In Re Motaharnia

215 B.R. 63, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 1830, 1997 WL 731479
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, C.D. California
DecidedNovember 19, 1997
DocketBankruptcy SV 96-24164-GM, SV 97-11662-GM, SV 97-10044-GM
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 215 B.R. 63 (In Re Motaharnia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, C.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Motaharnia, 215 B.R. 63, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 1830, 1997 WL 731479 (Cal. 1997).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF OPINION AS AMENDED TO CORRECT TYPOGRAPHICAL ERROR ON NOVEMBER 13,1997

GERALDINE MUND, Chief Judge.

I. INTRODUCTION

The United States Trustee brought a motion to-dismiss each of these chapter 7 cases pursuant to § 707 of the Bankruptcy Code. *66 11 U.S.C. § 707 (1994). 1 Each of the three debtors incurred substantial credit-card debt shortly prior to filing their respective bankruptcy petitions. The United States Trustee argues that the debtors have engaged in credit-card abuse and, therefore, that the cases should be dismissed under § 707.

The issue before this Court is the propriety of dismissing a chapter 7 case under § 707(a) or § 707(b) based on alleged credit-card abuse. Because this is the critical issue common in all three cases, these motions will be analyzed together.

II. FACTS

A. In re Mohammad R. Motaharnia

Mr. Motaharnia filed a voluntary chapter 7 petition on December 2, 1996. Prior to the petition date, he incurred $155,937 in unsecured debt. All but $17,500 of this indebtedness stems from sixteen unpaid credit-card balances; this credit-card debt was incurred during 1995 and 1996 and is generally comprised of cash advances as well as several thousand dollars worth of merchandise from various electronics stores. Motaharnia disputes this contention, claiming that the debt has been incurred since 1988. It appears from the evidence that he may have been obtaining cash advances on new credit cards to pay the balances owing on old credit cards as he continued to make new charges.

Motaharnia earns $2,439 per month. He has a 17-year-old son with whom he lives in a house valued at $145,000 (on which he owes $190,000). His monthly mortgage payments are $1,959. Motaharnia reports two cars: a 1990 Honda valued at $7,000 and a 1996 Mercedes Benz valued at $38,000 (on which he owes $38,280). His monthly ear payments total $736. His expenses exceed his income by $1,463 per month. Motaharnia asserts that he was current with his payments until Wells Fargo Bank increased his mortgage payments from $1,126 to $1,950. However, even before the mortgage increase, Motahar-nia had a cash deficit of over $600 per month, exclusive of any payment on credit-card debt (which, at 3% of principal, would be approximately another $400 per month).

In 1994 and 1995, Motaharnia earned $36,-864 and $29,625 respectively. There is no indication what his gross salary was in 1996, but he has been employed at the same company for 7 years and his budget shows a net $25,228 in salary and an additional $4,140 per year in some sort of government assistance or social security payments. It therefore appears that there has been no substantial change in earnings in the three years before filing — if there were any change, such change certainly would not be sufficient to justify the need for cash advances in excess of $100,000.

B. In re Supavarn Busayasakul

Ms. Busayasakul filed a voluntary chapter 7 petition on February 7, 1997. Prior to the petition date, she accrued $142,174 in unsecured debt, all of which is based on 22 credit cards. There is no indication when this debt was incurred.

Busayasakul is self-employed, earning approximately $1,000 per month in income from the operation of a video store; she receives an additional $500 each month from her son. Her gross income for 1995 and 1996 was $9,000 and $12,000 respectively. She has monthly expenses of $1,680, $900 of which is a car payment on a 1990 Mercedes Benz valued at $35,000 (on which she owes $34,-000). She pays no rent. Busayasakul’s expenses exceed her income by $180 per month.

In opposition to the motion to dismiss, Ms. Busayasakul claims that she lost her video store in a 1994 earthquake and subsequently became burdened by debt to various vendors. She also argues that she has been making sincere efforts to pay off her creditors (including having her son supplement her monthly income) by making minimum payments since the earthquake. The opposition is not supported by a declaration of Busaya-sakul (although referred to in the caption, no declaration is attached). There is no explanation as to how the alleged 1994 business debt resulted in all of her unsecured credit-card obligations. There is also no indication *67 where her credit-eard payments have come from over the last few years when she ran at a deficit budget; nor is there an explanation as to when and how she acquired the Mercedes Benz.

C. In re Florante M. Hagan and Fely V. llagan

Florante M. llagan and Fely V. llagan filed a voluntary Chapter 7 petition on January 2, 1997. 2 As of January 1, 1996, the Hagans owed a total of $47,393 in unsecured debt, $45 of which constituted credit-card debt. By December 31, 1996, they owed $176,552 in unsecured debt, approximately $95,000 of which was on 13 credit cards and was largely created by cash advances. Thus, in the 11 months preceding their bankruptcy filing, they incurred approximately $94,955 in credit-card debt. There is no explanation for this sudden increase in credit-card debt.

Florante Hagan is unemployed and receives no income. Fely Hagan is on disability and reeeives/eams $1,332 a month. The Statement of Affairs shows that, in 1995, Florante earned $13,300 and Fely received $12,702 from social security and $1,831 in pension money, thus bringing their total family income to $27,833. In 1996, according to the same information, Florante was unemployed, thus earning no money, and Fely received $14,148 from Social Security and $1,831 in pension money, making their total family income $15,979. Thus the family income dropped by approximately $988 per month in 1996. The Hagan’s family expenses of $2,626 per month, $1,798 of which is a mortgage payment, exceed their income by $1,295 per month. The Hagans did not file an opposition to the Motion to Dismiss.

III. DISCUSSION

A. Background of Section 707

Prior to 1984, § 707 consisted solely of the provisions now- contained in § 707(a). The 1984 amendment renumbered the section and added § 707(b). 3 Although the legislative history does not specify why section 707(b) was enacted as a separate subsection rather than as an additional category to the original § 707, it appears that this was done beeáuse § 707(b) was meant to establish different standards for dismissal than those now included in § 707(a). Section 707(a) is quite broad in that it permits dismissal for cause; hówever, as indicated by the enumerated factors in § 707(a)(l)-(3), that provision is geared toward maintaining the integrity of the bankruptcy process. In contrast, § 707(b) was created to provide the court with a tool to prevent the discharge of debt owed by non-needy consumer debtors and to deal equitably when an unscrupulous consumer attempts to use the bankruptcy court as part of a scheme to take unfair ■ advantage of his creditors. In re Green,

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Bluebook (online)
215 B.R. 63, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 1830, 1997 WL 731479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-motaharnia-cacb-1997.