states in its brief: "According

to Monroe, the value given was a loan. But Monroe never submitted a signed promissory

note and, therefore, never proved that its alleged security interest was enforceable." Wulco

cites no provision in the UCC stating that a promissory note is required to establish that

value was given. As we said above, the Credit Agreement establishes that a loan was the

value Monroe gave O'Gara for the security interest.

      {¶ 28} Therefore, having satisfied the statutory requirements for attachment, Monroe

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had an attached security interest in O'Gara's JPMorgan deposit accounts.

           3. Monroe perfected its security interest in the deposit accounts

       {¶ 29} A security interest in a deposit account is perfected by control.            R.C.

1309.310(B)(8). R.C. 1309.104 provides:

              (A) A secured party has control of a deposit account if:

                     ***

              (2) The debtor, secured party, and bank have agreed in an
              authenticated record that the bank will comply with instructions
              originated by the secured party directing disposition of the funds
              in the deposit account without further consent by the debtor; * *
              *

                     ***

              (B) A secured party that has satisfied division (A) of this section
              has control of a deposit account, even if the debtor retains the
              right to direct the disposition of funds from the deposit account.

When a deposit account is taken as original collateral, obtaining control is the only method

of perfection. See R.C. 1309.312(B)(1). An Official Comment to UCC 9-104 regarding the

requirements for "control" explains:

              [A] secured party may obtain control by obtaining the bank's
              authenticated agreement that it will comply with the secured
              party's instructions without further consent by the debtor. * * *
              An agreement to comply with the secured party's instructions
              suffices for 'control' of a deposit account under this section even
              if the bank's agreement is subject to specified conditions, e.g.,
              that the secured party's instructions are accompanied by a
              certification that the debtor is in default.

See R.C. 1309.104, Official Comment 3. The comments note that "[t]his section derives

from section 8-106 of revised article 8, which defines 'control' of securities and certain other

investment property." Id., Official Comment 2. A comment to UCC 8-106 points out that

"[t]he term 'control' is used in a particular defined sense," and goes on to explain what

"control" means for securities. R.C. 1308.24, Official Comment 7. Paraphrasing that

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comment and applying what it says to deposit accounts, what "control" means is that the

secured party can control the deposit account without further action by the debtor. There

is no requirement that the powers held by the secured party be exclusive. For example, if

the secured party wants, it can allow the debtor to retain the right to direct the disposition

of funds from the deposit account. The test of control is not whether the debtor has retained

other powers but whether the secured party has obtained the requisite power. Retention

by the debtor of powers is not inconsistent with the secured party having control. Nor is

there a requirement that the secured party's powers be unconditional, provided that further

consent of the debtor is not a condition.

       {¶ 30} Monroe has control of O'Gara's JPMorgan deposit accounts.               Monroe

obtained control on October 26, 2020, under the "Amended and Restated Block Control

Agreement," which it signed along with O'Gara, JPMorgan, and UMB Bank, the then-senior

lender. Control over the accounts was the stated intent of the Control Agreement. The first

sentence of the second paragraph states: "It is the intent of the parties to this Agreement

that the Agents [UMB Bank and Monroe] have control over the Account within the meaning

of Section 9-104 of the Uniform Commercial Code."

       {¶ 31} The Control Agreement defines UMB Bank and Monroe as "Agents." UMB

Bank is the "First Lien Agent," and Monroe is the "Second Lien Agent." The "Control Agent"

is initially UMB Bank. The Agreement provides that when UMB Bank resigns Monroe

becomes the Control Agent. O'Gara continues to have the right to direct the disposition of

funds from its bank accounts. But that changes when the Control Agent files a "Shifting

Control Notice" with the bank. At that point—and without O'Gara's consent—the Control

Agent takes over the accounts and O'Gara loses all rights over the funds in the accounts.

       {¶ 32} Based on our "control" discussion above, none of this undercuts the

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conclusion that Monroe has "control" over O'Gara's JPMorgan bank accounts. One of

Monroe's executives stated in his deposition that Monroe had not yet formally taken control

of O'Gara's accounts by filing a Shifting Control Notice. But the fact that it could have done

so unilaterally at any time means that it had control over the bank account for purposes of

R.C. 1309.104.

       {¶ 33} Therefore, Monroe has a perfected security interest in O'Gara's JPMorgan

bank accounts. Monroe also has a perfected security interest in the "proceeds" of the

accounts, the funds on deposit. See R.C. 1309.102(A)(64). And this perfected security

interest arose before Wulco obtained its default judgment against O'Gara.

   4. Monroe's security interest was not stripped when the funds were paid to the
                                     Clerk of Courts

       {¶ 34} Without any analysis, the trial court concluded that Monroe's security interest

was stripped under R.C. 1309.332(B) when JPMorgan paid the funds to the Butler County

Clerk of Courts. That section pertinently provides that "[a] transferee of funds from a deposit

account takes the funds free of a security interest in the deposit account." The term

"transferee" here is not defined. While the trial court evidently had every confidence that

the clerk was a "transferee" within the meaning of the statute, we do not share that

confidence.

       {¶ 35} In support of the trial court's conclusion, Wulco cites several cases, beginning

with Orix Financial Services Inc. v. Kovacs, 167 Cal.App.4th 242 (Cal.App.2008). In this

California garnishment action, an unsecured judgment creditor obtained garnished funds

from a judgment debtor's bank account. Subsequently, in a separate action, a third-party

secured creditor attempted to claw back the funds from the judgment creditor.             The

appellate court concluded that the judgment creditor was a "transferee of funds" under UCC

9-332(b) and took the garnished funds free of any security interest. The court held that the

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broad language of UCC 9-332(b) did not support the secured creditor's contention that a

judgment creditor was not the kind of transferee contemplated by that section.            The

judgment creditor's status as a creditor was irrelevant, said the court, and there was no

requirement that the debtor actively or voluntarily make a payment. UCC 9-332 required

only a transfer of funds.

        {¶ 36} Orix is readily distinguishable on its facts from the present case. In Orix, the

judgment creditor had already obtained the garnished funds from the debtor, and the

secured creditor was trying to claw back the funds from the judgment creditor in a separate

action. So the issue did not arise in the context of an inchoate garnishment action, like in

the present case. Also, there was no temporary holder of the funds, like the clerk in this

case.

        {¶ 37} More analogous is Stierwalt v. Associated Third Party Admrs., Case No. 16-

mc-80059-EMC, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 68744 (N.D.Cal.2016), another California case on

which Wulco relies. In that case, the district court applied UCC 9-332 to protect a judicial

lien creditor who had not yet actually received funds from debtor's deposit account. The

plaintiff had obtained judgment against the defendants in a New York court. Then the

plaintiff obtained a writ of execution from the California court to levy funds held by the

defendant in a bank account. The U.S. Marshal levied on the bank account and obtained

the funds from the bank. Before the funds were released to the plaintiff, third parties filed

a claim that they had security interest in the funds. The dispute before the Stierwalt court

was between the plaintiff and the third parties as to whether the funds in the bank account

should be distributed to the plaintiff.

        {¶ 38} The district court conceded that an argument could be made that a judgment

creditor who obtains funds from a deposit account under a writ of execution is not a

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"transferee of funds" for purposes of UCC 9-332(b). But the court relied on Orix's conclusion

that a judgment creditor is a transferee of funds for purposes of the statute, a conclusion

that the court said clearly supported the plaintiff's position. While the third parties had a

perfected security interest in the account funds, the court determined that their claim

ultimately failed because UCC 9-332(b) stripped that security interest. The court concluded

that "there was a transfer pursuant to § 9332(b) when the U.S. Marshal levied upon the

bank account, such that [judgment creditor] 'takes the funds free of a security interest in the

deposit account.'" Stierwalt at *23.

       {¶ 39} The court recognized that Orix involved a different procedural posture but

found that there was no material difference. "The bottom line," said the court, "is that Orix

was claiming as a secured party against a transfer of funds from a bank account, just as

[the third party] is doing in the case at bar." Id. at *22. The district court, therefore, held

that a judgment creditor was a "transferee" of funds upon obtaining a writ of execution to

levy funds, even though, unlike in Orix, there had been no actual transfer of funds to the

judgment creditor yet.

       {¶ 40} Two bankruptcy courts have applied Orix and Stierwalt to bankruptcy trustees.

In In re Delano Retail Partners, LLC, 2017 Bankr. LEXIS 2397 (E.D.Cal.2017), a California

bankruptcy court found that the bankruptcy code confers on a trustee the status of a

judgment creditor and lienholder as of the date a bankruptcy petition is filed. Under Orix

and Stierwalt, said the court, that makes the trustee a transferee under UCC 9-332. Thus

the court held that the trustee took trust account funds from a client trust account "free and

clear of any existing security interest." In re Delano at *24. And in In re Charleston Assocs.,

LLC, 2017 Bankr. LEXIS 4581 (D.Nev.2017), a Nevada bankruptcy court held that a

judgment creditor was a "transferee of funds" under UCC 9-332 when the funds were

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remitted to the creditor.

       {¶ 41} Monroe relies on a different set of cases to argue that UCC 9-332(b) did not

strip its security interest in the funds from O'Gara's deposit account.

       {¶ 42} In   Zimmerling     v.   Affinity     Financial   Corp.,   86   Mass.App.Ct.   136

(Mass.App.2014), the Massachusetts appellate court held that UCC 9-332 did not apply to

funds wired to an escrow account. "'To deposit a sum in escrow is simply to deliver it to a

third party to be held until the performance of a condition or the happening of a certain

event.'" Zimmerling at 139, quoting Childs v. Harbor Lounge of Lynn, Inc., 357 Mass. 33,

35 (1970). "[T]he escrow arrangement was both conditional and contingent," said the court,

and "[b]y its terms, UCC § 9-332 does not address the transfer of conditional or contingent

interests in funds, only the transfer of actual money or funds." Id. UCC 9-332 nowhere

refers to the transfer of an "interest in" funds. Rather, the court pointed out, the Official

Comments refer to the payment of money or the transfer of funds by methods (i.e., check,

cashier check, or wire transfer) that suggest a complete transfer of all interest in and control

over the funds. "The plain language of the statute does not encompass the transfer of a

partial, conditional, equitable interest in funds." Id. Thus, the court held that depositing

funds in an escrow account was not a transfer under UCC 9-332.

       {¶ 43} Zimmerling also held that when the funds were wired to the escrow account

no transfer was made to the escrow agent. The court distinguished between equitable

interest and legal title and said that even if an equitable interest in the funds was transferred,

"legal title to the funds would not, under any circumstances, have been transferred to the

escrow agent. In the case of a transfer of funds to an escrow account, the escrow agent

holds the funds in trust as a fiduciary." Id. at 141. "The conditions of the escrow were never

fulfilled, because there was no court order releasing the funds to [the judgment creditor],

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and there was no transfer to [the judgment creditor] of an equitable or legal interest that

would satisfy the phrase 'transferee of funds' within the meaning of UCC § 9-332." Id. at

142.

       {¶ 44} In PNC Equip. Fin., LLC v. Lopez, Case No. DG 18-03292, 2021 Bankr. LEXIS

1939 (Bankr.W.D.Mich.2021), the court held that a judgment creditor is not a "transferee of

funds" under UCC 9-332(b) upon service of a garnishment writ regarding funds in a bank

account. Applying Michigan law, the court distinguished between the "attachment" of a

judicial lien—when the judgment creditor obtains the lien—and the lien's "enforcement"—

when the judgment creditor obtains rights to the garnished funds. "[A] lien creditor who

garnishes a deposit account," said the court, "does not immediately obtain any 'funds' at

the moment it serves the garnishment writ, only an execution lien in the deposit account,

pending the outcome of the post-judgment proceedings." Lopez at *4. Under Michigan law,

there is then a waiting period following service of a writ that allows a court to resolve any

disputed claims to the garnished funds, "such as claims of the holder of a security interest

or the execution lien of a judgment creditor." Id. at *6. To say that a judgment creditor is a

"transferee" upon service of a garnishment writ, said the court, "puts the cart before the

horse by swapping the concepts of attachment and enforcement." Id. at *7. Also, the court

noted that if "a lien creditor becomes a 'transferee of funds' upon service of the garnishment

writ, there would be no point in providing a post-garnishment process for resolving disputed

claims." Id. Furthermore, it "would mean that a trustee in bankruptcy (included in the

Uniform Commercial Code definition of 'lien creditor') would take a debtor's property free of

perfected security interests, marking a sea change in our law." Id.

       {¶ 45} Lastly,   we   consider   Outsource,    LLC    v.   Horizon   Communications

Technologies, Inc., 2023 Cal.App.Unpub. LEXIS 1697 (Mar. 23, 2023), a recent

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unpublished decision from California that appears to hold contrary to Stierwalt and to limit

Orix's broad interpretation of "transferee" under UCC 9-332(b). In Outsource, the defendant

borrowed money and gave the lender a security interest in its deposit accounts.

Subsequently, the defendant failed to pay the plaintiff for contracted services, and the

plaintiff sued for breach of contract. California law contained a statutory procedure by which

a plaintiff could obtain a prejudgment lien in the amount of the anticipated judgment in the

pending lawsuit. The trial court issued the plaintiff a prejudgment lien—a right-to-attach

order and writ of attachment ordering that, during the pendency of the litigation, the plaintiff

had the right to attach the defendant's property, including the funds in its deposit accounts.

After receiving the notice of attachment, the defendant's bank remitted account funds to a

levying officer (the local sheriff's department). The lender filed a third-party claim against

the levying officer asserting a senior security interest in the deposit account, and the plaintiff

filed a petition with the court to determine validity of that claim. The trial court concluded

that the third-party claim was valid, and that the lender had a security interest in the deposit

account that had attached and was senior to the prejudgment lien. The plaintiff appealed.

       {¶ 46} After concluding that the lender's security interest in the deposit account had

attached, the appellate court rejected the plaintiff's argument that UCC 9-332(b) entitled it

to possession of the funds in the deposit account free of the lender's security interest. The

court concluded that the plaintiff was not a "transferee":

              [T]he term "transferee" has been interpreted broadly (Orix
              Financial Services, Inc. v. Kovacs (2008) 167 Cal.App.4th 242,
              250, 83 Cal. Rptr. 3d 900). But even a broad definition of
              "transferee" does not reach a party—like [the plaintiff]—to whom
              funds were never actually transferred. [The plaintiff] obtained a
              writ of attachment and obtained a pre-judgment lien as to the
              funds in [the defendant]'s deposit account [under California law]
              * * *, but [the lender]'s third party claim halted the transfer of
              those funds into [the plaintiff]'s proverbial hands * * *.

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(Emphasis sic.) Outsource at *7-8. The appellate court went on to conclude that the lender

failed to present evidence that its security interest in the deposit account was, in fact, senior

to the plaintiff's prejudgment lien.

       {¶ 47} It does not appear that the question whether the levying officer—the

temporary holder of the funds—was a "transferee" was raised.                For our purposes,

Outsource is instructive because the appellate court held that a prejudgment creditor did

not become a "transferee" under UCC 9-332(b) upon the attachment to a bank account of

a prejudgment lien and the deposit of funds with a temporary holder. This holding seems

contrary to the holding in Stierwalt, which held that when the temporary holder of funds in

that case (the U.S. Marshal) levied on the defendant's bank account, there was a transfer

under UCC 9-332(b) (to the U.S. Marshal, presumably).

       {¶ 48} In the case before us, JPMorgan paid the garnished funds to the Butler County

Clerk of Courts to hold until any objection to garnishment was resolved. This is akin to the

situations in Zimmerling, Lopez, and Outsource, cases in which funds were deposited with

a temporary holder while it was determined who was ultimately entitled to them. We find

these cases more persuasive than Orix and Stierwalt, especially in light of Outsource.

       {¶ 49} Here, the order and notice of garnishment "attached" the funds that O'Gara

had on deposit with JPMorgan. JPMorgan then paid the funds to the clerk to hold until the

trial court, if necessary, resolved any objection to the garnishment. O'Gara and Monroe did

object, interrupting the transfer of the funds to Wulco. At that point, only attachment had

occurred; there had been no execution. Before execution could occur, the trial court needed

to resolve the objections. Only when the court rejected the objections could Wulco's

judgment lien be enforced and the funds be released to Wulco.

       {¶ 50} Wulco was not a "transferee of funds" under R.C. 1309.332(B). Wulco did not

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immediately obtain the funds upon service of the garnishment order and notice regarding

O'Gara's bank account. See Lopez. Nor were any funds ever actually transferred to Wulco,

as O'Gara's and Monroe's objection to garnishment halted the transfer of the funds. See

Outsource.   That transfer could not happen unless and until Wulco prevailed in the

garnishment hearing.

      {¶ 51} The Butler County Clerk of Courts was not a "transferee of funds" either. A

R.C. 1309.332(B) transfer was not made when JPMorgan paid the funds to the clerk. See

Zimmerling. The clerk was a mere temporary holder of the funds pending a court order

about remittance. There was no remittance order here—no court order releasing the funds

to Wulco, and no transfer to Wulco of an equitable or legal interest that would satisfy the

phrase "transferee of funds" within the meaning of R.C. 1309.332(B).

      {¶ 52} Fundamentally, when JPMorgan paid the funds from O'Gara's bank account

to the clerk, it was not the type of transfer contemplated by R.C. 1309.332. See Zimmerling.

This was not a transaction subject to the UCC. The clerk was merely a contingent,

conditional, and temporary holder of the funds. And to pay the funds to the clerk was simply

to deliver them to a neutral party to be held until any objections to garnishment could be

resolved. We agree with Zimmerling that R.C. 1309.332 does not address the transfer of

conditional or contingent interests in funds but only the transfer of actual money or funds.

See Official Comment 2, UCC 9-332 (referring to payment of money or transfer of funds by

methods that suggest a complete transfer of all interest in and control over the funds).

      {¶ 53} Nothing in the conditional and contingent arrangement with the Clerk of

Courts implicates the policy behind UCC 9-332, expressed in the Official Comments:

             Policy. Broad protection for transferees helps to ensure that
             security interests in deposit accounts do not impair the free flow
             of funds. It also minimizes the likelihood that a secured party
             will enjoy a claim to whatever the transferee purchases with the

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             funds. Rules concerning recovery of payments traditionally
             have placed a high value on finality. The opportunity to upset a
             completed transaction, or even to place a completed transaction
             in jeopardy by bringing suit against the transferee of funds,
             should be severely limited. * * *

Official Comment 3, UCC 9-332. Paying the funds to the clerk did not impinge upon

commerce. The clerk would not be using the funds to make purchases. Nor was finality a

concern. Indeed, the transaction between JPMorgan and the clerk plainly was not—and

was not intended to be—final. The clerk was only a temporary holder of the funds, holding

them until the trial court could determine whether Wulco was entitled to them.

                                      III. Conclusion

      {¶ 54} After the garnishment hearing, the trial court had to determine what portion of

the funds JPMorgan had deposited with the clerk could be used to satisfy the debt. See

R.C. 2716.13(C)(5). To do that, the court had to determine whether Monroe defeated the

garnishment order by establishing a defense to garnishment.         R.C. 2716.13(C)(1)(a);

Liverpool, 2012-Ohio-2821 at ¶ 39. The court erred in its determination that Monroe did not

establish a defense. Monroe established that it had a prior perfected security interest in

O'Gara's bank accounts and funds with JPMorgan. That security interest was not stripped

under R.C. 1309.332(B) when JPMorgan paid the funds on deposit to the Butler County

Clerk of Courts. Neither Wulco nor the clerk was a "transferee of funds" under the statute.

      {¶ 55} In addition, Monroe's security interest is superior to Wulco's judgment lien, as

a security interest in specific property is "superior" to a judgment lien over that property

unless the judgment lien attaches before the security interest is perfected, see R.C.

1309.317(A)(2)(a). But the garnishment statutes do not permit a determination as to

whether the funds should be given to the secured party, here, Monroe. The most that can

be determined is that the funds from O'Gara's bank account cannot be used to satisfy its

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judgment debt to Wulco. Accordingly, the funds should be returned to JPMorgan for

redeposit into O'Gara's bank account.

      {¶ 56} The trial court's judgment is reversed, and judgment is entered for Monroe

and O'Gara on their objection to garnishment.

      M. POWELL, and BYRNE, JJ., concur.

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