In Re Hurst

212 B.R. 890, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 1776, 1997 WL 597531
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 18, 1997
Docket19-10290
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 212 B.R. 890 (In Re Hurst) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Hurst, 212 B.R. 890, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 1776, 1997 WL 597531 (Tenn. 1997).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER ON M & I MORTGAGE CORPORATION’S MOTION FOR RELIEF FROM THE AUTOMATIC STAY AND TO RATIFY AND CONFIRM FORECLOSURE SALE

JENNIE D. LATTA, Bankruptcy Judge.

M & I Mortgage Corporation filed the instant “Motion for Relief From the Automatic Stay and to Ratify and Confirm Foreclosure Sale” on August 14, 1997. This Court conducted a hearing in this contested matter pursuant to Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure 9014 on September 9,1997. After considering all of the pleadings and testimony before the Court, the Court makes the following findings of fact and conclusions of law pursuant to Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure 7052. This is a core proceeding. 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(G).

*891 FINDINGS OF FACT

The debtor filed her present petition for relief on July 23, 1997. This is the debtor’s third filing since 1993. 1 In the ease immediately proceeding this one, ease number 97-21809-XXX, an order granting adequate protection was entered in favor of Security Financial & Mortgage Mortgage Corporation. In that order granting adequate protection, the court required the debtor to pay her monthly mortgage installment together with her monthly arrearage payment within the calendar month the payment was due. In the event the debtor failed to timely make this payment, M & I had the right to file a Notice of Default with the debtor and her attorney, allowing the debtor to cure the default within ten (10) days. In the event the debtor failed to cure the default or in the event the debtor’s case was dismissed for any reason, M & I could proceed with a foreclosure sale and repossession of debtor’s property, located at 3090 Brisdane, Memphis, Tennessee, 38118, without further leave or order of this court. The order further enjoined the debtor from filing another ease until M & I completed the foreclosure sale. See Order Granting Adequate Protection; Amending Chapter 13 Case and Plan and Denying Objection to Confirmation (attached to M & I’s Motion for Relief from the Automatic Stay).

The Court dismissed the debtor’s prior case, number 97-21809-XXX, on April 30, 1997, on the chapter 13 trustee’s motion to dismiss. The debtor filed this prior case on February 7, 1997. Pursuant to the plan, the chapter 13 trustee was to make the ongoing mortgage payment beginning with the March 1997 payment. The chapter 13 trustee received two payments subsequent to the filing, the first on February 27, 1997 in the amount of $190.00 and the second on March 13, 1997 in the amount of $58.03. Because there were not enough finds on hand to make the first ongoing mortgage payment for March 1997, the chapter 13 trustee filed the motion to dismiss on March 18 or 19, 1997. The motion was set for hearing on April 15, 1997. Counsel for the debtor stated that on April 15, 1997, he spoke with the chapter 13 trustee about filing a “motion to advance these payments and to cure this [mortgage] arrearage.” The hearing on the motion to dismiss was adjourned to April 29, 1997. According to counsel for the debtor, he filed a motion to advance the mortgage payment on April 24, 1997. At the April 29 hearing on the motion to dismiss, neither the debtor nor her attorney appeared. The debtor’s counsel asserts that he did not appear because he believed that the filing of his motion would take care of the problem. The trustee submitted a dismissal order and the ease was dismissed on April 30, 1997. The debtor did not file a motion to vacate the order of dismissal.

M & I scheduled foreclosure proceedings for July 24, 1997 at 12:00 noon. M & I contends that it proceeded with the foreclosure sale and filed a Substitute Trustee’s Deed without knowledge of the filing of the instant case by the debtor on July 23, 1997 and pursuant to the order of adequate protection entered in the debtor’s case number 97-21809-XXX. M & I relies on the order granting adequate protection which prohibits the debtor from filing a petition for relief until M & I has completed the foreclosure sale. M & I also relies on the exhibits entered into evidence without objection, including the Warranty Deed transferring title of the property at 3090 Brisdane to the debt- or on June 15, 1994 for $65,465.52 (Exhibit 1); the Substitute Trustee’s Deed from the July 24,1997 foreclosure sale (Exhibit 2); M & I’s Proof of Claim filed in the present case (Exhibit 3); the Proof of Claim filed by Security Financial & Mortgage Corporation in case number 97-21809-XXX (Exhibit 4); and printouts from the records of the chapter 13 trustee of the case histories of each of the debtor’s three bankruptcy cases (Exhibits 5-7). Finally, M & I relies on the statements made at the hearing by the standing chapter 13 trustee.

The debtor contends that in her prior case her employer, Federal Express, failed to increase her payroll deduction from $190.00 *892 per week to $211.00 per week pursuant to a payroll modification order entered by this Court and that this failure led to the dismissal of her prior case. The debtor admitted on cross-examination, however, that she was aware that her plan payments were increased to $211.00 per week. She further admitted that she did not make any additional payments into her plan while she waited for her employer to implement the increase in her payroll deduction. The debtor also contends that she was unaware that her prior case had been dismissed because her employer continued to make payroll -deductions and send those funds to the chapter 13 trustee. Finally, the debtor contends that she has equity in the property in question as she paid down $5,500.00 and has improved the property by landscaping, painting, and installing ceiling fans.

The chapter 13 trustee 1 reported at the hearing that he returned $1,520.00 to the debtor and $1,221.36 to the debtor’s attorney on June 26, 1997. The trustee also returned one payment of $190.00 to the debtor on June 27, 1997 and three more payments of $190.00 each in July 1997. Upon the filing of the present case, the debtor’s attorney submitted the $1,221.36 into the debtor’s plan. The debtor testified that she wrote a personal check on her credit union account for $1,520 and submitted that check to the clerk’s office of the Bankruptcy Court. The debtor did not include her new case number on the check. As a result, the cheek apparently is in the process of being returned to the debt- or by the trustee’s office. The debtor testified, however, that she will resubmit the funds to the chapter 13 trustee’s office when she receives the returned check. - The debtor also testified that she will have access to her retirement account in December 1997. At that time she will be able to pay an additional $4,000 into her plan. As a result, the debtor contends that by year’s end she will have paid down the $14,621.40 arrearage by approximately $8,000.00.

DISCUSSION

I.

The Bankruptcy Code sets forth the conditions pursuant to which a creditor may obtain relief from the automatic stay. According to 11 U.S.C.

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Related

In Re Dupuy
308 B.R. 843 (E.D. Tennessee, 2004)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
212 B.R. 890, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 1776, 1997 WL 597531, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-hurst-tnwb-1997.