In Re Nixon

400 B.R. 27, 2008 WL 5378290
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 24, 2008
Docket19-10715
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 400 B.R. 27 (In Re Nixon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Nixon, 400 B.R. 27, 2008 WL 5378290 (Pa. 2008).

Opinion

Memorandum Opinion

DIANE WEISS SIGMUND, Bankruptcy Judge.

Before the Court is the Objection of the debtor Brian J. Nixon (“Debtor”) to the secured proof of claim in the amount of $322,471.85 filed by Michael T. Foster (“Foster”). For the reasons that follow, the Objection shall be sustained in part.

BACKGROUND

The relevant facts are undisputed. On or about December 27, 1994, the Debtor obtained a Business Loan from Quaker-town National Bank (the “Bank”) in the principal amount of $215,000. In conjunction with that loan the Debtor signed a Promissory Note (Exhibit F — 1), Business Loan Agreement (Exhibit F-2), and a Mortgage (Exhibit F-4, and collectively with F-l and F-2, the “Loan Documents”) on a parcel of real estate owned by the Debtor at 8184 Steinsburg Road, Coopers-burg, Pennsylvania (the “Coopersburg Property”).

On June 7, 2007, the Bank filed a Confession of Judgment in the Court of Common Pleas of Lehigh County, in the amount of $247,067.26 (the “Judgment”), allocated as follows:

Principal: $215,000.00

Interest through 5/24/07 8,013.45

Late Charges 10,914.86

Property Insurance 1,619.68

Attorney Fees 11,519.27

TOTAL: $247,067.26

Exhibit F-5. Debtor concedes that the Judgment attached as a lien to Debtor’s real property, including another parcel of land know as 1801-1821 Gerryville Pike, Bucks County, Pennsylvania (the “Gerry- *31 ville Pike Property”). 1

The Bank subsequently executed a document titled “Assignment of Mortgage, Note, Assignment of Rents and Judgment” in favor of Foster (the “Assignment”). Exhibit F-3. The Assignment is undated. The Assignment expressly references the Mortgage, an Assignment of Rents, and the Judgment, and cites to them by docket number or filing number in the county Recorder of Deeds. Except for the reference in the title of the document, the Assignment does not expressly mention the Note. The Business Agreement is not referenced anywhere in the Assignment.

Debtor filed a voluntary petition under Chapter 13 on October 22, 2007. Foster immediately filed a motion for relief from stay (“Stay Relief Motion”) with respect to the Coopersburg Property. At the hearing on November 20, 2007, the Debtor reported that he had a buyer for the Ger-ryville Pike Property which would pay Foster’s claim in full. I denied the Stay Relief Motion on the condition that Debtor remit the rental income from the Coopers-burg Property directly to Foster as adequate protection while Debtor proceeded with that sale. Doc. No. 20. Debtor filed the motion to sell the Gerryville Pike Property pursuant to § 363 (the “Sale Motion”) on December 21, 2007. Doc. No. 21. On January 3, 2008, I entered an Order approving Debtor’s sale of the Gerryville Pike Property for $365,000, which resulted in proceeds of $360,664.37 being distributed to the Chapter 13 Trustee. Doc. No. 61 (Debtor’s Report of Consummated Sale of Real Estate).

On October 10, 2008, Debtor filed his Second Amended Plan which is presently before the Court. 2 Doc. No. 94. It, like the plan filed on July 8, 2007, provides for full payment of Foster’s allowed secured claim. Foster objected because, inter alia, it did not specify that payment would be made when the Gerryville Pike sale proceeds were received. Doc. No. 97. 3

Before the Court presently is Foster’s Amended Proof of Claim setting forth a secured claim in the amount of $322,471.85. Exhibit N-5 (the “Foster Claim”). The liquidation of the Foster Claim has been viewed by the Chapter 13 trustee as a necessary predicate to determining plan feasibility. Notably the Foster Claim evidences a significant increase from the Judgment amount which is attributed to the post-judgment accumulation of interest and late charges ($49,097.75), and attorneys fees and costs ($26,306.84). Foster’s position is that these expenses and interest at the default rate continue to accrue. The Objection asserts that Foster is limited to the Pennsylvania statutory rate of interest (6%) and that the bulk of post-judgment attorneys’ fees and costs are unreasonable.

*32 The interest rate under the Note is a variable one that is tied to the Bank’s Base Lending Rate (the “Index”) and is defined as one percentage point above the Index. Exhibit F-l at 1. The Note also contains a provision for “interest after default” that give the lender the option of raising the rate to five percentage points above the Index upon default. Id. The only evidence of the Index was Foster’s testimony that the Index was 8.25 percent at the time of Judgment. Tr. at 52. 4

Foster has employed three attorneys to represent him in this matter. His first entry of appearance in this case was through Marc Kranson, Esquire (“Kran-son”), who provided 12.3 hours of services at an hourly rate of $185 plus costs of $150 for a total of $2,425.50. Exhibit F-8. Kranson prepared for and attended all hearings on behalf of Foster and prepared and filed all of Foster’s pleadings until October 2008, when he withdrew as counsel and was replaced by Michael Kaliner, Esquire. (“Kaliner”). Kaliner handled the defense of the Objection, serving as trial counsel and author of the memorandum of law. Debtor does not object to Kranson’s or Kaliner’s fees and costs. 5

Foster also employed Ronald L. Clever, Esquire (“Clever”), who has billed 106 hours at an hourly rate of $275, resulting in $29,190 in fees and costs for services rendered with respect to this case from September 2007 to September 2008. Exhibit F-9. Clever is a general practitioner who has represented Foster in various matters over the last fifteen years. Tr. at 83. Clever never filed an Entry of Appearance on behalf of Foster in the bankruptcy case, although he has addressed the Court at various hearings, primarily to register his client’s extreme displeasure at the deferral of payment occasioned by Debtor’s resort to bankruptcy. He has not signed any of the motions or pleadings submitted on behalf of Foster. Clever has repeatedly advised the court that his practice is not focused in bankruptcy, that he does not have the appropriate bankruptcy forms and that he is not an authorized user of the Court’s now mandatory electronic filing system. See, e.g., Tr. at 85.

Notably while there have been many scheduled hearings in this Court in the Nixon bankruptcy case, not much has happened between the settlement of the Stay Motion and the Objection hearing. The Debtor filed a Chapter 13 sale plan and the case was monitored with numerous status hearings to ensure that Debtor was working toward that end and fulfilling all other Code requirements applicable to a Chapter 13 debtor. Nonetheless, Clever appeared at most (if not all) of the hearings to object to whatever was contemplated or happening.

Foster’s need for two attorneys on this case was never clearly explained. Foster simply stated that Clever was his “main” attorney and Kranson’s job was to “deal with the filings.” Tr. at 58.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
400 B.R. 27, 2008 WL 5378290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-nixon-paeb-2008.