In Re Casavalencia

389 B.R. 292, 21 Fla. L. Weekly Fed. B 735, 2008 Bankr. LEXIS 1729
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Florida.
DecidedJune 5, 2008
Docket19-10904
StatusPublished

This text of 389 B.R. 292 (In Re Casavalencia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Florida. primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Casavalencia, 389 B.R. 292, 21 Fla. L. Weekly Fed. B 735, 2008 Bankr. LEXIS 1729 (Fla. 2008).

Opinion

ORDER DISMISSING CHAPTER 13 CASE FILED IN BAD FAITH

JOHN KARL OLSON, Bankruptcy Judge.

Four creditors of the Debtor, Carlos Casavalencia, moved to dismiss this case as a bad faith chapter 13 filing, for relief from the automatic stay so that they may continue with prepetition litigation against the Debtor, and for the award of attorneys’ fees and costs. Because I am satisfied that the Debtor’s prepetition conduct toward these four creditors was willfully and egregiously fraudulent, I conclude that no *294 chapter 13 plan could possibly be filed by this Debtor which satisfies the good faith requirements of 11 U.S.C. § 1325(a)(3). I will therefore dismiss this chapter 13 case with prejudice. Because of that result, the creditors’ motion for stay relief will be denied as moot, although in any other circumstance I would grant it. Finally, I will award attorneys’ fees and costs to the creditors’ counsel.

The Debtor, Carlos Ramon Casavalen-cia, consistently held himself out to the four creditors as “Carlos Valencia” or “Carlos Casa Valencia.” After listening to the creditors’ testimony and the Debtor’s testimony and assessing the witnesses’ credibility, I am satisfied that the Debtor filed this bankruptcy petition in the name “Carlos Casavalencia” in an effort to mislead his creditors and the court.

Movant Angel Rivera is a full-time student pursuing an engineering degree who met the Debtor on a yachting trip out of the exclusive CocoPlum section of Coral Gables. The Debtor held himself out to Mr. Rivera as a real estate investor and, during the giddy real estate market of 2005-2006, promised Mr. Rivera that money invested through him in his business, Money Investments & Business, Inc., would return a 6-10% monthly return. 1 The methodology employed by the Debtor was to deliver checks to the creditors when they invested funds postdated one month later and payable in an amount ranging (depending on the specific agreement) 4% to 10% higher than the invested amount. When the postdated checks matured, the Debtor undertook to entice the creditor involved to roll the amount over in exchange for a new postdated check in an amount equal to the new principal plus future interest. Sometimes an investment return was paid at the time of the rollover; sometimes it was not.

Under this scheme, Mr. Rivera initially invested $15,000; his personal investment ultimately reached a principal balance of $90,000, with the largest portion of those funds coming from the refinancing of his homestead. Mr. Rivera and his family and friends invested an aggregate amount of $480,000 in the Debtor’s scheme.

When Mr. Rivera sought repayment of these funds, the Debtor falsely represented to him that he could not return them because of an ongoing FBI money laundering and tax evasion investigation. Some three months later, after repeated promises to pay back the investments, the Debt- or finally delivered a promissory note to Mr. Rivera. After making three payments of $6,000 each on the note, the Debtor defaulted.

Movant Dennis Reilly is a former New York City firefighter who was forced to retire on disability as a result of severe lung damage received during the aftermath of the September 11, 2001, terrorist attack on the World Trade Center. A physical education major who formerly taught special education students, Mr. Reilly met the Debtor (who held himself out to be “Carlos Valencia”) as a result of serving as personal trainer for four members of the Debtor’s family. Mr. Reilly, his wife, and the Debtor and various members of the Debtor’s family socialized together. After five or six months, Mr. Reilly was induced to invest in the Debtor’s scheme, promised a 4% monthly return on funds invested. In all, Mr. Reilly invested *295 a principal balance of $70,000, of which only some $8,000 was ever repaid despite repeated and elaborate promises of repayment. Mr. Reilly’s health has been severely effected by the fraud perpetrated on him by the Debtor.

Movant Karmen Adame now works as a bartender. She came to the United States from Mexico 22 years ago, and came to know the Debtor while working as a personal trainer at the same facility which employed Mr. Reilly. The Debtor eventually employed her on salary at his business called Handyman for Rent, in which the Debtor spent money acquiring equipment, etc., but never actually did any handyman work. The Debtor persuaded Ms. Adame that he owned various overseas businesses, including bail bond and property investment businesses. At about the time she began to work for the Debtor at Handyman for Rent, she invested $20,000 of her savings with him and was promised a 4% monthly investment return. She later refinanced her apartment and invested an additional $150,000. She eventually asked for all of her money back in October 2007; the Debtor asked for a month to pay her back “and then everything exploded.” Her total repayment from the Debtor was $4,000 of the original $20,000 and none of the subsequent $150,000.

Movant Giaconda Diaz, who now operates a cleaning and maintenance company, met the Debtor through Karmen Adame. The Debtor represented to her that he invested in foreclosed properties acquired from area banks and the FBI, and that his ability to flip the properties at a substantial profit enabled the 6% monthly investment returns he promised her. Ms. Diaz invested $20,000 in July 2007 and another $30,000 in August 2007; the total amount ever paid back to her was $1,400.

The Debtor himself testified extensively. He acknowledged that he had failed to list on his bankruptcy schedules a property he owned located at 10781 Cleary Boulevard in Plantation, Florida, on the ostensible (and not credible) basis that “the property is in foreclosure.” He had represented in acquiring that property in January 2006 that he was married to Maribel Echevar-ria, whom he acknowledged at trial he had married in 2004, and to whom he is still married, but listed himself in his bankruptcy petition as a single man. Curiously, he had held himself out to Mr. Rivera, Mr. Reilly, and Ms. Adame as married to Emma Valencia, the mother of his children, from whom he had long since been divorced.

The Debtor failed to list a 2007 BMW 7451i, purchased in May 2007, on his bankruptcy schedules. He testified at trial that it had been repossessed by BMW — but then acknowledged that he still had possession of the car as of the date of trial.

The Debtor acknowledged that he has failed to file tax returns for the calendar years 2005, 2006, and 2007.

The Debtor acknowledged at trial that funds received from Ms. Adame were used to buy trucks, construction equipment, tools and supplies for Handyman for Rent, but that he had “lost everything from it.” Although Ms. Adame testified that he had told her that he used investors’ money to buy foreclosure properties, he claimed at trial that he had merely been retained by several banks to repair such properties. When asked to identify the banks, he stated that “I don’t have it here.”

Finally, the Debtor acknowledged at trial that he was never licensed to sell securities by the State of Florida or by the Securities & Exchange Commission.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
389 B.R. 292, 21 Fla. L. Weekly Fed. B 735, 2008 Bankr. LEXIS 1729, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-casavalencia-flsb-2008.