Butko v. Ciccozzi (In re Butko)

584 B.R. 97
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 9, 2018
DocketCase No. 16–23695–GLT
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 584 B.R. 97 (Butko v. Ciccozzi (In re Butko)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Butko v. Ciccozzi (In re Butko), 584 B.R. 97 (Pa. 2018).

Opinion

GREGORY L. TADDONIO, UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY JUDGE

Richard and Lorraine Butko ("Debtors") occupy a residential property owned by Ronald Ciccozzi and located at 120 Heather Dr. in Monaca, Pennsylvania ("Property").1 After battling for years over their respective rights to the Property, the parties' acrimonious dispute landed here when the Butkos commenced their bankruptcy case. The Court hoped to dispel the tension through mediation, but despite their successful negotiation of a Court-approved settlement, the parties now return with renewed vigor to contest the notice and default provisions within the settlement agreement. In this highly contentious matter for which the legal fees may now exceed the amount in controversy, the Court must determine whether Ciccozzi is entitled to stay relief.

I.

The current dispute and the animosity it generates date back many years. It appears the Debtors initially agreed to purchase the Property from Ciccozzi and his late wife, Joan Ciccozzi,2 through an installment land contract executed in July 2009. For reasons which are not entirely clear, the parties then entered into a Lease with Option to Purchase ("Lease") on December 1, 2014 that terminated the 2009 agreement and released and waived any related rights.3 The Lease provided for monthly rental payments of $1,675 and gave the Debtors the right to purchase the Property for $43,632 plus costs upon thirty days' notice to the Ciccozzis. In turn, the Ciccozzis agreed to credit $1,212 from each rental payment received against the purchase price.4

After defaulting on their September 2016 payment obligation, the Debtors petitioned for relief under chapter 13 of title 11 of the U.S. Code on October 1, 2016.5 The Ciccozzis filed a motion for relief from stay that prompted the Court to determine *100whether the Lease was a true lease or disguised financing agreement in the form of an installment land contract.6 On December 22, 2016, the Court issued its Memorandum Order finding the Lease to be a true lease agreement but denying stay relief because the Debtors commenced their bankruptcy case before the Lease cure period expired.7 The Debtors appealed the decision,8 but Judge Fischer of the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania held that the Memorandum Order was an unappealable interlocutory order.9 The Debtors then filed an amended Chapter 13 Plan dated February 24, 2017 to assume the Lease under 11 U.S.C. § 365 and ostensibly exercise the purchase option during the plan term.10

Ciccozzi filed objections to the chapter 13 plan disputing, among other things, the Debtors' right to assume the purchase option and arguing that they could only assume the Lease as month-to-month tenants.11 To facilitate a final resolution of these disputes and alleviate the considerable bitterness existing between the parties, the Court referred the matter to mediation before the Honorable Judith K. Fitzgerald, a former chief judge of this Court.12

As a result of the mediation, the Debtors and Ciccozzi consensually entered into a settlement agreement ("Settlement Agreement"), which provides that the Debtors will pay Ciccozzi $1,675 on the fifth of each month for thirty-six months.13 It also requires Ciccozzi to deliver the deed to the Property into escrow, with the understanding that it will be released to the Debtors upon completion of their required payments.14 Finally, it provides the Debtors with a ten-day cure period in the event of a payment default.15 After that date, Ciccozzi has no obligation to notify the Debtors of any nonpayment.16

The Settlement Agreement was presented to the Court for approval under Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure ("Bankruptcy Rule") 9019.17 During the hearing, the Court expressed concern with the onerous default provisions specifying that "all rights that [the Debtors] may have in the Property shall finally and permanently terminate" in the event a default is not timely cured.18 The Settlement Agreement also provides that in the event of an uncured default, the Court shall grant Ciccozzi stay relief upon the filing of an affidavit of default.19 Acknowledging that they were fully aware of the repercussions of a default, the Debtors committed themselves to proceeding with the settlement:

It is admitted that the forfeiture procedure is dangerous. The [Debtors] have been fully informed of this risk and have been advised to attend the hearing on this motion. They agree to accept this risk due to their inability to fund the option payment and extensive additional *101litigation costs absent settlement and to remove any risk of loss of the [Property] by an adverse ruling on appeal.20

After a hearing on September 19, 2017, the Court approved the Settlement Agreement subject to certain modifications, including a requirement that Ciccozzi report any default to the Court by filing a notice of default within two days after the applicable cure period expired.21

Less than two months later, Ciccozzi filed a notice indicating that the Debtors had defaulted on their November 2017 payment obligation and requesting enforcement of the forfeiture provisions of the Settlement Agreement.22 The Debtors filed a Motion to Deny Ronald A. Ciccozzi's Request for Relief from Stay ("Debtors' Motion"),23 arguing that the Settlement Agreement is an installment land contract subject to the Loan Interest and Protection Law ("Act 6"), which affords residential mortgagors unwaivable24 rights to statutory notice25 of defaults and a thirty-day cure period.26 Ciccozzi responded, arguing that the Debtors are estopped from taking that position, and that if Act 6 does apply, the Settlement Agreement is void because there was no meeting of the minds and the parties entered into it by virtue of a mutual mistake as to its enforceability.27 The Debtors argue that estoppel and mutual mistake do not apply because the Settlement Agreement's reference to the "applicable cure period" in ¶ 14 should be read as a reference to the thirty-day period afforded by statute rather than the contractual ten-day period. The Debtors also assert that Ciccozzi waived the default by accepting payment.28

Since then, Ciccozzi filed another notice of default (suggesting the Debtors failed to make their December 2017 payment),29

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W.D. Pennsylvania, 2023
BUTKO v. CICCOZZI
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Faulkner v. M&T BANK
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593 B.R. 263 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 2018)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
584 B.R. 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/butko-v-ciccozzi-in-re-butko-pawb-2018.