In Re Mill Place Ltd. Partnership

94 B.R. 139, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 2127
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedDecember 2, 1988
Docket14-41009
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 94 B.R. 139 (In Re Mill Place Ltd. Partnership) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Mill Place Ltd. Partnership, 94 B.R. 139, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 2127 (Minn. 1988).

Opinion

ORDER

DENNIS D. O’BRIEN, Bankruptcy Judge.

At St. Paul, Minnesota.

The above-entitled matter came on for hearing on November 17, 1988, on motion by Prudential Insurance Company of America (Prudential) to dismiss this bankruptcy case for bad-faith filing, and on motions by Debtor for expanded use of cash collateral and for the approval of appointment of certain professionals. Based on the testimony and documentary evidence heard and received, and upon memoranda and arguments of counsel, the Court now being fully advised in the matter hereby makes this Order pursuant to the Federal and Local Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure.

I.

Mill Place Limited Partnership (Mill Place) is a limited partnership that filed for relief under 11 U.S.C. Chapter 11 on September 28, 1988. Mill Place’s general partner commenced the case as a defense to state court proceedings brought by Prudential for the appointment of a receiver coincident with foreclosure of its nonrecourse mortgage on the Debtor’s principal asset. Prudential countered with a motion to dismiss for bad-faith filing.

According to Mill Place’s schedules, the Debtor has three secured creditors. They are: Prudential, with a $7,000,000.00 mortgage on Mill Place, a Minneapolis riverfront restoration development office building; GT Finance with a $12,800.00 lien on heating equipment in the building; and Ben Miller, a limited partner with a $125,000.00 mortgage on a parcel of real estate adjacent to Mill Place which is used as a parking lot.

The schedules list 14 unsecured creditors totalling $26,100.00. Six of them are shown as having claims of less than $100.00. One creditor is not assigned any value to its claim. Of the remaining seven creditors, two claims are shown exceeding $5,000.00. The debts owing all unsecured creditors listed were incurred prepetition *141 for maintenance performed on, or services rendered to, Mill Place.

The Debtor’s scheduled assets consist of two parcels of real estate and $60,900.00 in cash. One real estate parcel is the Mill Place commercial building and land upon which it sits, valued by the Debtor at $3,500,000.00. It is subject to Prudential’s $7,000,000.00 mortgage. The other is an adjacent oddly shaped parcel, historically used for railroad purposes, now utilized by Mill Place as a parking lot for the commercial building. The second parcel is valued by the Debtor in excess of $500,000.00 and is subject to Ben Miller’s $125,000.00 mortgage. The cash is rent receipts and is Prudential’s cash collateral by prepetition rent assignment.

Alan Wilensky is a limited partner who directly and indirectly has a substantial partnership interest in Mill Place. He is also an attorney who attempted to negotiate a financial workout with Prudential on behalf of the partnership prior to the filing of the petition. Prudential’s mortgage had been in default for about a year before bankruptcy.

One of the more attractive features of the limited partnership interests (perhaps the only one) has been the availability to the partners of certain tax deductions to offset nonpartnership income. The Mill Place project development is an officially designated historic restoration project to which special tax treatment applies as an incentive to attract investors. To maximize the tax advantage, and possibly to avoid recapture of deductions previously taken, the partners must retain their interests until June of 1990. Mr. Wilensky had explored various alternatives with Prudential, prepetition, toward that end.

When Wilensky ran out of ideas and Prudential ran out of patience, the war began. The first salvos were verbal. Prudential warned of an immediate assault through foreclosure. Wilensky countered with the thunderous threat of a “scorched earth” retreat and defense that would involve Chapter 11 and that would prove extremely costly to Prudential. Only the lawyers, he claimed, would benefit from such a war. Prudential took steps to foreclose, and Mill Place filed its petition.

Prudential argues that the petition was filed in bad faith, and furthermore, that confirmation of a plan under any scenario is impossible over its objection. The case should therefore be dismissed, it claims.

The Debtor counters that the only dismissal should be Wilensky’s prepetition threats to employ “scorched earth” tactics in defense to foreclosure. The Debtor argues: the threat was merely a thunderous charge that fired a blank; and it should be dismissed as simply zealous representation in the heat of negotiation. The petition was filed in good faith, the Debtor argues, and Mill Place points to new management along with an aggressive post-petition attempt at obtaining fresh capital as evidence.

II.

Dismissal of a Chapter 11 bankruptcy case for bad-faith filing is a power that should be exercised with extreme caution. Ordinarily, to justify such a dismissal, there should exist circumstances other than alleged hopeless financial condition of a debtor. Otherwise, Chapter 11 will likely become a protection and remedy easily available only to those who need it the least, while those who need it the most will be left to essentially prove good faith in order to qualify.

Creditors who become entangled in hopeless Chapter 11 cases filed by debtors have remedies of relief from stay, adequate protection, and dismissal or conversion based on the enumerated grounds in 11 U.S.C. § 1112(b). Dismissal on grounds of bad-faith filing should not be judicially developed as an easy alternative to other post-petition creditor remedies, thereby, subverting the reorganization and confirmation scheme of the Code.

Dismissal for bad-faith filing should ordinarily be restricted to those instances where it can be clearly and convincingly shown that a debtor filed either to maliciously, injure, damage or destroy the property rights of another; or to accom *142 plish an otherwise unlawful purpose through use of the Bankruptcy Code. Filing a petition on the eve of foreclosure, or to stop a foreclosure in progress, is not, standing alone, bad-faith conduct. Nor is it bad-faith conduct for a debtor to file on the eve of foreclosure with what then appears to be an unrealistic hope of the ability to reorganize.

The exercise of a right or remedy does not ordinarily constitute the malicious injury, damage or destruction of the property rights of another, even though some injury to such property might result in the process. Furthermore, the observation, boast or threat of likely injury is not clear and convincing evidence of a bad-faith Chapter 11 filing when reorganization is realistically possible over the objection of hostile creditors, within a reasonable period of time after filing.

However, use of Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code for the sole purpose of delaying or injuring a threatened creditor is both malicious and for an unlawful purpose. It is an abuse of process — the unlawful exercise of a right or remedy.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

G.A.F. Seelig, Inc.
E.D. New York, 2020
In Re Coleman
275 B.R. 763 (W.D. Virginia, 2002)
In Re Fox
232 B.R. 229 (D. Kansas, 1999)
In Re Victoria Ltd. Partnership
187 B.R. 54 (D. Massachusetts, 1995)
In Re Midway Investments, Ltd.
187 B.R. 382 (S.D. Florida, 1995)
In Re Khan
172 B.R. 613 (D. Minnesota, 1994)
In Re Kellogg Square Partnership
160 B.R. 343 (D. Minnesota, 1993)
In Re Lumber Exchange Ltd. Partnership
125 B.R. 1000 (D. Minnesota, 1991)
In Re Marion Street Partnership
108 B.R. 218 (D. Minnesota, 1989)
Carolin Corporation v. Robert J. Miller, Jr.
886 F.2d 693 (Fourth Circuit, 1989)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
94 B.R. 139, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 2127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-mill-place-ltd-partnership-mnb-1988.