Collier v. Hill (In Re Collier)

410 B.R. 464
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Texas
DecidedApril 7, 2009
Docket19-60146
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 410 B.R. 464 (Collier v. Hill (In Re Collier)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Collier v. Hill (In Re Collier), 410 B.R. 464 (Tex. 2009).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION

BILL PARKER, Chief Judge.

This matter is before the Court on the trial of the Complaint for Injunctive Relief, Contempt and Damages filed by the Plaintiff, James Bradley Collier, the Debtor in the above-referenced bankruptcy case. The complaint seeks a determination that the Defendant, Paul Hill, willfully violated 11 U.S.C. § 362(a) and is liable for actual damages, costs, and attorney’s fees. Upon conclusion of the trial of the complaint, the Court took the matter under advisement. This memorandum of decision disposes of all issues pending before the Court. 1

Background 2

Prior to the filing of his bankruptcy petition, the Debtor, James Bradley Collier and the Defendant, Paul Hill, were longtime, close friends living in Seottsville, Texas, located east of Marshall. 3 In the spring of 2007, Collier desired to make certain improvements to his mobile home. On three separate occasions, he purchased *469 on credit from the Defendant’s store, Hill’s Mobile Home Parts & Service, various mobile home parts and materials, including doors, floor vents, faucets, and pipes, thereby incurring a debt of $984.23. 4 Hill even assisted his friend in the remodeling and helped Collier to install the purchased parts free of any labor charge. Over the next few months, as he began to experience financial problems, Collier continually assured Hill that he would pay his outstanding debt for the mobile home parts.

As his financial problems worsened, Collier consulted with Jean Taylor, a bankruptcy attorney in Marshall. The result of those consultations was the filing of a voluntary petition by Collier for relief under Chapter 13 of the Bankruptcy Code on September 28, 2007. Accompanying Collier’s petition were his schedules and statements wherein Collier scheduled Hill’s pre-petition claim as an unsecured claim on Schedule F. Collier also supplied a mailing matrix that listed Hill as a creditor with an address of “9350 E. Hwy. 80, Marshall, Texas 75672.”

There were immediate problems with delivery of notice to Hill at that address. Collier claimed this was the address that Hill provided to him. Hill denied that and asserted that his address was as indicated on the invoices submitted to the Court as Defendant’s Ex. A: 9350 U.S. Hwy 80 East, Scottsville, TX 75688. 5 Both addresses, however, appear to be ineffective mailing addresses due to the fact that the physical address technically exists within the confínes of the city of Marshall, but the small community of Scottsville has its own post office and its own zip code but that zip code services only post office boxes located within that post office. To complicate things further, the Bankruptcy Noticing Center utilized by the Court apparently automatically corrected the zip code on each notice addressed to the physical address by changing 75672 to 75670, which is the primary zip code for downtown Marshall — but not a zip code for physical addresses in the Scottsville area. As a result, every notice sent by BNC to Hill was sent to 9350 E. Hwy. 80, Marshall, Texas 75670, though that likely was not a deliverable address.

These “postal” circumstances created tension between these estranged friends. Hill wanted to be paid. Collier continually told Hill that he had filed for bankruptcy relief and assured him that his claim had been properly scheduled. Yet Hill was not timely receiving documentation from the bankruptcy court to corroborate Collier’s assurances, although Collier was not really responsible for the delay in notice.

As a result of that delay in notice, Hill and his representatives 6 placed a number of phone calls to Collier between the petition date in September 2007 and early February 2008, seeking confirmation as to the existence of the purported bankruptcy case and whether his debt had been included in the bankruptcy case. On or *470 about February 7, 2008, one of Mr. Hill’s employees finally called Jean Taylor, the Debtor’s bankruptcy attorney, to confirm the information about the bankruptcy. Oral confirmation was given but no paper work followed. At the end of April, a new employee of Hill, Linda Simmons, contacted Collier about the status of the debt. On May 1, 2008, Hill personally called Taylor’s office, leaving a voice mail message that he had still not received any communication from the bankruptcy court to date regarding his claim or any other documentation that corroborated the existence of the bankruptcy filing but in that message, for the first time, he disclosed his post office box address in Scottsville to Taylor. Still no corroborating documentation was sent. Five days later, Linda Simmons spoke by phone to Jean Taylor and again requested that copies of Collier’s bankruptcy information to be sent to Hill’s post office address. In response thereto, Taylor finally mailed a letter to Hill on May 7 at that post office box address, enclosing a copy of the “Notice of Bankruptcy Case Filing,” procured from PACER, which detailed all of the relevant case information. 7 This information prompted Hill to retain an attorney, Josh Maness, for assistance in collecting his pre-petition claim. Although Maness had the ability to confirm all of the case and claim information which had been sent to Hill, he conducted only a “creditor search” from the Query section of the website and failed to find any reference to Paul Hill. Throughout this time period and notwithstanding the information provided in the Notice, there was apparently no effort by the Defendant, his subordinates, or his counsel to contact the bankruptcy court in Tyler directly for confirmation of the bankruptcy filing or any of the case information.

Two months later, on July 11, 2008, Maness, on Hill’s behalf, sent the following letter to Jean Taylor:

Re: Debt collection on Brad Collier; Tim Moran & Paul Hill.
Please accept this letter as a formal demand for payment of two outstanding debts owed by your client Brad Collier. The first debt concerns $4000 in unpaid rent to Mr. Tim Moran for office space located adjacent to the “grub sack” on highway 80. Mr. Collier failed to pay rent for approximately thirty-six months, ending in December 2004.
The second debt concerns $987.37 in parts and supplies sold by Mr. Paul Hill to Mr. Collier for mobile home related repairs. This debt is approximately one year old.
I am aware that he has recently filed for protection under Chapter 13 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code. These debts however were not disclosed by him to the bankruptcy court. Furthermore, it is my understanding that the trustee closed the bankruptcy case. 8
Your client is aware of these two debts and had repeatedly promised to make good on them to my clients.

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Bluebook (online)
410 B.R. 464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collier-v-hill-in-re-collier-txeb-2009.