In Re Khan

34 B.R. 574, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 5051
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Kentucky
DecidedNovember 10, 1983
Docket19-50133
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 34 B.R. 574 (In Re Khan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Khan, 34 B.R. 574, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 5051 (Ky. 1983).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

MERRITT S. DEITZ, Jr., Bankruptcy Judge.

Hippocrates, the father of medicine in western civilization, in contemplating the duties owed by a physician to his brethren, wrote these lasting lines:

I will keep this oath and its stipulation— to reckon him who taught me this art equally dear to me as my parents, to share my substance with him, and to relieve his necessities if required; to look upon his offspring as my own brothers ... I will abstain from every voluntary act of mischief and corruption. 1

Dr. Ibrahim Khan caused a fellow physician to be rendered quadriplegic in an automobile accident in 1978. In order to avoid the inevitable major lawsuit, Dr. Khan signed a contract for the lifetime support of Dr. Dolly Yusufji. When he failed to begin payments, she sued him and obtained a judgment for $1,205,400. When she attempted to enforce the judgment, Dr. Khan promptly filed a Chapter 11 petition with this Court. At this writing, five years after the accident, Dr. Khan has yet to pay Dr. Yusufji the first dollar. She moves about *575 in a motorized wheelchair. He drives a Rolls-Royce.

Obviously it is not the Hippocratic Oath with which this Court is concerned. It is, rather, the question of whether Dr. Khan acted in good faith in filing his Chapter 11 petition and that of his wholly-owned incorporated medical practice. To state the facts is to foretell the result.

There are, to be sure, other important facts in the case. But before turning to them we will indulge in a brief summary of the law of good faith as it has evolved in cases under the Bankruptcy Code.

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Because the protections accorded debtors in reorganization proceedings are so absolute and the restraints on claimants so strict, it is required that a reorganization filing be accomplished in good faith. The requirement existed under prior law and was carried forward in the new Bankruptcy Code. 2

In general terms, the concept of good faith is a jurisdictional requirement of equitable origin. It is the statutory descendant of the venerable “clean hands” doctrine in equity, designed to protect the integrity of the bankruptcy court system and to properly limit access to the extraordinary forms of relief there available. The cases dealing with good faith share the common purpose of preventing abuse of the bankruptcy process. 3

Much of the case law on good faith draws heavily upon the time-honored method of analyzing and establishing a nexus between cause and effect. Long a modus habilis not only in bankruptcy but in criminal and tort law and in virtually any legal inquiry where intent is an issue, this sort of a posteriori inquiry permits courts to work backward from effect to cause — to reason, that is, that if the probable effect of a reorganization plan is to treat unfairly of creditors, then the probable cause of the filing was bad faith. The judicial exercise of discovering antecedent intent through a study of subsequent conduct is not unknown to this Court. 4

Chapters 11 and 13 both have good faith requirements, although the great bulk of the case law that has developed — and it has been substantial 5 — has been under Chapter 13. The reason is that Chapter 13 is available only to individuals, whereas Chapter 11 has been principally used by corporations, and the individual animus is always easier to identify, isolate and explore than the corporate.

A preliminary point which we have considered is whether the same standards of good faith apply to both chapters. If so, then we are able to draw upon the broader pool of learning which has accumulated in Chapter 13.

The similarities between Chapters 11 and 13 are many. Both provide for payments to be made in the future and allow liquidation-based plans; both have a “best interests of creditors” test, 6 require a judicial finding of feasibility, 7 and allow confirmation of a plan over creditor objection. 8 Each makes provision for the acceptance or rejection of executory contracts. 9 Finally, both chapters contain good faith requirements. 10

*576 In contrast to these generic likenesses, the differences between the chapters are largely matters of scale and degree. Chapter 13 generally is tailored to fit the producer of regular income with limited liabilities. In Chapter 11 a petitioner need not produce regular incomé and can report unlimited liabilities.

The regular income requirement of Chapter 13 is designed to make the chapter available to a broad economic class capable of being treated uniformly by the Chapter 13 Trustee. Chapter 11, on the other hand, was made flexible enough to accommodate variegated business forms having an infinite number of variables of ownership, capital structure and cash flow.

Had Dr. Khan's total liabilities been less than $100,000 and $350,000 on unsecured and secured debts respectively instead of the larger amounts which appear in his petition, he would have been required to file under Chapter 13, thus subject to its good faith requirement. His filing under Chapter 11 should work no basic change in the standards of conduct to which he is held. Nowhere is it written that the basic concept of good faith is altered in any way by one's quantum of debt alone.

In summary on our threshold point, we have no difficulty in holding that those standards of good faith which control in Chapter 13 may also be applied to an individual filing under Chapter 11. Nor, in the context of this case, do we strain to hold that those same standards may properly be applied to an individual’s wholly-owned professional service corporation. The unity of corporate control, the mutuality of interest, and the indivisibility of corporate policy and direction from those of the sole stockholder, render the corporation’s motives literally indistinguishable from those of its owner. We are therefore relieved of the often delicate task of “piercing the corporate veil” in the search for personal culpability.

Having concluded that the law of good faith as understood within the context of Chapter 13 also applies here, we are able to turn for direction to the Sixth Circuit’s recent pronouncement on the subject in Memphis Bank & Trust v. Whitman. 11 We need look no further.

Although primarily a decision on the treatment of secured claims in Chapter 13, Memphis Bank & Trust also treated specifically, if not to say forcefully, of the good faith issue.

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Bluebook (online)
34 B.R. 574, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 5051, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-khan-kywb-1983.