In Re Arena

81 B.R. 851, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 63, 16 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 1303, 1988 WL 4825
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 25, 1988
Docket15-18108
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 81 B.R. 851 (In Re Arena) 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
In Re Arena, 81 B.R. 851, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 63, 16 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 1303, 1988 WL 4825 (Pa. 1988).

Opinion

OPINION

DAVID A. SCHOLL, Bankruptcy Judge.

The motion before the court in the instant case requires us to examine once again the meaning and application of 11 U.S.C. § 109(g), a subject which we previously addressed in In re Samuel, 77 B.R. 520 (Bankr.E.D.Pa.1987). We hold that, in order to prevail in a motion based upon 11 U.S.C. § 109(g)(1), the moving party bears the burden of showing that the debtor either (1) willfully failed to abide by an order of the court or (2) willfully failed to appear before the court in proper prosecution of the case. Although we believe that the conduct of the Debtor in issue here, the failure to appear at a meeting scheduled pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 341, certainly is within the scope of § 109(g)(1), it appears to fall within the first category of conduct described in that section noted above, not the second category, contrary to what both we and the parties assumed at the hearing. *853 We also hold that the Debtor’s subsequent failure to appear at a dismissal hearing based on the failure to appear at the § 341 meeting, also in issue here, does not constitute a “voluntary dismissal” within the scope of § 109(g)(2), but may constitute a failure to appear before the court, per the second category of § 109(g)(1) conduct. However, because we believe that, in this context, the requisite element of willfulness is proven only by a finding of the court that the debtor has done an act deliberately, we believe that same may be established only by (1) an admission of intentional conduct by the debtor; (2) a conclusion that denials of intentional conduct by the debtor lack credibility; or (3) our drawing adverse inferences from all of the circumstances attendant to the filing, including the debtor’s failure to prosecute the present case and determination of whether the debtor engaged in conduct manifesting an abuse of bankruptcy process in making repetitious filings.

Here, although the muddled record makes the matter closer than it should have been, we find the Debtor’s testimony denying intentional conduct credible and we perceive an active intention to prosecute this case and no attendant circumstances manifesting an abuse of bankruptcy process. Crediting the Debtor’s explanation that he failed to attend the § 341 hearing in his prior case because he innocently forgot about it and that he failed to attend the dismissal hearing because the notice of the hearing was misdirected by his wife, we find that the requisite willfulness is lacking and we therefore proceed to deny the motion before us.

The Debtor filed the instant Chapter 13 bankruptcy case on October 22, 1987. The Motion in issue, seeking dismissal per § 109(g) or relief from the automatic stay per 11 U.S.C. § 362, was filed by the Debt- or’s mortgagee, THE KISSELL COMPANY (hereinafter referred to as “the Mov-ant”), on November 17, 1987. After the Debtor answered on November 25, 1987, the matter was heard on December 22, 1987. We accorded the parties until January 13, 1988, to simultaneously file Briefs supporting their respective positions.

The only witness at the hearing was the Debtor, called as of cross-examination by the Movant. It was established that the Debtor had remitted all post-petition payments to both the Movant and the Trustee. However, confusion concerning this element had been created in the payments to the Trustee because counsel for the Debt- or, apparently considering it too much trouble to proceed properly, had failed to terminate the wage order in the Debtor’s previous bankruptcy, at Bankr. No. 87-01578S, and hence wages withheld to date were appearing on the Trustee’s Report of Receipts and Disbursements in the previous case rather than in the instant case. Apparently satisfied that payments were being made, the Movant did not address this issue in its Briefs and we therefore assume that it is appropriately no longer vigorously pressing for relief under § 362(a) at this juncture.

The Movant averred, and the Debtor admitted, that he had made two prior filings, one on May 1, 1985, which was dismissed on account of the Debtor’s failure to make payments to the Trustee, on December 4, 1986; and the other on April 2, 1987, at Bankr. No. 87-01578S, dismissed on July 14, 1987, because of the Debtor’s failure to attend the § 341 meeting scheduled on June 1, 1987. It was admitted that all three filings had been made shortly before sheriff’s sales scheduled by the Movant to execute upon mortgage foreclosure judgments obtained by it.

The most substantive aspect of the Answer was a recitation, at 1111, that the Debtor’s failure to attend the § 341 hearing in Bankr. No. 87-01578S was not willful but was because the Debtor “had been in a car accident on the date scheduled for the 341 meeting and had failed to appear in court to explain his absence because of a mixup in the dates.” Answer to Motion to Dismiss of Kissel] Co. to Dismiss [sic] or for Relief from Automatic Stay, 1111.

Whatever “mixup” is attributed to any vehicular accident in which the Debtor was allegedly involved, it pales in comparison to the mixup between these allegations of the *854 Answer and the testimony of the Debtor at the hearing. The Debtor testified that he-had only been in one such accident, which he adamantly maintained was in the month of December, 1987. Hence, the Debtor himself negated any possibility that he had failed to attend a § 341 meeting as long ago as June 1, 1987, for such a reason. His explanation as to actually why he did not attend the § 341 meeting, to the extent that he recalled at all, was that he “probably” was at work as a truck driver on the date of the hearing and forgot about it. When asked why he failed to attend the subsequent dismissal hearing on July 14, 1987, the Debtor testified that he had been separated from his wife and living with his mother between May, 1987, and late October, 1987. During this period, his wife, remaining in the marital home after he went to live with his mother, discarded much of his mail and did not tell him about it. The Debtor surmised that the notice of the dismissal hearing thus failed to come to his attention.

We found the Debtor’s testimony, although totally divorced from the written Answer, entirely credible. Certainly, he was not guilty of conforming his testimony to that anticipated by his counsel in questioning him.

The statute upon which the relevant portion of the motion is based, 11 U.S.C. § 109(g), reads as follows:

(g) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, no individual or family farmer may be a debtor under this title who has been a debtor in a case pending under this title at any time in the preceding 180 days if—
(1) the case was dismissed by the court for willful failure of the debtor to abide by orders of the court, or to appear before the court in proper prosecution of the case; or

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
81 B.R. 851, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 63, 16 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 1303, 1988 WL 4825, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-arena-paeb-1988.