Allen Wayne Knott and Sabrina Gale Knott

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Virginia
DecidedJune 24, 2022
Docket21-50423
StatusUnknown

This text of Allen Wayne Knott and Sabrina Gale Knott (Allen Wayne Knott and Sabrina Gale Knott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen Wayne Knott and Sabrina Gale Knott, (Va. 2022).

Opinion

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A y rm fe Ly □□□ SIGNED THIS 24th day of June, 2022 Khvece rn wll i THIS MEMORANDUM OPINION HAS BEEN ENTERED ON THE Rebecca B. Connelly DOCKET. PLEASE SEE DOCKET FOR ENTRY DATE. UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY JUDGE

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF VIRGINIA In re: ALLEN WAYNE KNOTT, Chapter 13 SABRINA GALE KNOTT, Case No. 21-50423 Debtors. MEMORANDUM OPINION The question in this case is whether individuals who do not meet the eligibility debt limits of Bankruptcy Code section 109(e) may nevertheless proceed under chapter 13 if not all creditors file proofs of claim for such debt and they successfully obtain disallowance of enough filed claims to render the total amount of filed allowed claims within the debt limits. In other words, are the debt limits in section 109(e) based on the amounts claimed on proofs of claim filed with the Court after accounting for potential disallowance of some of those claims? This Court answers no. The eligibility limits of section 109(e) are based on the amount of debt as of the petition date. This question came before the Court during a hearing on May 26, 2022, at which the debtors, debtors’ counsel, and the chapter 13 trustee appeared. After hearing argument from debtors’ counsel and the chapter 13 trustee, the Court found that the debtors were ineligible to proceed as debtors under chapter 13 because the amount of their noncontingent, liquidated, unsecured debt as of the petition date exceeded the statutory eligibility thresholds contained in section 109(e). Because these debtors had converted their case from chapter 7 to chapter 13

although they were ineligible for chapter 13, the Court determined it was appropriate to reconvert their case back to chapter 7. This opinion explains the Court’s ruling. JURISDICTION This Court has jurisdiction over this bankruptcy case by the provisions of 28 U.S.C. §§ 1334(a) and 157(a), the delegation made to this Court by Order of Reference from the District

Court entered on December 6, 1994, and Rule 3 of the Local Rules of the United States District Court for the Western District of Virginia. In this bankruptcy case, the Court must apply the statutory qualifications for chapter 13 bankruptcy eligibility. This is a core bankruptcy proceeding. BACKGROUND Allen Wayne Knott and Sabrina Gale Knott formerly operated as proprietors of an unincorporated roofing business. The business failed. On August 6, 2021, Allen and Sabrina Knott filed a voluntary chapter 7 petition along with the required schedules and statements. See ECF Doc. No. 1. According to Mr. and Mrs. Knott, at the time they filed bankruptcy, they owed debts to four secured creditors. See Schedule D: Creditors Who Have Claims1 Secured by Property, ECF

Doc. No. 1, at 22–24. All but one of these creditors were owed amounts greater than the value of the collateral, and so three of these creditors had an unsecured portion of their debt for the difference between the total secured debt and the value of the collateral. Specifically, on Schedule D, the debtors report they owe secured debt totaling $417,448.40 and value the collateral securing

1 Both “claim” and “debt” are defined terms under the Bankruptcy Code. Compare 11 U.S.C. § 101(5)(A) (defining “claim” as meaning, in part, “right to payment, whether or not such right is reduced to judgment, liquidated, unliquidated, fixed, contingent, matured, unmatured, disputed, undisputed, legal, equitable, secured, or unsecured”), with id. § 101(12) (“The term ‘debt’ means liability on a claim.”). While the terms are closely related, they are decidedly different. For example, although a debtor may receive a discharge of his debts (the liability), his creditors may nevertheless file a claim against the bankruptcy estate based on their right to payment. Congress used the term “debt” in section 109(e), but the Official Forms instruct the debtor to list “claims” when identifying their creditors. Because Congress specified the amount of “debt” in section 109(e), the Court will use “debt” throughout this decision when referring to the criterion. that debt at $166,700. For this reason, they report the unsecured portion of the debt on Schedule D as $250,748.40. According to the Knotts’ schedules filed with the petition, at the time they filed bankruptcy, they owed debts to 104 unsecured creditors (2 priority unsecured creditors and 102 nonpriority unsecured creditors). See Schedule E/F: Creditors Who Have Unsecured Claims, ECF Doc. No.

1, at 25–60. Mr. and Mrs. Knott report debts to these 104 creditors totaling $508,313 (priority unsecured of $8,750 plus nonpriority unsecured of $499,563). Id. at 61. Not a one was scheduled as unliquidated or contingent. Mr. and Mrs. Knott report that they were parties to 29 separate lawsuits against them from creditors, either pending at the time of the petition or concluded in the months before the petition. See Statement of Financial Affairs for Individuals Filing for Bankruptcy, ECF Doc. No. 1, at 77– 80. They report 65 individuals with whom they have an executory contract, from most of whom they note they received a roofing business deposit for uncompleted work. See Schedule G: Executory Contract and Unexpired Leases, ECF Doc. No. 1, at 63–68. In total, Mr. and Mrs. Knott

admit owing, at the time of the petition, unsecured debts in the amount of $759,061.40 (Column C of Schedule D + priority debts and scheduled unsecured debts on Schedule E/F).2 On September 29, 2021, Andrew S. Goldstein, the chapter 7 trustee, filed a Request for Asset Notice. See ECF Doc. No. 20. Accordingly, the Court entered a Notice of Need to File Proofs of Claim and sent the notice to creditors and parties in interest. See ECF Doc. Nos. 21, 22. Five months later, in February 2022, Mr. and Mrs. Knott filed a Notice and Motion to Convert Case from Chapter 7 to Chapter 13. See ECF Doc. No. 35. According to their motion,

2 The debtors also recount five separate seizures of assets including a criminal forfeiture action. See Statement of Financial Affairs for Individuals Filing for Bankruptcy, ECF Doc. No. 1, at 80–81. They do not disclose any criminal fine or other debt associated with the criminal action. As such, the debt for the criminal fines has not been included in the total debt computation. the debtors sought to convert to chapter 13 “in order to pay their creditors the amount required pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 1325.” Id. The Court issued a form order converting the case to chapter 13 on March 2, 2022. See ECF Doc. No. 49. The Court then issued the form Notice of Chapter 13 Bankruptcy Case, scheduling an initial confirmation hearing to be held on April 27, 2022. See ECF Doc. Nos. 50, 51.

The debtors requested and the Court permitted an extension of time to file a chapter 13 plan and amended schedules. See ECF Doc. Nos. 53, 54. The debtors ultimately filed a chapter 13 plan and amended Schedules I and J. See ECF Doc. Nos. 56, 57. In their amended schedules, the debtors report each of them having regular income from employment obtained post-petition. See Schedule I: Your Income, ECF Doc. No 56, at 4–5. The debtors included with the amended Schedules I and J, a statistical summary schedule that discloses a total for their debts in an amount significantly lower than they disclosed on the statistical summary filed with their original schedules.

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