In re Felix

562 B.R. 700, 2017 Bankr. LEXIS 215
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedJanuary 23, 2017
DocketCase No. 15-50016
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 562 B.R. 700 (In re Felix) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.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 Felix, 562 B.R. 700, 2017 Bankr. LEXIS 215 (Ohio 2017).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER SUSTAINING TRUSTEE’S OBJECTION TO DEBTORS’ HOMESTEAD EXEMPTION, AND ORDER REGARDING ADMINISTRATION OF ESTATE (DOC. NO. 13)

Judge Caldwell

This Memorandum Opinion and Order serves as the Court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law for an Objection to Exemptions filed by Clyde C. Hardesty (Trustee), and a Response filed by Austin Chidi Felix and Dorothy Ify Felix (Debtors). Based upon the pleadings, testimony and exhibits, the Court finds and concludes the Trustee has sustained his burden of proof, and Debtors are not entitled to the claimed exemption.

Initially, while both Debtors have been active in this case, Mrs. Felix appears to be the most knowledgeable, and indeed the guiding force in their financial endeavors. [702]*702By contrast, Mr. Felix’s testimony shows a lack of knowledge and understanding of the Debtors’ financial affairs. As a result, the Court focused primarily upon Mrs. Felix’s testimony in preparing this Opinion. In addition, the complexity of Debtors’ finances makes it necessary to discuss a broad range of factors and pre-filing history.

The Debtors’ story begins with their emigration from Africa, as early as 1984. Mrs. Felix resided in Maryland from 1988 to 1999, and she still has family living that State. Mrs. Felix moved to Reynoldsburg, Ohio in 1999, and registered to vote here on April 7, 2003. She and Mr. Felix married, and now have six children.

Mrs. Felix is a licensed LPN in Ohio, and based upon this skill, Debtors incorporated City Medical Nursing Center, LLC on June 2, 2003. It is located at 5340 E. Main Street, Ste. 209, Columbus, Ohio 43213. This entity remains active to this date, and provides home health nursing services. Evidently, the business thrived, and on December 7, 2004, Debtors purchased a house located at 973 Mueller Drive, Reynoldsburg, Ohio 43068 (Ohio house). It is 4,304 sq. ft., including five bedrooms, four baths, and an attached garage. The purchase price was $321,500.00, with $5,000.00 down, and originally there was a 30-year mortgage.

The Debtors prospered, and paid extra mortgage payments. As a result, four years later, Well Fargo Home Mortgage recorded a Certificate of Satisfaction on the Ohio house (September 15, 2008). Then ten months later, on July 17,2009, Debtors purchased for $651,815.00, an additional house located at 14700 Elberfeld Court, Upper Marlboro, Maryland 20774 (Maryland house). It is 4,607 sq. ft., including four bedrooms, three and a half baths, with an attached garage.

To finance this purchase, Debtors executed an “Affidavit of Grantees As First-Time Maryland Home Buyers” stating in relevant part they, “will occupy the property as Grantee’s principal residence”. Simultaneously, Debtors signed a “Homeowner’s Certification Of Principal Residence” stating, “(We) certify under penalties of perjury, that ... (we are) the homeowner(s) of the following property and will occupy the property as ... (our) principal residence. ..” In addition, Debtors certified, “The above Property Address has been ... our ‘Principal Residence’ since July, 2009. Finally, this same document required Debtors to certify the number of months they, “have resided or expect to reside at the address each year”, and the Debtors marked “12”. That same year, Mrs. Felix obtained a Maryland driver’s license and opened a bank account. The following year, on April 23, 2010, Mrs. Felix registered to vote in Maryland.

A little more than two years later, on December 31, 2012, the Debtors sold a “City Medical Nursing Services, LLC”. The purchaser was their 22-year old Son, Brian Felix. The purchase price was $1,000.00. To complete the transaction, Debtors and Brian Felix executed a “Bill of Sale” that contains inconsistencies and errors sufficient to fill a hefty law school textbook.

After this sale and between 2013 and 2015, Mrs. Felix tried to start a home nursing services enterprise in Maryland, but could not obtain a nursing license for that State. According to her, Maryland placed a moratorium on the establishment of home nursing service businesses. During this period, Debtors formed two entities and registered one trade name in Maryland and the District of Columbia. They include: a. City Medical Nursing Care [703]*703Services, Inc., 2010 Rhode Island Avenue, Second Floor, Washington, D.C. 20018, on February 26, 2013; b. City Medical Nursing Care Services (trade name), 14700 El-berfeld Court, Upper Marlboro, Maryland 20774, on May 2,2013; and c. City Medical Nursing Care Services, LLC, 14700 Elber-feld Court, Upper Marlboro, Maryland 20774, on August 6,2013.

However, during the flurry of new enterprises and houses in Ohio, Maryland, and the District of Columbia, Debtors neglected to pay their taxes. Consequently, Debtors made it to our doorstep on January 2, 2015, filing under Chapter 7 of the United States Bankruptcy Code (Code). Debtors claimed on Schedule C, a $265,800.00 homestead exemption for the Ohio house, under Ohio Revised Code § 2329.66(A)(1). On the Statement of Intent, Debtors disclosed that they planned to surrender the Maryland house, but retain the Ohio house, and reaffirm any debt on that Property.

According to Debtors’ Schedule A, there was no mortgage on the Ohio house, valued at $279,700.00. Debtors’ Schedule A valued the Maryland house at $532,300.00, and disclosed a $647,418.40 mortgage. Debtors’ Schedule D showed that the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) levied two tax liens against the Ohio house—one for $145,122.03 and the other for $264,887.12. Debtors’ Schedule I indicates that Mr. Felix is an office manager for a “City Medical Nursing Services”. Schedule I includes Mrs. Felix as the “Administrator” for the same entity. However, according to. Schedule I, neither of the Debtors earned wage income, which is in conflict with tax returns presented at trial. In the original Statement of Financial Affairs Debtors listed having an interest in City Medical Nursing Center, LLC.

During the creditors’ meeting conducted on February 10, 2015, Ms. Felix testified that her family did not intend to stay in the Ohio house because of the IRS liens. Specifically, Mrs. Felix testified, “No.. .the IRS have.. .put everything on the house. They ... say we owed them ... almost a million dollars and they put a hen on it. So we not staying there.” At that same time, Mrs. Felix testified that she moved to Maryland and was commuting to Ohio, “(b)ecause with my job I could do it online exactly what I do and then I stayed in Maryland because I really wanted to leave Ohio.” Debtors’ first bankruptcy attorney, Phillip Gerth, (Mr. Gerth), corroborated Mrs. Felix’s testimony at the meeting of creditors by volunteering that, “The plan is to hopefully offer the house in Ohio as an ... (offer) of compromise to the IRS. Hope it clears it. And then hope they (Debtors) can do a loan modification in Maryland.. .Then they’re going to move there. ... That’s the master plan.”

Next, Mrs. Felix testified during a Bankruptcy Rule 2004 examination conducted on May 15, 2015, that she was working too hard in the Ohio business, no longer enjoyed that business, and wanted to do something else. In addition, Mrs. Felix testified that she hired a broker to sale the business, to no avail.. Mrs. Felix also testified she only returned to Ohio to help her son Brian Felix with the business, but wanted to be in Maryland near her family. Finally, Mrs. Felix at that time testified their older daughter is in Maryland, while the other children remain in Columbus.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In re Felix
Sixth Circuit, 2018

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
562 B.R. 700, 2017 Bankr. LEXIS 215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-felix-ohsb-2017.