In Re Lord

325 B.R. 121, 2005 Bankr. LEXIS 911, 2005 WL 1230760
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMay 24, 2005
Docket18-36573
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 325 B.R. 121 (In Re Lord) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Lord, 325 B.R. 121, 2005 Bankr. LEXIS 911, 2005 WL 1230760 (N.Y. 2005).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION OVERRULING OBJECTIONS TO MOTIONS FOR RELIEF FROM THE AUTOMATIC STAY

CECELIA MORRIS, Bankruptcy Judge.

In recent months, this Court has received a rash of similar pro-se pleadings *124 from apparently unrelated debtors. Normally received in opposition to either a secured creditor’s motion for relief from the automatic stay for non-payment of mortgage arrears or the chapter 13 trustee’s motion to dismiss the case, these objections have several things in common:

— The objections rarely, if ever, address the specific allegations contained in the motion. The objections normally altogether ignore crucial allegations such as’ failure to make post-petition mortgage payments.
— The objections contain many irrelevant and false or inaccurate factual and legal arguments.
— The objections contain numerous identical sentences or paragraphs (sometimes including the same typographical errors), and the copied statements are usually combative and hysterical in tone.
— The objections contain unfounded accusations against the Court or the movant and/or movant’s counsel. For example, the Court has been accused of “rubber stamping” broad, vague and unconstitutional orders; and counsel have been accused of lying and deserving to be sanctioned. The facts upon which these accusations are founded are rarely provided, or else are demonstrably false.
— Finally, having submitted these objections, none of the debtors have appeared in court at their scheduled hearings.

The Court has come to refer to these types of pleadings as “copycat” or “Internet-compiled” pleadings, because the debtors do not appear to understand their own request for relief, much of which is both factually and legally inapplicable to their cases. Rather than a coherent response to the allegations set forth in the motion, these pleadings are more like a collection of spurious objections or an intentional attempt at disinformation and delay.

In re Diane Keefer, No. 04-30304, slip op. (Bankr.S.D.N.Y., February 10, 2005) (ECF Docket No. 8), Judge Burton R. Lifland 1 overruled similar objections contained in that debtor’s opposition to relief from the automatic stay. By addressing two additional “Internet-compiled” objections, this decision is a further attempt to address the problems created by these objections and bring attention to what this Court identifies as a pattern of abuse of the bankruptcy system.

BACKGROUND FACTS

During separate hearings on May 17, 2005, the Court granted motions by (1) Citifinancial Mortgage Company (“Citifi-nancial”), terminating the stay in the case of Lynn Lord (05-30066) with prejudice and also awarding in rem relief; and (2) Charter One Bank, National Association (“Charter One”), terminating the stay in the case of Lisa Stallings (05-30090) with prejudice, but denying the request for in rem relief. In both cases, the Court denied the movant’s request for waiver of the 10-day stay contained in Fed. R. Bankr.P. 4001(a)(3). Before turning to the specifics of each lift-stay motion and the opposition thereto, the Court will set forth a few common background facts.

Both debtors filed skeletal petitions (missing all schedules, the statement of financial affairs and the chapter 13 plan) and listed a single secured creditor in the creditor matrix. Lord filed her petition on March 8, 2005 and listed Citifinancial in her creditor matrix; Stallings filed on *125 March 28, 2005 and listed only Charter One. Both debtors signed page two of the petition, swearing under penalty of perjury that the information provided was true and correct; yet neither debtor listed any “Pri- or Bankruptcy Case Filed Within Last 6 Years” on the second page of the petition. Lord filed a prior, joint chapter 13 case with Robert Lord on January 30, 2001 (Case No. 01-35188); Stallings‘has filed four prior chapter 13 cases (Case No. 02-30180, filed March 19, 2003 and dismissed June 10, 2003; Case No. 02-30131, filed June 9, 2003 and dismissed July 31, 2003; Case No. 03-30251, filed October 14, 2003 and dismissed July 13, 2004; and Case No. 04-30234, filed September 27, 2004 and dismissed January 5, 2005).

After the chapter 13 trustee moved to dismiss the cases, both debtors untimely filed their schedules, statement of financial affairs, and chapter 13 plan. Both debtors listed a single creditor, which was the same secured creditor listed on the creditor matrix. In her chapter 13 plan, Lord acknowledges pre-petition mortgage arrears of $60,000 to Citifinancial and proposed to repay the arrears (with 1% interest) through 60 monthly payments of $1,000, in addition to regular monthly payments outside the plan of $1,200. Stall-ings’ chapter 13 plan acknowledges pre-petition mortgage arrears of $21,000 to Charter One and proposed to repay the arrears (with 1% interest) through 60 monthly payments of $300 (a total of only $18,000), in addition to regular monthly payments outside the plan of $980.

In the afternoon of May 17, 2005, the Court granted the chapter 13 trustee’s motions to dismiss both cases for failure to make plan payments and failure to provide requested documentation to the chapter 13 trustee. In addition, Lord’s case was dismissed due to her failure to appear and be examined at the meeting of creditors required by 11 U.S.C. § 341. 2

Lynn Lord

According to Schedule A to Lord’s petition, she owns a one-family home at 7 Barnett Road in Monroe, New York. The home is valued in Lord’s petition at $340,000 and subject to the lien of Citifi-nancial. Lord acknowledges Citifinancial’s “1987 First Mortgage” in the amount of $220,000 in Schedule D to her petition, and she does not contend that the debt is contingent, liquidated or disputed.

On April 19, 2005, Citifinancial moved for relief from the automatic stay, claiming that relief was justified due to Lord’s failure to make contractual mortgage payments post-petition, and that non-payment constitutes “cause” to lift the stay under 11 U.S.C. § 362(d)(1). Citifinancial also alleges that “the mortgage loan is contractually due for the October 3, 2001 monthly mortgage payment.” Application of Citifi-nancial, ¶ 12 (ECF Docket No. 6). Citifi-nancial also claims that it has been forced to pay real estate taxes and hazard insurance on the real property that has not been paid by the Debtor. Citifinancial also filed a proof of claim in Lord’s case on March 21, 2005, showing pre-petition arrears of $119,382.05, including 42 months of unpaid principal and interest payments totaling $48,788.76. Desiring to commence foreclosure proceedings, Citifinancial requested relief from the automatic stay with prejudice for 180 days, including in rem relief and .waiver of the 10-day stay in Fed. R. Bankr.P.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
325 B.R. 121, 2005 Bankr. LEXIS 911, 2005 WL 1230760, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-lord-nysb-2005.