In Re North Vermont Associates, L.P.

165 B.R. 340, 1994 Bankr. LEXIS 397, 1994 WL 111047
CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedFebruary 23, 1994
DocketBankruptcy 93-01068
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 165 B.R. 340 (In Re North Vermont Associates, L.P.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re North Vermont Associates, L.P., 165 B.R. 340, 1994 Bankr. LEXIS 397, 1994 WL 111047 (D.D.C. 1994).

Opinion

DECISION RE MOTION TO DISMISS

S. MARTIN TEEL, Jr., Bankruptcy Judge.

This is a case in which the debtor proposes a plan that gives mortgaged property to a mortgagee in satisfaction of its allowed secured claim and proposes that any unsecured portion of the mortgagee’s claim be paid by the guarantors of the claim (subject to the limitations of their guarantees). The court concludes, on the unique facts of this case, that the case was filed in bad faith. The court will grant the mortgagee’s motion to dismiss.

The debtor, North Vermont Associates, L.P., filed its voluntary petition under chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code on October 28, 1993, one day before a scheduled foreclosure sale. The debtor filed its Liquidating Plan of Reorganization on November 3, 1993, and filed minor revisions to that plan on December 29, 1993.

The debtor’s assets consist of: real property securing the claims of the mortgagee, Potomac Equity Portfolio Limited Partnership; $40,800 in cash (after payment to debt- or’s bankruptcy counsel of a $30,000 retainer to handle this case); and approximately $3,500 in accounts receivables.

The debtor’s liabilities consist of: $18,143,-815.09, with interest accruing at the per diem rate of $2,817.36 after July 15, 1993, owed to the mortgagee; $158,500.00 owed to Arlington County, Virginia in secured, first-priority real estate taxes; and $10,000.00 owed to general unsecured creditors (not including a disputed commission claim of S.G. Gerachis Company). The Gerachis claim was scheduled as a disputed and unliquidated claim of an unknown amount. When the petition was filed, the debtor thought Gerachis would assert a claim of $38,000. After the petition was filed, Gerachis filed a claim against the debtor’s general partner on the debt for more than $175,000. The debtor continues to dispute the entire claim.

The debtor’s sole general (and managing) partner is the Oliver Carr Company (“OCCO”). Clark Enterprises, Inc. (“CEI”), a limited partner of the debtor, is liable to the mortgagee on a guaranty given with re *341 gard to a loan of $2.5 million (one of three loans leading to the $18,143,814.09 mortgage debt), under which CEI agreed to guarantee payment of the principal due and attorneys fees, interest, and other charges. Oliver T. Carr, Jr., a limited partner of the debtor, granted the mortgagee a deficiency guaranty, capped at $2 million, for any deficiency that the mortgagee might suffer, after CEI’s payment on its guaranty. The mortgagee released OCCO from liability on the mortgage loans but OCCO collateralized the deficiency guaranty in return. The debtor’s limited partners (there are three besides CEI and Carr) and OCCO have entered into an agreement for indemnification of CEI in the event that its guaranty is called upon.

The debtor’s only significant asset is the real property, an assemblage of five parcels of land in the Ballston area of Arlington County, Virginia. The property was acquired for redevelopment as two office and two residential buildings. Four of the five parcels have small, older buildings on them; currently only one of the four parcels is under lease, to month-to-month tenants, generating $4,400 per month in rents, an amount insufficient to cover even two days of interest on the mortgagee’s claim. The debtor completed preliminary design work and environmental testing on the property. However, unable to find any definite prospective tenants for the property, the debtor has decided that it is economically too speculative to continue development efforts. Besides, the debtor could not proceed with redevelopment in the face of the mortgagee’s refusal to extend the acquisition loans. The debtor has no employees except for its principals.

The debtor filed an adversary proceeding to enjoin the mortgagee’s proceeding against the guarantors. Because the court determined that no harm could befall the debtor prior to entry of a judgment against the guarantors, the court simply enjoined collection for 10 days (by agreement of the mortgagee) after entry of any judgment against a guarantor. No judgment has yet been entered against either guarantor.

Under the plan (as revised) the mortgagee’s claims will be dealt with as follows. First, the mortgagee’s allowed secured claim shall be fixed by the court’s valuation of the collateral. The allowed secured claim shall then be satisfied by the transfer of the collateral securing the claim (either by a transfer of title by special warranty deed or, at the mortgagee’s option, by exercising the right to foreclose on the property). If the mortgagee exercises the option of foreclosure, the court’s valuation nevertheless fixes the amount of its allowed secured claim and the allowed secured claim is deemed paid in full regardless of the price paid for the property at foreclosure.

The court’s valuation of the property is to be used as well to fix the amount of the mortgagee’s unsecured deficiency claim and “the maximum liability of CEI under the CEI Guaranty and of the Deficiency Guarantor under the Deficiency Guaranty.” Revised Plan at par. 5.01. The mortgagee’s unsecured deficiency claim — the difference between the mortgagee’s total allowed claim and the fair market value of the property — is to be satisfied by the payment of the amount owed under CEI’s guaranty and by issuance of a note by Carr for any amount owed under Carr’s deficiency guaranty. CEI’s payment under the plan is to constitute full satisfaction of its obligations under the CEI guaranty; the valuation will also fix the maximum amount for which Carr is required to issue a promissory note for the deficiency guaranty (capped by the guaranty’s terms at $2 million).

The debtor’s plan proposes that non-lien holding general unsecured creditors will receive a distribution out of funds left after payment of claims entitled to priority under 11 U.S.C. § 507. In addition, they may elect to release the general partner, OCCO, and receive a. distribution out of a maximum of $8,000 that OCCO will deposit with the debt- or. Their distributions are to occur 30 days after the effective date of the plan.

On these facts, the court makes the ultimate finding that the plan was filed in bad faith. The debtor held sufficient funds on hand, $40,000, to pay in full all undisputed unsecured claims, other than whatever unsecured claim the mortgagee may have after foreclosure. The mortgagee has no apparent interest in pursuing a bankruptcy case *342 against the debtor, even upon payment of the other unsecured creditors. The mortgagee already has a right to pursue the guarantors to recover any amount it does not recover through foreclosure and there is no evidence that those guarantees -will not suffice to make it whole. Upon their being paid, the undisputed unsecured claims of $10,000 would have no basis for pursuing an involuntary case against the debtor. The holder of the disputed unsecured claim could not pursue an involuntary case on its own as long as its claim remains the subject of a bona fide dispute. Moreover, had the debtor not paid its bankruptcy counsel $30,000 the day before the petition was filed, the debtor would have had on hand enough funds to pay the $38,000 it thought was the maximum that would be sought by the disputed claim’s holder.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
165 B.R. 340, 1994 Bankr. LEXIS 397, 1994 WL 111047, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-north-vermont-associates-lp-dcd-1994.