First National Bank of Rocky Mount v. Chitwood (In Re Chitwood)

1 B.R. 415, 21 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 846, 1979 Bankr. LEXIS 694
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Virginia
DecidedDecember 5, 1979
Docket15-61895
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1 B.R. 415 (First National Bank of Rocky Mount v. Chitwood (In Re Chitwood)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First National Bank of Rocky Mount v. Chitwood (In Re Chitwood), 1 B.R. 415, 21 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 846, 1979 Bankr. LEXIS 694 (Va. 1979).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

H. CLYDE PEARSON, Bankruptcy J udge.

James Edward Chitwood, Jr. (hereafter Defendant) on August 24, 1976, at 9:15 a. m., filed his voluntary petition in this Court under the Bankruptcy Act seeking a discharge of his debts. Among his scheduled creditors was the Plaintiff, The First National Bank of Rocky Mount. Prior to the filing of the petition, Chitwood had been engaged in the used car business as a dealer in the Martinsville area, and among the institutions used by the Defendant for financing his business and floor planning his inventory was the Plaintiff. In addition to his personal endorsement on the indebtedness owing to the Bank, the Bank obtained additionally a written guarantee of these obligations from Marie M. Chitwood, Wife of the Bankrupt.

Plaintiff, on September 6, 1977, filed this Complaint seeking a delay of the issuance of the discharge of the Defendant to enable the Plaintiff to enforce a joint obligation against the entirety property of Mr. and Mrs. Chitwood. This entirety property is situate in Franklin County and is the residence of the Chitwoods. The evidence showed that the value of the entirety property was far in excess of the Plaintiff’s debt.

On August 24, 1976, when the petition was filed, the Bank, at that time, had separate confessed judgments against the Chit-woods upon the separate obligations, but did not have a joint judgment, which was the proper vehicle to subject liability against the entirety property.

Following the filing of the petition herein, and later, on the same day, the Bank proceeded before the Circuit Court of Franklin County to have additional judgments rendered against Mr. and Mrs. Chit-wood for FIFTY-FOUR THOUSAND NINE HUNDRED EIGHT and 57/100 DOLLARS ($54,908.57), which was the alleged balance due the Bank following credits applied from sales of the Bankrupt’s inventory. This amount was subsequently further reduced to FIFTY-ONE THOUSAND, ONE HUNDRED TWENTY-SIX and 77/100 DOLLARS ($51,126.77). This additional judgment by the Circuit Court recites an entry upon the “consolidated actions”, both of which were then pending in that Court upon separate docket numbers on August 24, 1976. The evidence further showed that the judgment on August 24, 1976, was entered, after the fact of the petition filed in this Court was brought to Counsel’s attention, as well as the attention of the Court.

*417 The evidence further showed that again on October 27, 1977, while this case was pending and without relief from the stay of Rules 401 and 601, the Circuit Court of Franklin County, Virginia, in a case therein styled First National Bank of Rocky Mount v. James E. Chitwood, Jr. and Marie M. Chitwood, proceeded to enter yet another Order, which purported to direct the issuance of a “joint judgment” against the Chitwoods and the docketing of the same in the said Clerk’s Office wherein the real estate is situate. 1

. The Complaint herein, when called for trial, was continued generally to enable the Plaintiff to complete liquidation of all collateral upon which it held a security interest so that Plaintiff could file with this Court a sum certain remaining due and owing upon the indebtedness of the Defendant and Wife, following the liquidation of the collateral. This was ultimately accomplished, and on September 26, 1979, following numerous other proceedings and motions, this Court heard the Complaint and the evidence as to the balance due the Plaintiff, following the application of all credits, which sum appears to be THIRTY-SIX THOUSAND SIX HUNDRED FORTY-THREE and 79/100 ($36,643.79) plus claimed interest of THIRTEEN THOUSAND THREE HUNDRED TWENTY-FIVE and 72/100 ($13,325.72) through September 26, 1979.

The issue simply put, is whether or not the Plaintiff should have the discharge stayed to enable it to proceed to obtain and enforce a joint judgment against the Chit-woods in the Circuit Court of Franklin County and, thereby subject to the satisfaction of such judgment the entirety property of the Chitwoods.

The Plaintiff’s remedy invokes the equitable powers of this Court as heretofore enunciated in the case of Lockwood v. Exchange Bank, 190 U.S. 294, 23 S.Ct. 751, 47 L.Ed. 1061, 10 Am.B.R. 107 and later followed in the Fourth Circuit case of Phillips v. Krakower (4th Cir. 1931), 46 F.2d 764.

In the Lockwood case, the Supreme Court was asked to delay the discharge of the Bankrupt to enable the Bank to subject to the satisfaction of its claim, property which the Bankrupt sought to have exempt under a homestead deed. The Bank’s note waived homestead exemption. The Supreme Court, in granting the right of the noteholder, stated that the creditor

“ . . . may be protected by the court of bankruptcy, since, certainly, there would exist in favor of a creditor holding a waiver note, like that possessed by the petitioning creditor in the case at bar, an equity entitling him to a reasonable postponement of the discharge of the bankrupt in order to allow the institution in the state court of such proceedings as might be necessary to make effective the rights possessed by the creditor.”

The Court in Krakower, supra, commented as to the holding in Lockwood:

“It was property, therefore, which was reachable by the creditor in the state courts, but, as here, the right of the creditor to subject it to his claim would be lost if the bankrupt were granted a discharge and his debt thereby extinguished.”
“There is no difference in principle between that case (Lockwood) and the case at bar. In both there was property which did not pass to the trustee, but was reachable by the creditor under the laws of the state. In both a discharge of the bankrupt would have precluded a proceeding to subject the property to the satisfaction of the debt. And in both a stay of discharge was asked in order that .the property might be subjected to the claims of the creditor.”
“ . . . The basis upon which relief is granted in either case, however, is not that the bankrupt has consented that property be subjected to the claims of the *418 creditor, but that an equity exists in favor of the creditor because he is entitled to subject property to the satisfaction of his claim and this right will be extinguished by the granting of the discharge.”

The right of the Bank to proceed as authorized by Lockwood and Krakower, supra, is conditioned further in that there must be equity in the property sought to be subjected. See In Re Hawks (4th Cir.

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1 B.R. 415, 21 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 846, 1979 Bankr. LEXIS 694, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-of-rocky-mount-v-chitwood-in-re-chitwood-vawb-1979.