In Re Crichlow

334 B.R. 321, 2005 Bankr. LEXIS 2347, 2005 WL 3220229
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedMay 13, 2005
Docket19-30146
StatusPublished

This text of 334 B.R. 321 (In Re Crichlow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Crichlow, 334 B.R. 321, 2005 Bankr. LEXIS 2347, 2005 WL 3220229 (Mass. 2005).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION ON MOTION OF DEBTOR FOR STAY PENDING APPEAL

ROBERT SOMMA, Bankruptcy Judge.

The Debtor, Marie Maud Crichlow, has asked this Court to stay pending appeal an order granting to Sandra DaSilva relief from the automatic stay to evict the Debt- or from the property in which the Debtor resides. DaSilva opposes the motion. For the reasons set forth below, the Court will deny the requested stay.

Facts and Procedural History

The facts and procedural history are as follows. As of October 21, 2004, the Debt- or owned and resided in the real property at 59 Amor Road, Milton, Massachusetts, but her interest in that property was subject to a mortgage, and that mortgage was in distress. On October 21, 2004, the mortgagee conducted a foreclosure sale of the property. Sandra DaSilva was the high bidder at foreclosure, and, on that *322 same day, she and the foreclosing mortgagee signed a Memorandum of Terms and Conditions of Sale (the “Memorandum”). The Memorandum provided that the “sale shall not be deemed completed until the Buyer has made his or her deposit and has signed this Memorandum of Sale.” The record does not indicate when and whether the Buyer made her deposit. The Debtor filed her petition for relief under Chapter 13 of the Bankruptcy Code on October 27, 2004, thereby commencing this bankruptcy case, and only later (the precise date is not clear) did DaSilva pay the balance of the purchase price to the mortgagee and receive from the mortgagee the deed to the property. She recorded the deed on November 17, 2004. That same day, the Debtor had filed a Chapter 13 plan in which she proposed to cure the arrearage on the mortgage that had been foreclosed upon.

DaSilva then moved in the bankruptcy case for relief from the automatic stay to evict the Debtor. The Debtor opposed the motion, arguing that, because the mortgagee had not actually transferred the property to DaSilva by the date of the Debtor’s bankruptcy filing, the property had not yet been sold, and therefore § 1322(c)(1) of the Bankruptcy Code treated the sale as incomplete and permitted the Debtor to cure her mortgage arrears through the Chapter 13 plan and, in essence, to treat the foreclosure and subsequent signing of the Memorandum as not having terminated her equity of redemption, notwithstanding Massachusetts law to the contrary. 1 On February 16, 2005, the Court (Hillman, J.) granted relief from the automatic stay to evict the Debtor. In the memorandum of decision he issued in support of the order, Judge Hillman disagreed with the Debtor, ruling that, for purposes of § 1322(c)(1), a Massachusetts foreclosure sale would be deemed complete upon the signing of the memorandum of sale, because it is this event that, under Massachusetts law, terminates the mortgagor’s equity of redemption. Judge Hillman concluded that, as of the date of her bankruptcy filing, the Debtor’s equity of redemption had been terminated; that she therefore no longer had an ability to cure her mortgage through a Chapter 13 plan; and, accordingly, that it was appropriate to grant DaSilva relief from the stay to evict.

The Debtor timely appealed from the order and elected to have the appeal heard by the United States District Court. The record on appeal was transmitted to the District Court on March 31, 2005. A briefing schedule has been set, but the Debtor has moved to continue it pending resolution of a second motion he has filed in the appeal, a motion to have certain issues on appeal certified to the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court.

After she received relief from the automatic stay to evict, DaSilva sought and obtained an order in the state court to evict the Debtor; and she intends to enforce that order upon expiration of the time to appeal from it.

In the meantime, the Debtor and her teenage children continue to occupy the property. The Debtor is and has been setting aside $3,100 per month (into an account held by her attorney) in order to fund payments to her mortgagee, should she prevail on her appeal and her plan be confirmed. However, she is under no obligation to be setting aside these payments. Also, by virtue of an order of this Court entered on April 4, 2005, DaSilva’s admin *323 istrative claim for postpetition use and occupancy of the property was allowed in the amount of $7,000 for use and occupancy up to March 1, 2005, and the Debtor was further ordered to make monthly use and occupancy payments in the amount of $2000 per month — which, according to Da-Silva, was the fair rental value of the premises — commencing March 1, 2005. (Though the Debtor initially contested the monthly payment obligation, she has since conceded that $2000 per month constitutes fair rental value.) It is not clear whether she is current on these obligations to Da-Silva. And the Court is skeptical that the Debtor has the wherewithal to fund both monthly use and occupancy payments of $2,000 and monthly set asides of $3,100 at the same time.

DaSilva bought the property with the intention of occupying it with her own family, and she is understandably determined to do so. She incurred approximately $500,000 in debt to purchase the property, and that debt is secured by mortgages on her current home and on her father’s home. She remains responsible for servicing this debt, and for taxes, insurance, and maintenance of the property, even while she cannot occupy the property. This imposes on her a substantial financial burden because she cannot sell or rent her current home while the Debtor continues to occupy the Amor Road property.

Discussion

A party moving for stay pending appeal “must establish that there is a strong likelihood of success on the merits of its appeal; that he will suffer irreparable harm if a stay is not granted; that the harm will outweigh any harm opposing parties will suffer if a stay is granted; and that the public interest would be furthered by the granting of a stay.” In re Power Recovery Systems, Inc., 950 F.2d 798, 804 n. 31 (1st Cir.1991); In re Miraj and Sons, Inc., 201 B.R. 23 (Bankr.D.Mass.1996). The public interest prong of this standard is not implicated here, but the Court’s analysis as to the three remaining requirements is set forth below.

1. Likelihood of Success on Appeal

While the Debtor’s appeal is not frivolous, she does not have a strong likelihood of success on appeal or, in the formulation the Debtor urges, a “substantial case” or “strong case on appeal.” Judge Hillman’s memorandum of decision is solid in its reasoning. As Judge Hillman makes clear, under long-settled Massachusetts law and conveyancing practice, a debtor’s equity of redemption is terminated upon the signing of the memorandum of sale. It was this event that effectuated, in essence, a transmittal to the mortgagee of the equity of redemption. Though the signing of the memorandum of sale was not the final step between the mortgagee and the buyer at foreclosure, the signing of the memorandum was the final act insofar as the mortgagor’s equity of redemption was concerned.

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334 B.R. 321, 2005 Bankr. LEXIS 2347, 2005 WL 3220229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-crichlow-mab-2005.