In Re Pickering

195 B.R. 759, 1996 Bankr. LEXIS 920, 1996 WL 226615
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Montana
DecidedApril 29, 1996
Docket2:19-bk-60212
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 195 B.R. 759 (In Re Pickering) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Montana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Pickering, 195 B.R. 759, 1996 Bankr. LEXIS 920, 1996 WL 226615 (Mont. 1996).

Opinion

*761 ORDER

JOHN L. PETERSON, Chief Judge.

At Butte in said District this 29th day of April, 1996.

In this Chapter 13 bankruptcy, hearing was held March 12, 1996, at Billings on the motions of Rick E. Raymond (“Raymond”) to dismiss the case and for court appointed counsel. The motion of Debtor Gudrun Pickering (“Pickering”) for sanctions was also heard, as was hearing on confirmation of Pickering’s Amended Chapter 13 Plan, dated February 21, 1996, and objections of Raymond and the Chapter 13 Trustee thereto. The Chapter 13 Trustee appeared at the hearing, as did Raymond and Pickering represented by counsel. Dan Pickering gave testimony and Exhibit 1 was admitted into evidence. In addition, Raymond’s written arguments rely on facts in the records of Pickering’s prior Chapter 7 bankruptcy (Case No. 94-11322), a related adversary proceeding (Adversary Complaint No. 95/00001) and evidence adduced at hearing on December 12, 1995, on Raymond’s Motion to Dismiss filed November 7,1996, which the Court denied.

Upon the conclusion of the March 12,1996, hearing, the Court took under advisement both Raymond’s motion to dismiss and confirmation of Pickering’s Chapter 13 Plan. Finally, the Court granted Raymond seven days to file a brief in support of Raymond’s objection to confirmation, and Pickering seven days in which to respond. Briefs having been filed, the matter is now ripe for adjudication. Upon consideration of the record, the Court finds for Raymond and the Standing Trustee.

Regarding the motion to dismiss, Raymond protests that Pickering has an earlier Chapter 7 bankruptcy case still pending before the Court in which discharge of Raymond’s claim was denied. Raymond argues that, notwithstanding a Ninth Circuit Bankruptcy Appellate Panel decision allowing such a result, this Court should not permit Pickering to maintain a second petition in bankruptcy during the pendency of an earlier ease.

Concerning Raymond’s objection to confirmation of Pickering’s Plan, Raymond alleges Pickering’s Chapter 13 Plan lacks good faith for a litany of reasons, including: (1) Pickering has no nonexempt assets needing Chapter 13 protection; (2) Pickering’s Plan provides for payment of only 2 percent of Raymond’s claim, the chief debt addressed in the Plan; 1 (3) the Court has already declared Raymond’s claim nondischargeable in Chapter 7 bankruptcy; 2 (4) Pickering’s Plan lasts only 36 months; (5) less than 100 percent of Pickering’s disposable income goes to payments under the Plan; (6) Pickering, as one whom the Court has found in defalcation of fiduciary duties pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(4), is not an “honest but unfortunate” debtor for which bankruptcy protection was designed; (7) under the facts at bar, Pickering and Pickering’s spouse will build equity in livestock assets over the duration of the Plan; and (8) after discharge of Raymond’s claim in Chapter 13, Pickering will be able to claim a substantial inheritance from Pickering’s mother immediately upon the discharge, free and clear of all current debts.

As to the Trustee’s objections to Pickering’s Plan, the Trustee alleges the Plan fails to disclose all household income and expenses per F.R.B.P. 1007, and the Trustee cannot determine whether 100% of disposable income is being provided for in the Plan. The Trustee further argues the Plan lacks a good faith basis for three reasons. First, Pickering has failed to correctly schedule household income and expenses. Therefore, the Trustee cannot properly determine the presence or amount of surplus in Pickering’s income after payment under the Plan. Second, the inaccuracies in Pickering’s filings, in the face of direct admonitions against submitting false statements, suggest Pickering’s intent to deceive the Court. Third, the nature of the debts and income sub judice, in which the main and only substantial unse *762 cured creditor under the Plan has a claim already declared nondischargeable in a prior Chapter 7 case, shows a lack of good faith in the filing of the Chapter 13 case.

I.

The parties do not dispute the material facts at hand. Pickering filed a Chapter 7 Bankruptcy petition September 13, 1994 (Case No. 94 — 11322-7). A discharge was entered on July 25,1995. The Court, however, excepted Pickering’s debt to Raymond from the discharge in an adversary proceeding (Adversary Complaint No. 95-00001) pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(4). This Chapter 7 case remains pending.

In disposing of the adversary proceeding, the Court adopted findings of fact made by the Hon. Kenneth R. Wilson, District Judge for the Montana Sixteenth Judicial District, Custer County, Montana, in Cause 20,022 entitled “Rick E. Raymond, Plaintiff, v. Dan Pickering and Gudrun Pickering, Defendants.” To summarize these findings, Pickering, as co-conservator of Raymond’s assets during a period in which Raymond suffered mental incapacitation, engaged in activities found to be “a breach of [Pickering’s] fiduciary duties” and in “violation of] the statutes with respect to conservators and guardians.” Raymond v. Pickering, Adversary No. 95/00001 (Bankr.Mont. filed September 13, 1994), Order entered March 15, 1995, ¶22. In determining the debt created by these acts nondischargeable under 11 U.S.C. 523(a)(4), this Court concluded:

For clearly [Pickering] using [Raymond’s] funds in [Pickering’s] cattle operation, sought to improve [Pickering’s] largess not the Conservatorship, and then had no records to even support such expenditures. I conclude [Raymond] has shown by a preponderance of the evidence that [Pickering] dealt with the Guardianship funds “as if they were her own”, thus causing a defalcation by a fiduciary within the meaning and interpretation of § 523(a)(4).

Id. at 19. The U.S. District Court for the District of Montana affirmed this decision in Raymond v. Pickering, CV 95-089-BLG-JFB (D.Mont. notice of appeal filed May 22, 1995), by Judgment entered August 22, 1995.

Subsequently, on October 6, 1995, Pickering filed the instant Chapter 13 petition. Pickering’s Amended Plan provides for payments of $56.00 a month for 36 months, with a total payment to unsecured creditors amounting to $1,800.00. Raymond is the chief 'unsecured creditor, with a claim of some $87,000 out of $101,412.99 in unsecured claims. Thus, the Court can only characterize the Plan’s proposed payment on Raymond’s claim as, at best, “nominal.” The provisions call for payment of a secured creditor, First State Bank of Forsyth, outside the Plan.

In addition, the record shows Pickering’s spouse, Dan, owns a small cattle heard. The cow-calf operation runs off advances made by First State Bank of Forsyth deposited in Dan’s checking account as expenses accrue.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
195 B.R. 759, 1996 Bankr. LEXIS 920, 1996 WL 226615, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-pickering-mtb-1996.