Duplessis v. Valenti (In Re Valenti)

310 B.R. 138, 52 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 403, 2004 Bankr. LEXIS 684, 2004 WL 1194690
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedMay 11, 2004
DocketBAP No. CC-03-1096-MoPMa. Bankruptcy No. SV 01-16072 KL. Adversary No. SV 02-01812 KL
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 310 B.R. 138 (Duplessis v. Valenti (In Re Valenti)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duplessis v. Valenti (In Re Valenti), 310 B.R. 138, 52 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 403, 2004 Bankr. LEXIS 684, 2004 WL 1194690 (bap9 2004).

Opinion

OPINION

MONTALI, Bankruptcy Judge.

Karen Valenti (“Debtor”) allegedly hid $700.00 per month of income, concealed her ongoing beneficial interest in a single family home she had quitclaimed to her daughter pre-petition, and lied about having paid off the mortgage debt on that home through escrow. According to creditors and appellants Roy and Denise Du-plessis (“Creditors”), Debtor was ineligible for Chapter 13 relief under Section 109(e), her plan was unconfirmable under Section 1325, and she obtained confirmation through fraud so that she could use the Chapter 13 super-discharge to avoid paying Creditors’ claim, which had been held non-dischargeable in Debtor’s earlier Chapter 7 case. 1

Creditors did not raise these issues prior to confirmation of Debtor’s Chapter 13 plan. Instead, they filed a post-confirmation complaint to revoke the confirmation order and later submitted a proposed amended complaint.

We hold that, although Debtor’s alleged conduct, if proven, is reprehensible, there is a strict 180-day time limit for seeking to revoke confirmation for fraud under Section 1330(a). This bars the claims raised in Creditors’ proposed amended complaint even if Debtor concealed her alleged misconduct. We reject Creditors’ attempts to get around Section 1330(a) by alleging bad faith and by invoking Section 105(a), Section 1307(c), and Fed.R.Civ.P. 60 (incorporated by Rule 9024), which have no 180-day time limit.

Creditors’ claims in their original complaint were raised within the 180-day time limit of Section 1330(a), but those claims are barred by res judicata. Creditors cannot wait until after confirmation and then seek to revoke the confirmation order based on matters that they could have or should have raised at the confirmation hearing.

We address one other issue. Creditors apparently believe that the bankruptcy court’s order dismissing their complaint under Section 1330(a) was with prejudice against any future motion they might file under Section 1307(c) to convert or dismiss Debtor’s Chapter 13 case. We clarify that relief under Section 1307(c), which includes no explicit 180-day time limit, is not necessarily barred by res judicata.

*142 With that clarification, the bankruptcy-court’s order dismissing Creditors’ complaint with prejudice is AFFIRMED.

I. FACTS

In an earlier Chapter 7 case, Creditors had obtained a judgment determining that a debt Debtor owed to them was non-dischargeable. Later, Debtor filed a petition commencing her present Chapter 13 case. On March 18, 2002, after a contested confirmation hearing, the bankruptcy court entered an order confirming Debt- or’s Chapter 13 plan (the “Confirmation Order”).

A. Creditors’ complaint

Six months after the Confirmation Order was entered, on September 16, 2002, Creditors filed a “Complaint To Revoke Order of Confirmation of Chapter 13 Plan [11 U.S.C. § 1330]” (Adv. No. SV-02-01812-KL). 2 The complaint alleges that (1) Debtor made materially false representations regarding her compliance with the best interests of creditors test of Section 1325(a)(4) by omitting any mention of a beneficial interest she had in a single family residence located at 6802 Aldea Avenue, Van Nuys, California (the “Aldea Property”), (2) Debtor misrepresented the amount of her “monthly disposable income” under Section 1325(b)(1)(B). “by at least $700.00,” and (3) Debtor did not propose her plan in good faith.

Debtor filed a motion to dismiss the complaint (the “Motion to Dismiss”). 3 At a hearing on that motion, the bankruptcy court asked why the complaint’s claims should not be barred because they had not been raised before the Confirmation Order was entered. The bankruptcy court noted that Debtor’s Schedule I discloses $700.00 of monthly income from real property (even though her Schedule A states that she does not own any real property).

According to Creditors’ attorney, newly discovered information suggested that Debtor retained a beneficial ownership interest in the Aldea Property after she quitclaimed it to her daughter in 1996, and the source of the income from real property might be different from what Creditors had understood (apparently a muffler business in which Debtor allegedly had some sort of beneficial interest). The bankruptcy court was not persuaded, stating later that the question is not what was actually known to Creditors but whether or not the issues were sufficiently apparent that they should have been investigated, and then raised as an objection to confirmation.

Creditors’ attorney also argued that Debtor misled them, prior to confirmation of her Chapter 13 plan, by claiming to have paid off her obligations relating to *143 the Aldea Property (the “Aldea Debt”). He argued that this debt, combined with Debtor’s other obligations, made her ineligible for Chapter 13 under Section 109(e). 4

The bankruptcy court responded that Creditors could not raise the issue of lack of eligibility because it was not stated anywhere in the complaint and “you’re stuck now with what you alleged prior to the expiration of the 180 days [under Section 1330(a) ].” Transcript 11/21/02, p. 6:19-20. Creditors’ attorney conceded that this issue was not raised by the complaint and added that this is why Creditors would like leave to amend. The bankruptcy court granted the Motion to Dismiss with prejudice as to the first claim but permitted Creditors to submit a proposed amended complaint.

B. The proposed amended complaint

On December 23, 2002, Creditors submitted their proposed amended complaint seeking relief under Sections 1330(a) and 105(a), Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b) (“Rule 60(b)”) and, at least in conjunction with Section 1330, Section 1307(c). The gravamen of the proposed amended complaint is that Debtor did not disclose the Aldea Debt and thereby acted in bad faith and knowingly or recklessly misled the bankruptcy court “as to her level of unsecured debt,” which was “in excess of the debt limit established by [Section] 109(e).” Creditors contend that the Aldea Debt, combined with the general unsecured claims listed in Debtor’s schedules, results in a total amount of noncontingent, liquidated unsecured debt that exceeds the $290,525.00 limit in Section 109(e).

Both the complaint and the proposed amended complaint include nothing in their prayers for relief about conversion or dismissal of Debtor’s Chapter 13 case under Section 1307(c). Nevertheless, the proposed amended complaint’s claim for relief under Sections 1330(a) and 1307(c) includes the statement that the facts alleged “warrant[ ] dismissal.”

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310 B.R. 138, 52 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 403, 2004 Bankr. LEXIS 684, 2004 WL 1194690, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duplessis-v-valenti-in-re-valenti-bap9-2004.