In Re Miller

90 B.R. 865, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 1506, 1988 WL 94959
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Michigan
DecidedSeptember 9, 1988
Docket19-03623
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 90 B.R. 865 (In Re Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Miller, 90 B.R. 865, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 1506, 1988 WL 94959 (Mich. 1988).

Opinion

OPINION

LAURENCE E. HOWARD, Bankruptcy Judge.

LAND CONTRACTS — ABANDONMENT AND WAIVER UNDER MICHIGAN LAW

The parties have come before the court on an objection to confirmation of a chapter 13 plan and a motion for relief of stay under 11 U.S.C. § 362.

FACTS

On July 23, 1985, debtors Jeff and Deborah Miller entered into a land contract with creditors David and Ann Gregory, the parents of Deborah Miller. Under the land contract the Millers were to pay a total purchase price of $5,000 at $100 per month, for the real estate and residence commonly known as 281 North Sixteenth Street, Battle Creek, Michigan. (Hereinafter, “281.”) Sometime in the first half of 1987 the Millers fell into default on the land contract. The Millers decided to leave 281 and to rent the house next door, 283 North Sixteenth Street, owned by Joanna Cerva. (Hereinafter the “Cerva house.”) At the end of May the Millers requested the telephone and electric utility companies to terminate their service at 281 and commence service in their names at the Cerva house, all effective as of June 1, 1987. This was done. On June 1, 1987, the Millers moved into the Cerva house. On June 15,1987, the Grego-rys obtained a Judgment of Land Contract Forfeiture on 281. The Millers rented the Cerva house from June 1, 1987, to July 17, 1987. Sometime in early to mid July the Millers attempted to rent 281 to a third party, but the arrangement was never consummated. At the same time the Millers apparently decided to move out of the Cer-va house. On July 9, 1987, the Millers requested that their telephone service be switched from the Cerva house to 47 Pleasant Avenue, Battle Creek, effective July 14, 1987.

At about this time Deborah Miller approached Ann Gregory to discuss the house at 281. Both parties agree that at this meeting Deborah Miller gave possession of her original land contract to Ann Gregory. Beyond this their accounts differ. Ann Gregory gives a very full account of the meeting. She testified that Deborah Miller came to her, explained that the Millers had financial difficulties, and asked to be allowed to rescind the land contract and be allowed to live at 281 as mere tenants under an oral lease for $100 a month rent. Ann Gregory agreed, and contends that Deborah Miller gave up her original land contract in token of this new arrangement. (Transcript, pp. 14-15.) Deborah Miller’s account differs, although she never expressly denied Ann Gregory’s account. Deborah Miller admits that she handed the contract to Ann Gregory, but with the purpose of finding out what was the total amount of the Miller debt under the contract and having that figure written on the contract.

Of the two accounts given above, the court finds Ann Gregory’s more credible. According to Ann Gregory, Deborah Miller asked to be allowed to cancel the land contract, rent the house as tenants, and surrendered the land contract accordingly. (Transcript, pp. 14-15, 67-68.) In her direct testimony, Deborah Miller never contradicted this account. (Transcript, pp. 51-58.) It was only on cross-examination that Mrs. Miller stated that she surrendered the land contract in order to have the total amount due written upon it. Deborah Miller never explained why she needed to have that figure written on the land contract when it is clearly stated on the Judgment of Land Contract Forfeiture which was served upon her. Nor is there any indication in the record that Deborah Miller ex *867 pected to receive the land contract back or insisted on its return. If her purpose was to learn how much she owed, it would be of no use to give the land contract to Ann Gregory unless she got it back with the figure written upon it. The court also notes that prior to this meeting the Millers evidenced every intent to leave 281. They had moved out of 281 and into the Cerva house, which is where they had transferred their utility service. True, the Millers had attempted to rent out 281, but that arrangement fell through and the record shows no further attempts by the Millers to rent out 281. At the time that Ann Gregory and Deborah Miller met, the Millers’ land contract interest was seriously in default and was subject to a judgment of forfeiture with only about two months left of the redemption period. Furthermore, at the time the Millers were planning to leave the Cerva house and move not into 281 but into another rental home at 47 Pleasant.

Given this situation, the court must ask why did Deborah Miller return to 281 and why did Ann Gregory consent. There is no indication in the record that Ann Gregory waived the judgment of forfeiture or the running of the redemption period in order to allow the Millers to resume their land contract obligations. Deborah Miller really has no explanation for the events of that meeting; she did not even testify that Ann Gregory agreed to allow the Millers to resume their land contract obligations. Ann Gregory did have an explanation: that the land contract was surrendered and the Millers, who were looking for a new home anyway, moved into 281 as tenants. Given a choice between a rational explanation of these events and no explanation at all, the court must choose the explanation.

Moreover, the parties appear to have afterward acted on the assumption that the Millers were renting 281. On September 17, 1987, after the Millers filed their petition in bankruptcy, the Gregorys sought a Notice to Quit for failure to pay rent. Mr. Barton, the debtors’ attorney, wrote to the Gregorys on September 26, 1987. His letter does not state that it is in reply to this notice, but it is subsequent to the notice. In it Mr. Barton does not contest the characterization of the debt as rent. Rather, he implicitly accepts that characterization and assures the Gregorys that they will be paid the “back rent”, “on going rent”, and the “rent obligation” due them through .the plan. True, the Millers’ schedules do characterize the obligation and arrearage as a land contract debt. However, that is one aberration in a general course of conduct which treated the land contract as abandoned. Based on all of the above, the court holds that Debtor Miller surrendered her land contract to Ann Gregory in token of the Millers’ abandonment of their rights and interests under that instrument.

The Millers moved back into 281 on or about July 23, 1987. On that date the Millers paid $150 to the Gregorys. The form receipt of that date states: “Received of Jeff and Debbie Miller One-Hundred for Month of July Dollars for Fifty-dollars for Month of April By Ann Gregory.” (Defendants’ Exhibit A.) Ann Gregory admits that there was another payment of $150 made in August, $100 on the current month’s rent and $50 on an arrearage, also due on a land contract month, as with Exhibit A. However, no one at trial could produce a receipt for this second payment. (Transcript, pp. 26-27.) Ann Gregory contends that Deborah Miller made the $50 payments as back rent because the Millers hadn’t paid for six to eight months prior to that. (Transcript, p. 26.)

ISSUES PRESENTED BY THE OBJECTION TO CONFIRMATION

The Millers filed their petition under chapter 13 of the Bankruptcy Code on September 10, 1987.

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90 B.R. 865, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 1506, 1988 WL 94959, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-miller-miwb-1988.