In Re Joseph Vlasek, Debtor-Appellant

325 F.3d 955, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 6944, 41 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 43, 2003 WL 1858154
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedApril 11, 2003
Docket02-2062
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 325 F.3d 955 (In Re Joseph Vlasek, Debtor-Appellant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Joseph Vlasek, Debtor-Appellant, 325 F.3d 955, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 6944, 41 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 43, 2003 WL 1858154 (7th Cir. 2003).

Opinion

.KANNE, Circuit Judge.

Joseph Vlasek appeals the district court’s affirmance of the bankruptcy court’s refusal to dismiss his bankruptcy petition on the assertion that his mother had fraudulently signed the petition in his name and filed it without his authority. We dismiss Vlasek’s appeal.

HISTORY

In January 1991, Joseph Vlasek netted $907,500 in settlement of a personal-injury *958 lawsuit arising out of an injury he received in an automobile accident. Because Vla-sek was seventeen years old at the time, a minor estate was opened on his behalf and the settlement proceeds were delivered to the estate. Two months later, on the occurrence of his eighteenth birthday, the estate was closed, and the sum of $909,561.88 was turned over to Vlasek.

Over the next few years, Vlasek started and closed two business and bought four properties in his own name in Homewood, Illinois. All four properties were mortgaged, and he and his mother moved into one of them. By 1993, the failed businesses "and real-estate purchases had consumed most of his settlement proceeds.

In April 1993, Vlasek’s girlfriend gave birth to a son. She alleged Vlasek was the father, but Vlasek denied paternity. So, in October 1993, Vlasek’s girlfriend filed a paternity action, and nearly three years later, an Illinois state court found that Vlasek was the child’s father and ordered him to make semi-monthly $1000 child-support payments. When he refused to comply with that order, the state court, on August 20, 1996, entered a retroactive-child-support judgment against Vlasek in the amount of $77,000.

Seven days later Vlasek filed a Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition, and a month after that, he submitted his bankruptcy schedules. But curiously those schedules did not list the four real-estate holdings that Vlasek had purchased. It appears that back in 1993 while his child’s mother was still pregnant, Vlasek had begun transferring his real-estate holdings out of his name — without receiving any compensation.

By questioning Vlasek during his mandatory creditor meeting held pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 341, the Trustee learned about the personal-injury settlement, the four real-estate purchases, and the subsequent transfers. He later investigated the circumstances of the property transfers, determined the transfers were voidable, and successfully pursued a fraudulent-transfer action in the bankruptcy court. As a result, the bankruptcy court set aside the real-estate transfers. Vlasek did not move to alter or amend this order. Nor did he seek to appeal the bankruptcy court’s ruling.

The bankruptcy court obtained an agreement from the Trustee that the Trustee would not seek to sell Vlasek’s home unless the funds obtained by selling the other three properties proved insufficient to settle all creditor claims. Nevertheless, it became apparent that the proceeds from the three property sales would in fact prove insufficient. Thus, on November 17, 1998, the bankruptcy court entered an order authorizing the Trustee to employ a real-estate broker to market Vla-sek’s residence.

Seven days after the court authorized the Trustee to begin preparations to sell Vlasek’s residence, Vlasek moved to dismiss his bankruptcy petition altogether. This request came nearly two-and-a-half years after the bankruptcy petition had been filed. Vlasek alleged that he had never signed his bankruptcy petition, but rather that his mother had fraudulently signed his name. He later claimed that at the time of the bankruptcy’s filing in August 1996 he was mentally incompetent — a result of a closed-head injury suffered in the automobile accident. Vlasek asserted as proof of his incompetency a later 1997 Illinois probate court order granting his mother plenary guardianship over his person. 1 Vlasek asked the court to dismiss *959 his bankruptcy case and void each of the orders it had entered previously.

Besides the November 17, 1998 order authorizing the Trustee to hire a broker to market Vlasek’s residence, the orders that Vlasek also sought to void through dismissal would have included (i) the order setting aside the four real-estate transfers; (ii) a March 19, 1998 order approving the sale of the first of the four properties, located at 2147 Cedar Road, for the sum of $240,000; and (iii) a June 2, 1998 order requiring the Trustee to abandon the second of the four properties, located at 17835 South Howe, pursuant to a motion to compel brought by the bank that was foreclosing on that property. Vlasek, however, never sought to appeal or stay any of these individual orders at the time they were rendered.

The bankruptcy court promptly conducted an evidentiary hearing on Vlasek’s motion to dismiss. The court admitted into evidence a recording and transcript of Vla-sek’s § 341 creditor meeting. Vlasek also testified during the proceedings, but the bankruptcy court observed that his testimony “appeared to have been rehearsed.” (R.l, Bankr.N.D. Ill. Apr. 30, 1999 Order at ¶ 14.) At the request of the Cook County Public Guardian’s office (who had been invited by the court to participate in the hearings given the 1997 Illinois state court guardianship action), the bankruptcy court ordered Vlasek to submit to a psychiatric evaluation. The evaluation was scheduled for March 23, 1999, and the court deferred ruling on the dismissal motion. Vlasek never appeared for the evaluation.

While the dismissal motion was still pending, the court approved the sale of the third of the four properties, located at 17864 Tipton, for the sum of $154,500 by order dated January 7, 1999. In spite of the fact that success on his dismissal motion would render void this order also, Vlasek sought no appeal from the ruling nor did he seek to stay the sale pending the resolution of the dismissal motion.

On April 30, 1999, the bankruptcy court determined that even if Vlasek did not personally sign his name to the petition, he otherwise had adopted and ratified its filing through his course of conduct during the two years of bankruptcy proceedings. He was therefore estopped from raising the issue. Furthermore, the bankruptcy court was skeptical of Vlasek’s evidentiary basis for filing the motion, noting that he had only raised the genuineness of his signature and his mother’s lack of authority to act on his behalf when the sale of their residence appeared imminent. (The motion’s filing also coincided with Vlasek’s and his mother’s repeated obstructionist efforts to thwart or delay the sale.) Consequently, the bankruptcy court found that the petition was validly filed and that the Trustee’s ongoing administration of the estate was proper. Vlasek took no appeal from the ruling.

Instead, a few months later, Vlasek filed a motion “to vacate all orders relating to any adversary proceedings,” which was apparently stylized, like the relief he requested in his motion to dismiss, to contest the court’s earlier decisions to set aside the four property transfers and any orders approving their sale. The bankruptcy court denied that motion on June 8, 1999. Vlasek didn’t attempt to appeal the ruling. Nor did he later appeal or seek to stay the bankruptcy court’s August 31, 1999 order approving the sale of the last of the four properties — his residence at 1537 W. 187th Street.

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325 F.3d 955, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 6944, 41 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 43, 2003 WL 1858154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-joseph-vlasek-debtor-appellant-ca7-2003.