Arrow Road Construction Co. v. Bridgeview Bank Group (In Re Brittwood Creek, LLC)

450 B.R. 769, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 60734, 2011 WL 2214911
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedJune 2, 2011
Docket10 C 6295. Bankruptcy No. 10 B 15753
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 450 B.R. 769 (Arrow Road Construction Co. v. Bridgeview Bank Group (In Re Brittwood Creek, LLC)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arrow Road Construction Co. v. Bridgeview Bank Group (In Re Brittwood Creek, LLC), 450 B.R. 769, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 60734, 2011 WL 2214911 (N.D. Ill. 2011).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

CHARLES R. NORGLE, District Judge.

Before the Court is Arrow Road Construction Company’s (“Arrow Road”) appeal of the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Illinois’s August 12, 2010 Order Annulling the Automatic Stay As To Bridgeview Bank Group, Nunc Pro Tunc To May 24, 2010 (the “Annulment Order”). For the following reasons, the decision of the Bankruptcy Court is affirmed.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Facts

Brittwood Creek, LLC (the “Debtor”) is a single purpose entity that owned a residential real estate development project in Oak Brook, Illinois (the “Property”). The Property was developed with approximately $25 million in loans advanced by Appel-lee Bridgeview Bank Group (the “Bank”). The Property and its proceeds were pledged to the Bank as collateral for the Debtor’s obligations under a Construction Loan Agreement. The Debtor defaulted under the Construction Loan Agreement by, among other things, failing to make scheduled payments to the Bank.

On or about October 29, 2009, the Bank filed a foreclosure action, Bridgeview Bank Group v. Brittwood Creek, LLC, et al., No. 2009 CH 5173, in the Eighteenth Judicial Circuit, DuPage County (the “Foreclosure Action”) and subsequently recorded a lis pendens on the Property. On December 14, 2009, after publication of the lis pen- *772 dens, Arrow Road recorded a mechanic’s lien against the Property for $81,723.24 (the “Lien”). The Lien stated that Arrow Road last performed work on the Property — roadway construction and asphalt paving — on December 1, 2009, over a month after the Bank filed the Foreclosure Action.

Judgment of Foreclosure was entered on behalf of the Bank on March 8, 2010. However, just before the sheriffs sale, the Debtor electronically filed a voluntary petition under the Bankruptcy Code (the “Code”). On April 9, 2010, at 2:13 pm, Debtor’s counsel filed a petition under Chapter 7 of the Code (the “Chapter 7 Case”). The Bankruptcy Court found that Debtor’s counsel, intending to file under Chapter 11 of the Code, “inadvertently and by mistake” electronically filed the petition under Chapter 7. Tr. of Proceedings before the Hon. John H. Squires 6 [hereinafter Bankr. Tr.]. Upon realizing the mistake, Debtor’s counsel contacted the Bankruptcy Clerk but was advised that the Chapter 7 petition could not be withdrawn. The Chapter 7 Case was assigned to the Honorable John H. Squires, No. 10-15753. Forty-two minutes later, at 2:55 pm, Debtor’s counsel filed another petition, this time under Chapter 11 (the “Chapter 11 Case”). The Chapter 11 Case was assigned to the Honorable Jacqueline P. Cox, No. 10-15776.

The Bankruptcy Clerk mailed Notice of the Chapter 7 Case to the Debtor’s creditors on April 14, 2009, and Notice of the Chapter 11 Case to Debtor’s creditors on April 15,2009. Arrow Road received both notices. With the exception of removing the Chapter 7 Trustee from the Chapter 11 Notice, the two Notices were the same.

While no action was taken in the Chapter 7 Case, the Chapter 11 Case moved forward from the beginning. The Debtor filed its schedules in the Chapter 11 Case and the interested parties, including the Bank, participated. Arrow Road, however, did not participate in the case. Seeking to proceed with the Foreclosure Action, the Bank filed a motion to lift the automatic stay in the Chapter 11 Case (“Lift Stay Motion”) on April 21, 2010. The Debtor did not oppose the motion. Arrow Road received notice of the Lift Stay Motion but did not respond. On May 24, 2010, Judge Cox entered an Agreed Order of Relief From Automatic Stay, stating that the Bank is “hereby authorized to do any and all acts necessary and/or proper to enforce its right with respect to the [Property], including but not limited to, continuing the Foreclosure Action and sheriffs sale.” The Chapter 11 Case was formally dismissed on June 8, 2010, and Arrow Road received notice of the dismissal.

On June 11, 2010, the Debtor filed a Motion to Dismiss the Chapter 7 Case. This was the first document filed in the two-month-old Chapter 7 Case and it specifically cited the fact that the Chapter 7 case was filed inadvertently and that Debt- or’s counsel attempted to terminate the filing while it was in progress but was unsuccessful. Arrow Road received notice of this Motion as well.

After the Chapter 11 Lift Stay Order and Motion to Dismiss the Chapter 7 Case, but before the Chapter 7 Case was formally dismissed, a sheriffs sale was conducted on the Property. The Bank, with a bid of $20 million, was the successful bidder. On June 16, 2010, the state court issued an Order Approving Foreclosure Sale, after which the Bank sold the Property to a third-party purchaser, who is now in possession of the Property.

On June 18, 2010, Judge Squires granted the Debtor’s Motion to Dismiss the Chapter 7 Case. Arrow Road received notice of the dismissal.

*773 B. Procedural History

On July 13, 2010, nearly one month after the Order Approving Foreclosure Sale, Arrow Road filed a Motion to Vacate Judgment in the Foreclosure Action (“Motion to Vacate”). Arrow Road argued, as it does here, that because the Chapter 7 Case was not dismissed at the time of the Foreclosure Sale, the automatic stay rendered the sale and subsequent sale to a third-party purchaser void ab initio. In response, the Bank immediately sought relief in the Bankruptcy Court, requesting that it amend and/or clarify its June 18, 2010 Order dismissing the Chapter 7 Case. The Bank argued that, pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 105(a) and Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure 9024 (which incorporates Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60), the Bankruptcy Court should annul the Chapter 7 automatic stay, nunc pro tunc, to April 9, 2010, the date the bankruptcy cases were filed.

The Bankruptcy Court granted the Bank’s Motion on August 12, 2010, retroactively annulling the automatic stay not to April 9 but rather to May 24, 2010, the date of the Agreed Lift Stay Order in the Chapter 11 Case. Issuing his ruling from the bench, Judge Squires stated his findings:

[I]f the first 7 was the inadvertent 7, and the same day a few minutes later the 11 was filed, the appropriate form of relief ought to be to annul the automatic stay that was issued in the 7 at the time of the filing of the petition.... It is clear that retroactive relief from the stay is the exception rather than the rule. And this unusual scenario, which I haven’t seen exactly in this form present in this case, is one of those unusual situations where I think annulment is appropriate because it was clearly the intent of the debtor’s counsel to file one case that was intended to be filed as an 11, stay relief was appropriately sought and received in that case, and everybody just forgot about the pending 7, which shouldn’t have been there, and action should have been taken by debtor’s counsel much sooner.

Bankr. Tr. 12-13.

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Bluebook (online)
450 B.R. 769, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 60734, 2011 WL 2214911, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arrow-road-construction-co-v-bridgeview-bank-group-in-re-brittwood-ilnd-2011.