In Re Bagby

218 B.R. 878, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 416, 1998 WL 149436
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Tennessee
DecidedMarch 26, 1998
Docket19-21306
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 218 B.R. 878 (In Re Bagby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Bagby, 218 B.R. 878, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 416, 1998 WL 149436 (Tenn. 1998).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

JENNIE D. LATTA, Bankruptcy Judge.

In each of these cases, the Debtor used a deferred presentment service provider 1 to obtain a cash advance in exchange for á personal check after filing a Chapter 13 bankruptcy petition. In each of these eases, the Debtor and Creditor submitted for entry a proposed consent order creating a special class for treatment of the claim of the deferred presentment service provider. The Court was unable to determine from the information provided in the proposed consent orders whether approval of the proposed settlement was appropriate and thus set the matters for hearing. Because these eases raise common issues of law, joint hearings were held on these matters on January 21, 29, and February 13,1998.

FACTS

A. Annie Smith Bagby

Annie Smith Bagby filed a'voluntary petition under Chapter 13 of the Bankruptcy Code on September 27, 1996. Her Chapter 13 plan was confirmed by order entered December 20, 1996. Among the provisions of her plan, Ms. Bagby agreed to pay $128.00 semi-monthly by payroll deduction. Two secured claims and two priority claims were provided for. The Debtor originally listed eleven unsecured creditors holding claims in the aggregate amount of approximately $3,400.00. The percentage to be paid to these unsecured creditors was to be determined by the Chapter 13 Trustee upon the expiration of the bar date for filing proofs of claim. The percentage was later set at 50%. As the result of an addition of an inadvertently omitted pre-petition creditor, the Debtor’s plan payments were subsequently increased to $146.00 semi-monthly.

On September 29, 1997, the Debtor’s attorney filed a “Motion to Add Post-Petition Creditors,” alleging that the Debtor had become indebted to Cash Advance, Quick Cash, EZ Cash, Cash It Plus, and Cash Incorporate and desired to add these claimants 2 to her plan to receive 100% of their claim amounts. Notice of the Debtor’s motion was mailed to the claimants to be added and all pre-petition creditors. No objections were filed and the Court entered an “Order and Notice of Debtor’s Amendment to Add Post-Petition Creditors to Chapter 13 Plan and of Creditor’s Options to File a Proof of Claim and to Receive Payments Under the Plan,” with respect to Cash Advance, Quick Cash, *882 Cash It Plus and Cash Incorporate. EZ Cash was not included in that order. The order specifically provided that disbursements to allowed pre-petition creditors would not be reduced in the absence of notice to all pre-petition creditors and of their opportunity to object to the reduction of their disbursements.

With respect to the claim of EZ Cash, counsel for the Debtor and Claimant submitted a proposed “Agreed Order on Motion of Debtor to Add Post-Petition Creditor to Plan.” That order proposed that the claim of EZ Cash 1, LLC would be added to the plan as a Class I unsecured claim in the amount of $298.00, which included an attorney fee of $50.00, to be paid at the rate of $10.00 per month through the plan with interest at 10% per annum until completion of payment.

At the hearings, the Court heard the testimony of Ms. Bagby, the Debtor; Charlotte Cross, a manager for EZ Cash; Harold Sanders, who actually interviewed Ms. Bagby at her initial visit to EZ Cash; and Melinda Thompson, part owner of EZ Cash. The Debtor was represented by Sidney Feuer-stein, attorney. EZ Cash was represented by William M. Gotten, attorney. Mr. George W. Stevenson, one of the Standing Chapter 13 trustees for this district, also appeared and gave a statement to the Court.

Ms. Bagby testified that she has been employed by the State of Tennessee, Department of Corrections, for fourteen years. She explained that she originally entered into a transaction with EZ Cash because she needed money for rent or utilities. In the first transaction, which occurred June 19, 1997, Ms. Bagby completed a Customer Data Sheet and supplied a copy of her driver’s license, recent check stub, recent utility or telephone bill, and most recent bank statement. There was a dispute in the testimony of Ms. Bagby and the representatives of EZ Cash as to whether Ms. Bagby was questioned about whether she was “under a wage earner,” i.e., whether she was a debtor in a Chapter 13 case. Ms. Bagby insisted that the question was never asked, while Mr. Sanders, who interviewed Ms. Bagby, insisted that his normal procedure was to inquire about Chapter 13.

Ms. Bagby was approved as a customer. She apparently signed a document titled “EZ Cash Payroll Advance Customer Agreement Contract” (although the only agreement produced by EZ Cash was dated August 29, 1997, well after this initial transaction), wrote a check for $124.00 payable to EZ Cash dated June 19, 1997, and received a cheek from EZ Cash in the amount of $100.00. Ms. Bagby understood that EZ Cash would hold her check for fourteen days. In this first instance, Ms. Bagby redeemed her check by paying cash in the amount of $120.00 on June 27, 1997. She received a four dollar “discount” for early payment.

Ms. Bagby’s next transaction with EZ Cash occurred on July 2,1997. Because her first transaction had been handled satisfactorily, she was considered a “good customer” according to Mr. Sanders, and most of the background questions asked on her first visit were omitted. This time, Ms. Bagby wrote a cheek for $248.00 and received an advance from EZ Cash in the amount of $200.00. Her contract was “due” on July 16, 1997. This time, however, Ms. Bagby was not able to pay the entire $248.00 she owed, so she was permitted an “extension” upon payment of the $48.00 fee only. This process apparently occurred four times, with Ms. Bagby not receiving additional funds, but paying a $48.00 fee every two weeks to extend her contract. On at least one of these occasions, Ms. Bagby was asked to replace her original check. The check which is the subject of the EZ Cash claim is dated August 1, 1997.

Ms. Bagby testified that she eventually realized that she was “hooked,” with $48.00 coming out of her “bill money” every two weeks. She stated that she decided to put EZ Cash in the plan because she wanted EZ Cash to be paid. Ms. Bagby stated that she did not consider the service provided by EZ Cash to be a loan and thus did not seek Mr. Feuerstein’s advice about whether it was necessary to obtain the Chapter 13 Trustee’s approval before entering into these transactions. She stated that she thought the $48.00 fee was kind of steep but that she was willing to pay it because she needed the money.

*883 B. James L. Hughes, Jr.

Mr. Hughes’s story is similar to Ms. Bag-by’s. Mr. Hughes filed a voluntary Chapter 13 petition on March 10, 1997. Mr. Hughes listed one priority creditor and five unsecured creditors owed in the aggregate $4,330.00. Mr. Hughes proposed to pay $30.00 semi-monthly to fund his plan. The plan was confirmed by order entered May 6, 1997. The percentage to be paid to these unsecured creditors was to be determined by the Chapter 13 Trustee upon the expiration of the bar date for filing proofs of claim. It does not appear from the Court’s file what percentage has been set, if any.

Cash in a Flash, a deferred presentment service provider, filed an objection to confirmation of Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
218 B.R. 878, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 416, 1998 WL 149436, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-bagby-tnwb-1998.