In Re Bezoza

271 B.R. 46, 2002 Bankr. LEXIS 5, 38 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 231, 2002 WL 5570
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJanuary 3, 2002
Docket19-10359
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 271 B.R. 46 (In Re Bezoza) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Bezoza, 271 B.R. 46, 2002 Bankr. LEXIS 5, 38 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 231, 2002 WL 5570 (N.Y. 2002).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION AND ORDER DENYING MOTION TO ENFORCE THE AUTOMATIC STAY

STUART M. BERNSTEIN, Chief Judge.

The debtor is presently in jail, pursuant to an order of contempt, based on his failure to pay spousal and child support. After filing this chapter 11 petition, he *48 made a motion seeking various forms of relief, all posited on the premise that his continuing confinement violated the automatic stay. I denied his application from the bench, and this memorandum amplifies my decision.

BACKGROUND 1

The debtor, Howard M. Bezoza, is a medical doctor. He was formerly married to Linda Blau Bezoza (“Linda”), and the couple have three daughters who range in age from approximately nine to seventeen years. (See Decision 9.) The debtor and Linda entered into a Property Settlement Agreement (“PSA”) on September 2, 1998. (Id. at 76.) They were divorced by judgment of the Superior Court of the State of New Jersey on November 9, 1999, and the PSA was incorporated in the divorce judgment. (Id.) The judgment required the debtor to pay weekly spousal support in the sum of $923.08, and the identical amount in weekly child support. In addition, the PSA required the debtor to pay “add-on” expenses. (Id.) The New Jersey divorce judgment also included a money judgment in the amount of $563,435.00 against the debtor based upon unpaid support, “add-on” and other expenses. 2 (Id. at 76-77.)

Linda subsequently registered the New Jersey support order in New York, and commenced proceedings to enforce it. The Hearing Examiner conducted several days of evidentiary hearings, and heard the testimony of the debtor, Linda and the debtor’s father, Nathan. The evidence disclosed that the debtor had little money in his own name. Nevertheless, he managed to maintain an extravagant life style using corporate credit cards, funds liberally provided by corporate affiliates and his father, and trust funds taken from his daughters custodial bank accounts. The debtor operated through a professional corporation, or PC. (See id. at 56-57.) According to his PC’s 1996 tax return, 3 the practice generated over $2 million in fees. (Decision at 80.) In addition, the few business bank statements he produced covering the relevant period showed “high five-figure deposits.” (Id.)

The debtor also operated several other medical entities. He owned and apparently practiced medicine through the 57th Street Vitamin Dispensary. In September 1998, he sold the inventory for $133,000.00 and the practice for $1,533,000.00 to Vitality Centers, Inc. 4 (Id. at 19-21.) He and his professional corporation continued as employees of Vitality, (id. at 20), he received salary of $20,000.00 per month for a time, (id. at 31), but after Vitality paid only $200,000.00 against the purchase price, it terminated the deal in March 1999. (Id. at 21.)

A company called PDI was then incorporated, apparently to continue the business formerly operated by the debtor and sold to Vitality. The debtor testified that he *49 was not a shareholder 5 , (id. at 34), but PDI paid the debtor’s PC weekly rent of $1,000.00. (Id. at 28.) The debtor could write checks of up to $2,500.00 on the PDI bank account to pay PDI business expenses, but he also cut PDI checks when his practice needed money, (id. at 34-35), he used the PDI corporate Optima card to buy inventory, (id.), and used the PDI corporate credit card to pay personal expenses as well. (Id. at 28.) 6 In addition, the debtor controlled the PDI Membership Account, (id. at 56), which contained the fees from some sort of pre-paid medical plan. (Id. at 66.) The program had no more than nine members, and the funds were drained by November 1999. (Id.)

The debtor also received substantial sums from his father, amounts he characterized as loans. (Id. at 59-60.) Nathan paid his legal bills, provided $50,000.00 in December 1999 to bring his office rent up to date, gave him $15,000.00 during the summer of 1999 to rent a house with Ms. Ash, and paid $10,000.00 to obtain his release from jail. In addition, his father deposited an unspecified amount in the debtor’s business account in February 1999. (Id. at 32.) The debtor claimed he owed his father $130,000.00. (Id. at 60.)

According to his testimony, he repaid his father, and then some, through the sale of his interest in a family real estate partnership, White Street Associates (“WSA”). In January 2000, he transferred his interest for $430,000.00, but received no proceeds. Instead, Nathan received all of the proceeds. In exchange, he canceled the debtor’s $130,000.00 loan, and delivered a $300,000.00 note, payable in quarterly installments of $25,000.00. 7 (Id. at 60, 69.) Nathan paid the first $25,000.00 installment in May 2000, and the debtor endorsed the payment to Karen Ash. (Id. at 44.) 8 He received only one other quarterly payment, and the loan appears to be in default. (Id. at 63.)

Aside from his father and the corporate affiliates, the debtor took liberally from his minor daughters. In January 1999, he raided his daughter Michelle’s custodial account and appropriated over $103,000.00 for himself. (Id. at 52.) In March 1999, he emptied $14,200.00 from his daughter Tori’s custodial account. (Id. at 32, 52.) He eventually closed his personal account in October 1999 because he ran out of money, but was unable to explain where he had invested his daughters’ trust money. (Id. at 52.)

*50 At the conclusion of the hearing, the Hearing Examiner concluded that the debtor was able to pay his support obligations but wilfully failed to do so. (Id. at 1.) He described the debtor as a “pampered physician” who used corporate credit cards to travel with his girlfriend to the Bahamas (at a cost of $5,000.00) at a time when he was claiming poverty because he was caring for his terminally ill mother and was unable to work. (Id. at 79.) The Hearing Examiner discounted the debtor’s “claims of poverty,” observing that the debtor “has lead a lifestyle which apparently is designed to fulfill his whims no matter who else must suffer, be it his landlord, the taxpayers of the United States and the State of New York or even his ex-wife and children.” (Id. at 79-80.)

Aside from the debtor’s trial testimony, which the Hearing Examiner called “unreliable,” the debtor failed to offer any evidence regarding his own financial condition.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
271 B.R. 46, 2002 Bankr. LEXIS 5, 38 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 231, 2002 WL 5570, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-bezoza-nysb-2002.