In Re Greenberg

200 B.R. 763, 36 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1421, 1996 Bankr. LEXIS 1243, 1996 WL 566854
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York
DecidedSeptember 4, 1996
Docket19-22356
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 200 B.R. 763 (In Re Greenberg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.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 Greenberg, 200 B.R. 763, 36 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1421, 1996 Bankr. LEXIS 1243, 1996 WL 566854 (N.Y. 1996).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION GRANTING DEBTOR’S MOTION TO DISMISS CASE

STUART M. BERNSTEIN, Bankruptcy Judge.

40 East 80 Apartment Corp. (the “Co-op”) moves to convert Olivia Greenberg’s (the “debtor”) Chapter 13 case to one under Chapter 7. Prior to the return date, the debtor “cross-moved” to dismiss her case pursuant to § 1307(b) of the Bankruptcy Code. The Co-op opposed the debtor’s motion. For the reasons that follow, the Court will dismiss the case upon the conditions stated below, and deny the Co-op’s motion to convert the case.

FACTS

The factual background of this case is set forth in the Court’s Memorandum Decision Denying Debtor’s Motion to Reinstate the Automatic Stay and Stay Pending Appeal dated July 8, 1996 (“Mem. Dec.”), familiarity with which is presumed. I will summarize only those facts relevant to the pending motions.

The debtor resides in Apartment 3A in a building located at 40 East 80th Street (the “Building”). The Co-op owns and operates the Building as a residential, cooperative multiple dwelling. The debtor, in turn, owns 1,515 shares in the Co-op and occupies Apartment 3A as assignee of a proprietary lease with the Co-op. She acquired her shares and lease on or about April 12, 1979, from Sidney N. Weniger, the sponsor of the conversion, for approximately $56,000.00. She financed her acquisition with a $50,-000.00 loan from The Bowery Savings Bank to whom she pledged the shares and lease as security for repayment. The Bowery subsequently assigned its interest to Home Savings Bank (“Home”). Today, the debtor’s interest may be worth ten times the original purchase price.

Since 1992, the debtor and the Co-op have been engaged in numerous disputes whose enmity, at least from the debtor’s standpoint, rivals the bloodiest civil war. The origins of the dispute remain murky to this day, but I have become convinced that they have as much to do with personalities as with economics. The debtor has also fought with her mortgagee, accusing it of various sins not quite rising to the level of the Co-op’s supposed wrongdoing.

This is the debtor’s second sojourn through bankruptcy. She filed her first chapter 13 case on March 17, 1994, apparently to forestall legal action against her by the Co-op. (Application for an Order Converting Chapter 13 Case to One under Chapter 7 dated July 3, 1996, at ¶ 9.) On July 27, 1994, Judge Gallet, to whom the case was assigned, signed an order granting the debtor’s motion to voluntarily withdraw her petition. (Id., Ex. D.) Thereafter, in or about January, 1995, the Co-op served a Notice to Cure and Notice of Intention to Terminate Proprietary Lease and Cancel Shares of Stock, (id., Ex. E), on the debtor, and commenced an action in state court to foreclose its security interest in the debtor’s shares in the Co-op and her proprietary lease.

In response to the debtor’s motion, the state court granted a stay of the foreelo-sure/eviction proceeding based upon the debtor’s contention that she had paid her maintenance, although late, and that the amounts demanded by the Co-op were excessive and not due. (Transcript of hearing held May 23, 1996, at 19-20.) According to the debtor, her state court attorney quit on the eve of the state court hearing, she was not prepared to try the case pro se, and filed this chapter 13 case on March 9, 1995, to *766 obtain the benefit of the automatic stay. (Id. at 20.)

The debtor’s current petition and her schedules contain numerous misstatements and omissions. She did not disclose the prior bankruptcy in the petition. She failed to disclose her ownership of certain artwork that came to light only when her former attorney, Larry Fine, Esq., sought leave to withdraw as her counsel in May, 1996. (Mem. Dec. at 22-23 n. 10.) In addition, her schedules revealed that she did not earn regular income and apparently relied upon contributions from unidentified sources to pay her monthly co-op maintenance. (See Schedule I —Current Income of Individual Debtors dated Mar. 9, 1995.) Her schedules did not indicate how she met her other expenses. Her plan, dated Mar. 30, 1995, proposed to pay only $320.00 per month, for sixty months, or a total of $19,200.00, which is inadequate to meet her priority and secured debt. Finally, she never sought a court order authorizing a five year repayment plan. See 11 U.S.C. § 1322(d).

As I explained at greater length in the Memorandum Decision, the debtor has continuously faded to pay her co-op maintenance in the .correct amount or in a timely fashion even after I ordered her to do so. Consequently, I granted the Co-op’s motion for relief from the automatic stay, essentially sending the parties back to state court to litigate their two party dispute.

At approximately the same time, the Co-op made the pending motion to convert the case, claiming that the debtor had engaged in dilatory and abusive practices before me, and her conduct mandated conversion to chapter 7 and the appointment of an independent trustee. The Co-op’s real concern is that the state court litigation will take more than six months to resolve. The debtor, it fears, will wait six months, 1 file another case and invoke the automatic stay to again frustrate the Coop’s efforts to collect its secured claim.

Prior to the return date, the debtor made a “defensive” cross-motion to dismiss her case. 2 She preferred to remain in chapter 13, but if she could not, she would then prefer to be out of bankruptcy rather than in chapter 7. On the July 25, 1996 return date, she reiterated this position in open court. (Transcript of hearing held July 25, 1996 (“Tr. 7/25/96”), at 25-26.) Responding to the Co-op’s concerns that she would file another case in six months, she agreed that if she filed another case within one year of a dismissal, the automatic stay would not apply in the new case to the Co-op or Home. (Id. at 48.)

The debtor subsequently reneged on her offer. On or about August 2, 1996, she submitted an unsolicited, proposed order granting her motion to dismiss her case without prejudice pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 1307(b). 3 The proposed order made the automatic stay inapplicable to any case filed in the next 180 days although under 11 U.S.C. § 109(g)(2), she could not even file another case within 180 days. Hence, her proposed order not only withdrew her concession but impliedly granted rights that Congress had withheld.

DISCUSSION

Section 1307(b) of the Bankruptcy Code states that “[o]n request of the debtor at any time ... the court shall dismiss a case under this chapter.” 11 U.S.C. § 1307(b) (emphasis added).

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Bluebook (online)
200 B.R. 763, 36 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1421, 1996 Bankr. LEXIS 1243, 1996 WL 566854, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-greenberg-nysb-1996.