In Re Gracyk

103 B.R. 865, 1989 Bankr. LEXIS 1478, 1989 WL 103215
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedFebruary 17, 1989
Docket19-30036
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 103 B.R. 865 (In Re Gracyk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.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 Gracyk, 103 B.R. 865, 1989 Bankr. LEXIS 1478, 1989 WL 103215 (Ohio 1989).

Opinion

*866 MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

RICHARD L. SPEER, Bankruptcy Judge.

This cause comes before the Court on the Trustee’s Motion to Vacate the Abandonment of Real Property. A Hearing was held on the Trustee’s Motion, and the Court requested Briefs from the parties. Briefs were filed by the Trustee and the Debtors. The Court has reviewed the evidence and arguments of counsel, as well as the entire record in this case. Based on that review, and for the following reasons, the Court finds that the Trustee’s Motion to Vacate the Abandonment of Real Property should be denied.

FACTS

The facts in this case are not in dispute. The Debtors, Jerry Franklin Gracyk and Jo Ann Gracyk, filed their Petition for relief under Chapter 13 on March 18, 1983. The real estate in question was scheduled by the Debtors as having a value of Fifty-four Thousand Dollars ($54,000.00), with the first mortgage to Peoples Savings Association in the amount of Twenty-eight Thousand Dollars ($28,000.00), and a second mortgage to First National Bank in the sum of Four Thousand One Hundred Forty-seven Dollars ($4,147.00).

On November 6, 1985, First National Bank of Toledo filed its Motion for Abandonment of Property of the Estate and for Relief from Automatic Stay on a 1974 GMC % Ton Pick-Up and real property located at 2103 Char-Ming Drive, Toledo, Ohio. The Motion alleged that the Debtors had failed to make their mortgage payments outside the Plan as had been proposed by the Gracyks and Confirmed by the Court. There were no Objections to the Motion, and this Court granted Relief from Stay and Abandonment. First National Bank then commenced a foreclosure action against the real estate in the Lucas County Court of Common Pleas. Thereafter, Peoples Savings Association filed a Motion for Relief from Stay and Abandonment, which was also granted without Objection. Peoples Savings then filed an answer and cross-claim in the foreclosure action.

Before the completion of the foreclosure process, the parties reached a settlement. The Debtors borrowed the sum of Five Thousand Two Hundred Dollars ($5,200.00) from Kenneth and Eva Esterline to pay off the second mortgage owed to First National Bank. The Debtors gave the Esterlines a second mortgage on the real estate to secure the debt. The Debtors paid First National Five Thousand One Hundred Ninety-four Dollars and Eighty-one Cents ($5,194.81) to avoid foreclosure of the real estate and repossession of the 1984 PickUp. Part of the payment to First National Bank was for an unsecured debt.

The Debtors subsequently converted their case to a proceeding under Chapter 7. Edward F. Zoltanski was appointed as Trustee for the Gracyks’ case, and filed this Motion to Vacate the Abandonment of Real Property.

LAW

The Trustee argues that his Motion for Abandonment and Relief from Stay should be granted under Fed.R.Civ.P. 60(b). The Trustee asserts that the two secured creditors have used the legal system to take the Debtors’ property out of the bankruptcy estate, and receive full payment on their mortgages, and an unsecured debt. The Trustee contends that these actions are contrary to the policies of the Bankruptcy Code, and seeks the return of the previously abandoned home to the Debtors’ estate.

The Debtors maintain that even if the Court accepts the Trustee’s interpretation of the facts, the abandonment of property is irrevocable, despite a subsequent discovery that the property may have value to the estate. In the Debtors’ view, the only two exceptions to this rule are for property which was not scheduled, or where property was concealed from the Trustee.

The Trustee’s position is not supported by a review of the case law. The courts have been very reluctant to vacate orders granting relief from stay, and they have been even more reluctant to overturn or *867 ders granting abandonment. The most recent case addressing the relief from stay issue is In re Hood, 92 B.R. 648, 18 B.C.D. 628 (Bankr.E.D.Va.1988), aff'd., In re Hood, 92 B.R. 656 (E.D.Va.1988). In Hood, the court refused to vacate an order granting relief from stay, even though the granting of such relief could have resulted in a benefit to the estate in the amount of Sixty-seven Thousand Five Hundred Dollars ($67,500.00). It should be noted that the Hood decision involved a completed foreclosure sale. Nevertheless, the policy of finality set forth in the Hood decision remains persuasive.

Moreover, in the case sub judice, not only was relief from stay granted, the property was also abandoned. As the Hood court noted in dicta, “Property abandoned pursuant to Section 554 generally cannot be recovered by the debtor’s estate notwithstanding a later determination of value which might have benefitted the estate.” In re Hood, 92 B.R. at 655, 18 B.C.D. at 633.

Another case which reached a similar result is Matter of Fisher, 80 B.R. 58 (Bankr.M.D.N.C.1987). In the Fisher ease, the Debtors in a Chapter 13 sought a preliminary injunction in their action to set aside a foreclosure sale which had been entered after the subject property had been released from the automatic stay. The basis for the Debtors action was that the property had sold for too low an amount and that the sale was, as a result, fraudulent. The Fisher court stated:

Absent unusual and compelling circumstances or a particularly egregious fact situation, a Bankruptcy Court should not exercise its broad jurisdictional mandate as provided by section 105, to upset a perfectly proper and valid state court foreclosure proceeding which took place after the bankruptcy petition was filed and after the Court released the property from the automatic stay pursuant to section 362.

Matter of Fisher, 80 B.R. at 62.

Other cases have directly addressed the recovery of abandoned property. Most of these cases have dealt with efforts to recover abandoned property after the discovery that it had value which would benefit the estate. The general rule appears to be that abandonment, once accomplished, is irrevocable, regardless of any subsequent discovery that the property had greater value than previously believed. See, In re Atkinson, 62 B.R. 678, 679 (Bank.D.Nev. 1986); In re Bryson, 53 B.R. 3, 4 (Bankr.M.D.Tenn.1985); Matter of Enriquez, 22 B.R. 934, 935 (Bankr.D.Neb.1982); In re Sutton, 10 B.R. 737, 739 (Bankr.E.D.Va.1981); 4 Collier on Bankruptcy 554.02,2. at 554-7 (15th ed. 1986). Unlike the majority of the cases cited above, this property was not abandoned upon the motion of a Chapter 7 Trustee. In the present case, the Motions for Relief from Stay and Abandonment were filed by creditors, although the Chapter 13 Trustee did not file an Objection. Nevertheless, abandonment’s conceptual underpinnings, and the policy of preserving finality, both support the result reached in the above cases.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
103 B.R. 865, 1989 Bankr. LEXIS 1478, 1989 WL 103215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-gracyk-ohnb-1989.