In RE LaLONDE

431 B.R. 199, 2010 Bankr. LEXIS 1588, 2010 WL 1903584
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Wisconsin
DecidedMay 7, 2010
Docket3-14-10566
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 431 B.R. 199 (In RE LaLONDE) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In RE LaLONDE, 431 B.R. 199, 2010 Bankr. LEXIS 1588, 2010 WL 1903584 (Wis. 2010).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION

ROBERT D. MARTIN, Bankruptcy Judge.

Christine LaLonde filed a chapter 7 petition, and when faced with the trustee’s action to pursue preference recovery from her daughter and son-in-law, converted to chapter 13. The chapter 13 and chapter 7 trustees each objected to confirmation of the plan she proposed, and the chapter 7 trustee objected to certain claimed exemptions.

Ms. LaLonde is a realtor. In 1999, she and her sister, Janese Peleck, bought a condominium unit located at 232 Grand Canyon Drive in Madison as joint tenants. Three years later, the sisters bought a neighboring unit located at 238 Grand Canyon Drive, again as joint tenants. By 2006, the relationship between LaLonde and Peleck had deteriorated to the point that Peleck sued LaLonde in state court seeking a forced sale or partition of their condos.

To avoid trial, LaLonde filed under chapter 13. She dismissed that bankruptcy after the sisters worked out a settlement of the state case calling for one condo to be sold and the other either refinanced or sold. In accord with the settlement, LaLonde arranged to sell 232 Grand Canyon to Tera and Brad Beisbier for $149,000. Tera Beisbier is LaLonde’s daughter and Brad Beisbier is her son-in-law. LaLonde and the Beisbiers agreed that LaLonde would continue to live in the unit and pay monthly rent to the Beisbiers. The Beisbiers advanced the closing costs, but expected to be repaid from LaLonde’s share of the closing proceeds.

A closing was held on September 6, 2007. The Beisbiers had already signed two notes and mortgages and did not attend the closing. The deed as initially drafted showed the grantees to be the Beisbiers as joint tenants. LaLonde claims that on the way to the closing, she realized that she had to be a unit owner to remain an officer of the condo association. She impulsively decided to have her name put on the deed. She called Brad Beisbier and asked whether he would mind. La-Londe assured him that she would have no interest in the property. He consented (or did not object). LaLonde did not speak to Tara Beisbier about this change prior to the closing.

At the closing, LaLonde asked the title company to add her name to the deed. Remarkably, the title company assented, and the recorded deed shows the property was conveyed to Brad and Tera Beisbier and Christine LaLonde as joint tenants. LaLonde claims it was never her intent to have any interest in the property. La-Londe did not sign, nor does her name appear on, either of the two mortgages given at closing.

The sale netted $36,978.34. LaLonde received $10,736.25, of which she transferred $10,370.23 to the Beisbiers as reimbursement of the closing costs. Peleck received $20,593.09. A separate fund of $5,649 was held in escrow and was eventually divided in November 2007, with $4,500 going to LaLonde and $1,149 going to Peleck.

The other condo — -238 Grand Canyon— was sold in June 2008 in an arms’ length sale. Peleck received all the proceeds, totaling $14,004. LaLonde testified that *204 Peleck was paid an outsize share of the proceeds to partially repay her for a home equity loan LaLonde had taken out to pay personal expenses.

LaLonde filed this case under chapter 7 on September 12, 2008. She claims that she did not believe she had any interest in 232 Grand Canyon, but scheduled a 1/3 joint tenancy interest in the property out of caution. LaLonde did not disclose the $10,370 she paid the Beisbiers after closing and stated that she had received no proceeds from the sale of either 232 or 238 Grand Canyon. Using the federal exemptions, LaLonde claimed a $2,500 homestead exemption and a total exemption of her vehicle and personal property.

In June 2009, the chapter 7 trustee initiated an adversary proceeding against Brad and Tera Beisbier to sell 232 Grand Canyon. The Trustee sought a determination that the condo was owned jointly among LaLonde and the Beisbiers. The trustee contended that the mortgage only attached to the Beisbiers’ portion of the property and that an unencumbered 1/3 interest in the property belongs to the bankruptcy estate.

Shortly after the adversary proceeding was filed, LaLonde converted her case to chapter 13. LaLonde filed new schedules and, using state law exemptions, claimed a $40,000 homestead exemption in 232 Grand Canyon, a $1,200 motor vehicle exemption, and fully exempted her personal property. On September 30, LaLonde filed her chapter 13 plan. The plan proposes monthly payments of $280 for 48 months, for a total of about $13,000. Both the chapter 7 and chapter 13 trustees object to plan confirmation as failing the best interests test. Additionally, the chapter 7 trustee contends that the plan was filed in bad faith and that LaLonde improperly claimed certain exemptions. For the reasons stated below, the plan cannot be confirmed.

I. Best Interests

Section 1325(a)(4) provides that the court shall confirm a plan if, and only if:

“(4) the value, as of the effective date of the plan, of property to be distributed under the plan on account of each allowed unsecured claim is not less than the amount that would be paid on such claim if the estate of the debtor were liquidated under chapter 7 of this title on such date”

Thus, if the trustee in chapter 7 by, inter alia, exercising his avoidance powers, could sufficiently enlarge the estate to create a distribution to general creditors greater than the proposed plan distribution, the plan cannot be confirmed. It would not be in the general creditors’ best interest.

The plan proponent bears the burden of showing that the plan should be confirmed. This requires LaLonde to prove that the plan meets the best interests test. In other words, she must show that creditors in chapter 7 would have received no more than what her plan will pay — $13,000.

The Bankruptcy Code allows any “party in interest” to object to confirmation of a chapter 13 plan. 11 U.S.C. § 1324(a). Although the term is never defined in the Code, its use elsewhere suggests that the term is broad enough to include any party whose interests would be affected by a particular decision. See, e.g., 11 U.S.C. § 1109; see generally, 3 Collier on Bankruptcy, § 362.07[2]. Thus, both trustees qualify as parties in interest. If the plan is confirmed, the chapter 13 trustee must administer it; if confirmation is denied, the case may convert to chapter 7 for administration by the chapter 7 trustee. In any event, LaLonde failed to challenge either trustee’s standing.

*205 There is little doubt that this court must consider what the chapter 7 trustee could have achieved by his avoidance and sale powers. On its face, the language of § 1325(a)(4) seems to demand that a court conduct just this hypothetical inquiry, and the few courts confronting the issue have agreed with this reading. See, In re Carter, 4 B.R. 692 (Bankr.D.Colo.1980); In re Future Energy Corp., 83 B.R. 470 (Bankr.S.D.Ohio 1988); In re Larson, 245 B.R. 609 (Bankr.D.Minn.2000). In

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
431 B.R. 199, 2010 Bankr. LEXIS 1588, 2010 WL 1903584, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-lalonde-wiwb-2010.