In Re Delray Associates Ltd. Partnership

212 B.R. 511, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 1470, 31 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 648
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Maryland
DecidedSeptember 16, 1997
Docket19-11607
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 212 B.R. 511 (In Re Delray Associates Ltd. Partnership) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Delray Associates Ltd. Partnership, 212 B.R. 511, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 1470, 31 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 648 (Md. 1997).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION

DUNCAN W. KEIR, Bankruptcy Judge.

Before the court is a Motion to Dismiss this Chapter 11 case filed by the holders of a note (“Movants”) which is secured by a first deed of trust upon the sole significant asset of this debtor. Debtor’s business and asset is an office building. This case, Case No. 97-1-3542 (herein after “Case No. 2”), was commenced on April 2, 1997, by the filing of an involuntary petition “against” the debtor by three petitioners. At the time of the filing of the involuntary petition and today, there was and is an outstanding Chapter 11 ease filed by this debtor on July 3, 1991. In that case, Case No. 91-4-3233 (hereinafter “Case No. 1”), a confirmation of a Chapter 11 Plan (“Plan No. 1”) was entered by the court on October 19, 1993. Plan No. 1 has not been fully performed, particularly as to the treatment of the Movants’ claim, although the plan is substantially consummated. Movants seek the dismissal of Case No. 2 on the basis that it is a serial filing on behalf of the debtor and that it is filed in bad faith.

In order to decide the issues raised, the court must examine in detail the facts and circumstances of the filing of Case No. 2, as reflected by the evidence introduced during two days of evidentiary hearings.

Case No. 1 was filed by the debtor to prevent a foreclosure by the Movants of their first deed of trust. Treatment of Movants’ claim under Plan No. 1 provided that the Movants would receive interest only for a period of approximately three and 1/2 years and then would be paid in full in March of 1997. Initially, the interest amount to be paid was less than the interest rate accrual called for under Plan No. 1, thus the balance due actually increased during the first part of the plan. This treatment is sometimes referred to as a negative amortization.

Having averted foreclosure and provided in Plan No. 1 for an extension of the defaulted loan upon such favorable terms, the debt- or made the interest payments called for under the plan until March of 1997. However, debtor defaulted upon payment of real estate taxes as they became due on the property in 1996. From the testimony of Gerald Wade, general partner of the debtor (hereinafter “Wade”), it was shown that the reason for the tax default was insufficient income from the property. Although in questioning Wade, counsel for the debtor suggested in his questions that the fortunes of the debtor improved sufficiently to allow the debtor to cure the tax default, upon questioning by the court, Wade testified that the debtor accumulated the funds to pay the open taxes and avert foreclosure by defaulting upon payments due to the second trust holder on the property. Thus, the court must find that as late as 1996, the property was not consistently cash flowing in an amount to pay current bills plus plan payments.

In March of 1997, the debtor defaulted on the last interest payment due to Movants under Plan No. 1. Debtor also failed to pay the full balance when it became due. The Movants instituted a foreclosure proceeding and again a bankruptcy was filed to stay the foreclosure. The petition filed was an involuntary petition signed by three entities purporting to be creditors and purporting to hold claims in conformity with the requirements of Section 303 of the Bankruptcy Code. 1 During the immediate post-petition period in Case No. 2 and before an order for relief was entered, the debtor did not make payments to the Movants and as a consequence amassed sufficient funds to advance a retainer to its bankruptcy counsel. 2 The *514 debtor then filed a voluntary consent to an order for relief thus curing defects which existed in the involuntary petition.

In Case No. 2, the debtor has filed a plan (“Plan No. 2”) which is virtually identical to Plan No. 1, with the exception that the due date for the balance of the Movants’ claim is extended to the year 2004. Counsel for the debtor in his closing argument acknowledged that the plans were identical in substance, except for this one change.

Debtor argues that Case No. 2 cannot be considered a serial filing by a Chapter 11 debtor, as the petition was involuntary. This court disagrees. It is clear from the evidence, taking into account the demeanor and credibility of the witnesses, that the filing of Case No. 2 was completely orchestrated by the debtor. Further, it is clear that the reason for orchestrating an involuntary filing was for the purpose of creating the misleading and erroneous impression that Case No. 2 was not a voluntary entry into a serial filing by this debtor.

Debtor attempts to portray the involuntary filing as one in which the debtor had no part. This court finds nothing could be further from the truth and the attempt to portray such a scenario is disingenuous. Two of the three petitioning “creditors”, Beta Construction (“Beta”) and ARC Water Treatment Co. (“ARC”), were entities which had provided goods and services to the Delray project and to other projects managed by Pinnacle Realty (“Pinnacle”), the management company for this property. Beta and ARC were telephoned by a representative of Pinnacle and informed that the property might be sold at foreclosure. It was suggested to each that they would get a call from either counsel for the debtor or counsel for the second trust holder (the third petitioning creditor) and that participating in an involuntary bankruptcy petition might be in petitioners’ best interest. Neither Beta nor ARC held an account receivable from the debtor which was in default at the time of these phone calls. Beta, a roofing contractor which had done work upon the property, held an outstanding invoice which was not overdue and indeed was paid in full by Pinnacle shortly after Beta signed the proffered involuntary petition forms which were sent to it. At the time of the filing of the involuntary petition, Beta was not owed any money by the debtor. As to ARC, it is shown by exhibits that its monthly payments for water treatment bills were up to date when it was called by Pinnacle. Mr. Eric Hagen at ARC dug through old files involving Case No. 1 and from a copy of a ballot submitted upon Plan No. 1, inferred that there might be some historical unpaid amount that could be used as the pretext to claim creditor status on the involuntary petition. Mr. Hagen testified that he had no knowledge as to whether there was actually any outstanding unpaid balance.

These facts completely belie the canned question to Mr. Hagen on cross examination by counsel for the debtor, and response to the effect that ARC participated in the involuntary for the purposes of protecting its interests as a creditor. At the time of the fifing of the petition, ARC did not even know whether it was a creditor, and if it was a creditor it was for a minuscule balance which had been owed years prior to the petition date. Although Mr. Jeremy Brown, for Beta, gave a similar response to the same question posed by debtor’s counsel, Beta was not even a creditor when the petition was filed.

Counsel for the debtor also asked Messrs. Hagen and Brown whether they had received any telephone calls or had conversations with Wade. They responded that they had neither spoken with nor met Wade. This exchange was obviously intended to create an impression that the debtor had not participated in the communications soliciting the involuntary petition.

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Bluebook (online)
212 B.R. 511, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 1470, 31 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 648, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-delray-associates-ltd-partnership-mdb-1997.