In re: Kathleen A Rabon

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedApril 3, 2026
Docket25-21127
StatusUnknown

This text of In re: Kathleen A Rabon (In re: Kathleen A Rabon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re: Kathleen A Rabon, (Conn. 2026).

Opinion

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT DISTRICT OF CONNECTICUT HARTFORD DIVISION In re: Chapter 7 Kathleen A Rabon, Case No. 25-21127 (JJT) Debtor. Re: ECF No. 20

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION GRANTING MOTION FOR RELIEF FROM STAY Before the Court is the Motion for an In Rem Order for Relief from Stay Pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 362(d)(4) (Motion, ECF No. 20), filed by Elaine Malchman,1 Richard Russ, and Richard Rothstein, Trustee (together, Movants). For the following reasons, the Court grants in rem relief. 1. Background

On September 7, 2010, Mark Rabon executed a Note in favor of Savings Institute Bank & Trust Company in the original principal amount of $231,000. To secure the Note, Mark Rabon and the Debtor granted a mortgage on 34 Krug Road, Preston, CT (Property) to Savings Institute that same day. Payments on the Note ceased by April 15, 2016. On October 2, 2018, Savings Institute filed a foreclosure complaint against,

among others, the Debtor and Mark Rabon to foreclose on the Mortgage.2 Savings Institute then merged with and into Berkshire Bank in 2019, which was substituted

1 References to “Malchman” are to Elaine, not Daniel. 2 See Savings Inst. Bank & Trust Co. v. Rabon, No. KNL-CV18-6037411-S (Conn. Super. Ct.). The Court has taken judicial notice of the foreclosure action. in as plaintiff in the foreclosure action. After years of litigating, including various spurious motion practice by Mark Rabon and Edwin C. St.Germain (who is the Debtor’s brother),3 the Superior Court entered a judgment of foreclosure by sale on

February 24, 2022 (Foreclosure Judgment).4 Appeals to and motions with the Connecticut Appellate Court followed, all concluded in Berkshire Bank’s favor.5 The Debtor and Mark Rabon then filed a series of seesaw bankruptcy petitions. Mark Rabon filed a Chapter 13 case on March 13, 2024, which was dismissed on October 29, 2024. The Debtor then filed a Chapter 13 case on January 30, 2025, which was dismissed on April 15, 2025.6 Mark Rabon followed up with a Chapter 7 case filed

on May 5, 2025, which resulted in a discharge being granted on August 14, 2025. The Debtor then filed the instant Chapter 7 case on October 24, 2025.7 The first three of these cases all came before either scheduled judicial foreclosure sale dates or law days.8 Each of these cases has had the effect of delaying the foreclosure process.

3 On February 13, 2021, Mark Rabon quitclaimed a one-eighth interest in the Property to St.Germain. Whether this interest is one-eighth of Mark Rabon’s interest (and thus one-sixteenth) or one-eighth overall is immaterial. 4 References to the Foreclosure Judgment include all subsequent entries of judgment. 5 One of the appeals was dismissed as frivolous. Savings Inst. Bank & Trust Co. v. Rabon, No. AC 46149 (Conn. App. Ct. April 12, 2023). 6 During the pendency of the Debtor’s prior Chapter 13 case, the Court granted relief from the automatic stay under 11 U.S.C. § 362(d)(1), finding that cause existed in part due to the Debtor’s and Mark Rabon’s “advancement of spurious and meritless challenges to claims and liens over four years made solely to delay or impede these proceedings.” 7 The Court takes judicial notice of all four bankruptcy cases noted. In re Rabon, No. 24-20201 (Mark; filed March 13, 2024); In re Rabon, No. 25-20100 (Kathleen; filed January 30, 2025); In re Rabon, No. 25-20466 (Mark; filed May 5, 2025); In re Rabon, No. 25-21127 (this case; filed October 24, 2025). 8 The judgment of foreclosure by sale was converted to a judgment of strict foreclosure on April 2, 2025, after the total debt owed exceeded the fair market value of the Property. In February 2025, St.Germain began communicating with counsel for Berkshire Bank regarding a purchase of the Note. In March 2025, Berkshire Bank agreed to sell the Note for $200,000 and releases from the Debtor, Mark Rabon, and

St.Germain. In April 2025, St.Germain was attempting to obtain the necessary funds from Xanadu Capital. By early May, such efforts had failed, and St.Germain quickly turned to seeking the funds from Daniel Malchman. Rather than lend St.Germain the money directly, Daniel Malchman had Malchman (his wife) and Russ (his wife’s brother) put up the money. Things moved very quickly, chaotically, and disjointedly at this point. In

order to stall a pending law day, Mark Rabon filed his Chapter 7 case on May 5, 2025. St.Germain and Attorney Frank Liberty (who represented Malchman and Russ) exchanged terms for Malchman and Russ to lend $260,000 to St.Germain so that he could purchase the Note, pay off outstanding property taxes, pay closing costs, and other miscellaneous costs.9 In anticipation of a potential agreement, Malchman and Russ each placed $125,000 in escrow with Attorney Rothstein. The negotiations, however, did not result in a material accord evidenced by a signed

lending agreement, largely because St.Germain, as borrower, insisted on his terms, which were unacceptable to Malchman and Russ. Despite there being no lending agreement, St.Germain directed Attorney Rothstein to disburse the $200,000 to Berkshire Bank on May 9, 2025 in order to purchase the Note, along with amounts for the outstanding taxes and other costs.

9 Although Malchman and Russ each contributed $125,000, the parties anticipated a loan of $260,000, which would include points. By the end of May 2025, Attorney Liberty had sent a proposed agreement to St.Germain, but St.Germain unequivocally rejected any proposal that did not recognize him as the sole buyer of the Note. St.Germain blamed Daniel Malchman’s

“eleventh hour tactic to get his wife and Russ named as co-assignees[,]” which St.Germain stated “kind of pissed me off[.]”10 St.Germain, having initiated the Berkshire Bank transaction, unilaterally believed that he should own and control the Note. Attorney Liberty, however, testified that St.Germain’s loan approach was improvident and unacceptable, as it would render his clients unsecured creditors vulnerable to loss. Understandably, the risks of loss in St.Germain’s approach were

too significant. As a consequence, no agreement was ever reached by St.Germain and Malchman and Russ.11 Meanwhile, in Mark Rabon’s Chapter 7 case, the Movants moved for relief from stay under 11 U.S.C. § 362(d)(1), so as to continue the foreclosure process in the Superior Court. That motion went unopposed by the Debtor, Mark Rabon, and St.Germain and was subsequently granted. The Debtor then filed the instant case on October 24, 2025. By operation of

law, the stay against the Debtor expired after 30 days because the Debtor’s prior Chapter 13 case had been dismissed within one year of the petition date in this case. See 11 U.S.C. § 362(c). The Movants filed the Motion on December 5, 2025,

10 Among the disagreements between the parties was whether Malchman and Russ would be designated as trustees, as Attorney Rothstein was. 11 Although St.Germain had checks tendered to Attorney Liberty for interest payments, Attorney Liberty did not accept these checks because (1) he was not authorized to do so and (2) Malchman and Russ contended that the amounts tendered were incorrect. seeking in rem relief from the automatic stay and for cause. The Debtor and St.Germain filed objections (ECF Nos. 21, 23, 32). The Court then held hearings on January 23 and February 5, 2026, and determined that an evidentiary hearing was

required.

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In re: Kathleen A Rabon, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-kathleen-a-rabon-ctb-2026.