In Re Five Boroughs Mortg. Co., Inc.

176 B.R. 708, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 53, 26 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 722, 1995 WL 28368
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. New York
DecidedJanuary 23, 1995
Docket1-19-40725
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 176 B.R. 708 (In Re Five Boroughs Mortg. Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Five Boroughs Mortg. Co., Inc., 176 B.R. 708, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 53, 26 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 722, 1995 WL 28368 (N.Y. 1995).

Opinion

DECISION AND ORDER

ROBERT JOHN HALL, Bankruptcy Judge.

Preliminary Statement

Prior to its making the instant motion *709 (“Motion”), 1 mortgagee CrossLand Federal Savings Bank (“Bank”) obtained relief from the automatic stay to proceed with its state court foreclosure action. The debtor (“Debt- or”) 2 then moved before this Court for a determination of the allowed amount of the Bank’s claim. The referees appointed by the state court (“Referees”) ceased computing the outstanding debt to the Bank, effectually paralyzing the foreclosure action. The Bank reacted by filing the within Motion, pursuant to which it requests this Court to render an order compelling and/or authorizing the Referees to proceed with their duty to compute the debt outstanding under the parties’ loan and mortgage documents, rather than await the outcome of Debtor’s motion. Accordingly, the Bank’s Motion requires the Court to determine whether a referee appointed in a foreclosure action should await — or be at all concerned with — a bankruptcy court’s calculation of the allowed amount of the foreclosing mortgagee/bank’s claim against the bankruptcy estate.

Relevant Factual History

By order dated December 21, 1993, this Court granted the Bank relief from the automatic stay. 3 See 11 U.S.C. § 362(d). This permitted the Bank to pursue its rights as a mortgagee in certain of Debtor’s real property. The Bank then had the state court in which the foreclosure action was pending appoint the Referees to compute the outstanding debt owed by Debtor. The Bank furnished the Referees with the amounts it alleged to be the outstanding debt due, and documents with which to support such allegations.

Debtor subsequently filed a motion with this Court for an order fixing the amount of the Bank’s claim. See id. § 502(b); Fed. R.Bankr.P. 3012. Debtor also notified the Referees that it disputed the amount the Bank alleged was owed. The Referees ceased computing the debt due the Bank as mortgagee, believing it appropriate to wait for this Court’s decision determining the amount of its claim. Debtor’s counsel approved of and encouraged the Referees’ hesitation. See Debtor’s Reply to the Bank’s Motion ¶ 5. 4 By way of an order to show cause, the Bank initiated the Motion at bar for an order directing and/or authorizing the Referees to proceed with their duties to compute Debtor’s obligation to the Bank in accordance with their appointment by the state court in the foreclosure action.

Parties’ Arguments

The Bank alleges that the Referees have an existing duty to compute the amount of the outstanding debt due it under its loan and mortgage agreement with Debtor. The Bank believes the Referees’ duties have in no way been suspended or stayed.

Debtor contends that this Court can and should determine the allowed amount of the *710 Bank’s claim. This contention has sparked little controversy. But Debtor further maintains that the Referees should await this Court’s determinations, since the referees will be bound by such determinations. Alternatively, even if the Referees will not be bound by the Court’s determinations, Debtor believes the Referees should wait for the Court’s calculations since they can nevertheless be helpful to the Referees, promoting economy.

There are reasons why Debtor urges that the Referees should not perform their computations before this Court determines the allowed amount of the Bank’s claim. First, Debtor correctly argues that the allowed amount of the Bank’s claim as determined by this Court is likely to be lower than the amount of the outstanding debt computed by the Referees. This result is mandated because under the Bankruptcy Code certain portions of a claim against a bankruptcy estate are not allowable. See, e.g., 11 U.S.C. §§ 502(b); 506(b). These are described further below, but they include those components of certain creditors’ claims which -(for example) represent demands for attorneys’ fees and for interest which accrued on claims subsequent to the bankruptcy petition. Debtor stresses that these items would be unallowable portions of the Bank’s claim against Debtor’s bankruptcy estate. These items would be part of the Referees’ computations of the outstanding debt, for they were provided for in the parties’ loan and mortgage documents. If the Referees are not bound by the Court’s determinations, then such items would be included in their computations. This would render the debt as computed by the Referees larger than the allowed amount of the claim as determined by the Court. But if the Referees would be bound by the Court’s determinations, then obviously their computations would be identical to that of the Court’s. Necessarily, then, arguing that the Referees are bound by the Court’s determinations lowers the Bank’s debt. One question accordingly is whether the Referees are bound by the Court’s determination of the allowed amount of the Bank’s claim.

As stated, Debtor also argues that this Court’s determination of the Bank’s claim will facilitate and expedite the Referees’ tasks of computing the total amount due. The logic is that even if the Referees are not bound by the Court’s determinations, it would be advantageous in any event to have the Referees wait.

Debtor maintains that it can pay the Bank the amount determined by this Court to redeem the mortgaged property prior to the foreclosure sale. Or, if Debtor does not redeem and the property is sold by foreclosure, the proceeds received will be applied to reduce the claim amount calculated' by this Court. The Bank disputes this logic, noting that the Referees’ use of the figure that constitutes this Court’s determination of the allowed amount of its claim would render all resulting calculations inaccurate.

DISCUSSION

Our order to show cause scheduled oral argument upon the Bank’s Motion and mandated that those served include the Referees and that they file responsive papers. The Referees disregarded our order, failed to appear before the Court at oral argument and refused to file papers. Their disregard of our order, and their failure to ascertain this Court’s stance on the Motion, contributed to what we believe was their irresponsible neglect of the duties they assumed by oath pursuant to a state court appointment. Debtor furnished the Referees with wool and the Referees pulled it over their own eyes without compulsion. Such is not exemplary behavior, either for referees 5 upon whom courts and litigants are depending, or for attorneys at law cognizant of the public’s current impression of the bar’s members.

*711

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
176 B.R. 708, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 53, 26 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 722, 1995 WL 28368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-five-boroughs-mortg-co-inc-nyeb-1995.