In Re Enriquez

315 B.R. 112, 2004 Bankr. LEXIS 1665, 2004 WL 2203386
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. California
DecidedSeptember 22, 2004
Docket19-50195
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 315 B.R. 112 (In Re Enriquez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Enriquez, 315 B.R. 112, 2004 Bankr. LEXIS 1665, 2004 WL 2203386 (Cal. 2004).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION SUSTAINING OBJECTION TO CONFIRMATION BY COMERICA BANK, IN PART

ARTHUR S. WEISSBRODT, Bankruptcy Judge.

Before the Court is confirmation of the plan (“Plan”) proposed by Rose Enriquez, the Debtor in this Chapter 13 1 case (“Debtor”).

Comerica Bank (“Bank”) asserts a claim against the Debtor and filed an objection to confirmation alleging that the Plan was not proposed in good faith and does not treat the Bank’s claim in the manner required by law. At trial, the Bank raised for the first time an objection based on the Debtor’s lack of eligibility for Chapter 13 relief due to debts exceeding the limits fixed by § 109(e) — in closing argument, *114 counsel for the Debtor objected to those grounds being initially asserted at trial, but contended that the Debtor was not ineligible under the statute. 2

The Debtor is represented by Lars T. Fuller, Esq. of The Fuller Law Firm. The Bank is represented by Barbara Cray, Esq. of Law Offices of Barbara Cray. The matter has been tried and submitted for decision.

This Memorandum Decision constitutes the Court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law, pursuant to Rule 7052 of the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure (“FRBP”).

I.

FACTS

The facts are largely undisputed, although the parties disagree as to their interpretation.

The Debtor testified that she commenced a sole proprietorship business known as Omega Mailing Services (“Omega”) in December 1995. Omega processed bulk mail for companies and its major customer was Marketing Response Systems, Inc. (“MRSI”). MRSI was a corporation wholly owned by Frank Brauch and his wife Joan (collectively, “Brauchs”), and the Debtor believed it to be “a very strong business and very well kept”. The Brauchs decided to sell MRSI and the Debtor negotiated with them in August or September 1999 to buy the stock of the corporation for $580,000. At that time, the business had some equipment in the form of printers, computers, and desks, but the Debtor considered its primary assets to be “very good will, very strong work flow”, and approximately $200,000 cash on hand.

On February 22, 2000, the Debtor and the Brauchs signed an agreement (“Sale Agreement”) for the Debtor to buy the stock of MRSI, although the Debtor said the document was actually prepared in late 1999. The Sale Agreement calls for the $580,000 purchase price to be paid in the form of a $29,000 cash down payment, a bank loan of $493,000, and two $29,000 promissory notes carried by the Brauchs— one unsecured note with monthly payments made over five years, and one note due in ten years without interim payments but secured by a certificate of deposit.

The Debtor testified that she submitted an application for the loan to the Bank in September 1999 and began discussing the transaction with bank personnel in October 1999 — first with Joe Baker (“Baker”) and then with Marie Anderson (“Anderson”). 3 According to the Debtor, she included an unsigned copy of the Sale Agreement in the “package” requested by the Bank, along with a handwritten financial statement that she prepared in September 1999. The information in the latter document was used by the Bank to prepare a typewritten version, which the Debtor signed in February 2000 (“Financial Statement”). The Financial Statement showed $85,000 cash on hand and the Debtor testified that those funds were in Omega’s account in September 1999. However, they had been “used” by the beginning of 2000 because Omega “went into a transition” and “went through a very difficult time”, eventually losing the lease of its business premises and having to operate *115 out of the Debtor’s home. The Debtor had to borrow funds for the down payment from her brother in Mexico, which loan was repaid -with cash of MRSI on March 22, 2000, immediately after escrow closed for the sale. The Debtor testified that her attorney and counsel for the Brauchs told Anderson that the Debtor no longer had the $35,000 cash shown on the Financial Statement, and said that she also “spoke with” both Baker and Anderson “about getting the money from Mexico”. The Debtor testified that the Financial Statement reflected the conditions that existed in September 1999 when she prepared the handwritten version, rather than the actual state of affairs in February 2000 when she signed the typed version, although she acknowledged that she wrote “2/24/00” at the top of the typed form after the language “Personal Financial Statement As of’.

On December 6, 1999, the Bank issued a letter (“Commitment Letter”) signed by Anderson, stating the terms and conditions under which the Bank would agree to lend money for the purchase of MRSI. The Debtor signed at the bottom of the Commitment Letter on December 9, 1999, following the sentence “I(we) have read and agree to the terms and conditions of the proposed credit facilities described in this letter”. The terms set forth in the Commitment Letter call for, inter alia, 75% of the loan to be guaranteed by the Small Business Administration (“SBA”), a principal amount of $493,000 amortized over a ten year period, a variable interest rate and monthly payments of $6,862, collateral in the form of a senior security interest in the assets of MRSI and Omega, a down payment of at least $29,000, and “Seller financing in the amount of $58,000.00 to be on full standby (no payments) for the life of the SBA loan”. The Debtor’s signature appears twice, once labelled “Marketing Response Systems by Rose Enriquez, President”, and once labelled “Rose Enri-quez, as Guarantor” — however, the body of the Commitment Letter identifies “Borrower” as MRSI and the Debtor, and states “n/a” in the space provided for the names of “Guarantors”.

The Debtor testified that the “full standby” provision of the Commitment Letter (prohibiting payments to the Brauchs until the Bank loan had been repaid) must have been merely “a proposal” because it contradicted the Sale Agreement, a copy of which was in the Bank’s possession at that time. The Sale Agreement provides that the Brauchs’ ten year note is “fully subordinate” to the Bank loan and no payments are to be made on it “prior to maturity” without approval from the Bank, but the five year note is not made subject to such restrictions — as to that note, $616.17 is to be paid monthly and the maker “may at any time prepay the balance due on said note without penalty”. Nevertheless, the Debtor also said that, when she signed the Commitment Letter on December 9, 1999, she did agree to its “full standby” provision concerning both notes.

The Debtor testified that, a week later, on December 16, 1999, she sent a memo to Anderson by means of facsimile transmission (“FAX”). The memo states that the Debtor had decided that the “best interest” of MRSI would be served by prepaying the Brauchs’ ten year note within the next two years, if possible, rather than paying interest for the full term, and:

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Bluebook (online)
315 B.R. 112, 2004 Bankr. LEXIS 1665, 2004 WL 2203386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-enriquez-canb-2004.