Crosspointe Trustees, LLC v. Lucash (In re Lucash)

370 B.R. 664, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 2166
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedJune 25, 2007
DocketNo. 07-10729-SSM
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 370 B.R. 664 (Crosspointe Trustees, LLC v. Lucash (In re Lucash)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crosspointe Trustees, LLC v. Lucash (In re Lucash), 370 B.R. 664, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 2166 (Va. 2007).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

STEPHEN S. MITCHELL, Bankruptcy Judge.

A hearing was held on June 20, 2007, on the motion of Crosspointe Trustees, LLC, for relief from the automatic stay in order to obtain possession of real property located at 9566 James Madison Highway, War-renton, Virginia, and for a determination that the lease under which the debtor occupies the property has been rejected and is not property of the estate. Until shortly before this chapter 13 case was filed, the debtor was the record owner of the property. Then — in furtherance of what was presented to him as a foreclosure prevention program under which $23,700 was advanced to stop an impending foreclosure sale of a different property — he executed a series of instruments that had the effect of transferring legal title to his residence to a land trust of which Crosspointe is the trustee, with the debtor becoming merely a tenant. The debtor asserts that he had no idea he was transferring ownership of the property, which all the parties agree had at least $500,000 in equity. The court, after hearing the evidence, ruled from the bench that Crosspointe was sufficiently protected in the short term by the substantial equity cushion and by the debtor’s offer of a $4,079 adequate protection payment. The court therefore declined to terminate the automatic stay and set a further hearing to resolve adequate protection issues on a going-forward basis. An order reflecting that ruling was entered on June 21, 2007. The purpose of this opinion is to explain more fully, for the benefit of the parties and any reviewing court, the reasons for the ruling and also to address the lease rejection issue.

Background

The debtor, David J. Lucash, is a 45-year-old college graduate who owns and operates two small businesses. He filed a voluntary petition in this court on March 28, 2007, for adjustment of his debts under chapter 13 of the Bankruptcy Code. Among the assets listed on his schedules were two parcels of real estate: a rental property located at 2100 Painter Lane, Haymarket, Virginia, and his own residence located at 9566 James Madison Highway, Warrenton, Virginia. The rental property had been scheduled for a foreclosure sale at 8:00 a.m. on March 6, 2007. Although it did not have a great deal of equity, Mr. Lucash' — who had been trying to sell the property for a year and a half— did not want to have a foreclosure on his credit report. Sometime prior to the scheduled sale, he had received a letter from an entity called Sovereign Capital Development Authority, LP (“Sovereign [667]*667Capital”) promoting that company’s foreclosure prevention program. On March 3, 2007, the debtor telephoned the number provided and spoke briefly with Larry Starks, a vice president of Crosspointe (and evidently also an officer of Sovereign Capital). On the afternoon of March 5, 2007, Starks and another representative of Sovereign Capital, Christopher Maher, met with the debtor at his house. The testimony is sharply conflicting as to what Starks and Maher told the debtor concerning the foreclosure prevention program and the effect of the documents he was being asked to sign. In any event, shortly before 5:00 p.m., the debtor, Starks, and Maher went to a nearby bank that had a notary public, and the debtor signed a series of documents, comprising approximately 44 pages, that, among other things, (1) created a land trust, of which the debt- or was the grantor, initial trustee, and initial beneficiary; (2) deeded the debtor’s residence to the land trust; (3) appointed Crosspointe as the successor trustee of the land trust; (4) assigned the beneficial interest in the land trust to Sovereign Capital; and (5) leased the property back to the debtor for two years beginning April 1, 2007, at a monthly rent of $2,717.03.

As explained in still another document entitled “Foreclosure Prevention Agreement,” the rent was calculated as the sum of the regular monthly mortgage payment on the property ($2,260.78) plus interest at 15% per annum on a principal amount composed of the sum paid to stop the foreclosure plus $12,500 in “administrative” and trustee fees. The agreement further provided that if the principal amount were repaid within two years and the rent payments were not in default, the beneficial interest in the property would be reassigned to the debtor. If the debtor were unable to maintain the payments or did not redeem the property by the end of the two years, Crosspointe would be entitled to sell the property, with the debtor receiving a specified share of the proceeds provided he had voluntarily vacated the property; otherwise he would receive nothing. The debtor’s testimony is that he did not read the documents and assumed that he was simply placing a junior deed of trust against the property. It is undisputed that he was not given copies that evening of any of the documents he signed. The next morning, Maher appeared at the foreclosure sale and tendered a cashier’s check to the substitute trustee in the amount of $25,000 to reinstate the mortgage. The substitute trustee — who had not been able to provide a precise reinstatement figure in advance of the sale— subsequently refunded approximately $1,300.00, for a net advance of approximately $23,700.00.

The debtor testified that copies of the documents he had signed were not mailed to him until several weeks later. The parties agree that the residence — because it is situated on land that is zoned commercial — is worth approximately $850,000. There is a first deed of trust against the property in favor of IndyMac Bank in the amount of approximately $300,000. Shortly after the Foreclosure Prevention Agreement and related documents were signed, Crosspointe discovered that the deed of trust on the debtor’s residence was also facing foreclosure. Crosspointe then advanced an additional $12,763.69 to bring that deed of trust current and thereafter executed and recorded a deed of trust (referred to in the Foreclosure Prevention Agreement as a “redemptive deed of trust”) against the property to secure the fees charged and the funds that had been advanced. Stark testified that the additional money advanced would increase the monthly rent payment under the lease by one-twelfth of 15% of $12,763.69, or $159.56. Although the deed of trust was [668]*668not offered in evidence, the noteholder and beneficiary is evidently an entity called Dominion Equity Investments Group (“Dominion Equity”).1

The debtor listed Dominion Equity on his schedules as the holder of a disputed secured claim against the residence, but did not provide for any payment on its claim in the plan that was filed on April 17, 2007.2 That plan, which was confirmed without objection on May 15, 2007, requires the debtor to pay the chapter 13 trustee $549.00 per month for seven months plus a lump sum payment of $29,000.00 in month 3 and a $25,000.00 lump sum payment in month 7, for total plan funding of $57,843.00. The two lump sum payments are to come from a sale of the rental property and of a vacant lot, and the projected dividend on unsecured claims is 100 cents on the dollar. Shortly after the plan was confirmed, the rental property was sold, with net proceeds of approximately $11,000.00 being paid to the chapter 13 trustee. The vacant lot has not yet been sold.

It is undisputed that the debtor has not made any of the rent payments required by the lease. At the hearing, the debtor offered to make immediate payment of $4,078.97.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
370 B.R. 664, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 2166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crosspointe-trustees-llc-v-lucash-in-re-lucash-vaeb-2007.