In Re Adamic

291 B.R. 175, 2003 WL 1740571
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Colorado
DecidedMarch 26, 2003
Docket19-10811
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 291 B.R. 175 (In Re Adamic) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Adamic, 291 B.R. 175, 2003 WL 1740571 (Colo. 2003).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER REGARDING MOTION FOR ENTRY OF ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE WHY SANCTIONS SHOULD NOT ENTER

SIDNEY B. BROOKS, Chief Judge.

THIS MATTER is before the Court after a hearing on February 19, 2003, concerning the Debtor’s Motion for Entry of Order to Show Cause Why Sanctions Should Not Enter Pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 362(h).

The Debtor, Bruce Adamic, requests that the Court enter an order to show cause, directed to the Colorado Department of Labor and Employment, Division of Employment and Training (“Department”), requiring it to demonstrate why sanctions should not be imposed for its alleged violation of the automatic stay in collecting pre-petition unemployment com *178 pensation overpayments. The Department filed a written response to the Debt- or’s motion, but did not appear at the hearing. 1 The Court took the matter under advisement and the following constitutes the Court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law. Fed. R. Bankr.P. 9014(c); Fed.R.Civ.P. 52(a). 2

I. Background

For a period of weeks in the fall of 1993, the Debtor collected state unemployment benefits under the Colorado Employment Security Act. See Colo.Rev.Stat. §§ 8-70-101 to 8-82-105; 7 Colo.Code Regs. 1101-2. The following year, the Department audited the Debtor’s claims and determined that he had worked at a company called Sygma Network in Westminster, Colorado while receiving unemployment compensation. The Debtor never disclosed to the Department that he had obtained another job while he was receiving payments for unemployment.

After its initial audit, the Department sent a letter to the Debtor requesting more information and the Debtor conceded in a written response that he had worked temporarily while receiving unemployment payments. (Department’s Response Ex. A through C)

In November, 1994, the Department issued a formal “Determination of Overpayment of Benefits,” in which it calculated that the Debtor had received $2,370.00 in overpayments. (Department’s Response Ex. E) The Department concluded that the Debtor had received those payments “by reason of false representation or willful failure to disclose a material fact,” and it assessed a fifty percent monetary penalty in the amount of $1,185.00 in accordance with Colo.Rev.Stat. § 8-81-101(4)(a)(II). 3 The Department also imposed a non-monetary penalty of forty weeks under the statute. 4 The penalties were effective under the Department’s formal determination on November 14,1994.

The Debtor did not appeal the Department’s determination as to the amount of the overpayment or the penalties assessed. Colo.Rev.Stat. § 8-74-106 (governing time limits and procedures for appeal). The monetary obligation remained unsatisfied *179 when the Debtor filed for Chapter 13 relief five years later.

The Debtor filed a voluntary Chapter 13 petition on December 27, 1999. 5 In Schedule F, he listed the debt to the Department in the amount of $3,555.00 as an unsecured, non-priority claim. In Schedule I, the Debtor disclosed that was employed in Fort Collins, Colorado as a regional manager at “DalTile,” with $4,900.00 of gross monthly income. See generally 11 U.S.C. §§ 101(30); 109(e). 6

The Department filed a proof of claim on January 31, 2000, asserting a $3,094.32 unsecured claim for “overpayment of unemployment insurance benefits due to fraud/misrepresentation.” The Debtor’s Third Amended Chapter 13 Plan, which proposed no special treatment for the Department’s general unsecured claim, was confirmed without objections on October 24, 2000, and it requires plan payments of $632.00 each month for a period of fifty-four months. 7

The Debtor lost his job in August, 2002, and again applied to the Department for unemployment benefits. The Department issued a “Monetary Determination of Unemployment Insurance Benefits” on August 29, 2002, indicating that the Debtor was eligible to receive weekly unemployment benefits of $398.00 for twenty-six weeks (or total benefits of $10,348.00). (Debtor’s Motion Ex. A) The Department also sent a form “Overpayment Reminder” indicating that the remaining balance of the 1993 overpayments owed by the Debt- or was $2,972.50. 8 (Docket Entry No. 92, filed Nov. 4, 2002, Ex. 1) The “reminder” also indicated that, although the debt for the overpayments was “pending bankruptcy,” all of the Debtor’s weekly unemployment benefits “will be used to pay off the [1993] overpayment” because he had “caused the overpayment by willfully giving false information or consciously holding back information.” {Id.)

According to a handwritten notation on the “reminder,” the forty-week penalty assessed under Colo.Rev.Stat. § 8-81-101(4)(a)(II) is “not dischargeable by [sic] bankruptcy.” (Docket Entry No. 92, filed Nov. 4, 2002, Ex. 1) A subsequent letter from the Department to the Debtor in October, 2002, confirmed that, in its opinion, the Debtor is required to “serve” the penalty weeks. (Debtor’s Motion Ex. B)

In November, 2002, the Debtor filed a pro se letter with the Court, complaining that the Department was “not following the rules,” by penalizing him and withholding his current unemployment benefits to recover the 1993 overpayments. The Debtor retained counsel (after a letter from the Court’s staff advised that it could not accept his ex parte communication), and on January 24, 2003, the Debtor filed the present Motion for Entry of Order to Show Cause Why Sanctions Should Not Enter Pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 362(h).

In his motion, the Debtor claims that the Department is bound by the terms of the confirmed Chapter 13 plan, and that its efforts to collect the 1993 overpayments by withholding his current unemployment *180 benefits and exacting the forty penalty weeks is a “clear violation” of the automatic stay. See 11 U.S.C. § 362(a)(6) (precluding “any act to collect, assess or recover a claim against the debtor that arose before the commencement of the case”).

The Department filed a responsive pleading on January 24, 2003, arguing that the automatic stay does not preclude it from recouping the 1993 overpayments or from denying the Debtor’s claim for current unemployment benefits.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
291 B.R. 175, 2003 WL 1740571, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-adamic-cob-2003.