Elgin State Bank v. Cowsert (In Re Cowsert)

14 B.R. 335, 32 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 949, 1981 Bankr. LEXIS 3149
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Florida.
DecidedAugust 14, 1981
Docket18-25050
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 14 B.R. 335 (Elgin State Bank v. Cowsert (In Re Cowsert)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Florida. primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Elgin State Bank v. Cowsert (In Re Cowsert), 14 B.R. 335, 32 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 949, 1981 Bankr. LEXIS 3149 (Fla. 1981).

Opinion

FINDINGS AND CONCLUSIONS

JOSEPH A. GASSEN, Bankruptcy Judge.

This adversary proceeding came to trial on the first count only of plaintiff Elgin State Bank’s complaint. That count seeks relief from the automatic stay of 11 U.S.C. § 362(a) so that Elgin State may continue with its state court foreclosure action against a condominium unit owned by the debtors.

Another complaint to lift stay, Adversary Case No. 81-0159-BKC-JAG-A, tried shortly after this case, was filed by Elgin National Bank, another creditor. Both cases involve the same set of creditors and debts, and were tried by the same counsel. Although these cases did not take long to try, and appear relatively simple at first glance, the court’s traversal through them has been studded by legal land mines, as difficult new issues revealed themselves in later memoranda of the parties and in the court’s own research. Subsequent to both trials, the court called a conference to discuss issues not addressed at the trials. These Findings and Conclusions address the ultimate positions taken by the parties.

Debtors Herschel L. Cowsert and his wife Catherine A. Cowsert were formerly residents of Illinois. In October, 1979, debtors purchased a condominium unit at 1450 Plymouth Road, Elgin, Illinois, known as Unit 505, Tyler Towers, and received a deed to that property, including an easement for ingress and egress (Exhibit D attached to Debtor’s Schedule A-2). A purchase money first mortgage in the principal amount of $42,400 was given by the Cowserts to Elgin State (Plaintiff’s Composite Exhibit No. 2). Thereafter, in January, 1980, the property was deeded to a pre-existing land trust, of which Elgin National Bank was the trustee. (Plaintiff's Composite Exhibit No. 3).

The land trust had been created in 1976, and the Cowserts’ former residence, a home at 3869 Hopps Road, Elgin, Illinois, had been deeded to the land trustee before the condominium was purchased by the Cow-serts. (Exhibit No. 1 to Deposition of William Westerman, Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 4). Home Federal Savings and Loan held a first mortgage on the Hopps Road house. (Exhibit A to Debtor’s Schedule A-2).

After the addition of the condominium to the land trust, the Cowserts made a collateral assignment of their beneficial interest in the trust (an “ABI”), to secure a loan they received from Elgin National Bank in the principal amount of $71,535 (Plaintiff’s Composite Exhibit No. 3). A UCC financing statement was filed in Illinois on Janu *337 ary 14,1981, (Exhibit No. 4 to Deposition of William Westerman, Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 4).

In September, 1980, a junior assignment of the same beneficial interest (Plaintiff’s Composite Exhibit No. 3,) was given by the Cowserts to Elgin State to secure a previously unsecured loan in the principal amount of $25,000 (Exhibit G to Debtor’s Schedule A — 2). There was no evidence of any UCC financing statement being filed for this transaction.

On debtors’ schedules B-l and A-2, the Tyler Towers property was listed as having a value of $55,000, although at his deposition, (Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 1, p. 5) Herschel Cowsert testified that its value was $63,000 to $64,000. In his deposition, Jan George Hervert, an expert for plaintiff, referred to the value as $61,000, but gave no supporting data because the deposition primarily related to the Hopps Road property (Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 6, p. 14). The only evidence of the current outstanding mortgage balance was debtors’ Schedule A-2, which lists the mortgage debt as $43,000. Schedule A-2 lists the debt secured by the ABI to Elgin National as $71,535. William Westerman of Elgin National testified that as of May 22, 1981 the balance due on debtors’ note was $89,992.62 (Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 4, p. 13). Finally, Schedule A-2 lists the balance on the ABI to Elgin State as $18,000.

The debtors moved to Florida in the latter part of May, 1980 (Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 1, deposition of Herschel Cowsert, p. 3). On January 16, 1981, they filed their joint voluntary petition in bankruptcy under chapter 7.

Plaintiff seeks a lifting of the stay pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 362(d)(2) which provides that relief shall be granted if:

(A) the debtor does not have an equity in such property; and
(B) such property is not necessary to an effective reorganization.

All agree that subsection (B) is satisfied because in a chapter 7 case, there is no reorganization. Plaintiff further contends that subsection (A) is also automatically satisfied in a chapter 7 proceeding because all non-exempt property belongs to the trustee on behalf of the estate and the debtor’s ownership is terminated. Plaintiff argues that if the trustee’s equity were the issue, § 362(d)(2) would have been so phrased by Congress. Plaintiff cites no case applying this interpretation of the statute, but relies on the section’s plain wording. The court has considered this imaginative and resourceful argument by the plaintiff, but concludes that it has no merit. Such reasoning would require relief from stay in all chapter 11 cases as well, because in reorganization cases the “debtor-in-possession” is not the same legal entity as the “debtor”. Such an interpretation would moot subsection (B), would render the automatic stay provisions of the Bankruptcy Code virtually meaningless, and is not in keeping with what this court discerns to have been the Congressional intent.

Elgin State additionally contends that under the conventional interpretation of § 362(d)(2), it must prevail because the debtors, in fact, had no equity. One of plaintiff’s alternative positions is that the debtors had no equity in the real property itself because the land trustee holds title to the real estate, and the debtors had, at most, a beneficial interest in the land trust. The court admits that this is a troubling issue. Counsel have not directed the court’s attention to, and the court has not found any cases applying § 362(d)(2) in this context.

Illinois courts have repeatedly upheld the right of parties to, in effect, transform what traditionally has been an interest in real estate into a personal property interest, through the use of the land trust device. 1 E. g. Horney v. Hays, 11 Ill.2d 178, 142 *338 N.E.2d 94 (1957). The parties in this case have not asserted that the land trust was a fiction and the collateral ABFs, in actuality, mortgages. And under the Illinois cases they would probably not be deemed such. Nevertheless, this court cannot ignore the practical fact that the debtors held a “beneficial equity” in the real property akin to the interest of a debtor mortgagor. It conflicts with the entire concept and purpose of the Congressional automatic stay to conclude that a foreclosure of a first mortgage on such real property is not stayed because of the land trust device which put the debtors at one remove from the property, and without legal title to it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 B.R. 335, 32 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 949, 1981 Bankr. LEXIS 3149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elgin-state-bank-v-cowsert-in-re-cowsert-flsb-1981.