In Re Geller

74 B.R. 685, 1987 Bankr. LEXIS 951
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 18, 1987
Docket19-11039
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 74 B.R. 685 (In Re Geller) 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 Geller, 74 B.R. 685, 1987 Bankr. LEXIS 951 (Pa. 1987).

Opinion

OPINION

DAVID A. SCHOLL, Bankruptcy Judge.

The matters presently before the Court in these cases are Objections of a creditor and the Trustee to a Stipulation of Dismissal entered into between the Debtors and several of their creditors, who are former tenants of the Debtors whom we shall refer to herein as “the Tenants.” After considering several of the ironies which pervade disposition of motions to voluntarily dismiss Chapter 7 and Chapter 11 cases generally and these cases in particular, we conclude that, since we believe that Motions to voluntarily dismiss voluntary bankruptcy cases should be liberally granted, we should approve the Stipulation, with several caveats.

The first of these two matters is a voluntary Chapter 11 case filed by MORRIS GELLER (hereinafter referred to as “Morris”), JOEL GELLER (hereinafter referred to as “Joel”), and LILLIAN GELLER (hereinafter referred to as “Lillian”) as a partnership trading as M.B. GELLER & SON, on June 5, 1984. The second is a voluntary Chapter 7 case filed by Morris only on March 29, 1985. By Order of June 12, 1985, the two cases were directed to be jointly administered. Appointed also Trustee in both cases was James J. O’Connell, Esquire, at that time also the Philadelphia Standing Chapter 13 Trustee.

The Gellers are landlords who have repeatedly resorted to the bankruptcy court in times of crises. The Tenants advise us of seven filings prior to the two at hand, and we are aware of a tenth filing, a Chapter 13 case filed by Lillian on January 30, 1987, and already dismissed by us on May 5,1987, due to her failure to file any of the necessary papers due after the filing of a Petition and List of Creditors.

Numerous motions and adversarial cases were initiated against the Debtors throughout the course of these proceedings, including the following:

1. Adversarial proceedings, in both cases, by the objecting creditor, ACACIA MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO. (hereinafter referred to as “Acacia”). These were resolved by a default in the Adversary proceeding in the Chapter 11 case, Adversary No. 84-1257; and an agreement between Acacia and the Debtors that the debts to Acacia were non-dischargeable and the liens of Acacia against the Debtors’ properties were valid in the Adversary proceeding in the Chapter 7 case, Adversary No. 85-0772.

2. Vigorous interrogation of Morris at meetings conducted pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 341 by the Tenants’ counsel, which led to the filing, by the Tenants’ counsel, in September, 1986, of both a Motion to convert the Chapter 11 case to one pursuant to Chapter 7, and a Motion to compel Morris to answer certain questions and produce certain documents which he declined to do at the § 341 meetings.

3. Adversary cases by the Trustee to require the Debtors to turn over certain books and records, at Adversary No. 86-0008, which was apparently ultimately resolved in some fashion not disclosed by the record, and a Complaint pursuant to 11 *687 U.S.C. § 363(h), at Adversary No. 86-0488, against Morris and Lillian, to partition and sell certain of the partnership’s property.

On October 2, 1986, the Tenants’ two Motions, the Trustee’s § 363(h) Complaint, and a Motion for relief from the automatic stay filed by one Bruce Rosenberg, a mortgagee, all came before us for disposition. At that time, all of the parties present, including not only Morris’s counsel but Morris himself, reported to us that they had settled all of these matters by the Debtors’ agreeing to voluntarily dismiss their cases. The matters were, however, continued until November 20, 1986, for calendar purposes.

On November 20, 1986, we learned that the measures to effect the dismissal, which the Debtors had promised to institute immediately, had not been performed, and we rescheduled the matter for December 17, 1986, stating, in an Order of November 20, 1986, that, if the dismissal were not effected by that date, we would act to enforce the October 3, 1986, agreement ourselves.

On December 17, 1986, the matter was reported as settled; the Stipulation of Dismissal in issue was filed; and we ordered that the Stipulation would be approved if no objections were filed after thirty days’ notice to creditors. Unfortunately, a delay in transmission of the Order put off the dispatch of the notice until January 14, 1987. On February 17, 1987, the last day established for such filings, Acacia and the Trustee both filed the Objections which are before us.

In addition to filing on the last day, Acacia allegedly failed to serve its Objections on the Tenants’ counsel, and the Tenants’ counsel accordingly applied for us to enter the Order approving the Stipulation, erroneously certifying that no objections except that of the Trustee, who merely stated, in two lines, that he objected, without stating any reasons therefor, had been filed. Considering the Trustee’s Objection to be without any force, we proceeded to enter the Order approving the Stipulation on March 12, 1987, only to learn that the Objections had been duly listed by the Clerk’s Office for a hearing on March 19, 1987.

On March 19, 1987, at the hearing, we strongly urged the parties to amicably resolve this matter, continuing it until March 26, 1987, and quoting to them the discussion of 11 U.S.C. § 707(a) in Collier. 4 COLLIER ON BANKRUPTCY, 11707.03, at 707-7 to 707-8 (15th ed. 1987). Nevertheless, the parties returned on March 26, 1987, without a resolution, and we directed them to simultaneously file Briefs on or before April 16, 1987, supporting their respective positions.

The Stipulation of Dismissal contains an agreement that both of these cases will be dismissed with prejudice and that neither Morris nor Joel nor any partnership nor any corporation in which they are principals will refile a bankruptcy petition for six months; that Morris waives any discharge; that the Debtors will make certain payments to the Tenants and their counsel; i.e., $6,000.00 to the Tenants on or before October 31, 1986, and $2,500.00 in installments thereafter to the Tenants’ counsel; and that, upon full payment, the Tenants would release the Debtors and cease their efforts to obtain books and records from the Debtors.

Acacia’s Objection and its supporting Brief are only slightly more illuminating than the unimpressive two-line Objection filed by the Trustee. Acacia alleges that the Debtors owe it almost $400,000.00 and that approval of the Stipulation “will pay funds from the estate to certain creditors, thereby precluding equal distribution of funds to all creditors.” In its Brief, containing two pages and five lines of “Argument,” despite its belated filing on April 20, 1987, Acacia states as follows:

[The Tenants’ counsel] represents several of the creditors of Geller. [The Tenant’s counsel] has expended considerable time and expenses in order to achieve the aforementioned objective. Their continued efforts to determine assets of Geller’s has resulted in Geller’s desire to have them removed from the case.
The Dismissal of Geller frees Geller of continued investigation by [the Tenant’s counsel], the only creditor [sic] who has *688

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
74 B.R. 685, 1987 Bankr. LEXIS 951, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-geller-paeb-1987.