Gardner v. Tyson (In Re Gardner)

218 B.R. 338, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 183, 1998 WL 81692
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 24, 1998
Docket19-11211
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 218 B.R. 338 (Gardner v. Tyson (In Re Gardner)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gardner v. Tyson (In Re Gardner), 218 B.R. 338, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 183, 1998 WL 81692 (Pa. 1998).

Opinion

OPINION

DAVID A. SCHOLL, Chief Judge.

A. INTRODUCTION

The instant proceeding (“the Proceeding”), initiated by PATRICIA ANN GARDNER (“the Debtor”) against the transferee of her home at 5321 North 16th Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (“the Home”), realtor RENEE TYSON, a/k/a RENEE JEFFERSON (“the Realtor”), and the Realtor’s subsequent-transferee-son, ASMAR TYSON (“the Son;” with the Realtor, “the Defendants”), faces several procedural and substantive hurdles. While we conclude that a claim under the pertinent Pennsylvania state fraudulent conveyance law is not barred by limitations and that, with the cooperation of the Standing Chapter 13 Trustee, EDWARD SPARK-MAN, ESQUIRE (“the Trustee”), the parties could be realigned to render the claims set forth in the Proceeding actionable, we find that the Debtor has not met her burden of proving that she failed to receive “reasonably equivalent value” from the Realtor in exchange for the Home, particularly in light of the Realtor’s post-transfer remittance of $13,942.28 to the mortgagee of the Home. Therefore, judgment is entered in favor of the Defendants on all counts.

B. PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL HISTORY

The Debtor filed the underlying individual Chapter 13 bankruptcy case on October 1, 1997. The Debtor’s plan modestly proposes payments of $39.43 for 36 months, to be distributed to a claim of a creditor which financed the purchase of her 1988 Mazda automobile, crammed down to the $1,000 alleged value of this vehicle.

However, the Debtor apparently formulated more ambitious goals before or immediately after filing this case. On October 24, 1997, she filed the instant Complaint seeking to set aside the March 5, 1995, transfer of the Home to the Realtor. The original Complaint contained four Counts, two claims each under both 11 U.S.C. § 548(a)(2) and 11 U.S.C. § 544(b), incorporating 12 Pa.C.S. § 5104. The Complaint alleges two claims that the Debtor was insolvent when the transfer was made and two claims that she “became insolvent” as a result of the transfer under both federal and state law. The named Defendants included the Trustee.

The Defendants (excluding the Trustee) filed an Answer to the Complaint on the first date of trial, December 11, 1997. While the Answer denies the Complaint’s averments, it invokes no affirmative defenses, and thus the invocation of any defense based upon applicable statutes of limitations is conspicuously absent. Moreover, the Defendants’ counsel appeared late on the trial date, after the Debtor’s counsel had departed believing that he could move for judgment by default. When the Debtor learned of the Defendants’ response to the Complaint, he graciously agreed to continue the trial until February 3, 1998. In the meantime, he also filed an ultimately unopposed motion seeking to amend the Complaint to revise the averment of the date of the transfer to read March 5, 1996, and to add three Counts to the Complaint. Two of these additional Counts sought damages for the Defendants’ creation of a liability of the Debtor to her mortgagee by failing to make the post-transfer mortgage payments, one based on a violation of contract theory and one based upon common-law fraud. The third additional count stated a claim under the Pennsylvania law prohibit *341 ing certain unfair and deceptive practices, 73 P.S. § 201-1, et seq. (“UDAP”), arising from the Debtor’s alleged fraud in misrepresenting that she had the ability to make the mortgage payments.

At trial, the Debtor testified that she purchased the Home on August 8,1980,- with her former husband. After a period of marital strife in the early 1990’s, during which she and her ex-husband each lived separately in the Home at different times, her ex-husband ultimately deeded his interest in the Home to her. However, the Debtor was uncertain whether she could keep up the mortgage payments and, also noting that she suffered from some bad memories in the Home, she and her two dependent daughters, now aged 11 and 16 years, moved out of the Home. She then attempted to list the Home for sale with a realtor.

The Debtor was unsuccessful in her initial efforts to sell the Home. She ultimately approached the Realtor to list the Home for sale with her. The Debtor claims, at this time and at present, that the Home was worth between $40,000 to $50,000; that the mortgage balance was about $28,000; and that she was only three months behind in mortgage payments of about $333/monthly when she listed the Home for sale with the Realtor.

The relationship of the Debtor and the Realtor advanced from one of strictly business to friendship. Ultimately, the Realtor, who claimed that she listed the Home for sale at $29,000 without success, agreed to purchase the Home from the Debtor for her own use. An Agreement of Sale, dated January 10, 1995, was executed by the Debtor in which the consideration was $1.00, subject to the following “Special Clauses:”

Seller agree [sic] to allow the buyer to assume the [sic] existing [sic] mortgage [sic].
Buyer agree [sic] to pay up back payments on the loan.
Buyer agree [sic] to pay all cost [sic] to complete this transaction

A deed of the Home from the Debtor to the Realtor, in the name of Renee Tyson, dated March 5,1995 (“the Deed”), was introduced at trial. Attached thereto were documents indicating a recording of the Deed on March 5, 1996. The coincidence in these dates caused the Debtor to aver, in the Amended Complaint, that the Deed should have been dated 1996. However, the dates of the Agreement of Sale and of the other pertinent documents referenced two paragraphs below appear to settle 1995 as the correct year of the Deed.

The “fair market value” of the Home listed on the transfer tax documents was $36,-748.80. The Realtor somewhat reluctantly admitted that she falsely swore on that form, and surreptitiously added to the Deed, the statement that the transfer was “from sister to sister” to avoid paying local real estate transfer taxes. Also, the Deed was notarized by the Realtor herself, using the name Renee Jefferson in her capacity as notary.

The Realtor testified, contrary to the Debtor, that the mortgage was seriously in default at the time of the transfer and that the Home at that time required substantial repairs to its roof, ceilings, and plumbing. She claimed to have paid $13,942.28 in delinquent mortgage payments, verified by copies of the faces of a personal check and of a cashier’s check made out to the mortgagee dated May 11, 1995, in the amount of $5,242.28; and dated November 3, 1995, in the amount of $8,700, respectively. She also claimed to have spent $15,000 in making repairs to the Home, but produced no documentary verification of same.

On July 8, 1996, the Realtor deeded the Home to the Son. The “fair market value” of the Home was listed at $37,099 on these transfer tax documents. The only explanation which the Realtor gave for this transfer was that it would encourage the Son, though a non-resident of the Home, to assist her with the mortgage payments.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
218 B.R. 338, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 183, 1998 WL 81692, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gardner-v-tyson-in-re-gardner-paeb-1998.