In Re Oglesby

161 B.R. 917, 1993 Bankr. LEXIS 1876, 1993 WL 532619
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 22, 1993
Docket19-11049
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 161 B.R. 917 (In Re Oglesby) 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 Oglesby, 161 B.R. 917, 1993 Bankr. LEXIS 1876, 1993 WL 532619 (Pa. 1993).

Opinion

OPINION

DAVID A. SCHOLL, Bankruptcy Judge.

A INTRODUCTION

In an appeal from our confirmation of the First Amended Chapter 13 Plan (“the Plan”) filed by SHARON OGLESBY, a/k/a Sharon Cofey, Sharon Simmons, and Sharon Council (“the Debtor”), including certain protections for the appellant-mortgagee of the Debtor’s home, ASSOCIATES NATIONAL MORTGAGE CO. (“Associates”), required by our prior Opinion reported at 150 B.R. 620, 628 (Bankr.E.D.Pa.1993) (“Opinion I”), the district court (“the Court”) in a Memorandum reported at 158 B.R. 602 (E.D.Pa.1993) (“Opinion II”), vacated the confirmation order and remanded the matter to us to ascertain the Debtor’s “good faith.” The Court expressed particular concern about the fact that this case represented the Debtor’s fourth bankruptcy case between 1988 and the present.

We note that the scales of repetition are evened by the fact that the instant remand provides Associates with its fourth opportunity to. raise the issue of whether the Debtor has been proceeding in “good faith.” Applying the Court’s good faith test, which we are required to do in light of the remand, we find that the totality of circumstances indicates that this case was filed in good faith and the Plan was conceived in good faith. The latter conclusion is supported most strongly by (1) the fact that the Court agrees that the Plan is feasible and otherwise confirmable; and (2) the Debtor, on remand, has poignantly *919 described her severe health problems and socio-economic factors which prompted her multiple filings.

B. PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL HISTORY PRIOR TO REMAND

The history of this case and the Debtor’s prior three cases is recited in Opinion I, 150 B.R. at 622-24. Familiarity with that recitation is assumed, although some of the facts are recast herein in light of the present issues before us, and new information is provided in light of subsequent developments.

The Debtor filed the instant voluntary Chapter 18 bankruptcy case on May 4, 1992, admittedly primarily in an attempt to preserve 904 Longacre Boulevard, Yeadon, Delaware County, Pennsylvania (“the Home”), as a residence for herself, eleven dependent children, and two dependent grandchildren.

The first opportunity of Associates to raise the issue of whether the instant case was filed in good faith was in a motion to dismiss this case which it filed just eight days after the filing of this bankruptcy case, on May 12, 1992, on the ground that the Debtor had not complied with payment directives in her past three bankruptcy eases and should not be given any further opportunities to do so.

On the day following a hearing, we entered an Order of May 29,1992 (“the May Order”), denying this motion on the condition that the Debtor make monthly payments of $2,192 to the Trustee for Associates’ benefit pending confirmation and promptly achieve confirmation of a plan of reorganization.

No appeal from the May Order was taken, which arguably established the conclusion that dismissal of the case on grounds that it was filed in bad faith was res judicata, or at least the law of the case, as long as the conditions set forth in the May Order were satisfied. In any event, as we shall come to see, this issue never resurfaced in this court until after the remand of this case following Opinion II.

On September 22, 1992, the Debtor filed an adversary proceeding at Adv. No. 92-1002DAS (“the Proceeding”) against Associates under 11 U.S.C. § 506, seeking a determination of the validity, extent, and priority of Associates’ lien. Trial of the Proceeding was eventually scheduled, in conjunction with a hearing to consider confirmation of the Debtor’s then-current Chapter 13 plan, on January 5,1993. Although this juncture constituted its second opportunity to do so, Associates did not reiterate the Debtor’s lack of good faith, either in filing the case or in proposing her Plan, as one of its objections to confirmation.

In Opinion I, dated February 11,1993, this court decided and held in favor of the Debtor in the Proceeding. Pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 506(a), we fixed the value of the Home and the secured claim of Associates against it at $60,000, and determined that the Debtor’s proposed monthly payments of only $1,107.78 to Associates were sufficient to satisfy this claim in a plan. We also held, inter alia, that the Debtor was not estopped from claiming that the Home was worth only $60,000 by her declarations, in her Schedules in this case, and her attempts at paying considerable more in prior cases, that the Home was worth $100,000. Most prominent of our other holdings was that the Debtor’s Chapter 13 reorganization plan would be deemed feasible if and only if it included a provision for summary dismissal, barring a refiling for 180 days, in the event that the Debtor failed to pay Associates as proposed in her plan in the first 24 months after confirmation. The Plan in issue, filed on February 19, 1993, was devised from adherence to these conditions set forth in Opinion I.

We allowed Associates until March 12, 1993, to file Objections to the Plan. Thus, Associates was presented with its third chance to raise the good faith/multiple filings issue(s). However, despite reiteration of numerous prior objections addressed and rejected in Opinion I, the issues of multiple filings and lack of good faith were not linked in any Objections filed by Associates at that time. In one paragraph, Associates did object to the five-year length of the Plan in light of the Debtor’s prior bankruptcies. The term “good faith” was invoked, however, only in the following passage:

9. Debtor’s plan has not been proposed in good faith as the Debtor has not fully accounted for payments to all creditors *920 and may pay certain creditors on a more favorable basis without fully disclosing that intention in her plan.

At the confirmation hearing of March 18, 1993, scheduled pursuant to the Order accompanying Opinion I, we advised Associates that, in light of its failure to appeal Opinion I, we appeared to be bound by res judicata from sustaining the repetitious objections, if not strongly inclined to reach the same result under “the law of the case” doctrine. See, e.g., In re River Village Associates, 161 B.R. 127 (Bankr.E.D.Pa.1993) (the “law of the case” dictates that courts will reopen prior decisions in the case only if they were “clearly erroneous” or would “work a manifest injustice”). Although the confirmation order should have been entered ministerially by the clerk’s office immediately after the March 18, 1993, hearing, for some unknown reason its entry was delayed until April 6, 1993.

The Court initially discussed at length, Opinion II, 158 B.R. at 604-07, the issue of whether the appeal from the Order accompanying Opinion I, filed on April 8, 1993, was timely. The Court concluded that the entire Order accompanying Opinion I, including the decisions in the Proceeding, was appealable. 1

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Bluebook (online)
161 B.R. 917, 1993 Bankr. LEXIS 1876, 1993 WL 532619, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-oglesby-paeb-1993.