In Re Hill

96 B.R. 809, 1989 WL 13588
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedFebruary 15, 1989
DocketBankruptcy 2-88-03137
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 96 B.R. 809 (In Re Hill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.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 Hill, 96 B.R. 809, 1989 WL 13588 (Ohio 1989).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER ON OBJECTION TO CONFIRMATION AND MOTION FOR VALUATION

R. GUY COLE, Jr., Bankruptcy Judge.

I. Preliminary Statement

This contested matter presents a dispute over the valuation of a 52-acre tract of real estate and the improvements thereon. The dispute arises in the context of an objection to debtors’ proposed Chapter 13 plan (“Plan”) and the related motion for valúa *810 tion which have been asserted by Judi's, Inc. (“Judi’s”). The Court has jurisdiction over this contested matter pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1384(b) and the General Order of Reference entered in this judicial district. The matter at bar is a core proceeding which the Court may hear and determine in accordance with 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(1), and (2)(B) and (L). The following opinion and order shall constitute the Court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law pursuant to Bankruptcy Rule 7052.

Debtors’ Plan provides for payments of $450 per month over a 36-month time period; payment of $1,500 (debtors’ anticipated. yearly federal income tax refund) on or before April 1 of each calendar year; payment in full to holders of allowed secured and priority unsecured claims; and, a dividend of 13% to holders of allowed general unsecured claims. Judi’s has filed a claim in the amount of $52,046.40 which it asserts is fully secured (“Claim”). The Plan treats the Claim as secured in the amount of $12,960 and unsecured as to the remaining balance of $39,086.40. Hence, debtors propose to pay Judi’s $12,960 over the 36-month duration of the plan with interest at a rate of 10% per annum and a 13% dividend on its $39,086.40 unsecured claim. This proposed treatment under the Plan has spawned Judi’s objection to confirmation (“Objection”) and motion for valuation (“Motion”).

II. Factual Background

Judi’s Claim arises from a series of pre-petition transactions with the debtors, Jeffery and Tobie Hill (“Debtors”). In 1984, Debtors purchased a 15-acre tract of land and the house and two barns thereon (“Residential Tract”) from Judi’s. The property was purchased pursuant to a land contract for a purchase price of $50,000. Under the contract, Debtors were granted the option to purchase from Judi’s an adjoining tract of real estate, consisting of 37-acres (“Farm Property”), at a price of $1,000 per acre. On April 16, 1986, Debtors entered into a second transaction with Judi’s whereby Debtors acquired title to both the Residential Tract and the Farm Property (collectively the “Property”). Debtors paid $33,300 in cash to Judi’s which sum represented the proceeds of a $33,300 loan obtained from First Federated Mortgage Corporation (“FFMC”). To secure repayment of the loan received from FFMC, Debtors granted FFMC a first mortgage on the Residential Tract. The remaining $41,700 of the total purchase price of $75,000 was financed by Judi’s, which received a second mortgage on the Residential Tract and a first mortgage on the Farm Property.

Debtors’ treatment of the Claim as a $12,960 secured claim and a $39,086.40 unsecured claim is based upon their assertion that the value of the Property is $38,-000. To support this valuation, Debtors offered the testimony of Ronald Rhodeback (“Rhodeback”) and introduced Rhodeback’s appraisal letter as an exhibit. Rhodeback, a licensed real estate salesman and auctioneer who is associated with Duck’s Mill Real Estate and Auction Company, resides in Granville, Ohio, and is a neighbor of the Debtors. He obtained his license as a real estate salesman in 1976 and has been a licensed autioneer since 1970. According to Rhodeback, the Property has a fair market value of $38,000. Rhodeback’s appraisal assigns separate valuation amounts for the Residential Tract — $23,600—and the Farm Property — $14,400. Rhodeback described the house situated on the Residential Tract as being in a state of disrepair, noting that the interior of the house is in dire need of renovation. The exterior of the house, Rhodeback testified, is also in a dilapidated condition: the soffits of the house are rotting and there is at least one hole in the south wall of the home. Rhode-back opined that the soil on the Farm Property, which is a clay soil as opposed to a loam-type soil, was not conducive to the production of a good crop. Rhodeback has never seen a good crop grown on the Farm Property in the years he has lived adjacent thereto. He compared the Farm Property to four similar properties in the general vicinity which were recently sold. Based upon his examination of these comparable sales, he values the Farm Property at $450 per acre.

*811 Rhodeback’s appraisal training is limited, however, to the completion of two appraisal courses: an appraisal course with the auctioneer’s association hé is a member of and a more recent (June, 1988) appraisal course with the Appraisal Institute in Nashville, Tennessee. Rhodeback’s principal occupation is that of an auctioneer as opposed to an appraiser.

Judi’s presented the testimony of Hale Whipkey in support of its Motion and Objection. Whipkey is a licensed real estate appraiser and broker doing business in Westerville, Ohio. Whipkey has been a licensed appraiser for approximately 12 years and in that capacity has performed appraisals of agricultural, residential, commercial and light industrial properties. Whipkey was formerly employed by the State of Ohio, Department of Tax Equalization, for a two-year period. He conducted numerous appraisals for that state agency. Whipkey has taken a series of courses since 1976 from the American Institute of Real Estate Appraisals and is a candidate for designation as a Member of the Appraisal Institute (M.A.I.). Whipkey’s written appraisal of the Property fixes the Property’s value at $66,000. According to Whipkey, the 32-acre Farm Property has a fair market value of $29,000 and the Residential Tract’s fair market value is $37,000.

The amount of Judi’s allowed secured claim, Debtors contend, should be fixed at $12,960. This sum represents Rhodeback’s opinion as to the value of the Farm Property ($14,400) — the property upon which Judi’s holds a first mortgage — less 10% hypothetical costs of sale ($1,440). Judi’s vigorously disputes Rhodeback’s appraisal figures, asserting that there are three possible figures which the Court could appropriately choose from in valuing the Property. The valuation alternatives suggested by Judi’s are based upon the county auditor’s tax appraisal of the Property, its sale price in April, 1986, or the value derived from Whipkey’s appraisal. Judi’s proposed valuation alternatives are set forth in the chart below:

A.Tax Appraisal.
Appraised Value (county auditor) $80,100.00
Less 10% costs of sale — (8,010.00)
Less first mortgage on the Residential Tract -(32,829.84)
Value of Judi’s secured claim $39,260.66
B. Sale Price.
Sale Price (4-16-86) $75,000.00
Less 10% costs of sale - (7,500.00)

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Bluebook (online)
96 B.R. 809, 1989 WL 13588, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-hill-ohsb-1989.