In Re Ormond Beach Associates Ltd. Partnership

185 B.R. 408, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 1131, 27 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 807, 1995 WL 498817
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedJuly 11, 1995
Docket19-30278
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 185 B.R. 408 (In Re Ormond Beach Associates Ltd. Partnership) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Ormond Beach Associates Ltd. Partnership, 185 B.R. 408, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 1131, 27 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 807, 1995 WL 498817 (Conn. 1995).

Opinion

RULING ON MOTION FOR SANCTIONS FOR VIOLATION OF AUTOMATIC STAY

ROBERT L. KRECHEVSKY, Chief Judge.

I.

The matter before the court is the debtor’s motion for sanctions against Citation Mortgage Ltd., Citation Mortgage Corp. (collectively “Citation”), and their attorney, Terrence Russell (Russell) for “violation of the automatic stay and this court’s December 22, 1994, Order.” Debtor’s Motion at 1. Citation and Russell deny any responsibility for the complained of violation, as hereinafter detailed.

II.

Ormond Beach Associates Limited Partnership (the debtor) on September 30, 1986 acquired and subsequently operated a retirement center located in Ormond Beach, Florida (the “center”). The debtor also acquired and operated a nursing home located next to the center. The center was then subject to a first mortgage, which on January 9, 1992, was purchased by Citation from the Resolution Trust Corporation (RTC). The RTC had received the mortgage from the original mortgagee, Freedom Savings & Loan Association.

Citation, on June 26, 1992, started a mortgage foreclosure action in the Circuit Court for the Seventh Judicial Circuit in and for Volusia County, Florida (the “state court”) naming the debtor, its present corporate general partner, LPIMC, Inc., and several former general partners, Eugene Rosen (Ro-sen), Bruce Weinstein (Weinstein) and John Galston (Galston) as defendants. A later amended complaint asserted various additional tort claims against all defendants, and sought to add 165 of the debtor’s limited partners as party defendants. Citation, claiming under a written assignment of the center’s rents and prior actions taken by the RTC, made demand upon the debtor for all rents received by the debtor at the center after July 1989.

The state court, on January 6, 1993, entered a judgment of foreclosure and Citation thereupon took title to the center. During the foreclosure action, Citation, on October 19,1992, filed a motion to require the debtor to deposit the demanded rents in the state-court register. The state court, on July 16, 1992, granted the motion, and also ordered the debtor to submit a written accounting within 20 days detailing the receipt and use of the center’s net operating income. Citation’s Exhibit 3 (the “deposit order”). The debtor neither deposited the rents nor filed the accounting, and following a hearing on August 26, 1993, the state court found “the defendants” in contempt and imposed “a fine in the amount of $10,000.00 per day, commencing on the date of this order, for each and every day that the Defendants fail to purge themselves of the acts of contempt described in this order.” Citation’s Exhibit 6 (the “contempt order”).

The debtor had appealed the deposit order, and the contempt-order sanctions were stayed from September 3, 1993 through March 3, 1994, when the Florida Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the deposit order. The debtor, on March 7, 1994, filed an accounting of the rents with the state court. At a hearing held on April 25, 1994, the state court concluded that the accounting was insufficient, and that the defendants remained in violation of the deposit order. The state court continued the hearing to April 28, 1994 to determine further sanctions.

The debtor filed for relief under Chapter 11 in the bankruptcy court on April 26,1994, and the state court hearing scheduled for April 28, 1994 did not go forward. The *410 debtor then removed the state-court proceeding to the bankruptcy court. By order dated June 30,1994 the bankruptcy court, on Citation’s motion, remanded that proceeding to the state court “as to all matters and all parties therein, except as to the Debtor ... and ... any general partner who has indemnification rights against the debtor.” The bankruptcy court later authorized the debtor to employ an accounting firm to prepare a revised accounting of the rent received at the center by the debtor after July 1989. This accounting was submitted to the state court on October 24, 1994.

Citation, on December 1, 1994, filed a motion for relief from stay in the bankruptcy court seeking, inter aha, an order to permit the state court to determine the “following specific aspects of the litigation”: Citation’s entitlement to the rents, the amount of the rents, and whether Citation is entitled to a mortgage deficiency judgment. The motion expressly asserted: “Citation does not seek relief from the stay: (a) to continue contempt proceedings against the Debtor_” Debt- or’s Exhibit 2. The grounds stated in the motion for the requested relief were comity, the presence of novel state law issues under a “new” Florida statute, judicial economy and the location of records and witnesses in Florida.

The bankruptcy court, on December 15, 1994, held a hearing on Citation’s motion at which Russell and Robert A. White, Esq. (White), Citation’s Connecticut counsel, appeared. White, during the hearing, made the following representation to the court:

[T]he first thing that we would like to have happen to move this case along is the completion of that rent entitlement hearing, which, under the statute, involves completion of the accounting. The judge is going to deal with the contempt issues as to the general partners. We have said to the court that we are not going to pursue contempt sanctions against the debtor, even though there may not be any jurisdiction for the court to prevent the state court down there from [imposing] a fine for pre-petition contempt, certainly nothing further. But we’re not going to be pushing it. We will as to the general partners.

Debtor’s Exhibit 4, at 99. When the bankruptcy court indicated it was considering granting the motion, White read into the record a suggested order. He repeated that “Citation will not be pursuing contempt against the debtor under the existing orders.”

The bankruptcy court, on December 22, 1994, entered an order, jointly submitted by the parties, which, in part, provided:

IT IS FURTHER ORDERED, that the automatic stay is modified to permit Citation to pursue its claims against the Debt- or in the State Court Action, including all claims under Fla.Stat. § 697.07 and any appeals thereon except that (1) the Florida state court may not direct that any property of the Debtor be placed in the court registry without further order of this Court; (2) Citation may not collect on any judgment without further order of this Court; and (3) the Florida state court may not commence trial on counts X, XI, XIII and XV of the amended complaint as to the Debtor. By agreement of the parties, any determination as to whether Citation holds a secured claim under the Bankruptcy Code will be determined by the Bankruptcy Court without being bound by any determination of a Florida court against the Debtor whether by res judicata, collateral estoppel or otherwise.

Debtor’s Exhibit 5. Citation thereafter proceeded to reactivate the state court action. On January 19,1995, the state court (Honorable Patrick G. Kennedy) entered an order outlining the matters to be addressed at a two-day trial to commence on February 15, 1995. These matters included:

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Bluebook (online)
185 B.R. 408, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 1131, 27 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 807, 1995 WL 498817, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-ormond-beach-associates-ltd-partnership-ctb-1995.