In Re Giordano

234 B.R. 645, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 668, 1999 WL 382447
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 8, 1999
Docket15-14511
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 234 B.R. 645 (In Re Giordano) 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 Giordano, 234 B.R. 645, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 668, 1999 WL 382447 (Pa. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION

DAVID A. SCHOLL, Chief Judge.

A INTRODUCTION

The principal issue presented by the instant objections of a Chapter 13 Debtor to her mortgagee’s proof of claim relate to the mortgagee’s alleged failure to properly allocate sums paid to the mortgagee from the Debtor’s Trustee payments in two previous Chapter 13 bankruptcy cases. We reject the mortgagee’s apparent argument that the Debtor’s failure to object to its claims in two prior bankruptcy cases binds the Debtor to the instant claim, especially since most of the dispute involves allocation of payments post-dismissal in the immediately prior case, which could not possibly have been litigated there. Although we cannot totally accept the allocations proposed by the Debtor, we agree that the mortgagee has failed to present any evidence supporting the propriety of its own allocations or in support of allowance of the components of its claim apart from delinquent payments.

While it is difficult to fix the claim with precision on this record, since we are obliged to do so as best we can, we will reduce the $26,412.30 delinquent payment component of the claim by $12,998.87, the figure which the Debtor asserts was misal-located. The mortgagee’s claim for arrears is therefore fixed at $13,413.43.

B. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

PATRICIA F. GIORDANO (“the Debt- or”) filed the instant individual Chapter 13 bankruptcy case on October 14, 1998. In response to Proof of Claim No. 4 (“the Claim”) filed by Huntington Mortgage Company (“the Mortgagee”) on November 23, 1998,- which claimed arrears of $29,-009.47 and a total payoff amount of $43,-763.26, the Debtor filed objections thereto (“the Objections”) on February 19, 1999. The components of the arrears claimed were as follows:

$26,412.30 45 payments at $586.94
$102.75 Accrued late charges to date of filing
$125.00 Legal fees and distributions
$47.00 Inspections
$2,115.00 Foreclosure Costs
$207.42 Other: BPO
$29,009.47 TOTAL ARREARS

A hearing scheduled on the Objections on March 25, 1999, the date of a continued confirmation hearing and oh the Trustee’s motion alleging that the amount of the mortgagee’s disputed claim rendered the Debtor’s plan infeasible, was rescheduled for April 15, 1999, on the Mortgagee’s request for a continuance because that witness allegedly missed her flight. On the latter date, that witness was again not *648 present, but the parties agreed to resolve the Objections by preparing a written Stipulation of Facts to be filed on or before May 6, 1999, and briefs to be submitted on or before May 20, 1999. However, when no Stipulation arrived on May 6, 1999, we entered an Order on that date scheduling a hearing on the Objections for May 13, 1999.

The Mortgagee’s witness did not appear at the May 13, 1999, hearing as well. Instead, the parties orally stipulated to certain facts on the record, e.g., that the Debtor had made 100 of the 149 required mortgage payments between June 1986 and October 1998 directly to the Mortgagee; that $4,339.83 was received by the Mortgagee from the Trustee during the Debtor’s first case, Bankruptcy No. 92-12461 (“the 1992 Case”), filed on April 23, 1992, and dismissed on January 24, 1995; and the Mortgagee acknowledged receipt of $11,006.80 from the Trustee in the course of Debtor’s third case, Bankr. No. 96-13363 (“the 1996 Case”) 1 filed on April 15, 1996, and dismissed on July 14, 1998. In addition, the parties stipulated that the Debtor had, on several occasions, made additional payments to cover the Mortgagee’s outstanding legal fees and costs, including $923.75 in September 1991; $50 each in October, November, and December 1992; and two payments totaling $610 to prior counsel for the Mortgagee in May and June 1998.

The Debtor was the only witness for either party to testify at the hearing. She stated that, as a past employee of a mortgage company, she was competent to prepare her own allocation schedule for the mortgage payments from its inception to date, which was admitted into evidence. According to this accounting, the Debtor asserted that she was only $13,404.46 in arrears at the time of the filing of her latest bankruptcy case.

The Debtor’s aforementioned schedule demonstrated that she assumed that the two lump sums distributed by the Trustee to the Mortgagee from her payments during her two previous bankruptcies should have been allocated to monthly mortgage payments, with appropriate late charges being applied as she calculated. The Debtor also submitted another exhibit which purported to be an analysis of her escrow account from the inception of her mortgage to date, embellishing same with copies of receipts of tax and insurance bills paid by the Debtor totaling $2,408.42, which she claimed were the responsibility of the Mortgagee.

The Mortgagee argued at the hearing that the first Trustee payment of $4,339.83 was properly applied to cover attorney fees of $877.69 and an escrow deficit of $3,462.14. No contentions regarding the allocation of the second Trustee payment of $11,006.80 were offered by the Mortgagee at the hearing. The Mortgagee did note that plans had been confirmed in the 1992 Case and the 1996 Case without the Debtor’s asserting any objections to its Proofs of claim in those cases, which were admitted into evidence at the hearing.

In her post-hearing brief, the Debtor argued not only that the Mortgagee had failed to carry its burden of proof in supporting its claims in light of the Objections but also that we should accept her accounts as controlling. She further argued that the Mortgagee failed to prove any components of its claim except the delinquent payments, failed to account for $12,-998.87 from the two Trustee payments in the prior Cases, and failed to credit her with the $2,408.42 paid towards taxes and insurance. She ultimately requested that we fix the Mortgagee’s arrearages at $10,-996.04 and its total claim at $25,812.77. 2

*649 The Mortgagee, meanwhile, argues that the confirmation orders in the 1992 and 1996 Cases bound the Debtor to accept the proofs of claim submitted in those two cases and, presumably, in this case as well. It therefore contends that its claims must be sustained in their entirety.

C. DISCUSSION

1. No Developments in the Debtor’s ■Prior Bankruptcy Cases Reasonably Support the Validity of the Claim of the Mortgagee in the Instant Case.

The unarticulated legal theories which the Mortgagee appears to be invoking as its sole support for the validity of the Claim are res judicata or collateral estoppel arising from the treatment of its claims in the Debtor’s 1992 and 1996 Cases. We begin by noting a procedural difficulty besetting any use of such legal theories,'¿e., the principle that res judicata

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Bluebook (online)
234 B.R. 645, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 668, 1999 WL 382447, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-giordano-paeb-1999.