In Re Coleman

288 B.R. 608, 2002 WL 31941486
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Georgia
DecidedSeptember 24, 2002
Docket13-41945
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 288 B.R. 608 (In Re Coleman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Coleman, 288 B.R. 608, 2002 WL 31941486 (Ga. 2002).

Opinion

ORDER DISMISSING CASE

LAMAR W. DAVIS, Jr., Bankruptcy Judge.

Confirmation of the above matter was scheduled for July 25, 2002, in Savannah. Virtually all of the secured creditors in the case filed Objections to Confirmation of Debtor’s Plan, and the balloting revealed that all the secured creditors voted negatively. The unsecured class, however, voted to accept the plan. At the call of the case, Debtor’s counsel requested a sixty (60) day continuance in order to file a modified plan. At that time, the Court informed Debtor’s counsel and other parties present that it would withhold a ruling on the Motion to Continue for at least 30 days in order to consider any post-hearing briefs or other submissions. The Court also advised Debtor’s counsel that he should operate under the assumption that an Amended Disclosure Statement and Plan needed to be filed with the Court within a 30 day period.

FINDINGS OF FACT

At the time Debtor filed her case, she owned numerous pieces of rental property in the Savannah and Coastal Georgia area. Under the contracts with the mortgage lenders on those rental properties, she was required to make monthly payments totaling approximately $36,000.00 per month. Debtor’s plan provided for amortizing all secured debt over a thirty-year period at nine percent interest per annum, and for rolling current post-petition arrearages into the principal amount of the new loans. Based on this restructuring of the secured debt, her monthly plan payments would be reduced to approximately $27,000.00 per month.

During the twenty-month period since this case was filed on December 29, 2000, Debtor has made post-petition payments averaging approximately $19,000.00 per month. Some loans were maintained on a current or nearly current basis while others received few if any payments. During the months of January through June of 2002, Debtor’s performance improved marginally in that she made mortgage payments averaging approximately $21,000.00 per month. That $21,000.00 figure, however, still fell far short of the payments required by her proposed plan.

The evidence presented by counsel for numerous creditors show there is a vast discrepancy in the proportion of monthly payments made to some creditors as opposed to others. For example, a representative sample of payment histories to creditors who have obtained adequate protection orders from this Court show that since the entry of those orders, none of them has received all of the monthly mortgage payments. The best performance Debtor has managed for this class of creditors is the payment of 12 of 15 monthly mortgage payments, and the worst is only four out of 15 monthly mortgage payments. Debtor has also failed to pay accruing county ad valorem taxes on more than half of these properties. With respect to properties without adequate protection orders, Debtor has maintained current post-petition payments on one loan. Among the remainder, however, Debtor’s best monthly payment record is seven of *610 17, and the worst is an appalling one of 17. The reasons for these discrepancies have not been explained, but it is clear that Debtor has been “robbing Peter to pay Paul” in order to allocate payments to properties where she has felt the most pressure, or faced the threat of foreclosure, or believes that she might have the best equity position should she at some point have to surrender some, but not all, of her rental properties.

As of July 25, the evidence revealed that Debtor’s plan was clearly not feasible and thus could not have been confirmed since it would have violated the provisions of 11 U.S.C. § 1129(a)(ll). At the hearing, Debtor’s counsel requested the Court to grant a continuance of at least 60 days. The basis for his motion was that an outside investor had been located who agreed, in principle, to purchase a 49 percent equity interest in all Debtor’s rental properties, contingent on the confirmation of a plan, and had tentatively agreed to pay $1,250,000.00 for that interest. With this influx of new capital, Debtor’s counsel believed that Debtor could bring current all post-petition arrearages on all properties and could reduce the principal indebtedness in some manner on the properties Debtor would retain by amortizing the balance at nine percent per year for 30 years, thereby achieving a reduced monthly payment requirement of approximately $20,000.00 per month.

If all of the pieces of the puzzle were to fall into place in accordance with all of Debtor’s expectations, it is possible, given the six month performance on mortgage payments of approximately $21,000.00, that Debtor could propose a feasible, confirmable plan. However, as of July 25, no firm commitment had yet been arranged with the potential investor. Both the investor and Debtor had a due diligence obligation to determine the merits of the investment proposal and the feasibility of the investor’s ultimate performance. Simultaneously, Debtor had to determine the specific ways in which the dollars received from the possible investment would be allocated among the various creditors, modify the plan, and disseminate it for the creditors’ balloting.

With those considerations weighing heavily against granting Debtor’s request for a 60 day continuance, I informed Debt- or’s counsel at the conclusion of the July 25 hearing that, given the dismal performance of Debtor to date, I was not certain whether it would be appropriate to grant the requested continuance for the full 60 days. I announced, however, that I would withhold a ruling on the continuance motion for 30 days and that I would consider any post-hearing submissions. I also advised Debtor’s counsel that he should operate under the assumption that an Amended Disclosure Statement and Plan needed to be filed with the Court within a 30 day period.

On August 27, I received a letter from Counsel representing numerous secured creditors outlining the communications between his office and that of Debtor’s counsel during the interim period. Debtor had provided a financial statement on the potential investor to opposing counsel, but as of the date of the letter there had not been an opportunity by opposing counsel to conduct any analysis of that statement or any further due diligence inquiry. After Debt- or’s counsel responded to that letter, I scheduled a status conference for September 19, 2002, to take additional evidence.

At the September 19 status conference, Debtor produced Exhibits 1 and 2 in support of her request for additional time to formulate a plan. Debtor’s Exhibit 2 is an equity sharing agreement into which she entered on or about July 24, 2002, with Bayo Olagoke. Under that agreement Mr. *611 Olagoke would pay a $1,250,000.00 cash infusion to Debtor in order to purchase a 49% equity interest in the real estate which she owns and which is subject to this Chapter 11 proceeding. By the terms of the equity sharing agreement, any transfer of Debtor’s interest and Mr. Olagoke’s obligation to pay are conditioned upon confirmation of Debtor’s plan or an order of this Court “containing such terms and conditions as are satisfactory to the parties herein.”

In order to provide this capital infusion, Mr. Olagoke must obtain a loan for that sum of money. He has approached a branch of Regions Bank in the Atlanta metropolitan area for that purpose.

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Bluebook (online)
288 B.R. 608, 2002 WL 31941486, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-coleman-gasb-2002.