In Re Pagaduan

429 B.R. 752, 2010 Bankr. LEXIS 1082, 2010 WL 1453071
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Nevada
DecidedApril 12, 2010
Docket19-50102
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 429 B.R. 752 (In Re Pagaduan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Nevada primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Pagaduan, 429 B.R. 752, 2010 Bankr. LEXIS 1082, 2010 WL 1453071 (Nev. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER REGARDING SANCTIONS

BRUCE A. MARKELL, Bankruptcy Judge.

Randolph Goldberg (“Goldberg ”) runs a high-volume consumer bankruptcy practice in Las Vegas, Nevada. Over the past 13 years, he claims to have handled twenty to twenty five-thousand individual bankruptcy cases. At the time of the hearing on this matter, he was filing close to 200 cases a month. One of those cases filed was the bankruptcy of Editha and Alfonso Paga-duan (the “Debtors ”).

Mr. Pagaduan is retired, and Ms. Paga-duan is a semi-retired nurse. Before filing this case, the Debtors had some familiarity with the bankruptcy process, as they had filed a chapter 7 bankruptcy case in 1987. They decided to file for bankruptcy again because their numerous investment properties had negative cash flow, and they were therefore unable to make the payments on these properties and on their primary residence. They thought that bankruptcy offered them the best chance of keeping their home and as much of their remaining property as they could.

The Debtors decided to hire Goldberg because they “saw him on TV.” The initial *757 consultation with Goldberg was on March 4, 2009; the Debtors returned to engage him on May 6, 2009. During the May appointment, they signed various documents. These documents included a retainer agreement, which obligated them to pay Goldberg more than $5,000 over time, and which also required an immediate $1,000 payment. The Debtors also signed authorizations allowing Goldberg to obtain their credit report and tax returns. 1 Finally, they also gave Goldberg confidential personal information, such as their social security numbers, mothers’ maiden names, dates of birth, places of birth, and pay stubs.

Goldberg filed a chapter 13 bankruptcy for the Debtors on May 15, 2009. Three days later, Goldberg filed certificates of completion of pre-petition credit counseling for the Debtors. These were dated May 15, 2009. 2 Due to the problems outlined in this opinion, the Debtors soon requested that their ease be dismissed. That dismissal occurred on June 4, 2009. 3 These problems also led to an evidentiary hearing regarding Goldberg’s practices on this and other cases.

To put it bluntly, the Debtors contend that Goldberg forged their signatures on their filed credit counseling certificates. They support this serious claim with undisputed proof that they were in Canada when the certificates were issued. They also allege that Goldberg violated a previous order of this court, entered in In re Sanford, No. 04-21213-bam, while representing them. Finally, they point to other misconduct.

Goldberg’s response was that although no one in his office had any memory of the meetings with the Debtors before they filed the Debtors’ case, his office’s internal procedures make forgery impossible. He denied any other misconduct.

On July 22, 2009, this court issued an Order to Show Cause regarding the allegations and held a hearing on the order. One co-debtor, Editha Pagaduan (“Paga-duan ”) testified, as did Goldberg and Adam Parmelee (“Parmelee ”). Parmelee is a “paralegal ‘slash’ office administrator” in Goldberg’s office. Ms. Pagaduan testified based on her direct recollections of the events leading to the Order to Show Cause.

Since neither Goldberg nor Parmelee could remember any pre-petition dealings with the Debtors, their testimony focused exclusively on the standard practices of Goldberg’s office.

I. Fabricated Credit Counseling

The Debtors first expressed their dissatisfaction with Goldberg in a letter to the *758 court dated June 2, 2009 (Dkt.# 19). In this letter, the Debtors declared that they never took the pre-petition credit counseling required by 11 U.S.C. § 109. They stated that they had been in Canada on that date and had airline tickets and passport entries to prove it. At the hearing, no one contested that they were not in the United States on May 15, 2009, the date appearing on the credit counseling certificates.

In response, Parmelee testified as follows regarding the intake and credit counseling process in Goldberg’s office:

Basically, you would have them come into the office ... whether it’s myself or one of the girls, and we, we’ll go to the computer. We’ll ask them a bunch of questions, you know, such as their name, you know, city of birth, date of birth, and just go through the entire process with them, you know, why they’re filing bankruptcy, if they’re behind on their house, you know, the — if they have a house, if they have a car, bank accounts.

To complete the process, Goldberg orders a credit report, and from it collects information about the prospective debtor’s creditors. The debtor’s income information is collected from pay stubs or from questioning the debtor. Typically, all this information is then entered by one of Goldberg’s staff into an on-line credit counseling website, the clients read the information on credit counseling provided, and then the credit counseling agency issues the certificate of completion. The resulting certificate is dated the day that the last of these acts is completed.

Goldberg’s testimony was consistent with Parmelee’s. He testified that prospective debtors “sit with a staff member who is on the computer, and the staff member enters the information into the computer with the assistance of the client by asking them the questions, and then the certificate gets issued, and then we can file the bankruptcy case.”

As mentioned before, no one in Goldberg’s office remembers the Debtors, so Goldberg could not present evidence as to how or if the Debtors actually completed the credit counseling. He does not dispute the Debtors’ testimony that, before them filing bankruptcy, they visited Goldberg’s office only twice: once on March 4, and again on May 6. To explain how the Debtors’ certificates of completion were dated on a day when they were out of the country, Parmelee offered that as a general matter if “there’s anything missed” by the debtors during a credit counseling class or if “a box was missed, not checked off, that should have been checked off, then we’ll [one of Goldberg’s staff] go back and fix it, and we will resubmit it to the credit counselor.” 4 The resulting certificate is dated the day the final box is checked.

Therefore, Goldberg would like the court to believe that the Debtors completed most of the credit counseling class at Goldberg’s office on May 6, 2009, missing only a box or two. When preparing to file the case on May 15, 2009, someone at Goldberg’s office noticed the missed boxes, and helpfully checked them, thereby generating a certificate stamped a day the Debtors were out of the country.

This is not a plausible account. It ignores the uncontradicted and emphatic testimony of Ms.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
429 B.R. 752, 2010 Bankr. LEXIS 1082, 2010 WL 1453071, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-pagaduan-nvb-2010.