In Re Brooks

305 B.R. 827, 2004 Bankr. LEXIS 196, 2004 WL 369855
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedFebruary 24, 2004
Docket19-50440
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 305 B.R. 827 (In Re Brooks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Brooks, 305 B.R. 827, 2004 Bankr. LEXIS 196, 2004 WL 369855 (Ohio 2004).

Opinion

ORDER DENYING MOTION FOR RECONSIDERATION OF THE ORDER DENYING MOTION FOR RELIEF

MARILYN SHEA-STONUM, Bankruptcy Judge.

On December 29, 2003, the Movant, Ford Credit Titling Trust, through its counsel Javitch, Block and Rathbone (“Javitch”) filed a Motion for Relief from Stay (the “Motion for Relief’) which was deficient because the attached exhibit that was identified as the Lease Agreement for an item in which the estate had an interest, a 2001 Ford Explorer, was unsigned. *828 On Motions for Relief from Stay, the Fed. R. Bankr.P. and the local rules are intended to, inter alia, assist movants in setting forth prima facie cases establishing their secured positions. An unsigned Lease Agreement is insufficient to assert that position and Movant did not make its pri-ma facie case.

On January 23, 2004, in accordance with Administrative Order 03-07 (discussed below) the Court held a preliminary hearing on the Motion for Relief (the “Hearing”). At the Hearing, the Court denied the Motion for Relief and the Order was entered that day. The Order specifically identified the deficiency. On February 3, 2004, the Movant filed what it labeled a Motion to Vacate Order and for Reconsideration of the Order Denying Motion for Relief (the “Motion for Reconsideration”) and attached the documents identified by the Court in its Order purporting to cure the deficiency.

To understand why the Court denied the Motion for Relief and is denying the Motion for Reconsideration, a review of the history of the processing of deficient motions for relief from stay in this Court location for a period of the 8 years from 1996 to 2004 is useful. In 1996 this Court, after specifically identifying the deficiency on the record, began denying motions for relief from stay that were deficient, without prejudice to the motion being re-set on the hearing calendar after it was corrected. This practice became onerous for the Clerk’s office and the Court, sua sponte, developed a written “Notice of Deficiency.” A copy of the last used form of that Notice is attached as Exhibit A to this Order. In 2001 the Court began issuing Notices of Deficiency as promptly as possible after the filing of such motion, detailing in writing the defect or defects that needed to be corrected by movant’s counsel before the motion could be granted. The Notice of Deficiency was designed to remind counsel who had occasional lapses of what documents and information were necessary for the Court to receive and examine in order to grant an unopposed motion for relief from stay. The Notice of Deficiency tracks Local Rule 4001-1 “Automatic Stay-Relief From,” last revised in this District on May 2, 2001. 1 These educational efforts have not resulted in increased levels of compliance with the filing requirements by several firms engaged in volume repre *829 sentation of secured creditors. Indeed, efforts by the Court to encourage counsel’s compliance appear to have caused practitioners to rely more on the Court’s work than their own. 2

In 2001 the Court issued 235 First Notices of Deficiency and 20 Second Notices of Deficiency. In 2002 the Court issued 312 First Notices of Deficiency and 43 Second Notices of Deficiency. In 2003 the Court issued 734 First Notices of Deficiency and 84 Second Notices of Deficiency. In May 2003 I announced at the White-Williams Seminar, the annual bankruptcy seminar co-sponsored by the Akron Bar Association and the Stark County Bar Association which draws more than 200 practitioners, that rather than continuing to issue an increasingly large number of Notices of Deficiency, I was considering denying motions for relief from stay that were deficient in situations where movant’s counsel had been the recipient of a significant number of Notices. In August 2003 the Court began to track the deficient motions for relief from stay by counsel’s name and/or law firm. Between August 1, 2003 and December 31, 2003, the Javiteh law firm filed, in this court location alone, over 25 motions for relief from stay which were deficient. The Court notes that since 2001 Javiteh has consistently had one of the highest percentages of Deficiency Notices re: motions for relief from stay at this Court location. 3

On November 24, 2003, the Court entered Administrative Order 03-07 entitled “Change in Protocol for Internal Processing of Motions for Relief from Stay/Abandonment,” alerting counsel to the fact that Notices of Deficiency would no longer be issued and stating that if:

substantive non-compliance in a Relief/Abandonment Motion has been found and if such motion was filed by an individual attorney or law firm that has continually failed to follow filing requirements, a notation will be made on the docket that the preliminary hearing on the Relief/Abandonment Motion will be held as scheduled. The Relief/Abandonment will then be denied by Court order which will be entered after the preliminary hearing ... has been held.

AO 03-07 at 1, ¶ 2. The Administrative Order further stated that as of December 1, 2003 a deficient Motion for Relief would be denied “without prejudice to the moving party being able to file a new Relief/Abandonment Motion with the payment of another filing fee.” Id.

In its AO 03-07 the Court further stated:

that at least 26% of all Relief/Abandonment Motions filed in the Akron Bankruptcy Court location from January 2, 2003 through April 14, 2003 were deficient and [2] that the percentage of defi- *830 dent ReliefiAbandonment Motions filed after April 15, 2003 has not decreased.

AO 03-07 at 3. In addition, the Court noted that the need to issue such a large number of Notices of Deficiency has “taxed the Court’s limited resource of personnel.” Id. Administrative Order 03-07 is available on the Court’s web site: www. ohnb. uscourts. gov.

Lawyers filing motions for relief from stay in this court location have had guidance from the Court on how to get it right for more than 8 years: 5 years of the Court identifying on the record the specific deficiency or deficiencies in their motions and permitting them to refile without paying another filing fee; 3 years of written Notices of Deficiency being sent to counsel, again specifically identifying the deficiency or deficiencies; and 6 months of warning that an Administrative Order would be entered providing for the final denial of motions for relief from stay that were deficient. The Administrative Order was entered pursuant to the Court’s ability, and indeed necessity, 4 to control its docket and to have lawyers filing at this Court location comply with Fed. R. Bankr.P. 9011 and Local Bankruptcy Rules 4001-1, 9013-1, 9013-2 and 9013-3.

Pursuant to the protocol adopted in AO 03-07, deficient motions for relief from stay are scheduled for preliminary hearing on Wednesdays at 9:35 a.m. or Thursdays at 3:05 p.m., depending on whether the case is a chapter 7 or a chapter 13.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
305 B.R. 827, 2004 Bankr. LEXIS 196, 2004 WL 369855, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-brooks-ohnb-2004.