Butz v. Society National Bank of Miami Valley (In re Clark)

28 B.R. 731
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedMarch 9, 1983
DocketAdv. Nos. 3-82-0571, 3-82-0572; Bankruptcy Nos. 3-82-00546, 3-82-0572 and 3-82-01281
StatusPublished

This text of 28 B.R. 731 (Butz v. Society National Bank of Miami Valley (In re Clark)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Butz v. Society National Bank of Miami Valley (In re Clark), 28 B.R. 731 (Ohio 1983).

Opinion

DECLARATORY DECISION

CHARLES A. ANDERSON, Bankruptcy Judge.

PRELIMINARY PROCEDURE

These adversarial matters were combined for disposition upon request of attorneys for the parties.

At the pretrial conference, the facts were stipulated and the trial dates cancelled. Briefs were submitted in both proceedings prior to the entry on January 10, 1983, of the following order, to-wit:

This matter is an action by the Trustee for money judgment. The controversy involves application of a penalty provision' under state law. The matter was submitted prior to expiration of the United States Supreme Court’s stay of its opin[732]*732ion in Northern Pipeline Construction Co. v. Marathon Pipe Line Co., - U.S. -, 102 S.Ct. 2858, 73 L.Ed.2d 598 (1982), (hereinafter Northern Pipeline), and is presently pending for final judgment.
The proceeding is now before the Court sua sponte as required by law for review of this Court’s jurisdiction in light of the Northern Pipeline decision. As elaborated in this Court’s opinion in The Schear Realty and Investment Co., Inc., 25 B.R. 463 (Bkrtcy.1982), the Court’s jurisdiction over this type of litigation is uncertain.
To avoid undue prejudice to the litigants by further delay, the Court hereby informs the litigants that, subject to further order of the Court, no decision will be rendered in this case until Congress enacts remedial legislation as necessitated by the Northern Pipeline decision. The Court, however, will proceed to decision if the parties either, to the extent permitted by the Constitution, waive, by stipulation, all jurisdictional questions under Northern Pipeline or the Order of the Judicial Council for the Sixth Circuit and the Order of the District Court of the Southern District of Ohio pursuant thereto, or move to dismiss on the basis of a lack of jurisdiction for a determination by the Bankruptcy Court.

Subsequently, the following stipulation was filed in behalf of the litigants, to-wit:

In response to this Court’s order entered January 10,1983 the parties herein waive all jurisdictional questions arising out of the Northern Pipeline case, Order for the Judicial Court Council for the Sixth Circuit and Order for the District Court of the Southern District of Ohio and hereby consent to this Court proceeding to decision on the matter submitted for decision previously.

FACTS

The operative facts in each case are fairly identical, except as to dates of the various transactions (which will be omitted herein), as follows:

The Debtors executed and delivered to Defendant Society National Bank of the Miami Valley, successor by merger to The Springfield Bank (“Society” herein), their promissory notes.
To secure the notes Debtors executed and delivered to Defendant Society installment loan disclosure statements and security agreements, granting Defendant Society a security interest in motor vehicles.
The Debtors defaulted in payment of the promissory notes according to their terms.
As a result of the defaults Defendant Society repossessed the motor vehicles.
Defendant Society mailed a notice of repossession and sale to Debtors by certified mail, which were received.
Notice of Defendant Society’s sale of the motor vehicles was published in the Springfield Daily News, a paper of general circulation in Springfield and Clark County, Ohio. The publication, however, was less than ten days before the sale.
The repossessed automobiles were sold at public auction.
Defendant Society then mailed to Debtors the deficiency letters.
John R. Butz, is the duly acting Trustee in both cases having been appointed on March 19,1982 in Clark and May 21,1982 in Latham.

DECISION

The facts present the question as to whether or not Defendant was required to comply with Ohio Revised Code § 1317.16 in disposing of its collateral taken by nonjudicial repossession. The Trustee urges that Defendant was thereby required to publish, “at least ten days prior to the sale, a notice of such sale listing the items to be sold, in a newspaper of general circulation in the county where the sale is to be held.” The Trustee relies primarily on a previous decision by this Court in Warren, Trustee v. The Springfield Bank (In the Matter of Bryan) (1976) 2 B.C.D. 959, 1 B.R.W. 752. He argues, as follows:

[733]*733In that case this Court analyzed the inner relationship between O.R.C. § 1309.47 and O.R.C. § 1317.16. In that case involving the repossession sale of a mobile home the Court concluded that a public sale of the mobile home as seemingly would have been required by O.R.C. § 1317.16 was not required because of the provisions of O.R.C. § 1317.01(P) which is a definition section and which specifically defined “a consumer transaction.” At the time the definitional section specifically excluded the sale of motor vehicles and mobile homes from its definition of consumer transactions and for that reason the Court concluded that the requirements of O.R.C. § 1317.16 were not applicable. However, in 1977 the definition section, O.R.C. § 1317.01(P) defining consumer transaction was amended and the exceptions previously mentioned were deleted. Following the Court’s rational in the above mentioned case, there seems to be no question that now a ten day notice in a paper of general circulation is a requirement of a secured party in disposition of collateral after default when the collateral is a motor vehicle such as in the case at hand.
O.R.C. § 1309.50 provides that if a secured party does not proceed in accordance with O.R.C. § 1309.44 to 1309.55 inclusive, “the debtor has a right to recover in any event an amount not less than the credit service charge plus ten percent of the principal amount of the debtor or the time price differential plus ten percent of the cash price.” In the within matter the defendant clearly did not comply with O.R.C. § 1309.47 as it incorporates O.R.C. § 1317.16

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Bluebook (online)
28 B.R. 731, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/butz-v-society-national-bank-of-miami-valley-in-re-clark-ohsb-1983.