In Re Harris

192 B.R. 334, 1996 Bankr. LEXIS 191, 1996 WL 88968
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. New York
DecidedMarch 1, 1996
Docket1-16-11752
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 192 B.R. 334 (In Re Harris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.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 Harris, 192 B.R. 334, 1996 Bankr. LEXIS 191, 1996 WL 88968 (N.Y. 1996).

Opinion

*335 DECISION & ORDER

JOHN C. NINFO, II, Bankruptcy Judge.

BACKGROUND

On January 8, 1996, the debtors, Clay Arthur Harris and Lori Ann Harris (the “Debtors”), proceeding pro se, filed a petition commencing a Chapter 13 case (the “1996 Case”).

The Court’s records indicate that the Debtors had filed two previous pro se Chapter 13 eases which had each been dismissed after the Chapter 13 Trustee made a motion to dismiss because the Debtors had failed to file a Chapter 13 plan and to appear at their Section 341 meeting of creditors.

A Chapter 13 case filed by the Debtors on November 15, 1994 (the “1994 Case”) was dismissed on April 18, 1995. In the 1994 Case, the Debtors failed to file the required schedules and statements but they did file a list of creditors with their petition which set forth only ITT Residential Capital (“ITT”) and New York State Higher Education Services (“New York State Higher Education”). In the 1994 Case, ITT filed a proof of claim for $19,608.13, representing arrearages due on a mortgage (the “ITT Mortgage”) which it held on the Debtors’ residence at 99 Paige Street, Rochester, New York (“Paige Street”).

A Chapter 13 case filed by the Debtors on June 26, 1995 (the “1995 case”) was dismissed on September 1, 1995. In the 1995 Case, the Debtors once again failed to file the required schedules and statements but they did file a list of creditors with their petition which set forth only ITT and New York State Higher Education. In the 1995 case, ITT filed a proof of claim for $30,255.20, representing arrearages then due on the ITT Mortgage, and New York State Higher Education filed proofs of claim for $18,805.09, representing the amounts due on federally guaranteed student loans.

On January 25, 1996, the Chapter 13 Trustee filed a motion to convert the 1996 Case from a Chapter 13 case to a Chapter 7 ease (the “Conversion Motion”) on the grounds that the Debtors had failed to file the required schedules, statements and a Chapter 13 plan, and because it appeared that the Debtors were attempting to abuse the Bankruptcy Code. The Conversion Motion was made returnable on February 5, 1996. Prior to the return date of the Motion, the Debtors filed a Notice of Conversion pursuant to Section 1307(a), which resulted in the conversion of the 1996 Case from a Chapter 13 case to a Chapter 7 case on February 2,1996.

In the 1996 Case, the Debtors initially filed a petition and a list of creditors which once again only set forth ITT and New York State Higher Education. Thereafter, however, on the February 2, 1996 conversion date, the Debtors filed schedules and statements which: (1) appeared to have been prepared by a typing service; (2) listed the value of Paige Street at $50,000 and the balance due on the ITT Mortgage at $34,000; (3) valued listed miscellaneous personal property and vehicles at $2,725, all but $20.00 of which was claimed as exempt; (4) listed unpaid income taxes for tax years beginning in 1986 for in excess of $52,000; and (5) listed unsecured claims of $62,590, held by fifty-nine separate entities, although some were collection agencies or attorneys for otherwise listed creditors and therefore duplicates. Some of the listed unsecured claims were shown as individual liabilities and others were shown as joint claims. These listed unsecured claims included over $10,000 for utility services owed to the Rochester Gas & Electric Corporation for Paige Street, $19,000 for utility services owed to the Rochester Gas & Electric Corporation for 255 Sawyer Street and $3,500 owed to the Penfield Federal Credit Union for a school loan.

The Debtors’ schedules indicated that: (1) Clay Harris was a self-employed real estate broker with monthly income of $1,600 from real property pursuant to an attached detailed statement which was not attached; (2) Lori Ann Harris was employed as a secretary with net monthly take-home pay of $888.00; and (3) the monthly family expenses were $2,440.00, leaving the Debtors with disposable income of only $48.00 per month.

On February 5, 1996, ITT filed a Motion for Relief from Stay in connection with Paige Street and the ITT Mortgage (the “Stay Relief Motion”). The Motion was made re *336 turnable on February 14, 1996 at the Court’s 11:30 a.m. Motion Calendar. In the Stay Relief Motion, ITT alleged that: (1) Paige Street had a fair market value of no greater than $53,000, based on the City of Rochester tax assessment; (2) the balance then due to ITT on its Mortgage pursuant to a September 19, 1994 Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale entered by the New York State Supreme Court was $55,647.79; (3) based on its fair market value and the outstanding balance due on the ITT Mortgage, there was no equity in Paige Street for the Debtors or the Chapter 7 estate; (4) Paige Street was not necessary for a reorganization by the Debtors, since this was no longer a Chapter 13 case; (5) ITT did not have adequate protection of its interest in Paige Street, since there was no equity in the property and the Debtors had not made any mortgage payments since May, 1993 prior to their filing of the 1994 Case; and (6) the Debtors’ 1996 Chapter 13 case was filed in bad faith since it was filed one day before the scheduled foreclosure sale of Paige Street with no reasonable possibility of a successful Chapter 13 ease and for the sole purpose of delaying the foreclosure sale.

On February 12,1996, the Debtors filed an Answer to the Stay Relief Motion which generally denied the allegations made by ITT and alleged that the Debtors were in the process of applying to H.U.D. for assistance.

On the February 14, 1996 return date of the Stay Relief Motion, the Court noted for the record that the Debtors had not appeared. Based on the pleadings before it, the Court found that ITT had met its burdens under both Section 362(d)(1) and Section 362(d)(2) and it granted the Stay Relief Motion. The Court further found that because the Debtors: (1) had a history of serial bankruptcy filings which were timed to stop ITT from completing its State Court mortgage foreclosure sales; (2) had given incorrect information (the lists of creditors) when filing their Chapter 13 petitions; and (3) had failed in any way to prosecute their Chapter 13 cases, there appeared to be an abuse of the Bankruptcy Code and the Bankruptcy System which warranted the additional relief which the Court had granted to movants such as ITT in similar cases. 1 The Court indicated that the Order granting relief from the stay could also provide that, should the Debtors, or any individuals obtaining title from the Debtors, file a bankruptcy case in the Western District of New York prior to: (a) the ITT Mortgage being brought current by the payment of all unpaid monthly mortgage payments and all escrow advances made by ITT in connection with Paige Street for insurance or real estate taxes; and (b) all outstanding real estate taxes on Paige Street being paid in full, ITT could continue with any scheduled State Court mortgage foreclosure sale of Paige Street without being in willful violation of the automatic stay which would be provided by Section 362 upon the filing of such a petition, provided that within ten days from the sale, a hearing, on notice to the U.S.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
192 B.R. 334, 1996 Bankr. LEXIS 191, 1996 WL 88968, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-harris-nywb-1996.