Hendon v. Oody (In Re Oody)

249 B.R. 482, 2000 Bankr. LEXIS 637, 2000 WL 777860
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Tennessee
DecidedMay 1, 2000
DocketBankruptcy No. 99-33156, Adversary No. 00-3006
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 249 B.R. 482 (Hendon v. Oody (In Re Oody)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hendon v. Oody (In Re Oody), 249 B.R. 482, 2000 Bankr. LEXIS 637, 2000 WL 777860 (Tenn. 2000).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM ON DEFENDANT’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

RICHARD S. STAIR, Jr., Chief Judge.

On January 24, 2000, Chapter 7 Trustee William T. Hendon filed a Complaint Objecting to Discharge of the Debtor’s debts under 11 U.S.C.A. § 727(a)(4)(A) and (B) (West 1998). The Debtor filed a Motion for Summary Judgment on February 23, 2000, accompanied by the February 22, 2000 affidavits of the Debtor, Travis Hardy, and O.R. Phelps, and a Memorandum Brief of Sheila A. Oody in Support of Motion for Summary Judgment. The Trustee filed his Response to Motion for Summary Judgment Filed by Sheila A. Oody and a supporting Memorandum in Support of Response to Motion for Summary Judgment on March 28, 2000. To that response, the Trustee appended excerpts from the sworn testimony of Sheila A. Oody and O.R. Phelps given in Rule 2004 examinations on November 11, 1999, and January 17, 2000, respectively. The Trustee has also filed the affidavits of Sharon H. Reagan, Bonnie Wear, and Ross Millsaps, dated March 16, 2000, March 21, 2000, and March 23, 2000, respectively. He filed his own March 23, 2000 affidavit on March 24, 2000. The court heard oral argument of the Debtor’s motion on April 6, 2000.

This is a core proceeding. 28 U.S.C.A. § 167(b)(2)(J) (West 1993).

I

The Debtor filed her petition under Chapter 7 on August 2, 1999. She filed her statement of financial affairs and schedules on August 11, 1999. On Schedule D, the Debtor listed her father, O.R. Phelps, as a creditor holding a $50,000.00 claim secured by a third mortgage on her residence. In addition, the Debtor disclosed in her statement of financial affairs that she held a 1992 Kawasaki waverunner at her home which belongs to Travis Hardy-

The Trustee brought this adversary proceeding, alleging that the Debtor does not owe a $50,000.00 debt to her father and that she does have an ownership interest in the waverunner. He seeks the denial of the Debtor’s discharge under § 727(a)(4)(A) for her allegedly false statement that she does not own the waverun-ner and under § 727(a)(4)(B) for presenting the allegedly false claim of her father. The Debtor maintains that neither the statement nor the claim is false.

II

The Debtor asserts that she owes a debt to her father stemming from her purchase *484 of real property from him and the repayment of his financial assistance to her from 1994 through 1999. In her affidavit, the Debtor states that she and her children moved into her parents’ home when she separated from her husband in 1993; that she and her husband were divorced in 1994; that in 1994 she and her father estimated that she would need approximately $25,000.00 for living expenses in addition to her income; and that he agreed to loan that amount to her. In addition, the Debtor stated that her father agreed to sell her a lot located at 5142 Scenic Drive, Lenoir City, Tennessee, and that she and her two children have lived in a home on the property since June 1997. The Debtor also stated that in consideration for the loan and lot she executed a note in the amount of $50,000.00 payable to her father with a maturity date of December 2008. The note, which is appended to the Debtor’s affidavit, is dated December 15, 1994, provides for an interest rate of three percent, and does not require the Debtor to make any payments before the maturity date.

On October 15, 1994, the Debtor’s parents executed a Warranty Deed for the property for the Debtor, which was recorded in the Loudon County, Tennessee, Register’s Office two days later. The Warranty Deed is appended to the Affidavit of Sharon H. Reagan who prepared the deed as an employee of the Phelpses’ attorney. She stated in her affidavit that O.R. Phelps instructed her to state the value of the property as $10,000.00 in the affirmation of value that appears on the Warranty Deed. She also stated that the Phelpses sold the lot adjoining 5142 Scenic Drive to their son, that she prepared a Warranty Deed for the Phelpses to give to him, and that O.R. Phelps instructed her to state the value of the property as $11,000.00 in the affirmation of value that appears on that Warranty Deed.

In addition, the Trustee submits, through the Affidavit of Bonnie Wear, the Register of Deeds for Loudon County, Tennessee, a copy of O.R. Phelps’ receipt for his payment of the fees and taxes paid at the October 1994 registration of the Warranty Deed. The receipt indicates that the fees and taxes were figured based on the amount of $10,000.00, which appears on the receipt as the “[gjreater of [cjonsid-eration or [vjalue” of the land conveyance. In addition, the Trustee submits through the Affidavit of Bonnie Wear the slip from the deposit of the payment, which indicates that O.R. Phelps made the payment with a check.

More than three years later, on May 21, 1998, the Debtor secured the $50,000.00 note to her father by executing a Deed of Trust for the property which was registered in the Loudon County, Tennessee, Register’s Office that day. O.R. Phelps, in his testimony at the Rule 2004 examination, explained that because of the family relationship between himself and the Debt- or he had not been concerned about obtaining a deed of trust immediately after the sale. He testified that he had the Debt- or execute and register the Deed of Trust in 1998 when a creditor, Troyse Ward, began demanding payment from her. 1

In her affidavit, the Debtor also states that she has transferred deeds of trust covering the property to Volunteer Federal Savings & Loan, O.R. Phelps, and Bank-First. In her schedules, she lists Volunteer Federal Savings & Loan as the first mortgagee, BankFirst as the second, and O.R. Phelps as the third. Appended to the Trustee’s response, together with excerpts of the Debtor’s testimony from the 2004 examination, is a Volunteer Federal Savings & Loan Uniform Residential Loan Application signed by the Debtor on July 7, 1998. 2 She testified that she signed the *485 application in order to convert her home construction loan to a permanent mortgage and that she provided Volunteer Federal Savings & Loan with the information necessary to complete the application. She did not include her father on that application as a creditor when asked to list her creditors.

In addition, through the affidavit of BankFirst Vice President Ross Millsaps, the Trustee submits a copy of another Uniform Residential Loan Application signed by the Debtor on March 18,1999, in order to obtain a loan from BankFirst. Although the Debtor’s note payable to O.R. Phelps was still outstanding and O.R. Phelps’ Deed of Trust had been registered by the date of that application, the Debtor did not list her father as a creditor on the application. The Debtor explains in her affidavit that BankFirst asked her about the Deed of Trust after discovering it and that O.R. Phelps agreed to subordinate his Deed of Trust to that of BankFirst when it agreed to loan $6,000.00 to the Debtor in April 1999.

O.R. Phelps, in his affidavit, repeats much of what the Debtor states. In addition, he states that before he transferred the property to the Debtor he was told by someone in the real estate business that the value of the property was not less than $25,000.00; 3

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
249 B.R. 482, 2000 Bankr. LEXIS 637, 2000 WL 777860, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hendon-v-oody-in-re-oody-tneb-2000.