Carol Marie Fenimore Safari

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Vermont
DecidedJanuary 10, 2025
Docket23-10101
StatusUnknown

This text of Carol Marie Fenimore Safari (Carol Marie Fenimore Safari) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carol Marie Fenimore Safari, (Vt. 2025).

Opinion

2:24-cv-00780-gwe Document 25 Filed 01/08/25 Page 1 of 26 U.S. DISTRI DISTRICT BF VERMONT FILED _ UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 2075 JAN -8 AM {0: Of FOR THE DISTRICT OF VERMONT CLERK BY ween CAROL MARIE FENIMORE SAFARI, ) ) Appellant, ) ) v. ) Case No. 2:24-cv-780 ) JOHN AND TERESA FENIMORE LIVING _ ) TRUST DATED DECEMBER 23, 2016, ) ) Appellee. ) ORDER ON APPEAL OF MEMORANDUM OF DECISION DENYING PLAN CONFIRMATION AND DISMISSING CASE Appellant Carol Marie Fenimore Safari is the debtor in this bankruptcy appeal. She seeks review of the decision of the Bankruptcy Court denying confirmation of her Chapter 13 plan and dismissing her case. (Doc. 2-49),! Appellee John and Teresa Fenimore Living Trust is the sole secured creditor. The trust holds a mortgage on Appellant’s principal residence at 8 South Maple Street, Vergennes, Vermont. The parties’ dispute arises from Appellant’s efforts to reinstate her mortgage through the remedy of cure of default afforded by 11 U.S.C. § 1322(b)(5). Facts History of the Underlying Debt Appellant and her former husband, Jacob Safari, purchased 28 South Maple Street together in 2013. (Doc. 4-2 992-3.) They did so with help from Appellant’s father, John J. Fenimore. (Doc. 16-1 at 33 (Appellant’s examination under oath).) Mr. Fenimore was originally aco-signer on the mortgage and a co-owner. (Doc. 4-2 J 2-3.) In May 2017 Mr. Fenimore

' Citations are to the documents filed with the District Court and use this court’s docket numbering system.

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transferred his interest in the home to the couple. (/d. 44.) Through the John and Teresa Fenimore Living Trust, he lent Appellant and her husband money to pay off the existing mortgage. (Doc. 16-1 at 34). The new loan in the amount of $269,108.34 is secured by a promissory note and mortgage with a maturity date of May 1, 2027. (Doc. 16-1 at 155-59.) Monthly payments are $1,363.53 with a 5% late charge for any late payment. (/d. at 155.) Upon maturity, the note calls for a balloon payment of unpaid interest and principal. (/d.) In 2018, Appellant and her husband separated. They are now divorced. (Doc. 16-1 at 32). Appellant continues to live at 28 South Maple Street. In 2017, she became unemployed for approximately two years. (Doc. 16-1 at 97-98). She returned to work part-time in 2019. (Doc. 16-1 at 98). In July 2023, she regained full-time employment, earning $4,183 per month. (Doc. 2-27 at 1; Doc.16-1 at 98). Starting in November 2018, appellant failed to make monthly mortgage payments from that date until August 2021. In September 2019, Appellee commenced a foreclosure proceeding in Vermont Superior Court. Appellant resumed making mortgage payments on August 12, 2021, when she made a payment of $1,363.53 that Appellee credited against the payment due on November 1, 2018. (Doc. 16-1 at 145.) Appellee’s proof of claim shows 13 monthly payments between August 12, 2021, and August 15, 2022. (/d. at 145.) In September 2022, she stopped making payments and did not resume payments until filing for bankruptcy in June 2024. On October 14, 2022, the Vermont Superior Court entered a Judgment Order and Decree of Foreclosure in the amount of $297,143.79. (Doc. 16-1 at 23). The redemption period expired on April 14, 2023. Appellant filed a Chapter 13 petition on June 14, 2023, a month prior to a foreclosure sale scheduled for July 13, 2023. (Doc. 2-5; Doc. 4-1 at 2).

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Proceedings Before the Bankruptcy Court Appellant filed her Chapter 13 petition on June 14, 2023. (Doc. 2-5.) The principal asset listed in the petition is her home at 28 Maple Street, which she described as a “Center door colonial build in 1820 with 6 bedrooms on .5 acre. Town assessment $360,000 but property can be subdivided.” She valued the home at $600,000. Other assets were an old car ($1,500) and personal property ($2,720). She listed bank accounts totaling $17,333. She identified Appellee as the sole secured creditor, to whom she owed $297,143.79 plus an unsecured loan of $60,000. She showed $2,539.90 in monthly net income from earnings plus $1,350 in business income (rent paid by housemates).? After monthly living expenses of $2,330, she showed monthly net income of $1,559.90. The petition was accompanied by Appellant’s first Chapter 13 plan. (Doc. 2-6.) It provided for monthly mortgage payments to the U.S. Trustee of $1,550 for 60 months and a final payment of $140,000 “paid from the sale of the building lot through the Plan. The balance of the mortgage shall be paid in full, outside of the Plan.” The plan contained an additional explanation: “Debtor will be subdividing the property to sell off a building site. The homestead and the building lot will be sold within five years of the filing with the balance of the secured debt being paid off in full.” On June 30, 2023, Appellant filed an affidavit in support of her proposed plan. (Doc. 2-8.) The affidavit stated that she has commenced making monthly mortgage payments of $1,550 to the trustee. (/d.) Throughout the period of the bankruptcy case, Appellant has made a

? Monthly rent income later fell to $775. (Doc. 2-22.) On December 5, 2023, Appellant amended schedule I to reflect an increase in net earned income to $3,114.27. (Doc. 2-26.) Total net income remained unchanged at $3,889.

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regular monthly mortgage payment to the trustee, who continues to hold the funds. (Doc. 11 at 2 (Trustee’s Response to Debtor’s Emergency Motion for Stay Pending Appeal). On July 31, 2023, Appellant amended her petition to show an additional asset (an IRA account held by National Financial Services LLC valued at $69,788) and three additional debts: $10,843.17 owed to CACH, LLC (a debt buyer); $134.88 owed to Discover Bank (credit card debt); and $52,055.16 owed to the U.S. Department of Education (student loans). (Doc. 2-9.) The parties appeared for a confirmation hearing concerning the first proposed plan on October 17, 2023. (Doc, 2-28.) Through counsel, Appellant represented that she would be filing an amended plan and an objection to the Department of Education’s proof of claim. (/d.) The court continued the confirmation hearing to December 5, 2023. (/d.) On December 5, 2023, Appellant filed monthly operating reports concerning rent she received from housemates between June and November 2023. (Docs. 2-20—2-25.) The court determined that the reports did not meet the requirements of its Operating Order and required Appellant to file corrected reports by December 18, 2023. (Doc. 2-28.) The court extended the time to file an amended Chapter 13 plan to the same date. (/d.) The court scheduled a hearing for January 9, 2024, at which time Appellant was ordered to “show cause as to why her case should not be dismissed for failure to meet her responsibilities under Chapter 13, to wit, a failure to timely file operating reports under the Operating Order, unreasonable delay, and failure to timely file a plan under § 1321.” dd.)

3 The three additional debts were resolved in the following manner: The debt to CACH was time-barred. (Doc. 2-15.) In the Third Amended Plan, appellant reserved her right to seek loan relief outside of bankruptcy or to file an adversary proceeding to determine dischargeability of the student loans. The plan itself does not provide for payments on the student loans. (Doc 2- 39, p. 4,5). The plan provides for full payment to Discover Bank. (Doc. 2-39, p. 5.)

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Appellant filed the amended operating reports as ordered on December 18, 2023. As required, the reports now showed -0- income and expense figures for two inactive limited liability companies owned by appellant.

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