Coco v. Eli Haddad Corp. (In Re Coco)

67 B.R. 365, 1986 Bankr. LEXIS 4927
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York
DecidedNovember 21, 1986
Docket19-22288
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 67 B.R. 365 (Coco v. Eli Haddad Corp. (In Re Coco)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coco v. Eli Haddad Corp. (In Re Coco), 67 B.R. 365, 1986 Bankr. LEXIS 4927 (N.Y. 1986).

Opinion

DECISION ON TRUSTEE’S ACTION TO RECOVER A PREFERENTIAL TRANSFER

TINA L. BROZMAN, Bankruptcy Judge.

This somewhat unusual preference action results from rental payments made by a tenant into an escrow account pursuant to order of the Civil Court of the City of New *367 York. The tenant is now a chapter 7 debt- or, his previously filed chapter 13 case having been converted. He had deposited some $14,400.00 into escrow, only $3,600.00 of which was deposited during the 90-day preference period. Subsequently, a New York Civil Court judge awarded judgment in favor of the landlord for $9,900.00 of the escrowed funds. Notwithstanding the literal terms of the judgment, the escrow agent, the landlord’s attorney, disbursed the entire fund to himself two months after the chapter 7 conversion in satisfaction of legal fees owed to him by his client.

The trustee has commenced this adversary proceeding against the landlord and the attorney seeking to recover the entire $14,400.00 as an avoidable preferential transfer. 1 The case was tried before this court on June 18, 1985, July 11, 1985 and September 4, 1985.

FACTS:

Pursuant to a lease dated October 18, 1978, Alfred Coco, the debtor, was a tenant in a building owned by Eli Haddad Corp. (“Haddad”). The term of the lease was 36 months beginning November 1, 1978 and ending October 30, 1981. Stipulated monthly rent was $900.00. Coco paid rent only through March 1981 although he continued to occupy the premises until August 1982 (despite the expiration of the lease on October 30, 1981). At trial, he explained that he refused to pay his rent when he discovered that the building had no Certificate of Occupancy.

On October 20,1981, Haddad commenced a nonpayment summary proceeding against Coco in the Civil Court of the City of New York seeking to recover back rent. In connection with that proceeding, Civil Court Judge Elliot Wilk ordered that Coco deposit the monthly rent into escrow to be held by Richard Meirowitz, attorney for the landlord Haddad, pending a determination of the nonpayment proceeding. Payments were made to Meirowitz by Coco as follows. 2

Date Paid Amount Rent For
August 4, 1981 $3,600.00 April-July 1981
August 18, 1981 900.00 August 1981
September-November
November 9, 1981 2,700.00 1981
December 9, 1981 900.00 December 1981
January 7, 1982 900.00 January 1982
February 4, 1982 900.00 February 1982
March 5, 1982 900.00 March 1982
June 3, 1982 1,800.00 June 1982
July 6, 1982 900.00 July 1982

Coco’s roommate contributed whatever he could afford each month. It was Coco alone, however, who was the tenant under the lease and against whom the state court proceeding was prosecuted.

The summary proceeding was tried before Judge Richard S. Lane who issued a decision awarding the landlord possession and $9,900.00, the original amount requested, which represented rent for the months of April 1981 through February 1982. Final judgment was entered on July 9, 1982. Although Coco filed a notice of appeal, he never perfected it.

Coco’s attorney in the nonpayment action, Bradley Davis, then wrote to Meirow-itz and authorized him to release $9,900.00 from the escrowed funds and instructed him to retain the balance pending final disposition by the court. (Def. Ex. E.). Meirowitz responded that Haddad was entitled to the entire $14,400.00 and that, until the issue was resolved, no funds would be disbursed. (Def. Ex. F.).

Coco filed a Chapter 13 petition on August 31, 1982. His case was converted on October 26, 1982 to one under chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code. On his bankruptcy schedules, he listed Haddad as an unsecured creditor in the amount of $20,000.00 for rent arrears, and Meirowitz as an unsecured creditor in the amount of $37,672.00 for unpaid legal fees. Haddad filed a proof of claim on September 30, 1982 in the *368 amount of $58,085.28 for both the arrears and the attorneys’ fees. That proof of claim indicated that $14,400.00 was being held in escrow by Meirowitz. After the bankruptcy was commenced Meirowitz released the funds to himself in satisfaction of legal fees owed to him.

PARTIES’ CONTENTIONS

As best as we can gather from his papers, the Trustee argues first that the entire $14,400.00 was a preferential transfer since the debtor had an equitable interest in the escrowed funds. He next argues that a transfer of $9,900.00 was effectuated on July 9, 1982 when the judgment was rendered and thus that that amount is a preference. Further, he asserts that the $3,600.00 paid into escrow during the preference period and pending a final determination of how the funds should be disbursed should be avoided as a preference. Alternatively he asserts that $4,500.00 was released by Meirowitz subsequent to bankruptcy and thus is recoverable under 11 U.S.C. § 549. This last theory was not pleaded by the Trustee but emerged in his post-trial submission.

The defendants counter that it was the deposits into escrow and not the subsequent judgment that constitute the relevant controlling transfers. Thus, the defendants argue that $10,800.00 transferred prior to the preference period cannot be recovered. With respect to the remaining $3,600.00, they argue that $1,800.00 of it (representing the rent for April and May, 1982) should have been paid into escrow pursuant to the state court’s order during the pre-preference period and should therefore not be considered property of the estate. Alternatively, they argue that the monies contributed by Coco’s roommate (which amounted to between $3,200.00 and $4,800.00) were not property of the estate so that, presumably, so much as he contributed of the remaining $1,800.00 cannot constitute a preference.

In addition to denying the preference elements, defendants’ answer raised two affirmative defenses: payment in the ordinary course and laches.

Before turning to the applicable law, we note that the Trustee in applying the law apparently misperceives the facts. The testimony and documentary evidence leave no doubt that all of the funds were released by Meirowitz post-petition in December of 1982. There was no pre-petition release of the monies awarded by Judge Lane’s judgment. 3 DISCUSSION

Maintenance of a successful preference action requires the Trustee to prove by a preponderance of evidence all the elements set forth in 11 U.S.C. § 547(b). 4 Hassett v. Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Greater New York (In re O.P.M. Leasing Services, Inc.), 46 B.R. 661, 666 (Bankr.S.D.N.Y.1985); Young v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 B.R. 365, 1986 Bankr. LEXIS 4927, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coco-v-eli-haddad-corp-in-re-coco-nysb-1986.