In Re Lancaster

280 B.R. 468, 48 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1104, 2002 Bankr. LEXIS 740, 2002 WL 1543065
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Missouri
DecidedJuly 12, 2002
Docket17-42853
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 280 B.R. 468 (In Re Lancaster) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Lancaster, 280 B.R. 468, 48 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1104, 2002 Bankr. LEXIS 740, 2002 WL 1543065 (Mo. 2002).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

JERRY W. VENTERS, Bankruptcy Judge.

This case presents the related questions of whether the Debtor, William Reece Lancaster, filed these Chapter 13 proceedings and his proposed Chapter 13 Plan in good faith.

Lancaster (“Lancaster” or “Debtor”) filed a voluntary Chapter 13 petition on December 13, 2001. At the same time, he filed a Chapter 13 Plan (“Plan”) in which he proposed to pay $150.00 a month for 36 months, which would be distributed pro rata to the four unsecured creditors listed in his bankruptcy schedules. Two of those *471 creditors' — Johnny Weathers and his attorney, J. Michael Riehn — filed a combined Motion to Dismiss and Objection to Confirmation of Plan on January 28, 2002. American Family Mutual Insurance Company joined in the Motion and Objection on February 4, 2002. 1 The Court held a hearing on both issues at the Jasper County Courthouse in Carthage, Missouri, on May 21, 2002, and took the matter under advisement. The Court has considered the briefs filed by the parties, has reviewed the evidence and the relevant case law, and is now ready to rule.

For the reasons stated below, the Court will deny the Movants’ Motion to Dismiss the Chapter 13 proceedings, but will sustain their Objection to Confirmation of Plan and will grant the Debtor 20 days in which to file an amended plan.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND FINDINGS

The events giving rise to this Adversary Proceeding have their origin in the marital discord of the Debtor and his wife, Kay Lancaster (“Mrs.Lancaster”), and which culminated in an explosion on October 23, 1998, that destroyed the home of Johnny Weathers, one of the Movants (“Weathers”).

At some time prior to October 23, 1998, Lancaster and his wife had separated and were living apart. Weathers and Mrs. Lancaster apparently had begun seeing each other, and Lancaster learned of this some time before October 23. Approximately two days before the explosion, Mrs. Lancaster telephoned Weathers and told him that Lancaster had threatened to kill Weathers or burn his house down. 2 Then, on October 23, at about 1 o’clock in the afternoon, Lancaster went to Weathers’s house near Washburn, Missouri, hoping (he said) to find his wife and Weathers there and confront them about their seeing each other. He entered the house but found no one there. 3 Lancaster admittedly went into a rage and decided he would damage Weathers’s house.

In the basement, Lancaster found Weathers’s motorcycle and, using his pocketknife, cut the brake line, because he had heard talk that his wife and Weathers might be going on a ride on the motorcycle. He then went to the kitchen where he pulled the refrigerator from the wall and broke the Freon line. Next, Lancaster broke the water supply line under the kitchen sink, causing the water to run freely into the house.

Hotly disputed at trial was whether Lancaster disconnected a half-inch copper pipe that ran from Weathers’s propane tank at the back of the house to the furnace in the basement, and that supplied propane gas for the furnace. Lancaster denied that he had disconnected the pipe. Weathers, understandably, argued that it was likely that Lancaster had disconnected the pipe because of the other damage that Lancaster did to the house and because of the threats that Lancaster had made just a couple of days earlier. The furnace was located approximately 20 feet from the motorcycle on which the brake line was cut. Counsel for Weathers also pointed *472 out that a state court jury, in a civil action filed against Lancaster by Weathers, had found that Lancaster had intentionally disconnected the pipe.

While the Court does not believe that a finding that Lancaster disconnected the gas line is essential to the Court’s decision, the Court nevertheless believes that it is more likely than not that Lancaster did, indeed, disconnect the gas line. Lancaster had, just days earlier, threatened to kill Weathers or burn his house down, either of which might be accomplished by disconnecting the propane gas line to the furnace. He admittedly had cut the brake line on Weathers’s motorcycle, which was parked in the basement some 20 feet from the furnace. He admittedly had broken the Freon line on the refrigerator, which allowed another hazardous (if not deadly) gas to escape into the house. A pair of channel lock pliers was found on the floor of the furnace room, and an investigator for the State Fire Marshal’s office determined that the gas line fittings had been disconnected before the explosion. Considering these facts and the other destruction wreaked by Lancaster in the brief time he was in the house, it seems most likely that he also disconnected the propane gas line. That action could well have resulted in someone’s death.

According to Lancaster, he was in Weathers’s house for only 10 minutes, leaving at about 1:10 p.m. When Weathers returned home at approximately 5 p.m., he discovered water running down the stairs and coming through the first floor ceiling. He shut off the main water supply and called his parents and neighbors who lived nearby to come and help him clean up the water. At some point, Weathers discovered that the source of the water in the house was the broken water supply line under the kitchen sink. He then decided to call the law enforcement authorities, who arrived at about 6:80 p.m.

Weathers testified that he, his neighbor, and the sheriffs deputies at one time or another noticed a “funny smell” that smelled like propane, but that they dismissed it as sewer gas because of the broken plastic pipes under the kitchen sink. Inexplicably, the sheriffs deputies never made any further investigation to determine the source of the smell. 4 Weathers, his parents, and his neighbors worked until almost 8 p.m. attempting to clean up the excess water and dry out the carpets; they opened the windows, placed several box fans throughout the house, and turned on the ceiling fans.

Weathers went to his parents’ house nearby to eat dinner. 5 He then returned to his home to change clothes and leave *473 the house to visit Lancaster’s wife. Weathers wanted it to appear that someone was in the house, so he turned on several lights and the television. He also either turned on the furnace or turned up the thermostat so that the furnace, which had an electric ignition, would begin to heat the house and help dry it out. As he prepared to leave the house, he flipped a light switch and an explosion occurred. Weathers was thrown several feet, his hair was singed, and he suffered extensive bruises and a cut on his arm. The injuries were relatively minor and Weathers did not require medical treatment.

The house, however, was another story, as the saying goes. In an understatement, Weathers testified that “[i]t was blowed up.” Though the walls of the building were still standing, the house was totally destroyed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
280 B.R. 468, 48 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1104, 2002 Bankr. LEXIS 740, 2002 WL 1543065, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-lancaster-mowb-2002.