In re Birchall

381 B.R. 13, 2008 Bankr. LEXIS 163, 2008 WL 189567
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedJanuary 22, 2008
DocketNo. 07-17294-WCH
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 381 B.R. 13 (In re Birchall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Birchall, 381 B.R. 13, 2008 Bankr. LEXIS 163, 2008 WL 189567 (Mass. 2008).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION ON MOTION BY SUZANNE D’AMOUR FOR AN ORDER OF ABSTENTION AND DISMISSAL PURSUANT TO 11 U.S.C. § 305 AND MOTION OF DEBTOR TO ORDER JUDGMENT CREDITOR TO FORTHWITH TAKE ALL STEPS NECESSARY TO SECURE THE IMMEDIATE RELEASE OF THE DEBTOR FROM INCARCERATION

WILLIAM C. HILLMAN, Bankruptcy Judge.

I. INTRODUCTION

The matters before the Court are the Motion by Creditor, Suzanne D’Amour, [15]*15For An Order Of Abstention And Dismissal Pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 305, Debtor’s Motion Brought On An Expedited Basis To Order Judgment Creditor To Forthwith Take All Steps Necessary To Secure The Immediate Release Of Debtor From Incarceration, and Suzanne D’Amour’s Opposition To And Motion To Strike Debtor’s Motion. By these motions Suzanne D’Amour (the “Creditor”) seeks in this second Chapter 7 case of Richard Birchall (the “Debtor”) another order granting abstention.1 Given that the facts and circumstances of the dispute between the Debtor and the Creditor are largely the same in this case as they were in Birchall I, as more fully detailed in my findings of fact and conclusions of law set forth below, I will enter an order granting the Creditor’s request for abstention.

II. BACKGROUND

In Birchall I, the Hon. Joan N. Feeney issued a Memorandum, see In re Birchall, Case No. 07-13232-WCH, 2007 WL 1992089 (Bankr.D.Mass. July 3, 2007) (the “Decision”), in which she explains the background of the dispute between the Debtor and the Creditor. By way of a brief summary, the Creditor obtained a judgment against the Debtor in the amount of $2,854,542.74 in July, 2005.2 In December, 2006, the Creditor brought a supplementary process proceeding against the Debtor in state court. Four months later, the state court conducted an eviden-tiary hearing to determine the Debtor’s ability to pay the judgment. It concluded that the Debtor was able to pay, and after he did not, the state court ordered the Debtor incarcerated. Shortly thereafter, the Debtor filed Birchall I.

The next day, the Creditor filed her Emergency Motion for Determination That Automatic Stay Does Not Apply To Debtor’s Current Incarceration. The Debtor then filed Debtor’s Motion Brought On An Expedited Basis To Order Judgment Creditor to Forthwith Take All Steps necessary To Secure The Immediate Release Of Debtor From Incarceration. In the Decision and corresponding order, Judge Feeney denied the Creditor’s motion and granted the Debtor’s motion, albeit with certain conditions related to his release from jail. Judge Feeney cautioned that the Debtor’s suspicious telephone calls warranted a further investigation and that if the Debtor transferred any property postpetition or failed to comply with his duties as a Debtor his discharge would be denied or his case dismissed.

Thereafter, the Debtor moved to amend the Decision and order to remove the conditions related to his release and the Creditor filed an objection. At the hearing on the motion and objection, I also considered a communication I had received from the state court judge which I indicated involved the state police and certain offshore accounts. Additionally, I reviewed an affidavit of counsel to the Creditor in which she represented that she had significant evidence to demonstrate that the Debtor had made several transfers of money postpetition and had recruited colleagues to assist in hiding his assets, all in violation of the Bankruptcy Code, the Decision and the corresponding order. Based upon the motion, objection, correspondence and affidavit, I found that although I continued to be concerned about whether the Debtor’s incarceration for civil [16]*16contempt violated the automatic stay, in the end it was in the best interest of all parties to have this matter decided in state court. As such, I entered an order dismissing the case under 11 U.S.C. § 305. The Debtor never filed his Schedules and Statement of Financial Affairs in Birchall I as I dismissed the case prior to the filing deadline. The Debtor did not seek reconsideration of or appeal from that determination.

On November 13, 2007, the Debtor filed the present case. He again filed a motion for an order requiring the Creditor to secure the Debtor’s release from jail (the “Stay Motion”). The Debtor explains that since the dismissal of Birchall I, the Creditor has received 1.58 million dollars as a result of the Debtor disclosing the existence of an account which contained funds the Debtor managed for other clients. The Debtor argues that he should be released in order to obtain the benefits of the automatic stay to which he is entitled.

In response to the Stay Motion, the Creditor filed a pleading opposing the Stay Motion and moving for an order striking the Motion on the grounds that there is no basis, statutory or otherwise, for me to order the Creditor to obtain the release of the Debtor from jail. With respect to the partial payment she received between the end of Birchall I and the start of this case, the Creditor contends that it was only through her hard work that the money was discovered. The Creditor explains that she is making progress in the state court case and if the Debtor were released at this time, it would destroy any hope she has of obtaining any further recovery.

The Creditor also filed a motion for an order of abstention and dismissal on the grounds that by his Motion, the Debtor simply is seeking reconsideration of my order granting abstention in Birchall I (“Abstention Motion”). She asserts that the litigation between the parties should remain in state court as it is only because of the Debtor’s incarceration that she has made so much progress in discovering assets of the Debtor. She describes that she has obtained various records and recordings of telephone conversations of the Debtor while incarcerated and it was only through that monitoring that she was able to discover the existence of the bank account which proceeds she has applied to her claim. Specifically, in the affidavit of her counsel attached to the Abstention Motion, counsel explains that one of the items that has helped them in their search was a letter which the Debtor wrote on the day I dismissed Birchall I. Exhibit 1 of her affidavit is a letter in which the Debtor instructed an acquaintance to destroy certain files and a calendar located in his briefcases and to hide his wallet. He specifically asked that the files be destroyed before the briefcases could be handed over to his counsel.3

At the hearing on the Stay Motion on December 5, 2007, the Debtor argued that much has changed since Birchall I. The Debtor explained that he satisfied more than half of his obligation to the Creditor when she liquidated a bank account after he voluntarily disclosed its existence. He also suggested that those funds were the property of other clients and that those clients would soon bring an action against the Creditor to recover the funds. He asserted that his incarceration has not [17]*17aided the Creditor because despite his voluntary disclosures and the vigorous investigations of various law enforcement agencies, no other assets have been discovered.

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Bluebook (online)
381 B.R. 13, 2008 Bankr. LEXIS 163, 2008 WL 189567, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-birchall-mab-2008.