In Re Jong Hee Kang

467 B.R. 327, 67 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 550, 2012 Bankr. LEXIS 753, 2012 WL 614785
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedFebruary 27, 2012
Docket19-12111
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 467 B.R. 327 (In Re Jong Hee Kang) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Jong Hee Kang, 467 B.R. 327, 67 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 550, 2012 Bankr. LEXIS 753, 2012 WL 614785 (N.J. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION

MORRIS STERN, Bankruptcy Judge.

Debtor moves to dismiss her Chapter 7 bankruptcy case, arguing the mechanics of the filing process were flawed in that she assumes she did not comply with § 109(h) and § 521 of the Bankruptcy Code; that is, Ms. Kang claims to have never received that credit counseling which is reflected in a November 28, 2011 credit counseling certificate. 1 In a long, very articulate certification (“Kang Cert.”) (docket entry 36) Ms. Kang, who states that she cannot read or write English (Kang Cert. ¶ 34), laid much of her current dilemma at the feet of her prior attorney (Sangwon D. Sohn, Esq., “Sohn”).

However, Ms. Kang’s petition as amended and her detailed portrayal of events dating back to at least September 2009 belie her position as to a current right to a voluntary dismissal of her case. In particular, Ms. Kang describes the following: (i) her extended contemplation of bankruptcy (culminating in her November 28, 2011 filing); (ii) her relatively extraordinary secured, would-be secured, and general unsecured debt (now scheduled at over $2 million notwithstanding a history of only *330 modest income, i.e., approximately $36,000 annually including more than half from her spouse); (iii) the debtor’s obvious but failed effort to prefer her sister as a creditor by wiping out (with a $400,000 mortgage) the equity in what is essentially the estate’s sole asset — Westfield real estate 2 ; and (iv) her early signed certification to the accuracy of her petition (including reference to credit counseling at Exhibit D), now followed by the debtor’s ambiguous and vague description of what could well have been an internet credit counseling interview through her attorney (“Sohn asked me a series of questions while looking at his computer monitor ... he stated ... I should try to be frugal in my spending ... [h]e asked me more questions, but I cannot recall exactly what the questions were ... at the end Mr. Sohn asked me if I understand all the questions he asked ... I stated ‘yes’.... ” (Kang Cert. ¶ 8)).

CHRONOLOGY

September 2009 Debtor consulted with and retained Sohn following formal creditor collection efforts; discussed Chapter 13. (Kang Cert. ¶¶ 3 and 8).

January 2010 Sister (“Jongim”) “requested” a mortgage to secure a loan (which Jongim is said to have made to the debtor so the debtor, in turn, could repay lender-friends who had advanced money over fifteen years through Kang to her friend “Joo”). (Kang Cert. ¶ 19, as to “request,” and ¶¶ 10-12 as to Joo pass-through loans.) No mortgage appears to have been prepared at this time. The Jongim loan is said to date back to some time in 2007.

May 2011 BNB Bank serves debtor with a Notice of Intention to foreclose (Kang Cert. ¶ 22.)

July 2011 Sohn prepares a mortgage (dated July 13, 2011), naming sister Jongim as the secured party; the mortgage is never recorded, though Kang thought it was to be recorded. (Kang Cert. ¶¶ 23 and 24.)

Fall 2011 Sheriff appears at Kang’s business to execute based upon default judgments. (Kang Cert. ¶ 3.) The trustee has been advised that one creditor, through execution, had a sheriffs sale of personalty scheduled for November 29, 2011.

November 28, 2011 The first six pages of the Chapter 7 petition (including the Exhibit D representation of credit counseling) are electronically filed by Sohn; a matrix naming only seven creditors was included, but there were no schedules; also filed on that date was a credit counseling certificate of that date. The filing was seemingly done in haste to stop a sheriffs sale of personalty the next day.

*331 December 8, 2011 Debtor says she appeared at Sohn’s office and signed documents (see Ex. A to Kang Cert., three signature pages dated December 8, 2011); she claims to have been unaware of the earlier filing. (Kang Cert. ¶¶ 7-9 and 29.)

December 13, 2011 Sohn files missing schedules electronically; filed are Schedule D (secured claims) at $610,000 (including only the sister’s $400,000 mortgage and the first mortgage of BNB Bank of $210,000), and Schedule F (unsecured nonpriority claims) at $93,000 (five creditors).

January 5, 2012 Sohn, without the debtor, appears at the scheduled § 341(a) meeting; the debtor claims to have been unaware of the meeting (Kang Cert, at ¶¶ 32-35); Sohn seems to have been advised of the trustee’s conclusion that the Westfield real estate had equity and would be marketed by the trustee (see docket entry 28 at ¶ 5(b)).

January 19, 2012 Trustee applies to retain an auctioneer to sell the real estate (granted).

January 20, 2012 Trustee files a Notice of Information of Public Auction (to take place February 23, 2012) and files a motion in support of the sale.

January 26, 2012 Trustee files a Notice of Assets.

January 30, 2012 On or about this date Sohn is said to have advised Kang of the question of the “validity” of Jongim’s mortgage. (Kang Cert. ¶ 26.)

February 2, 2012 Sohn files a cryptic motion to convert the case to Chapter 11.

February 3, 2012 (2 a.m.) Sohn files revised Schedules D and F, indicating only a single secured creditor (BNB Bank with a $210,000 claim), 3 and unsecured nonpriority claims of $1,865,740 (including $400,000 due sister Jongim) and listing twenty-seven 4 unsecured creditors and twenty-eight creditors in toto.

February 3, 2012 Debtor attends § 341(a) meeting; issue of credit counseling is not raised by the debtor, who responds affirmatively to the trustee’s questions about execution of documents (but now claims to have been unaware of the range of documents being referred to, *332 asserting “I answered yes because I believed that I reviewed all of the documents with Mr. Sohn on December 8, 2011 ... I do not know what other documents Mr. Sohn submitted-”). (Kang Cert. ¶ 36.)

Kim, Cho and Lim, LLC substituted as counsel to the debtor, replacing Sohn. February 8, 2012

Trustee files a motion for possession and application to shorten time for hearing, as a precaution against the debtor’s refusal to vacate the Westfield premises following the proposed sale (the auction intended to be held on February 23, 2012). February 9, 2012

Trustee files an application to retain an appraiser (granted). February 13, 2012

Court sua sponte schedules and holds a telephonic conference on the record to determine the status of pending matters; adjourns the sale without date and the sale motion, motion for possession and motion to convert (said to be subject to withdrawal) to February 27, 2012; it is anticipated that the immediate motion to dismiss the case will be filed, to be heard on shortened notice on the same date. February 15, 2012

February 20, 2012 Debtor through Mr. Kim files the instant motion to dismiss.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
467 B.R. 327, 67 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 550, 2012 Bankr. LEXIS 753, 2012 WL 614785, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-jong-hee-kang-njb-2012.