In Re Gallagher

332 B.R. 277, 2005 Bankr. LEXIS 2084, 2005 WL 2860183
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 21, 2005
Docket19-10401
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 332 B.R. 277 (In Re Gallagher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Gallagher, 332 B.R. 277, 2005 Bankr. LEXIS 2084, 2005 WL 2860183 (Pa. 2005).

Opinion

Memorandum Opinion

DIANE WEISS SIGMUND, Chief Judge.

Before the Court are the Motions of the Debtor (1) to Amend Confirmed Chapter 13 Plan Post-Confirmation (“Plan Motion”) and (2) for Permission to Obtain Credit (“Financing Motion”). A hearing was held on the Plan Motion on September 15, 2005, and the record was subsequently consolidated with the record made on September 29, 2005 on the Financing Motion. The Chapter 13 trustee (the “Trustee”) and Old Gold LLC (“Old Gold”) object to both Motions.

BACKGROUND

On August 5, 2003 Daniel Gallagher filed a petition under Chapter 13. 1 He quickly filed an adversary proceeding against Old Gold to challenge the extent of the lien it held on all his properties. 2 Old Gold responded with a motion for relief which some six months later was resolved with a consent order whereby Debtor agreed to sell the Pub, one of his properties, to partially satisfy Old Gold’s claim.

The Chapter 13 plan Debtor filed at the inception of his case to which Old Gold *279 objected was amended for the first time on March 24, 2004. The amendment provided for the sale of the Pub and subsequent financing to renovate the Moyamensing Property and pay off the balance to Old Gold. Old Gold maintained its objection. A second amended plan was filed on May 12, 2004 which contemplated a sale of the Mo-yamensing Property to the Mooney family, the buyer of the Pub, the proceeds of which would fund renovations of the Moya-mensing Property (in anticipation of a buy back) and satisfy Old Gold’s claim. A third amended plan filed on July 6, 2004 contained the same terms regarding the Moyamensing Property but reduced the monthly payments to the Trustee from $750 to $500. Debtor claimed he could not accomplish the second Mooney transaction or any refinance of the Moyamensing Property without knowing the amount of Old Gold’s claim. Accordingly, he was given liberal extensions of scheduled hearings on plan confirmation and the pending Trustee’s motion to dismiss (for lack of plan feasibility) to allow for the liquidation of Old Gold’s claim. On September 9, 2004 I held an evidentiary hearing on the claims objection and established a post-hearing briefing schedule.

On December 7, 2004 while the claim objection was under advisement, a fourth amended plan was filed. Doc. No. 120. For the first time, Debtor committed to accomplish the contemplated payment of Old Gold by a date certain. In the fourth plan, he proposed to pay off Old Gold through either a refinancing of the Moya-mensing Property and/or his other properties or through the Mooney transaction described above within 180 days of the determination of Old Gold’s claim. 3 On December 22, 2004 I entered an Order and Opinion which determined the amount of the Old Gold claim. 4

With the claim amount determined, a fifth amended plan was filed on February 18, 2005 in which Debtor committed to pay off Old Gold and all other amounts due under the plan by the sale of the Moya-mensing Property or before August 31, 2005, “or possibly some other arrangement by which Old Gold will be paid its allowed secured claim in full on or before that date. If no other arrangement can be made, the Restaurant (ie., Moyamensing Property) will be sold by that date or this case will be dismissed.” Doc. No. 152. The Fifth Amended Plan provided that no further monthly payments would be made to the Trustee but rather the plan would be paid off in full by a lump sum payment from the sale proceeds. Old Gold objected to confirmation of this plan. Prior to confirmation, the Debtor filed yet another plan. Doc. No. 164. The Sixth Amended Plan dated April 15, 2005 reiterated the provision to pay off Old Gold and the other amounts due under the plan by August 31, 2005 or the case would be dismissed but provided that monthly payments of $500 would resume until the lump sum payment was made on or before August 31, 2005. The Sixth Plan was confirmed on May 12, 2005. Doc. No. 167.

On August 15, 2005 the Plan Motion accompanied by the Seventh Amended Plan was filed. In the Plan Motion the Debtor avers that he has fallen slightly *280 behind in plan payments and has been unable to finalize a sale of the Moyamens-ing Property. He claims that “he has prospects for a sale or of an arrangement with investors who would put up funds to liquidate the claim of Old Gold LLC but he will need additional time to do so.” He requests a postponement of the drop dead date until December 31, 2005. The filed Seventh Plan, Exhibit D-l, simply copies the Sixth Plan substituting December 31, 2005 for August 31, 2005.

At the hearing on the Plan Motion, the Debtor had another proposal, perhaps anticipating that the ambiguity of the Seventh Plan, ¿a, prospects for a sale or an arrangement with investors to pay off Old Gold, would not pass muster over Old Gold’s expected objection given the Debt- or’s self-executing agreement to dismiss if the plan was not fully funded by August 31, 2005. The Debtor now testified that while he still had some sale prospects, he had secured a “commitment” from Nova Savings Bank (“Nova”) to extend a $170,000 mortgage loan on the Residence. Exhibit D-2. 5 Authorization of this loan is the relief sought by the Financing Motion. With the proceeds of the Nova loan, he intends to pay off Old Gold and the other creditor dealt with by the plan, his former wife Maryellen who is to be paid in full her non-dischargeable support obligation.

As that hearing and the subsequent hearing on the Financing Motion made apparent, there are not sufficient proceeds from the Nova loan to pay Old Gold 6 and the other plan obligations. Acknowledging the truth of the latter, Debtor vaguely states, as he has stated repeatedly before, that he intends to deal with Old Gold and then have a proposal to satisfy the rest of the plan funding. As for the Nova loan, he testified he did not know what it would take to close or when it would close. 7 However, once it did and Old Gold was paid, the Debtor believes he will be able to get additional financing on his other properties to pay the balance of the plan obligations.

As noted, the Trustee and Old Gold object to both Motions, albeit for different reasons. Old Gold simply has heard the Debtor’s vague and optimistic proposals too many times before and wants to move forward to exercise its state law remedies. It contends that the confirmed plan had an enforceable deadline which having not been met requires dismissal of the case by its own express terms. The Trustee is more charitable, focusing on the defects in the Seventh Plan which notably proposes *281 to pay all creditors by December 31, 2005. As the Trustee correctly observes, the financing at best satisfies Old Gold and adds a large new expense to the budget. There is no apparent source of funding for the remainder of the plan notwithstanding the provision that states that it will be paid off by December 31, 2005.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
332 B.R. 277, 2005 Bankr. LEXIS 2084, 2005 WL 2860183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-gallagher-paeb-2005.