In Re Evans

344 B.R. 440, 2004 Bankr. LEXIS 2458, 2004 WL 3985477
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Virginia
DecidedFebruary 26, 2004
Docket19-60443
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 344 B.R. 440 (In Re Evans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Evans, 344 B.R. 440, 2004 Bankr. LEXIS 2458, 2004 WL 3985477 (Va. 2004).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION

WILLIAM F. STONE JR., Bankruptcy Judge.

This case raises a number of interesting and challenging issues concerning the right of bankruptcy debtors, who have originally filed under Chapter 7, to convert their case to Chapter 13 and to obtain confirmation of a Plan over the determined opposition of the Chapter 7 Trustee, who contends that their actions have been taken in bad faith. For the reasons stated in this Memorandum Decision, the Court denies the Trustee’s Motion to convert the case back to Chapter 7, denies the Trustee’s Application for compensation for the services he has provided in the case, and confirms the Debtors’ Chapter 13 Plan.

CASE HISTORY

Christopher and Deirdre Evans, the Debtors, filed in this Court their Chapter 7 petition on April 25, 2003. Michael L. Shortridge, Esq. was appointed as the Chapter 7 Trustee and very promptly began a vigorous exercise of his duties as such. He demanded that various docu *442 ments relating to the Debtors’ assets and financial condition be made available to him. He also obtained information from creditors. As a result he learned, among other things, that the Debtors’ partially constructed residence was subject to an outstanding mortgage debt payoff of approximately $210,000 as of the filing date rather than the $255,000 amount reported on the bankruptcy schedules, and that they were entitled to income tax refunds far exceeding the $500 amount listed in the bankruptcy schedules. He next demanded on May 3 that the Debtors deliver to his office on the following Monday, May 5, a Dodge Durango motor vehicle which Mrs. Evans used to provide transportation to her job as a nurse in Morganton, North Carolina, and the keys to property described as the “rental house”. On May 9 he filed a motion to employ Larry W. Akers, t/a Southeast Recovery, to assist him to liquidate assets of the estate. On May 10 he demanded that the Debtors turn over to him the keys to both houses and that they vacate the premises with the admonition not to remove anything other than furnishings and clothing. On May 14 he filed a motion to employ himself and his firm as counsel for the Trustee. Orders granting the employment motions were entered by this Court on May 27 and May 28. On May 29 Mr. Shortridge filed another application to employ Jack Reynolds, Realtor, to provide services to the estate relating to the sale of the “rental house”.

On June 4 the Debtors filed a motion to convert their case to Chapter 13 and filed a proposed Chapter 13 Plan. Pursuant to this motion the Court on June 9 entered an order converting the case to Chapter 13 and among other things provided that the “trustee or any other party entitled to compensation may within thirty (30) days ... file an application for compensation and reimbursement of expenses.” Because the case was converted to Chapter 13 prior to the originally scheduled date for the “341 meeting”, the Chapter 7 meeting of creditors never occurred and the Chapter 13 “341 meeting” was scheduled for July 9. The latter meeting did not actually take place on that date and was continued to August 15. On July 9 Mr. Shortridge filed a Motion to Reconvert or Reconsider Order of Conversion and a Motion for Allowance of Administrative Expense. The grounds of the former motion are that the Debtors’ bankruptcy schedules contained “intentional and material representations”, “the Debtors repeatedly failed to turn over assets and information requested by the Chapter 7 Trustee” and “attempted to hinder, delay and defraud the Chapter 7 Trustee and the creditors”, and therefore the “Debtors have not acted in good faith”. The latter motion sought compensation in the amount of $3,442 1 and reimbursement of expenses of $78.92. Of these amounts $2,684 worth of compensation and $71.84 of expenses were rendered or incurred prior to the June 9 conversion of the case and $768.00 worth of compensation and $7.08 of expenses were rendered or incurred on or after such date. On July 29 Mr. Shortridge in his asserted capacity as “the Chapter 7 bankruptcy trustee for the estates of Christopher K. Evans and Deirdre B. Evans” filed an Objection to confirmation of the Debtors’ proposed Chapter 13 Plan. This Objection incorporated by reference the allegations contained in Mr. Shortridge’s previously filed motions and further asserted that the Chapter 13 Plan should not be confirmed because it did “not propose to pay the administrative expense claimed by Trustee Shortridge”.

*443 On August 28 the Debtors filed an amended Chapter 13 Plan which, as a result of clerical error, was inadvertently initially docketed in another case. On September 2, 2003 the Debtors filed amended schedules materially different than the ones originally filed. 2 The original scheduled confirmation hearing for September 3 was commenced but was continued due to the intervening filing of the amended Plan and all objections were continued to the new confirmation hearing date for the amended Plan. A new confirmation hearing was held on October 22 but was continued to November 19 to allow the parties to file briefs upon the Debtors’ objections to (i) the standing of the former Chapter 7 Trustee to maintain a motion to reconvert the case to Chapter 7, and (ii) the allowability of an administrative expense claim by a Chapter 7 Trustee who has not actually recovered or sold assets of the estate and has not disbursed any funds to creditors or to the Chapter 13 Trustee. On October 29 “Chapter 7 Trustee” Shor-tridge filed a new Objection to the amend *444 ed Plan and added to his previously stated grounds the objection that the proposed Plan would not result in a distribution to creditors equal to what they would receive in a Chapter 7 liquidation of assets and therefore violated 11 U.S.C. § 1324(a)(4). Counsel for the Debtors and Mr. Shor-tridge filed their respective briefs addressing the issues raised at the October 22nd confirmation hearing. The amended Chapter 13 Plan and the pending Motions came on for further hearing on November 19. At that time the Court had not been able to give full consideration to the arguments of the respective parties and allowed Mr. Shortridge, over the objection of the Debtors, to participate in the confirmation hearing and be heard on his Objection to confirmation.

Mr. Shortridge mainly disputes the Debtors’ good faith based on inaccuracies in their schedules, principally the listing of the construction loan deed of trust debt as $255,000, the maximum amount which could have been advanced on the loan, rather than the correct payoff of approximately $210,000, and the incorrect listing of the Debtors’ 2002 tax refund as $500 rather than the amounts shown on then-tax returns and subsequently actually received by them of $5,718 Federal, $2,180 Virginia, and $ 924 North Carolina, an aggregate total of $ 8,822. He has asserted that the Debtors were attempting to mislead the Court and their creditors as to the facts of their financial condition and has contended that the Debtors filed schedules representing that they had no equity in their property available to creditors and that the case was noticed as a “no asset” case. Actually neither of these contentions is correct.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
344 B.R. 440, 2004 Bankr. LEXIS 2458, 2004 WL 3985477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-evans-vawb-2004.