In Re Medina

413 B.R. 583, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 3041, 2009 WL 2809384
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Texas
DecidedAugust 20, 2009
Docket19-30341
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 413 B.R. 583 (In Re Medina) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Medina, 413 B.R. 583, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 3041, 2009 WL 2809384 (Tex. 2009).

Opinion

Decision on Motion for Sanctions for Wilful Violation of Automatic Stay

LEIF M. CLARK, Bankruptcy Judge.

On July 20, 2009, the court held a hearing on the debtors’ motion for sanctions for willful violation of the automatic stay by Hill Country Electric. Both parties appeared and presented both evidence and argument. The court reset the matter for ruling, to consider the legal issues created by the sometimes troublesome intersection of Texas’ scheme of remedies for unpaid subcontractors and the automatic stay of the Bankruptcy Code. This decision disposes of the issue. 1

Background

Jesse Medina is an electrical subcontractor. Prior to the bankruptcy filing, Medi *587 na was working in that capacity on a job site for New Leaf Development, installing electrical in houses in New Leafs subdivision. Medina failed to pay one of his suppliers, Hill Country Electric, for electrical supplies delivered to the building site on which he was working. HCE sent a Notice of Intent to File Lien to both the owner and the general contractor on the jobs to which HCE had sent materials for Medina to install, pursuant to the “trapping” provisions of the Texas Property Code. See Tex. PROP. Code, §§ 53.056(d), 53.081(a). The Notice also incorporated a Demand for Payment to the owner, as permitted by the statute. See id., § 53.083(a). New Leaf, as owner, paid HCE in a series of payments over a period of about two months in response to the Demand for Payment. New Leaf, in its capacity as original contractor, then offset these payments from post-petition draw requests submitted by Medina (who was continuing to do work on the New Leaf project post-petition). The debtor contended that HCE’s actions constituted a violation of the automatic stay, and filed a motion seeking damages.

HCE claimed that its efforts to get New Leaf to pay it for the outstanding debt run up by Medina was justified under state law and did not violate the automatic stay. Essentially, HCE maintains that its actions could not be stay violations because HCE only made demand on the owner for payment and the owner elected to pay. HCE adds that there was certainly no effort to create a lien on the debtor’s property nor is there any proof that the owner paid HCE monies that could be proven to have been the debtor’s (and the burden of so showing, says HCE, was placed on the debtors, not HCE).

Findings of Fact

The debtor 2 filed this petition on September 17, 2008. Prior to the filing (and after as well) Medina worked as an electrical subcontractor, under an “oral agreement” with New Leaf Homes to install the electrical in a number of homes that New Leaf was building at the time. 3 At least in the months of August and September 2008, Medina bought supplies from HCE on credit, for houses in the New Leaf development. Medina would order enough supplies for approximately a week’s worth of work. He and his workers would then install these supplies in the houses he was working on at that time. At the end of the week, he would submit a draw request for that week’s work. Following inspection by the contractor, the contractor would then pay Medina’s draw request, which of course included an amount sufficient to repay the supplier for the supplies furnished to Medina for that week.

Medina received payment pre-petition on draw requests submitted to New Leaf (which would have included a request for reimbursement for supplies purchased on credit from HCE) but did not then pay HCE out of these payments. Instead, Medina used the draw for other purposes. *588 As a result, HCE claimed to be owed $57,285.45 as of the date of filing. 4

The debtor claimed to have notified HCE of the bankruptcy filing within days, though the evidence on the point is uncertain. In all events, on September 22, 2009, HCE sent five Notices of Claim to New Leaf, the owner of the properties being improved (and also the general contractor for most of the properties), as well as to two related entities, MG Ventures, and Vivaldi Inc. (who were the original contractors on a few of the houses), based on the outstanding debt due HCE as of then. The notices were sent pursuant to section 53.056(d) of the Texas Property Code. The Notices incorporated a Demand for Payment as well, as authorized by section 53.083(c) of the Texas Property Code.

New Leaf as owner, in response, sent three checks to HCE to pay off the outstanding invoices of HCE to Medina. 5 The first check, for $29,711.66, was sent on September 26, 2008 and happened to match the outstanding HCE invoices for the month of August 2008. 6 New Leaf (again as owner) sent HCE a second check for $14,576.33 on November 14, 2008. 7 New Leaf sent a third check for $13,000 to HCE on November 21, 2008, this one for the balance due. 8

New Leaf was also the original contractor for whom Medina was continuing to do *589 work, and in that capacity, New Leaf recouped the payments New Leaf (as owner) had made to HCE out of draws due to Medina post-petition. The first draw check to Medina showed the setoff of $29,711.66 for payments made to HCE, then paid Medina a net $7,927.57. 9 A second draw check issued on November 14, 2008 reflected a setoff of $7,576.38 to recoup part of what New Leaf had paid HCE for outstanding September invoices. A third check issued on November 21, 2008 reflected a setoff of $7,000, in recoupment of part of its payment to HCE out of Medina’s draw for that week. Another check, dated December 12, 2008, reflected a recoupment of $7,000 for payments made to HCE. The last check, dated December 23, 2008, showed a deduction of $6,000. The total setoffs came out to $57,287.99. 10

There is no indication in the record of any malice on the part of HCE. Indeed, it is not even clear that HCE’s contact with New Leaf was directly motivated by Medina’s bankruptcy filing. It is also clear from the record, however, that the debtor eventually made demand on HCE to return the monies it had collected from New Leaf (and which New Leaf had then recouped by deducting payments from draw checks issued post-petition), and that HCE refused to do so.

Except for the first check, the draw checks to Medina from New Leaf (from which the deductions were made) were all attributable to post-petition work, and so constituted post-petition property of the estate. The first check, issued September 26, 2008, reflects payment for draw requests that are not specifically identified by date. Thus it is not possible to know whether the source of payment entitlement originated pre-petition.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
413 B.R. 583, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 3041, 2009 WL 2809384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-medina-txwb-2009.