In RE McMILLEN

390 B.R. 1
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedMay 7, 2008
Docket19-10255
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 390 B.R. 1 (In RE McMILLEN) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In RE McMILLEN, 390 B.R. 1 (Mass. 2008).

Opinion

390 B.R. 1 (2008)

In re Raymond E. McMILLEN, Jr., Debtor
Raymond E. McMillen, Jr., Plaintiff
v.
Marc Kadis, Defendant/Plaintiff in Counterclaim
v.
Raymond E. McMillen, Jr., Defendant in Counterclaim.

Bankruptcy No. 02-18501-WH. Adversary No. No. 04-1140.

United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts.

May 7, 2008.

*3 David G. Baker, Boston, MA, for Plaintiff.

Dax B. Grantham, Stefan E. Cencarik, Grantham & Associates, PC, Cambridge, MA, for Defendant/Plaintiff in Counterclaim.

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION

WILLIAM C. HILLMAN, Bankruptcy Judge.

While in a case under chapter 13, and facing imminent foreclosure on his home, Debtor Raymond McMillen entered into a court-approved purchase and sale agreement with Defendant Marc Kadis: Kadis would purchase the home at a bargain-basement price but permit McMillen to continue living in it for five years, the first year's rent to be deferred, and give McMillen a five-year option to buy the home back at fair market value. Kadis did purchase the home but also announced his intention not to the pay final installment of the purchase price, a $75,000 payment due seven years after the closing; he has also failed to give a mortgage securing that obligation, as further required by the agreement. McMillen, for his part, occupied the property for the five-year lease term but paid no rent. McMillen now sues for recision of the agreement—citing Kadis's breach and arguing fraud, duress, and unjust enrichment—and for damages under Massachusetts G.L. c. 93A. Kadis counterclaims for the rent. The matter having been tried, I now enter the following findings of fact and conclusions of law.

FINDINGS OF FACT

Raymond McMillen filed a petition for relief under Chapter 13 of the Bankruptcy Code on September 25, 2001, thus commencing bankruptcy case No. 01-17472. At the time, he was the owner of the real property located at 17 Bow Street, Wellesley, Massachusetts ("the Property"), where he and his family had resided since 1971. The Property was encumbered by a mortgage in favor of Ameriquest Mortgage Company ("Ameriquest"), and this mortgage was in default. Ameriquest sought and obtained relief from the automatic stay and scheduled a foreclosure sale for November 25, 2002. On November 22, 2002, while the first case remained open, McMillen filed another petition for relief under Chapter 13, thereby commencing the present case.

On December 2, 2002, McMillen and Kadis entered into a purchase and sale agreement.[1] The material terms of the agreement were as follows:

1. Kadis was to pay a total purchase price of $250,000, including a cash payment of $150,000 at the closing and a further cash payment of $100,000 on the seventh anniversary of the closing.
2. Kadis was to secure his obligation to make a cash payment of $100,000 on the seventh anniversary of the closing by giving McMillen a mortgage on the property, which mortgage obligation would bear no interest and require payment of principal in full only at maturity.
3. Kadis's obligation to provide a mortgage would survive the closing.
4. Kadis's obligation to provide a mortgage "is based on buyer's estimate of the cost of repair of the property, *4 and the parties agree that the amount of this mortgage may be adjusted by subsequent agreement."[2]
5. Kadis was to lease the property back to McMillen for a term of five years; the rate for the first year was $1200 per month; the rental rate would increase by $100 per month in each successive year; and payment of the rent for the first year was to be deferred, with payment of the first year's rent to be made at the rate of $300 per month for 48 months, commencing in the first month of the second year of the lease.
6. During the five year term of the lease, McMillen would enjoy the exclusive option to buy back the property for fair market value, and this provision too would survive the closing.[3]
7. The property was to be conveyed to Kadis free and clear of liens.[4]
8. The agreement was subject to approval of the bankruptcy court and would not be effective or binding on either party until so approved.[5]

On December 3, 2002, McMillen filed, in the second case, a motion for leave to sell the Property to Marc Kadis free and clear of liens. The motion set forth the terms of the purchase and sale agreement. As McMillen explained in the motion, the initial proceeds of the sale would permit him to pay in full the first and second mortgages on the property and his remaining obligations under his chapter 13 plan.

On December 9, 2002, McMillen filed an amended motion for leave to sell the Property to Marc Kadis free and clear of liens, setting forth the same terms as are set forth above. Ameriquest filed an objection, stating that $150,000 (the amount payable by Kadis upon closing) would not be sufficient to satisfy its mortgage in full. The Court held a hearing on the amended sale motion on December 16, 2002, at which McMillen, his attorney, and Kadis were in attendance. Prior to the hearing, and in order to permit McMillen to have sufficient funds to cover the existing mortgages and to fund in full his chapter 13 plan, the parties modified their agreement to specify that the payment due upon closing would be increased to $175,000 and the balance due on the seventh anniversary reduced to $75,000. In an order agreed to by both McMillen and Kadis, as attested by their respective signatures thereon, the Court, by Judge Carol Kenner, approved the agreement as so amended, stating, "[t]he cash portion of the sale price is $175,000 and a mortgage in the amount of $75,000 is authorized."

Kadis maintains that, prior to this hearing, he and McMillen also agreed that the second payment would be stricken from the agreement altogether, and therefore that Kadis would neither give nor be obligated to give McMillen a mortgage to secure a second payment. The evidence shows that, at some point after the sale hearing,[6] Kadis informed McMillen that he would not pay anything beyond the initial *5 $175,000 payment. This communication occurred after the sale hearing but before the closing, as Kadis himself remembers it. Had Kadis made the statement at or before the sale hearing, he would not have agreed to the provision in the sale order that expressly authorized a mortgage of only $75,000 instead of $100,000. There is no writing or other evidence that McMillen agreed to this modification, and I find that he did not agree to it. In fact, according to Kadis's own testimony, Kadis did not present this modification to McMillen as a proposed modification, for acceptance or rejection; rather, Kadis simply told McMillen that this was what he planned to do. Moreover, the alleged modification is inconsistent with the provision in the sale order—to which Kadis himself agreed— authorizing a mortgage of only $75,000 instead of $100,000. Had the second payment been removed from the agreement, the authorization of any mortgage would have been unnecessary and nonsensical.

On the same day as the sale hearing, the bankruptcy court also allowed a Motion by Ameriquest for relief from the automatic stay to foreclose on the property that was the subject of the sale hearing. Consequently, McMillen was under pressure to close the sale to Kadis soon, lest he lose the home to foreclosure.

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390 B.R. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-mcmillen-mab-2008.