In Re Day

208 B.R. 358, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 630, 1997 WL 266861
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 15, 1997
Docket19-10178
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 208 B.R. 358 (In Re Day) 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 Day, 208 B.R. 358, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 630, 1997 WL 266861 (Pa. 1997).

Opinion

OPINION

DAVID A. SCHOLL, Chief Judge.

A INTRODUCTION

In this Opinion, we address several issues common to three Chapter 13 cases filed by public housing tenants within six years of their having filed Chapter 7 cases in which they previously received discharges.

We grant the Objection of the Chester Housing Authority (“the CHA”) by its receiver, Robert C. Rosenberg, Esquire, to confirmation of the Debtors’ plans, since they con *360 template only nominal payments to the CHA. We hold that, in Chapter 13 cases like these, which are essentially serial successors to Chapter 7 cases, the CHA’s allowed claims for rents accruing subsequent to the Debtors’ prior discharges must be paid in full under the Debtors’ Chapter 13 plans.

However, we reject the CHA’s contention that we must defer our claims process to an arbitration procedure established for the CHA’s tenants in a pending federal class action brought against the CHA by its tenants. We also reject the CHA’s contention that there is no warranty of habitability applicable as to it, and we will sustain in part the Debtors’ Objections to these claims on this basis. Finally, we reject the CHA’s argument that the Debtors are obliged to assume their leases to retain their public housing tenancies, reaffirming our holdings in In re Sudler, 71 B.R. 780, 786-87 (Bankr.E.D.Pa.1987), that public housing tenants are protected by 11 U.S.C. § 525(a) and that a public housing tenant can generally retain a premises despite the failure of the ease trustee to assume the lease or, except where a prior Chapter 7 discharge was obtained in a previous case instituted within six years of a refiling, paying dischargeable rent.

As a result of these holdings, we will carry, to an anticipated final confirmation hearing date of June 19, 1997, the CHA’s motions for relief from the automatic stay to proceed under applicable nonbankruptcy law against the Debtors.

B. PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL HISTORY

Before we discuss the individual circumstances of the three Debtors before us, we note certain elements common to all three cases that bear mentioning, first among which is the status of the aforementioned federal class action against the CHA. Subsequent to the filing of this action, in which the District Court found that the CHA was liable for a “de facto demolition” of a substantial amount of the CHA’s housing stock in a decision reported as Velez v. Cisneros, 850 F.Supp. 1257 (E.D.Pa.1994), the CHA was placed in receivership by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (“HUD”) as a “Troubled Housing Authority.” Id. at 1259-60.

On February 24, 1995, a partial settlement in the Velez ease was approved by the District Court, per the Honorable Norma L. Shapiro (“the Settlement”), which purported to globally resolve the rent arrearage and maintenance disputes outstanding between the CHA and many members of the plaintiff class of CHA residents. Through the Settlement it was agreed that the CHA would grant all tenants who executed documents to participate in the Settlement a one hundred (100%) percent rent abatement for all arrears due prior to January 1, 1992, followed by a fifty (50%) percent abatement of all arrearages due from January 1, 1992, to August 31, 1994. Thereafter, tenants would be obligated to pay their full rent plus an extra amount toward the arrears at the rate of the greater of five (5%) percent of their income or $15.00 monthly. Tenants could choose to become parties to the Settlement by individually executing “Repayment/Repair Agreements” with the CHA and, as part of the Settlement, tenants were to submit to the CHA a list of items to be repaired. If the repairs were not made within a 60-day period, the tenants’ obligations to pay rent were to be suspended.

The parties agree that, at some time subsequent to the Settlement, Judge Shapiro entered a further Order of December 20, 1995, appointing a master to arbitrate CHA evictions in order to effect an arbitration provision added in a new CHA lease form. In that Order, Federal Magistrate Judge M. Faith Angelí was appointed as master. We now address the procedural histories and facts adduced at hearings of March 18,1997, and April 1,1997, with respect to each of the Debtor-tenants against this background.

Linda Driggins

LINDA DRIGGINS has been a CHA tenant for seven years, residing throughout that time in a three-bedroom McCafferty Village unit at 2904 Knight Place, Chester, Pennsylvania 19013. Driggins filed bankruptcy on two occasions prior to filing the instant case. On July 13, 1994, she filed under Chapter 7 and received a discharge in November of that year. At or about the time of her *361 Chapter 7 filing, simultaneous to being in Chapter 7, Driggins also filed a case under Chapter 18 -which was ultimately dismissed. Following the Chapter 7 discharge, Driggins only rarely, if ever, paid rent and has accumulated substantial post-discharge arrearages, amounting to $3,915.27 as of July 11, 1996, when she filed her instant case pro se under Chapter 13.

Driggins testified that a local tenants council assisted her and the two other instant Debtors, who live in her same block, in their bankruptcy-filings. Driggins’ Plan, filled out on the same form as the other Debtors’ plans, contemplates payments of $25 monthly to the trustee for 3 years and fails to designate any anticipated distribution.

The CHA filed, as it did in almost the same form in the other Debtors’ cases, comprehensive Objections to Driggins’ Plan on January 15, 1997, the day before her first scheduled confirmation hearing. The confirmation hearing was continued to February 13, 1997. On that date, Roger V. Ashodian, Esquire, of Delaware County Legal Assistance Association, an agency providing free legal services in civil cases to low-income persons, appeared and requested permission to file a “limited appearance” for Driggins and Debtor LINDA DAY. We allowed this request of Ashodian, though extraordinary, because it was apparent that Driggins and Day needed legal assistance, having received very little practical insight into what they needed to obtain plan confirmation by the tenants counsel which had “assisted” them; no issue of fees for partial service was presented; and the CHA did not oppose Ashodian’s request, presumably to attempt to globally resolve, with counsel involved in the Velez case, certain issues which would probably recur in cases of other tenants. The parties agreed to continue the confirmation hearings until March 6,1997.

On the latter date, the parties agreed to a further continuance of these hearings, until March 18,1997, which we allowed only on the condition that no further continuances would be allowed. They also desired to put before us on March 18, in hearings consolidated with the confirmation hearings, motions of the CHA for relief from the automatic stay (“the Motions”) and Objections of the Debtors to the CHA’s amended proof of claim (“the Objections”), which were not then filed but which were subsequently filed on March 13, 1997. We also placed the case of pro se

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Bluebook (online)
208 B.R. 358, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 630, 1997 WL 266861, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-day-paeb-1997.