In Re Boston Business MacHines

87 B.R. 867, 19 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 435, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 1132, 1988 WL 78295
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 27, 1988
Docket19-10106
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 87 B.R. 867 (In Re Boston Business MacHines) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.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 Boston Business MacHines, 87 B.R. 867, 19 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 435, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 1132, 1988 WL 78295 (Pa. 1988).

Opinion

OPINION

DAVID A. SCHOLL, Bankruptcy Judge.

The sequence of unfortunate events described herein which have transpired between the Chapter 11 Debtor and its landlord requires us to impose substantial damages upon the landlord for evicting the Debtor without first obtaining relief from the automatic stay, but to decline the Debt- or’s attempt to very belatedly assume the lease in issue. However, as we indicated to the parties previously, we will give the landlord an opportunity to avoid the adverse consequences of its violation of the stay if it agrees to allow the Debtor to belatedly assume the lease. Further, should the landlord eschew this resolution, we will require it to pay the damages awarded to the Debtor before obtaining relief from the automatic stay, thereby allowing the Debtor to have sufficient funds as well as time to relocate.

The matters presently before us are a Motion of the Debtor (1) to hold his landlord, Rudolph Realty (hereinafter referred *869 to as “Rudolph”) in contempt for violating the automatic stay, and (2) to assume its lease with Rudolph nunc pro tunc; and Rudolph’s counter-Motion seeking to annul the automatic stay. Both motions were heard by us at a consolidated hearing on July 13, 1988. Testimony was adduced from Jonathan S. Rudolph, the principal of Rudolph, and Boston Cain, the principal of the Debtor. Our factual findings, presented in narrative form as we are considering motions, see In re Campfire Shop, Inc., 71 B.R. 521, 524-25 (Bankr.E.D.Pa.1987), are derived from the evidence presented at this hearing.

The Debtor filed its Chapter 11 bankruptcy case on May 8, 1987. The parties’ relationship had commenced prior thereto in December, 1981, when the Debtor began operating its typewriter sales and repair business from the premises in issue, 7 West Oakland Avenue, Doylestown, Bucks County, Pennsylvania, as a sub-tenant of the previous owner of the business. In March, 1982, the Debtor began renting the premises in its own right under an oral lease with Rudolph, at a monthly rental of $250. The rent was increased to $287.50 monthly on January 1, 1987. The parties apparently had an amicable relationship up to this point.

Thereafter, the Debtor fell in arrears in the rent. There was apparently a further attempt to increase the rent, probably on January 1, 1988, which the Debtor resisted.

Counsel for the Debtor in this proceeding, Royland F. Cain, Esquire, maintains a New Jersey office and is the brother of Boston Cain. After filing the petition and schedules, the said Debtor’s counsel took no action whatsoever in this case, including preparation of monthly operating statements or the filing of a plan or disclosure statement, until prompted to do so by an Order of this court on November 30, 1987, threatening to dismiss this case if this course of inaction continued. In response, several false starts in filing the plan and disclosure statements followed, despite a series of explanations from the Clerk’s Office. Eventually, facsimiles of the requisite documents were filed. After reviewing these filings at a hearing on the propriety of the disclosure statement on June 8, 1988, we allowed the Debtor until July 12, 1988, to file an amended plan and disclosure statement and rescheduled the hearing to consider the disclosure statement for August 9, 1988.

Given the unfamiliarity with bankruptcy law and practice exhibited by the Debtor’s counsel throughout these proceedings, it should come as no surprise to learn that Boston Cain was completely unaware that his bankruptcy filing held any impact on his relationship with Rudolph. He therefore filed no motion to assume his lease with Rudolph.

More importantly, he never informed Rudolph of the pendency of the bankruptcy as their relationship deteriorated and Rudolph’s actions against him escalated. On February 20, 1988, Rudolph forwarded an “official notice to vacate” the premises within sixty (60) days to the Debtor. There is a dispute as to whether any rent was paid after that notice was sent, but it is agreed that no rent was paid for any months after March, 1988.

When the Debtor failed to vacate the premises in April, 1988, as the notice directed, a landlord-tenant proceeding seeking unpaid rent and possession of the premises was filed by Rudolph in District Justice of the Peace Court 07-2-02. A hearing was scheduled on May 2, 1988, before District Justice Oliver A. Groman of that court. At that hearing, Boston Cain, for the first time, informed District Justice Groman and Rudolph’s representative, Harriet Rudolph, the wife of Jonathan S. Rudolph, that he had filed a bankruptcy case.

It is unclear what transpired thereafter. In its motion, the Debtor alleges that another District Justice presided at District Court 07-2-02 thereafter due to the illness of District Justice Groman. Somehow a writ of possession was issued from that court in June, 1988, causing the Debtor to be locked out of the premises on June 20, 1988. There is no dispute that this eviction occurred. Boston Cain testified that, as the Debtor’s own property and that of some of its customers remained on the *870 premises and he was barred from entry, he was unable to conduct the business. As a result, he testified that the Debtor was deprived of its normal profits, which were claimed to net $18,000 to $22,000 per year.

On July 5, 1988, the Debtor filed the instant motion, combining a request for relief on account of Rudolph’s violation of the automatic stay with an attempt to assume the Debtor’s lease with Rudolph nunc pro tunc. Rudolph countered with a motion, filed July 11, 1988, to annul the automatic stay in light of the Debtor’s delay in informing it of the bankruptcy filing and due to its failure to “affirm,” i.e., assume, the lease within the 60-day period after the filing of the case, as required by 11 U.S.C. § 365(d)(4). Apparently, Rudolph read the final clause of that Bankruptcy Code section, requiring a debtor-in-possession to “immediately surrender such nonresidential real property to the lessor” if a lease to the property is not assumed within the 60-day period after the bankruptcy filing, as justification for proceeding with the action to dispossess the Debtor without first obtaining relief from the automatic stay even after Rudolph became aware of the bankruptcy filing.

At the close of the hearing on July 13, 1988, we entered an oral Order, reduced to writing on July 14, 1988, directing that Rudolph allow the Debtor to re-enter and peaceably possess the premises no later than 9:00 A.M. on July 14, 1988, pending further Order of this court. We indicated therein that this court would rule on the remaining motions on or before July 27, 1988. Also, we further stated that “[w]e will condition any relief granted to the Debtor upon Rudolph’s refusal to allow the Debtor to assume the lease of the premises if all lease payments are made, and we urge the parties to consider some resolution along these lines.” Unfortunately, as of July 22, 1988, we were, advised that the parties had made no progress in attaining the result that we suggested, requiring our preparation of this Opinion and Order ruling on these motions.

We first address Rudolph’s efforts to extricate itself from the impact of the automatic stay. As we rather clearly held on analogous facts in

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Bluebook (online)
87 B.R. 867, 19 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 435, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 1132, 1988 WL 78295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-boston-business-machines-paeb-1988.