In Re Ladak

205 B.R. 709, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 213, 1997 WL 97130
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Vermont
DecidedFebruary 27, 1997
Docket19-10094
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 205 B.R. 709 (In Re Ladak) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Ladak, 205 B.R. 709, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 213, 1997 WL 97130 (Vt. 1997).

Opinion

Memorandum of Decision Granting Debt- or’s Motion for Sanctions Under 11 U.S.C. Section 362(a)(2)

FRANCIS G. CONRAD, Bankruptcy Judge.

Debtor moves 1 for sanctions against her former spouse who attempted in state court, while the bankruptcy case was pending, to modify a prepetition divorce decree that established the property rights of the parties. *710 We grant the motion because Respondent’s post-petition attempt to modify a prepetition divorce decree that established the property-rights of the parties without the filing of an adversary proceeding in either the bankruptcy court or a state court with concurrent jurisdiction is a violation of the automatic stay.

FACTS

Debtor and Respondent entered into a stipulation that was incorporated into a Final Divorce Decree issued by the Orleans Family Court on September 7,1994. Debtor, a practicing medical doctor, agreed to assume responsibility for all joint marital debt and all debts of a jointly owned business known as Touch of Vermont, Inc. In the Final Divorce Decree, which was stipulated to by the parties, Debtor also agreed to hold Respondent harmless regarding the indebtedness. Like many former spouses who assume indebtedness and agree to hold the person they used to love harmless from the claims of creditors, the debtor here found post divorce life and circumstance forced her unwillingly into the forgiving arms of bankruptcy. By filing bankruptcy, Debtor shifted the substantial burden she had assumed onto the shoulders of Respondent. Respondent says he should not have to shoulder this burden.

Debtor filed her Chapter 7 petition on October 13,1994, and received a discharge on March 24,1995. This discharge was revoked pending the Trustee’s Final Report and Account and Distribution. On August 27,1996, Respondent filed a Vermont Rule 60(b)(6) motion in State Court seeking reconsideration of the parties’ Final Divorce Decree. Neither party provided us with a copy of the Vermont Rule 60(b)(6) motion. Debtor says Respondent argues that the motion alleges the Final Divorce Decree is not equitable in light of Debtor’s bankruptcy. Fried to its essence, Respondent’s state court motion wants the property settlement encompassed in the Final Divorce Decree revisited by the state court because of Debtor’s bankruptcy.

Earlier, in July, the Orleans Family Court denied Respondent’s request to modify the rehabilitative maintenance he received under the Final Divorce Decree. We were provided with this pleading but do not understand its relevance to the matter before us. The motion was deified by the state court and even without the denial the rehabilitative maintenance was of brief duration. It ended or would have ended before the bankruptcy case was filed.

A cursory review of the Final Divorce Decree shows clearly that the hold harmless agreement was intended as a property settlement and not for support. We make this Section 523(a)(5) finding even though no adversary proceeding under 11 U.S.C. Section 523(a)(5) has been filed by or against Debtor in either this Court or State Court. We assume, without making a finding, that the reason Respondent filed in state court is because he cannot make use of newly enacted Section 523(a)(15) 2 because it was not effective when Debtor filed her petition.

ARGUMENTS OF THE PARTIES

Debtor argues that Respondent’s actions seeking post-petition relief in state court based on equitable grounds resulting from the discharge in bankruptcy of joint marital debt violates the automatic stay. Respondent says it is clear from a long line of cases that state family courts continue to retain jurisdiction relative to the support, maintenance, alimony and other provisions of a *711 family court order despite a debtor’s bankruptcy petition or later discharge.

DISCUSSION

The facts presented are not in dispute. Respondent frames the wrong issue, however, by focusing on jurisdiction rather than on the real issue, which is the property rights of the parties. As Abraham Lincoln once said to a jury at the end of a barge/bridge collision case, “There is no question that they (my learned opponents) have their facts absolutely right. But they have drawn completely wrong conclusions.” 3 Like the bridge company lawyers, Respondent argues support, maintenance and alimony, but in state court he seeks to change or rearrange the property rights he and Debtor agreed to. If the facts matched Respondent’s argument, we would be led to a different conclusion than the one we reach today.

Bankruptcy is an effective weapon to thwart or impede a divorce or undo the result obtained after a settled or contested divorce. The story line is classic. A couple in love builds a nest to buffer themselves against the outside world. Love lapses and divorce ensues. Nothing is more acrimonious than two individuals bringing their carefully knitted nest into the divorce courtroom after the love and trust has folded. The parties are, in many cases, as disconnected and attenuated as the North Pole is to Florida. Suddenly those worldly possessions, once freely shared without question, are clasped to the bosom in the hope of preserving them from this newly created stranger. Emerging from divorce, like a butterfly from a chrysalis, the newly divorced individuals seek a new life, but soon find the financial deal they struck or the decision of the divorce court is very difficult to live with. The division of assets starts to look like a lose/ lose proposition. One spouse may be ordered to pay alimony or child support or both. One spouse or both may be obligated to make payments to third parties. There may be hold harmless agreements. Often, one spouse will be given a lien against property. The lien is often worthless or if it is not, it will not be reduced to cash for a long time. Under the laws of most states, creditors are not bound by a divorce decree and may pursue either party. Certainly the conversion of entirety property into a tenancy in common provides a capacious opportunity for creditors to conquer an already divided economic unit.. One spouse finds that the required payments under the divorce decree cannot be made without great sacrifice and files bankruptcy. Typically, the spouse who files bankruptcy is the one obligated to pay alimony, child support and make the hold harmless payments; much like the ease here.

Throughout the history of bankruptcy law in the United States, family support obligations survived a bankruptcy discharge. See Audubon v. Shufeldt, 181 U.S. 575, 21 S.Ct. 735, 45 L.Ed. 1009 (1901) (Debts arising out of a husband’s natural duty to support his wife are not dischargeable under the 1898 Act). Section 17(a) of the 1898 Act was amended to make the Supreme Court holding in Audubon pellucidly clear. Section 17(a) was carried over in the 1978 Code as Section 523(a)(5). 4

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
205 B.R. 709, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 213, 1997 WL 97130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-ladak-vtb-1997.