In Re Beharry

264 B.R. 398, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 908, 2001 WL 845324
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 18, 2001
Docket19-20442
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 264 B.R. 398 (In Re Beharry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.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 Beharry, 264 B.R. 398, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 908, 2001 WL 845324 (Pa. 2001).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

BERNARD MARKOVITZ, Bankruptcy Judge.

Before the court is a Rule To Show Cause pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 707(b) to dismiss debtor’s chapter 7 case as a substantial abuse of the provisions of chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code. Debtor originally filed this case under chapter 13 and thereafter requested that it be converted to a chapter 7 proceeding.

Debtor vigorously denies that granting him a discharge would result in such a substantial abuse. In support of his position, debtor filed amended schedules of his present monthly income and expenditures, which purportedly show that he lacks sufficient surplus monthly income with which to repay his creditors a significant portion of what they are owed. These schedules are at variance with the schedules he filed at Bankruptcy No. 97-21965BM, which case was dismissed as a substantial abuse of the bankruptcy system. At trial, he again orally amended his budget so as to guarantee that his spending exceeded his net income.

*400 We conclude for reasons set forth below that substantial abuse of the provisions of chapter 7 would result if debtor were granted a discharge and therefore will dismiss his case in accordance with § 707(b).

— FACTS —

This is not the first time we have visited this matter with respect to debtor Howard Beharry. Debtor and his then-wife, from whom he is now divorced, had filed a voluntary chapter 7 petition in March of 1997 at Bankruptcy No. 97-21965-BM. Upon motion by the United States trustee, we issued an order on November 5, 1997, directing debtors to request conversion of their case to a chapter 13 proceeding within twenty days and to submit a good faith chapter 13 plan that proposed making a substantial distribution to their unsecured creditors. Their case was to be dismissed if debtors failed to do so within twenty days. Debtors did not appeal the order. The case ultimately was dismissed when debtors failed to comply with the order.

We concluded in the memorandum opinion accompanying the order of November 5, 1997, that granting debtors a discharge would result in a substantial abuse of the provisions of chapter 7 because debtors were not truly in need of such relief. Their bankruptcy schedules, we concluded, did not accurately indicate debtors’ monthly net income and expenses because they had grossly understated the former and had grossly overstated the latter. After reviewing the totality of their circumstances, we concluded that debtors had available at least $1,600 in surplus monthly income, perhaps considerably more, which they could utilize to make substantial payment to their pre-petition general unsecured creditors.

Debtor has been a special education teacher for twenty-seven years. His present annual gross income is $60,000. Although debtor works only approximately 180 days per year, he avers he has no outside income.

On March 30, 1999, debtor filed a voluntary chapter 13 petition. The schedules accompanying the petition, which debtor had signed under penalty of perjury, listed assets with a total declared value of approximately $76,000 and liabilities approximating $207,000. His general unsecured debt approximated $140,000, some $40,000 more than was listed in the previous bankruptcy case. The remainder of the debt listed on the schedules was secured.

On Schedule I, Current Income, debtor indicated that he elected to take his annual salary over twelve months rather than nine or ten and, as a result, his monthly gross income was $4,996; that his total payroll deductions amounted to $2,117.47; and that his monthly net pay was $2,878.53. Included among his payroll deductions were payroll taxes and Social Security in the amount of $1,568.62; insurance in the amount of $226.80; union dues in the amount of $59.90; and an unspecified entry for “other” in the amount of $262.25. On Schedule J, Current Expenditures, debtor listed monthly .expenses totaling $2,333. Suffice it to say that compared to other budgets of debtors in bankruptcy, this debtor’s lifestyle is not spartan.

A comparison of debtor’s purported monthly net income ($2,878.53) as indicated on Schedule I and his purported monthly expenditures ($2,333) as listed on Schedule J indicated surplus monthly income in the amount of $545.53 ($2,878.53 - $2,333 = $545.53).

Debtor’s chapter 13 plan, which was confirmed on July 29, 1999, proposed, among other things, a 26.54% distribution to pre-petition general unsecured creditors over a 60-month period. Payments were made to *401 debtor’s pre-petition creditors for a period of time in accordance with the provisions of the confirmed plan.

Debtor married for a second time on January 1, 2001. The marriage unfortunately was of short duration, however, as debtor initiated a divorce proceeding against his second wife in March of 2001. They are now separated, with each living in a residence owned by that individual prior to their marriage. Even though they are separated and there is no court order compelling him to do so, debtor avers that he provides support for her and her child from a previous marriage. He provided no written proof of said payments at trial.

Debtor brought a motion on March 6, 2001, to convert his chapter 13 case to a chapter 7 proceeding. An order converting the case and transferring it to this member of the court issued on March 18, 2001. A chapter 7 trustee was appointed the next day.

On May 3, 2001, we issued a rule upon debtor to show cause why this case should not be dismissed as an abuse of the bankruptcy process pursuant to § 707(b) of the Code. An evidentiary hearing on the court’s motion was conducted on May 31, 2001.

After the evidentiary hearing concluded, debtor filed an amended Schedule I and an amended Schedule J.

Amended Schedule I indicated monthly gross income in the amount of $5,000; payroll deductions in the amount of $1,629; and a monthly net income in the amount of $3,371. The only payroll deductions were for taxes and Social Security in the amount of $1,629. No payroll deductions were listed for insurance, union dues, or “other”, as appeared on the original Schedule I.

Amended Schedule J listed monthly expenditures totaling $3,329, a mere $42 less than debtor’s net monthly income listed on amended Schedule I. According to the amended schedule, debtor’s electricity and heating fuel cost had increased three-fold; his food bill had doubled; and his transportation costs, excluding car payments, had more than doubled. Certain expenses not appearing on the original Schedule J also were listed on amended Schedule J. For instance, debtor listed an expenditure in the amount of $250 for “support of additional dependents not at home” and $100 for unspecified “miscellaneous” expenditures.

According to amended Schedule I and amended Schedule J, the difference between debtor’s monthly net income ($3,371) and his monthly expenditures ($3229) is only $42, nearly’ $500 less per month than was indicated on the original schedules. From this debtor obviously would have us conclude that he lacks the resources to pay his pre-petition creditors through a chapter 13 plan once he pays his current monthly living expenses.

— DISCUSSION —

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
264 B.R. 398, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 908, 2001 WL 845324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-beharry-pawb-2001.