Atcco Mortgage, Inc. v. Morley (In Re Morley)

2003 BNH 10, 292 B.R. 446, 2003 Bankr. LEXIS 371, 2003 WL 1923834
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. New Hampshire
DecidedApril 18, 2003
Docket19-10144
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2003 BNH 10 (Atcco Mortgage, Inc. v. Morley (In Re Morley)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atcco Mortgage, Inc. v. Morley (In Re Morley), 2003 BNH 10, 292 B.R. 446, 2003 Bankr. LEXIS 371, 2003 WL 1923834 (N.H. 2003).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

J. MICHAEL DEASY, Bankruptcy Judge.

I. INTRODUCTION

The Court has before it a motion by Atcco Mortgage, Inc. (“Atcco” or the “Movant”) seeking rescission of a Sale and Settlement Agreement (the “Settlement Agreement”) for fraud, and disbursement of funds to Atcco from the sale of the Debtor’s half interest in real property located in Fairfax County, Virginia (the “Fairfax Property”) (Doc. No. 46) (the “Motion to Disburse Funds”). The Debtor filed an objection to Atcco’s Motion to Disburse Funds (Doc. No. 62) (the “Objection”), denying the fraud allegation and asserting that no funds should be disbursed to Atcco because the judgment at *449 issue has been satisfied in full under the terms of the Settlement Agreement.

The Court has before it as well the Debtor’s objection to Atcco’s two proofs of claim (Doc. No. 49) (the “Objection to Claims”). Atcco’s first proof of claim (“POC 7”) is for a secured claim of $134,858.94, which represents Atcco’s computation of the amount owed by the Debt- or under the terms of the Settlement Agreement. Atcco’s second proof of claim (“POC 8”) is for a secured claim of $2,959,532.10, which represents Atcco’s computation of the amount owed by the Debtor if the Court orders rescission of the Settlement Agreement. The Debtor objects to both POC 7 and POC 8.

The Court conducted an evidentiary hearing on these matters on December 5, 2002 (the “Hearing”), and took the matter under advisement. Although most of the issues before the Court at the Hearing should properly have been raised as an adversary proceeding under Fed. R.P. 7001, the parties orally agreed to proceed on the merits at the Hearing. Based on the record before it and for the reasons set forth below, this Court finds that Atcco has failed to prove the fraud necessary to result in rescission of the Settlement Agreement, sustains the Debtor’s objection to POC 8, sustains in part Debtor’s objection to POC 7, and allows POC 7 in the amount of $120,293.95.

This Court has jurisdiction of the subject matter and the parties pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1334 and 157(a) and the “Standing Order of Referral of Title 11 Proceedings to the United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of New Hampshire,” dated January 18, 1994 (DiClerico, C.J.). This is a core proceeding in accordance with 28 U.S.C § 157(b).

II. FACTS

The Settlement Agreement at issue in this case was executed by Atcco’s predecessor-in-interest, Land Fund II Limited Partnership (“Land Fund”), and E. Dean Morley (the “Debtor”) and his wife Merry Morley (collectively, the “Morleys”) in 1996 to resolve satisfaction of a judgment held by Land Fund in the amount of approximately a million and a half dollars. At that time, the Morleys were debtors in a Chapter 11 proceeding in the Eastern District of Virginia (the “Virginia Bankruptcy”). Prior to execution of the Settlement Agreement, the Debtor represented to Land Fund that he did not own the real property located at 135 Krainewood Drive, Moultonboro, New Hampshire (the “New Hampshire Property” or the “Property”), but merely held it as trustee on behalf of Jerdart Associates II (the “Partnership”). Atcco now seeks rescission of the Settlement Agreement on the grounds that during negotiation of the Settlement Agreement and in his Virginia Bankruptcy schedules and statement of financial affairs, the Debtor fraudulently concealed the true nature of his ownership interest in the Property.

On September 22, 1988, the Debtor’s four children formed the Partnership and filed a certificate of partnership with the Commonwealth of Virginia. On the same date, the Partnership executed a power of attorney document granting the Debtor “complete authority to act on behalf of the partnership in all matters relating to the partnership until rescinded by the partnership” (the “Power of Attorney”). The Debtor testified that the plan was for the Debtor to use his funds to purchase the New Hampshire Property and create a camp. The Partnership would reimburse his expenditures at a later date, record the Partnership in New Hampshire, and pay the taxes on any profit made by the Debt- or. The Debtor testified that he did not record the Partnership in New Hampshire *450 because he did not want to create a problem with the IRS as the New Hampshire Property was initially purchased with the Debtor’s own funds and would not belong to the Partnership until the Debtor was paid in full.

The Debtor did in fact purchase the New Hampshire Property with his own funds in 1989, with title resting in the Debtor’s name as trustee for the Partnership. The Debtor named the Property “Camp Atlast.” However, the Partnership never obtained the financing by which it intended to repay the Debtor’s expenditures and take ownership of the Property, and the Partnership was never recorded in New Hampshire. Since October of 1997, the Debtor has resided at the New Hampshire Property with his wife; the Property is no longer known by the name of Camp Atlast. Title remained with the Debtor as trustee until September 17, 2001, when on the eve of filing his Chapter 13 bankruptcy petition with this Court, the Debtor as trustee conveyed title to himself as an individual by quitclaim deed. The Debtor values the New Hampshire Property at $875,000.00 and has claimed a homestead exemption in it.

The Morleys jointly filed the Virginia Bankruptcy on April 23, 1996. Prior to filing, the Morleys had defaulted on a note to which Land Fund had become successor-in-interest. The note was secured by a mortgage on property in Prince William County. After the Debtor defaulted on the note, Land Fund foreclosed on the property and then continued with a collection action to recover the remaining amount owed, which was approximately a million and a half dollars. Land Fund identified several additional properties in which the Morleys appeared to have a property interest: property located in McLean, Virginia (the “McLean Property”); the Fairfax Property; the New Hampshire Property; and the Debtor’s half interest in an abandoned hotel in Mississippi (the “Mississippi Property”). Land Fund obtained a judgment in Virginia for the remaining amount owed under the note (the “Virginia Judgment”). The Virginia Judgment was recorded in New Hampshire by local counsel who was in the process of pursuing an execution on the Virginia Judgment against the New Hampshire Property when the Morleys filed their Virginia Bankruptcy.

At some point during the New Hampshire proceedings seeking execution on the Virginia Judgment, the Debtor provided sworn testimony in the form of answers to Land Fund’s interrogatories in which the Debtor represented that the New Hampshire Property was held in trust and not owned by the Debtor individually. As further evidence to Land Fund that he held the New Hampshire Property in trust, the Debtor produced the Partnership Agreement, the title to the Property in his name as trustee, and the Virginia Bankruptcy schedules and statement of financial affairs in which the Debtor represented that the New Hampshire Property was owned by the trust.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2003 BNH 10, 292 B.R. 446, 2003 Bankr. LEXIS 371, 2003 WL 1923834, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atcco-mortgage-inc-v-morley-in-re-morley-nhb-2003.