In re: ALLANA BARONI

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJuly 13, 2021
DocketCC-20-1278-LGT; CC-20-1279-LGT
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re: ALLANA BARONI (In re: ALLANA BARONI) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re: ALLANA BARONI, (bap9 2021).

Opinion

FILED JUL 13 2021 NOT FOR PUBLICATION SUSAN M. SPRAUL, CLERK U.S. BKCY. APP. PANEL OF THE NINTH CIRCUIT

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY APPELLATE PANEL OF THE NINTH CIRCUIT

In re: BAP No. CC-20-1278-LGT ALLANA BARONI, BAP No. CC-20-1279-LGT Debtor. (Related Appeals)

ALLANA BARONI, Bk. No. 1:12-bk-10986-MB Appellant, v. MEMORANDUM∗ DAVID SEROR, Chapter 7 Trustee, Appellee.

Appeal from the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Central District of California Martin R. Barash, Bankruptcy Judge, Presiding

Before: LAFFERTY, GAN, and TAYLOR, Bankruptcy Judges.

INTRODUCTION

After debtor Alanna Baroni failed to fulfill her obligations under her

confirmed chapter 11 1 plan, the bankruptcy court converted the case to

chapter 7. The chapter 7 trustee (“Trustee”) filed a motion for turnover,

which Debtor opposed, arguing that her property revested in her upon

∗ This disposition is not appropriate for publication. Although it may be cited for

whatever persuasive value it may have, see Fed. R. App. P. 32.1, it has no precedential value, see 9th Cir. BAP Rule 8024-1. 1 Unless specified otherwise, all chapter and section references are to the

Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. §§ 101–1532, and all “Rule” references are to the Federal 1 confirmation, and conversion did not revest the property in the estate. The

bankruptcy court disagreed and granted the motion, and the United States

District Court for the Central District of California (“District Court”)

affirmed. Debtor appealed to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals and

obtained a stay pending appeal of the turnover order from the District

Court, which also stayed the sale order that is the subject of one of the

instant appeals. The Ninth Circuit appeal remains pending.

In the meantime, Trustee negotiated a settlement with certain

creditors. Among other things, the settlement calls for the sale of Debtor’s

two rental properties; Trustee separately moved for approval of the sale of

one of those properties. The bankruptcy court approved both the

settlement and the sale over Debtor’s objection that the relevant assets were

not property of the estate. Among other things, the bankruptcy court found

that Debtor lacked standing to object. Debtor appeals both orders.

Because the issue on which Debtor’s standing arguments are based

could yet be decided in her favor, we review the merits of these appeals

and AFFIRM.

FACTS

A. Pre-Conversion Events

Debtor filed a chapter 13 bankruptcy case in February 2012. Shortly

thereafter, the bankruptcy court granted her motion to convert to chapter

11. On the petition date, Debtor owned four real properties: a residence in

Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure. 2 Calabasas, California, and three rental properties located in Henderson,

Nevada, Camarillo, California, and Carmel, California, respectively.

The bankruptcy court confirmed Debtor’s second amended plan of

reorganization on April 15, 2013. Under the confirmed plan, Debtor was to

keep her real properties, pay allowed secured claims in full, and pay a total

of $50,000 to unsecured creditors. The plan provided that the claims

secured by her rental properties would be stripped down to the value of

each property and those claims bifurcated into secured and unsecured

portions or, in the case of the junior lien on the Henderson property,

avoided altogether.

In addition, Debtor disputed most of the claims secured by her real

property. Shortly before the plan was confirmed, Debtor filed adversary

proceedings challenging the secured claims of four creditors: Nationstar

Mortgage, LLC (“Nationstar”) (Carmel property); Green Tree Servicing,

LLC (junior lien on Henderson property); Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., as

Trustee for Structured Adjustable Rate Mortgage Loan Trust Mortgage

Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2005-17 (“Wells Fargo”) (senior lien on

Henderson property); and The Bank of New York Mellon fka The Bank of

New York, as Successor Trustee to JP Morgan Chase Bank, N.A., as Trustee

for the Holders of SAMI II Trust 2006-AR6, Mortgage Pass-Through

Certificates, Series 2006-AR6 (“BONYM”) (Camarillo property). Under the

plan, Debtor was to segregate payments owed to the holders of disputed

secured claims into a reserve account and then pay those claims if they

3 were allowed. She has not prevailed in any of those adversary proceedings,

some of which were still pending when the case was converted to chapter

7.

During the pendency of the plan, Debtor sold the Henderson rental

property; Wells Fargo was paid the amount of its payoff demand through

escrow, and Debtor retained the net proceeds. Additionally, the

bankruptcy court entered judgment in favor of BONYM in the adversary

proceeding, effectively allowing BONYM’s $1.4 million claim. That

judgment was affirmed on appeal.2

B. Post-Conversion Events

The case was converted to chapter 7 on April 29, 2019, on motion of

BONYM, based on Debtor’s default under the terms of the confirmed plan:

Debtor had failed to pay anything on BONYM’s secured claim despite

having lost her challenges to that claim. 3

After conversion, Debtor turned over to the estate $533,307.62, which

she asserted represented the payments reserved over the course of the

chapter 11 case for payment of the disputed claims of Nationstar and

BONYM (the “Disputed Funds”).

In July 2019, despite having been paid the amount of its payoff

demand from the sale of the Henderson property, Wells Fargo filed an

2 The judgment was affirmed by the District Court and the Ninth Circuit; the Supreme Court denied Debtor’s petition for a writ of certiorari. 3 The conversion order was affirmed by the District Court in January 2021 and is

currently on appeal at the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. 4 amended proof of claim for an unsecured claim of $839,944.84 ($647,065.93

of principal plus costs and attorneys’ fees). The Rule 3001(c)(2)(A)

statement attached to the amended proof of claim indicated that the claim

was subject to revision, stating that the secured portion of the principal

balance had been paid, but the creditor was still reviewing the legal effect

of conversion.

1. The Turnover Order

After conversion, Debtor failed to comply fully with Trustee’s

requests for information made at the initial § 341(a) meeting of creditors,

and she failed to respond to Trustee’s repeated demands for turnover of

estate assets. As a result, about two months after conversion, Trustee filed a

motion for turnover of property of the estate, including the Carmel and

Camarillo properties and associated rents and the proceeds from the sale of

the Henderson property. Debtor opposed the motion, taking the position

that the assets sought by Trustee were not property of the estate because

they had revested in Debtor upon confirmation of her chapter 11 plan and

that conversion did not restore the assets to the estate. The bankruptcy

court rejected this argument and granted Trustee’s motion, ordering

Debtor to turn over the Carmel, Camarillo, and Calabasas properties and

$315,078.12 from the sale of the Henderson property (“Turnover Order”).4

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