HP Bennett, LLC

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, District of Columbia
DecidedDecember 22, 2023
Docket22-00106
StatusUnknown

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Bluebook
HP Bennett, LLC, (D.C. 2023).

Opinion

order below is hereby signed. SO December 22 2023 “| ve □ □ aay x TOE □□ ee) ee = ge LE ee coe er =. Elizabeth | . Ku 1 (US. Bankruptey Judge

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA In re: Case No. 22-00106-ELG HP Bennett, LLC, Chapter 7 Debtor.

In re: Case No. 21-00249-ELG Baltimore Harlem Park Investment, LLC, Chapter 11 Debtor.

MEMORANDUM OPINION The Court has before it two motions for relief from stay (each individually a “Motion for Relief,” together, the “Motions for Relief’) filed by Hutchinson Holdings, LLC (“Hutchinson”) regarding 906 Bennett Place, Baltimore, MD 21223 (the “Property”). Am. Mot. for Relief from Stay, Jn re HP Bennett, LLC, Case No. 22-00106-ELG (Bankr. D.D.C. July 11, 2022), ECF No. 53; Mot. for Relief from Stay, /n re Baltimore Harlem Park Invs., LLC, Case No. 21-00249-ELG (Bankr. D.D.C. June 26, 2023), ECF No. 89. Hutchinson is the assignee of a tax certificate from the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore (the “Tax Certificate”) dated May 13, 2019 for unpaid property taxes owed by HP Bennett, LLC (the “Debtor,” and together with Baltimore Harlem Park Investment, LLC, the “Debtors”) for the Property. Hutchinson seeks relief from the automatic stay in each of the above-captioned cases to exercise and enforce its state law rights against the Property

to collect on the Tax Certificate. Hutchinson has not filed a proof of claim in either of the cases. The Debtors timely objected to each of the Motions for Relief. On October 18, 2023, the Court held a hearing (the “Hearing”) on the Motions for Relief and the Motion to Determine Value of Property of Hutchinson Holdings (the “Motion to Determine

Value”). Mot. to Determine Value of Property of Hutchinson Holdings, In re HP Bennett, LLC, Case No. 22-00106-ELG (Bankr. D.D.C. July 18, 2023), ECF No. 56. At the conclusion of the Hearing the Court issued an oral ruling denying the Motions for Relief. This Memorandum Opinion memorializes that ruling, to the extent there is any inconsistency, this Memorandum shall control. I. Background This matter involves the chapter 7 case of HP Bennett, LLC (“HP Bennett”) and the jointly administered, post-confirmation chapter 11 cases of Baltimore Harlem Park Investment, LLC (“BHPI”) and Ruby Jude City LLC (“Ruby Jude”). The three debtors are interrelated—BHPI is the sole member of Ruby Jude, which was the petitioning creditor of HP Bennett’s case. At issue

is the Tax Certificate in the amount of $26,254.88 on the Property. As stated on its face, under Maryland law, the Tax Certificate would be void unless a proceeding to foreclose the right of redemption was filed within two (2) years of the date of the certificate. On April 16, 2021, Hutchinson timely filed a Petition to Foreclose Rights of Redemption (the “Foreclosure Action”) against Ruby Jude in the Circuit Court of Baltimore City, case number 24-C-21-0001630, against multiple defendants including HP Bennett (the title owner) and Ruby Jude (the holder of the secured debt). BHPI and Ruby Jude filed voluntary petitions for relief in this Court on October 17, 2021, effectively staying the Foreclosure Action. An involuntary petition was filed by Ruby Jude against HP Bennett on June 23, 2022, and the Order for Relief (the “Order for Relief”) was entered on July 20, 2022. Order For Relief in an Invol. Case, In re HP Bennett, LLC, Case No. 22-00106-ELG (Bankr. D.D.C. July 20, 2022), ECF No. 6. Hutchinson was listed as a creditor in HP Bennett’s case. On July 11, 2022, Hutchinson filed the Motion for Relief in Ruby Jude’s case as to the

Property, seeking to exercise its right to foreclose its lien on the Property owned by HP Bennett. ECF No. 87.1 Despite the pending motion for relief in Ruby Jude’s case that was continued multiple times after its filing in July 2022, it was not until June 26, 2023, that Hutchinson filed a Motion for Relief from stay as to the Property in HP Bennett’s case. ECF No. 53. The Motions for Relief each raise the same question—whether Hutchinson should be granted relief from the automatic stay in each case to proceed with the Foreclosure Action against the Property. Relatedly is Ruby Jude’s Motion to Determine Value, which alleges Hutchinson no longer has a valid secured claim against the Property. Hutchinson’s secured claim to an interest in the Property is based upon the Tax Certificate and the Foreclosure Action. While the Foreclosure Action was timely filed, on July 19, 2022 (the

day prior to the entry of the order for relief in HP Bennett’s case), the Foreclosure Action was dismissed by order (the “Dismissal Order”) entered by the City of Baltimore Circuit Court (the “State Court”). On November 4, 2022, almost a year after the petition date for Ruby Jude and four months after the entry of the Order for Relief against HP Bennett, Hutchinson filed a motion in the State Court seeking to reopen and defer dismissal of the Foreclosure Action “nunc pro tunc” (the “Motion to Reopen”). The chapter 7 trustee of Debtor HP Bennett, LLC filed an opposition to the Motion to Reopen to which Hutchinson responded. On April 5, 2023, the State Court issued an order vacating the Dismissal Order, reinstating the Foreclosure Action, and deferring the dismissal

1 The Motion for Relief was redocketed later that day as “Amended” to correct certain technical deficiencies. The substantive portion of the motion was not modified. “nunc pro tunc” due to suggestion of bankruptcy (the “Order Vacating Dismissal”). At the Hearing, the Court heard the testimony of the CEO of Hutchinson and admitted all proposed exhibits as follows: a docket report from the Foreclosure Action; a copy of the Tax Certificate; a Suggestion of Bankruptcy dated October 21, 2021 in the Foreclosure Action without

any docketing information; and a letter from Hutchinson’s counsel Andrew W. Gray setting forth a summary of amounts due on the Property dated August 4, 2023 (the “Exhibits”). Neither party introduced any other pleadings from the Foreclosure Action into evidence. Despite this, during closing, counsel for Hutchinson attempted to read into the record language from the Dismissal Order and the Order Vacating Dismissal. As such documents were not properly introduced into evidence, the Court cannot rely upon the language in consideration of the Motions for Relief.2 All parties acknowledge that Hutchinson’s original complaint on the Foreclosure Action was timely filed, and the Dismissal Order dismissed the case. The question is whether the Order Vacating Dismissal, and thus reinstating the Foreclosure Action, which in turn retained Hutchinson’s interest in the Property, is a valid order. If the Order Vacating Dismissal is valid,

then Hutchinson retains a secured claim in the Property as set out in the Foreclosure Action. However, if the postpetition Motion to Reopen was a violation of the automatic stay, then anything resulting therefrom would be void. For the reasons stated herein, the Court finds that the Motion to Reopen violated the automatic stay, thus the Order Vacating Dismissal is void ab initio, and therefore the dismissal of the Foreclosure Action remains the last, controlling order. As a result,

2 See 2 Bankr. Litig. § 8:33, Westlaw (database update Oct. 2023) (“[t]he universe of evidence that a court will consider when deciding an issue will center upon that which is introduced by the parties. . . . A party should ensure that substantial evidence is set forth in its papers or presented at the trial or hearing to ensure that the judge will be satisfied. The failure to do so may result in an adverse ruling . . . While some bankruptcy judges allow a degree of informality in hearings, all the rulings must be supported by competent evidence. . . . Assertions by counsel are not probative evidence. Legal arguments made to the court are not judicial admissions.

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