In Re Dilley

125 B.R. 189, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 357, 21 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 821, 1991 WL 42061
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedFebruary 11, 1991
Docket19-30309
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 125 B.R. 189 (In Re Dilley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Dilley, 125 B.R. 189, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 357, 21 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 821, 1991 WL 42061 (Ohio 1991).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION

DAVID F. SNOW, Bankruptcy Judge.

Debtor commenced this case on November 9, 1989 by filing a bare chapter 13 petition without a chapter 13 statement, schedules or plan. Over the course of the next two months Debtor requested and was allowed four extensions of time to file these documents. Debtor finally filed them on January 8, 1990, six days after his last permitted deadline of January 2, 1990 *190 and 60 days after the Debtor’s petition was filed. None of these documents was signed as required by law.

The Debtor’s schedules identified 28 creditors to whom the Debtor acknowledged owing $102,402.00 and a disputed claim of the State of Ohio (“Ohio” or the “State”) in the amount of $98,199.00. The Debtor’s plan called for payment of 100 percent of his unsecured debt and payments outside the plan to secured creditors. It provided for plan payments of $500 per month, substantially less than required to pay the undisputed claims within the 60 months permitted by law. However, the budget filed by the Debtor indicated that after expenses the Debtor had only $528 of disposable income with which to fund a plan.

The creditors’ meeting was held on February 9,1990 pursuant to section 341 of the Bankruptcy Code. On the same day, the State filed an objection to confirmation of the Debtor’s plan. In that objection the State asserted that the Debtor owed it $120,832.44 for unpaid priority sales taxes and that the plan failed to provide proper treatment of its claim. The first confirmation hearing was scheduled for April 17, 1990 but was automatically adjourned under the Court’s chapter 13 procedures to May 15, 1990 because the Debtor had not responded to the objections or requests for additional information contained in the Chapter 13 Trustee’s recommendations made at the section 341 meeting.

The Chapter 13 Trustee reported at the May 15 hearing that the Debtor had still not responded to the Trustee’s recommendations and that the plan could not be confirmed since the plan would, without any payment to the State, take 248 months to pay out, 188 months longer than the 60 months permitted by law. The Court expressed concern with this serious question of feasibility and the Debtor’s failure to comply with the Trustee’s recommendations. Debtor’s counsel assured the Court that a feasible plan was possible since a $46,000 debt owing to his father would be eliminated and a monthly plan payment of $1,000 which would then be required could easily be made by the Debtor. He did not indicate why the Debtor’s budget reflected the ability to pay only half that amount or why he had proposed a clearly insufficient plan payment, nor did he offer to commence plan payments in the amount he now believed to be appropriate. Although the Court was not so informed, it later appeared that the Debtor was two months behind in his plan payments at the time of the May 15 hearing.

Debtor’s counsel minimized the significance of the State’s claim, which he characterized as approximately $7,000 on a worst case scenario. The Debtor urged the Court to deny the State’s objection because it had failed to file a formal proof of claim and because the State was not represented at the hearing. The Court declined to do so because the State’s objection appeared to constitute a valid informal proof of claim and because the Debtor’s plan was clearly not feasible without regard to the State’s claim. The Court noted that the Debtor’s failure to deal with the feasibility issue appeared to reflect lack of attention to his case and urged the Debtor to promptly object to the State’s claims to bring that matter to a head. The hearing was adjourned to June 26. That June 26 hearing was subsequently rescheduled to August 23, 1990 at the request of the Debtor and the State.

On July 26 the Debtor attempted once again to delay the confirmation hearing. He filed a request for evidentiary hearing which recited that there were “numerous issues of fact and law in dispute” between the Debtor and the State and requested postponement of the confirmation hearing pending their resolution. On August 2 the Court entered an order in response to the Debtor’s motion which ordered the Debtor to furnish not later than August 20, 1990 a concise statement of the contested legal and factual issues but which confirmed that the August 23 hearing would go forward as scheduled. The Court’s order nob ed that these requirements were imposed on the Debtor in view of the delays already occasioned by the Debtor.

*191 The Debtor’s statement of legal and factual issues furnished in response to that order provided no clarification of his disagreement with the amount of the State’s claims. It merely asked in the form of a question whether the State’s claim was excessive. The Debtor did not identify in the filed statement or in his response to the Court’s questions at the August 23 hearing any basis at all for questioning the accuracy of the State’s claims. The Debtor did not excuse his nonperformance in this regard by the State’s failure to comply with his discovery request. The only specific information ever presented by the Debtor on his contention that the State’s claim was excessive was based solely on the Debtor’s own records. This information was first presented in the Debtor’s brief and supplemental objection to claim filed in September.

The August 2 order also imposed on the Debtor a discovery cutoff date of August 15. The State had advised that it did not intend to do any discovery. The August 15 cutoff was not enforced, however, since the State sought a protective order against further discovery. The Court denied the State’s request but the State had already failed to appear at the deposition scheduled by the Debtor. The Debtor filed a motion seeking disallowance of the State’s claim because of this failure. The Court admonished the State for its failure but denied the Debtor’s motion as excessive because it appeared that the Debtor had failed not only to review his own records for the August 23 hearing, but had declined the opportunity to obtain discovery from the State prior to that hearing. Moreover, it appears that the Debtor used the State’s failure to appear for the one deposition as an excuse for not promptly concluding discovery. As late as the December 4 pretrial the Debtor advised that he had not reviewed all the State’s records. Subsequent to the August 23 hearing, however, the Debtor neither filed any motion to compel discovery nor complained of any failure by the State to cooperate with discovery.

In his opening statement at the August 23 hearing, Debtor’s counsel advised the Court that he had been conferring since 8:30 that morning with counsel for the State; he requested that the hearing be adjourned to permit the State to provide him an assessment record and to allow the State to review Debtor’s position with a view towards settlement. The State’s counsel asserted, however, that the Debtor had presented nothing new for the State to consider. After the Court’s efforts to elicit information from the Debtor to support his contention that the amounts claimed by the State were wrong proved futile, the hearing focused on the legal issues raised by the parties. Counsel for both parties agreed that the Debtor’s contention that the State’s claims were not timely filed and the State’s contention that its claims were based on state proceedings, which the Debtor could not now reopen under the doctrine of res judicata, would be disposi-tive if either contention were sustained.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 B.R. 189, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 357, 21 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 821, 1991 WL 42061, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-dilley-ohnb-1991.