In Re Bogan

281 F. Supp. 242, 1968 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8499
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 28, 1968
DocketBK-67-1811
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 281 F. Supp. 242 (In Re Bogan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District 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 Bogan, 281 F. Supp. 242, 1968 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8499 (W.D. Tenn. 1968).

Opinion

OPINION

ROBERT M. McRAE, Jr., District Judge.

This is a petition to review the actions of the Referee in Bankruptcy in a Chapter XIII, Wage Earner Plan Proceeding. The review was sought by Memphis Loan & Thrift Company, Inc., hereinafter called Loan Company. The primary issue. concerns whether or not an unsecured note which was the basis of the claim of the Loan Company is usurious under the law of Tennessee.

On June 1, 1967, the debtor, O. C. Bogan, filed a Wage Earner’s Petition in the Bankruptcy Court. A meeting of creditors and adjournments thereof were held to consider the Plan. The Loan Company first unsuccessfully undertook to become a secured creditor. On June 27 or June 28, 1967, the Loan Company indicated that it was an unsecured creditor and filed a claim rejecting the proposed plan. On June 28, 1967, the Referee entered an order requiring the Loan Company to appear on July 7 and produce specific information concerning possible usurious features of the claim. On July 7, 1967, the Loan Company was granted additional time to comply with the Referee’s order of June 28, 1967, and the Referee questioned the attorney for the Loan Company concerning possible usu *244 rious features of the claim and others filed by the Loan Company in other cases. On July 19, 1967, the Referee filed a Memorandum Opinion and Order requiring the Loan Company to present to the Court on July 21, 1967, the date of the last scheduled adjourned meeting of creditors, certain documents and evidence to prove the claim it had filed under the Wage Earner Plan. The Memorandum Opinion and Order was 25 pages in length and set forth in detail the reasoning and conclusion of the Referee pertaining to the law of usury as applicable to the Loan Company which operated under the Industrial Loan and Thrift Act of the State of Tennessee. The opinion dealt with the claim in the instant case and specific claims of a similar nature in other Wage Ear per cases wherein this loan company had filed claims in pending Wage Earner Plans in the Bankruptcy Court. The Memorandum Opinion and Order also ordered the attorney for the Loan Company to file affidavits at a later date, pertaining to possible usurious features as set forth in the opinion of the Referee in all claims filed by the Loan Company since June 1,1966. It was estimated that this involved approximately 225 cases.

On July 21, 1967, the Adjourned Meeting of Creditors was had and an amended order approving the plan was entered on that date. The order indicated that the proposed plan was approved and that the Loan Company “had agreed” to file a claim and would receive $17.00 in monthly payments as an unsecured creditor. Subsequent thereto, on July 24, 1967, the Loan Company filed an amended claim accepting the plan but it did not comply with the Referee’s orders of June 28, 1967 and July 19, 1967.

■ There was attached to the amended claim a printed form of promissory note signed by the debtor in the amount of $612.00, payable in eighteen monthly installments of $34.00 each, including the final installment. The note dated March 10, 1967, hereinafter will be referred to as the “claim note”. It was signed as the fifth in a series of notes made by the debtor in favor of the Loan Company which series began January 8,1966, when the debtor executed a note for $150.00. The successive notes dated April 30,1966, August 5, 1966, December 1, 1966 and the claim note, dated March 10, 1967, all constituted a new loan made before the preceding loan had been repaid and included the amount necessary to pay the balance of the preceding loan.

The claim note, on its face, bears a computation which reads as follows:

Date 3/10/67 Statement
Amount of Note $612.00
Interest ...................... 55.08
Loan Fee..................... 24.48
Ins: L 18.36 A&H 45.90 ....... 64.26
Ins. Prop. 18.36............... 18.36
Unpaid bal. former loan........ 450.00
Total disbursed (subtract)...... ......... $612.18
Cash received by borrower minus .........Minus .18
Ref. Ins. L 12.47 A&H 24.71 .... ......... 37.18
Ref. Ins. Prop. 12.47........... ......... 12.47
Refund - Interest.............. ......... 9.54
Cash to Cust. 59.01

*245 The items which were the basis of a refund had been charged in the prior note dated December 1, 1966, three months and ten days before the claim note. The charges on that prior note which formed the basis of the refund on the claim note are as follows:

CHARGE REFUND
Life, Ace’t. & Health Ins. 56.70 37.18
Property Insurance 16.70 12.47
Interest 48.60 9.54

The claim was filed on a printed form that provides spaces for the insertion of the names of the debtor and creditor, the number of the cause, and the amount of the claim. The claim was signed “Memphis Loan & Thrift, by Charles A. Walt.” Charles A. Walt was not an officer in the company as required by Gen. Order 21, 11 U.S.C. following § 53. The claim does not contain any specific information concerning usury. It merely recites, “Memphis Loan & Thrift, 25 S. Second Street, Memphis, Shelby County, Tennessee, being duly sworn, deposes and says:

«* * * * * *
7. That the claim is free from usury.”

After the petition to review was filed, there was also filed in the cause an affidavit made by the Vice President of the Loan Company which recited that the claim, in the amount of $581.40, based on a promissory note executed by O. C. Bogan, is free from usury as defined by the laws of the State of Tennessee.

In its petition for review, the Loan Company prayed that the Memorandum Opinion of the Referee be reviewed and held for naught; that the Court adjudge that the Referee issue no further orders in regard to the claim of the Loan Company in the instant case or to its claims in other causes in which the plans had been confirmed by the Referee. The petition further prayed that if the Court be of the opinion that it should decide whether or not the claim in the instant case was usurious, that petitioner be allowed to introduce additional proof in many categories.

At the hearing on the petition to review, this Court ruled that under the facts of the case, including irregularities in the signing of the claim, the Referee had the power to make further inquiry into the question of usury even though an amended order had been entered conditionally approving the plan. The order approving the amended plan was entered before the claim of the Loan Company was filed and the Court so finds. The Court further ruled that the Memorandum Opinion and Order of the Referee entered in this cause could not and did not affect other pending causes in the Bankruptcy Court. Wherefore, petitioner was sustained to that' extent.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
281 F. Supp. 242, 1968 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8499, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-bogan-tnwd-1968.