MEMORANDUM OF DECISION RE: MOTION TO REOPEN NO ASSET CHAPTER 7 CASE TO CREDITORS
LORRAINE MURPHY WEIL, Bankruptcy Judge.
The matter before the court is the above-captioned debtor’s (the “Debtor”)
Motion To Reopen (Doc. I.D. No. 8, the “Motion”) this chapter 7 case to add creditors omitted from the Debtor’s schedules and matrix.
I.
FACTS
The Debtor commenced this case by voluntary petition filed on May 26, 1999.
(See
Doc. I.D. No. 1.) The Debtor filed her schedules and statement of financial affairs (collectively, with the Summary of Schedules, the Debtor’s lists and matrix, the “Schedules”) at the same time.
(See
Doc. I.D. No. 1.) The Clerk’s Office issued a Notice of Chapter 7 Bankruptcy Case, Meeting of Creditors,
&
Deadlines (Doc. I.D. No. 2, the “Notice”) on May 27, 1999. The Notice did not set a deadline for filing proofs of claim but, rather, contained the following language: “Please Do Not File a Proof of Claim Unless You Receive a Notice To Do So.”
(See
Notice.)
The Notice set August 30, 1999 as the last day for filing complaints for determinations of nondischargeability under Bankruptcy Code §§ 523(a)(2), (4), (6) or (15).
(See
Notice.) The meeting of creditors provided for by Bankruptcy Code § 341 was held on June 29, 1999 and, on June 30, 1999, the chapter 7 trustee filed a Trustee’s Report of No Distribution.
(See
Doc. I.D. No. 4.) The Debtor received her chapter 7 discharge (the “Discharge”) by order entered on September 14,1999.
(See
Doc. I.D. No. 5.) A Final Decree that the estate “ha[d] been fully administered” was entered on September 22, 1999
(see
Doc. I.D. No. 7) and the case was closed on the same day.
The Debtor filed the Motion on June 10, 2002.
(See
Doc. I.D. No. 8.) The Motion seeks to reopen this chapter 7 case for the purpose of adding three creditors
who were not listed in the Schedules. Annexed to the Motion is the Debtor’s affidavit swearing that such omission was “inadverten[t].”
(See
Doc. I.D. No. 8.) The Debtor initially sought to use this court’s “Short Calendar Procedure” to obtain an order granting the Motion without a hearing if there were no timely objection.
(See
Doc. I.D. Nos. 9, 10.) However, stating that a timely objection to the Motion had been filed, the Debtor requested that the Motion be scheduled for a hearing.
(See
Doc. I.D. No. 11, the “Hearing Request.”)
Pursuant to the Hearing Request, a hearing (the “Hearing”) on the Motion was scheduled for, and convened on, July 17, 2002. At the Hearing, Carl and Susan Silvestri (collectively, the “Objecting Creditors”) appeared
pro se
and orally objected to the Motion. At the conclusion of the Hearing (at which neither side submitted evidence), the court took the matter under advisement and scheduled post-Hearing briefing. The Debtor and the Objecting Creditors
(pro se)
both filed post-Hearing briefs. Annexed to the Objecting Creditors’ post-Hearing brief are documents which, for the purposes of this memorandum only, the court will treat as admissible evidence.
(See
Doc. I.D. No. 15, the “Objectors’ Brief.”) The court gleans the following allegations from the Objectors’ Brief and the attachments thereto.
The Objecting Creditors claim that on or about January 5, 1998, they (as creditors) entered into an agreement with the Debtor and her then-husband (as debtors) for an unsecured, interest free loan in the amount of $20,000, payable in installments of $500.00 per month. The Objecting Creditors allege that such loan already had been fully funded, allegedly from funds earmarked for the Objecting Creditors’ young daughter’s “college fund.” The Objecting Creditors further allege that, after about four years of payments (primarily by the Debtor’s former husband), the Debtor and her former husband defaulted on the loan. Unaware of the Discharge, the Objecting Creditors retained an attorney to sue the Debtor and her former husband on the loan, which the attorney did in or about May of 2002.
Shortly thereafter, the Debtor filed the Motion.
The Objecting Creditors assert that the Debtor’s failure to list them in the Schedules was intentional. Moreover, the Objecting Creditors allege:
[The Debtor] ... is a woman who is in a much better financial situation today than we are. She has no bills thanks to Chapter 7; she works 40 to 50 hours a week as a travel agent, plus commission, drives a car, that is newer than ours, lives in an apartment that costs more than ours. And most recently married in St. Marten, where she had the wedding she’d dreamed.
We are not a business, nor a corporation, something that she was two years prior to her original bankruptcy (but not listed), and have no insurance to protect ourselves. We were the best of friends, friends who were totally unaware that the day she attended our daughters’ [sic] (her godchild) graduation, she was signing the papers to re-open this case against us.
(Objectors’ Brief at 2.) This matter now is ripe for decision.
II.
DISCUSSION
The Objecting Creditors’ objection to the Motion is based on the assumption that the Debtor’s amendment of the Schedules will do the Objecting Creditors some harm (or at least more harm than the entry of the Discharge had already inflicted). That is not so. Although there is not complete agreement among the courts on this issue, the more recent and better reasoned cases hold that, in No-Asset Cases, actual scheduling of a creditor is not necessary to render an otherwise dischargeable debt discharged.
See, e.g., Beezley v. California Land Title Co. (In re Beezley),
994 F.2d 1433 (9th Cir.1993) (per curiam);
In re Rollinson,
273 B.R. 352 (Bankr.D.Conn.2002) (Dabrowski, J.). The foregoing has been held to apply even if
the failure to schedule was not inadvertent.
See, e.g., Watson v. Parker (In re Parker),
313 F.3d 1267, 1268 (10th Cir.2002);
In re Woolard,
190 B.R. 70 (Bankr.E.D.Va. 1995).
Thus, the Objecting Creditors are no worse off if the Schedules are amended as proposed than if they are not. That is because, as established by the foregoing line of cases, Section 523(a)(3)(A) does not apply in a No-Asset Case.
Moreover, the proposed amendment to the Schedules has no effect upon whether Section 523(a)(3)(B) may apply in this case.
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MEMORANDUM OF DECISION RE: MOTION TO REOPEN NO ASSET CHAPTER 7 CASE TO CREDITORS
LORRAINE MURPHY WEIL, Bankruptcy Judge.
The matter before the court is the above-captioned debtor’s (the “Debtor”)
Motion To Reopen (Doc. I.D. No. 8, the “Motion”) this chapter 7 case to add creditors omitted from the Debtor’s schedules and matrix.
I.
FACTS
The Debtor commenced this case by voluntary petition filed on May 26, 1999.
(See
Doc. I.D. No. 1.) The Debtor filed her schedules and statement of financial affairs (collectively, with the Summary of Schedules, the Debtor’s lists and matrix, the “Schedules”) at the same time.
(See
Doc. I.D. No. 1.) The Clerk’s Office issued a Notice of Chapter 7 Bankruptcy Case, Meeting of Creditors,
&
Deadlines (Doc. I.D. No. 2, the “Notice”) on May 27, 1999. The Notice did not set a deadline for filing proofs of claim but, rather, contained the following language: “Please Do Not File a Proof of Claim Unless You Receive a Notice To Do So.”
(See
Notice.)
The Notice set August 30, 1999 as the last day for filing complaints for determinations of nondischargeability under Bankruptcy Code §§ 523(a)(2), (4), (6) or (15).
(See
Notice.) The meeting of creditors provided for by Bankruptcy Code § 341 was held on June 29, 1999 and, on June 30, 1999, the chapter 7 trustee filed a Trustee’s Report of No Distribution.
(See
Doc. I.D. No. 4.) The Debtor received her chapter 7 discharge (the “Discharge”) by order entered on September 14,1999.
(See
Doc. I.D. No. 5.) A Final Decree that the estate “ha[d] been fully administered” was entered on September 22, 1999
(see
Doc. I.D. No. 7) and the case was closed on the same day.
The Debtor filed the Motion on June 10, 2002.
(See
Doc. I.D. No. 8.) The Motion seeks to reopen this chapter 7 case for the purpose of adding three creditors
who were not listed in the Schedules. Annexed to the Motion is the Debtor’s affidavit swearing that such omission was “inadverten[t].”
(See
Doc. I.D. No. 8.) The Debtor initially sought to use this court’s “Short Calendar Procedure” to obtain an order granting the Motion without a hearing if there were no timely objection.
(See
Doc. I.D. Nos. 9, 10.) However, stating that a timely objection to the Motion had been filed, the Debtor requested that the Motion be scheduled for a hearing.
(See
Doc. I.D. No. 11, the “Hearing Request.”)
Pursuant to the Hearing Request, a hearing (the “Hearing”) on the Motion was scheduled for, and convened on, July 17, 2002. At the Hearing, Carl and Susan Silvestri (collectively, the “Objecting Creditors”) appeared
pro se
and orally objected to the Motion. At the conclusion of the Hearing (at which neither side submitted evidence), the court took the matter under advisement and scheduled post-Hearing briefing. The Debtor and the Objecting Creditors
(pro se)
both filed post-Hearing briefs. Annexed to the Objecting Creditors’ post-Hearing brief are documents which, for the purposes of this memorandum only, the court will treat as admissible evidence.
(See
Doc. I.D. No. 15, the “Objectors’ Brief.”) The court gleans the following allegations from the Objectors’ Brief and the attachments thereto.
The Objecting Creditors claim that on or about January 5, 1998, they (as creditors) entered into an agreement with the Debtor and her then-husband (as debtors) for an unsecured, interest free loan in the amount of $20,000, payable in installments of $500.00 per month. The Objecting Creditors allege that such loan already had been fully funded, allegedly from funds earmarked for the Objecting Creditors’ young daughter’s “college fund.” The Objecting Creditors further allege that, after about four years of payments (primarily by the Debtor’s former husband), the Debtor and her former husband defaulted on the loan. Unaware of the Discharge, the Objecting Creditors retained an attorney to sue the Debtor and her former husband on the loan, which the attorney did in or about May of 2002.
Shortly thereafter, the Debtor filed the Motion.
The Objecting Creditors assert that the Debtor’s failure to list them in the Schedules was intentional. Moreover, the Objecting Creditors allege:
[The Debtor] ... is a woman who is in a much better financial situation today than we are. She has no bills thanks to Chapter 7; she works 40 to 50 hours a week as a travel agent, plus commission, drives a car, that is newer than ours, lives in an apartment that costs more than ours. And most recently married in St. Marten, where she had the wedding she’d dreamed.
We are not a business, nor a corporation, something that she was two years prior to her original bankruptcy (but not listed), and have no insurance to protect ourselves. We were the best of friends, friends who were totally unaware that the day she attended our daughters’ [sic] (her godchild) graduation, she was signing the papers to re-open this case against us.
(Objectors’ Brief at 2.) This matter now is ripe for decision.
II.
DISCUSSION
The Objecting Creditors’ objection to the Motion is based on the assumption that the Debtor’s amendment of the Schedules will do the Objecting Creditors some harm (or at least more harm than the entry of the Discharge had already inflicted). That is not so. Although there is not complete agreement among the courts on this issue, the more recent and better reasoned cases hold that, in No-Asset Cases, actual scheduling of a creditor is not necessary to render an otherwise dischargeable debt discharged.
See, e.g., Beezley v. California Land Title Co. (In re Beezley),
994 F.2d 1433 (9th Cir.1993) (per curiam);
In re Rollinson,
273 B.R. 352 (Bankr.D.Conn.2002) (Dabrowski, J.). The foregoing has been held to apply even if
the failure to schedule was not inadvertent.
See, e.g., Watson v. Parker (In re Parker),
313 F.3d 1267, 1268 (10th Cir.2002);
In re Woolard,
190 B.R. 70 (Bankr.E.D.Va. 1995).
Thus, the Objecting Creditors are no worse off if the Schedules are amended as proposed than if they are not. That is because, as established by the foregoing line of cases, Section 523(a)(3)(A) does not apply in a No-Asset Case.
Moreover, the proposed amendment to the Schedules has no effect upon whether Section 523(a)(3)(B) may apply in this case. If the Objecting Creditors can prove a valid claim for nondischargeability under Bankruptcy Code §§ 523(a)(2), (4) or (6) and that they lacked the requisite “notice or actual knowledge,” they would remain free to assert such a claim in any court of competent jurisdiction even if the Schedules are amended as proposed.
See Boland,
275 B.R. at 679 n. 6.
In
Boland,
this court held that the foregoing analysis did not mean that grounds for reopening under 11 U.S.C. § 350 did not exist and encouraged debtors to reopen cases to correct their schedules if for no other reason than to equip the Clerk’s office to deal with late-identified assets.
See Boland,
275 B.R. at 678. However, although the Objectors’ Brief (deemed to be a written objection to the Motion) must be overruled, the court declines now to grant the Motion. That is because creditors who
were
listed in the Schedules (the “Other Creditors”) were not notified concerning the Motion and thus were deprived of the opportunity to raise (or waive) certain other issues noted but left undecided by
Boland. See Boland,
275 B.R. at 678 n. 5.
III.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons discussed above, (a) by separate marginal order the Objectors’ Brief (deemed to be an objection to the Motion) shall be overruled and (b) unless on or before February 19, 2003 the Debtor shall file a certificate of service (pursuant to this court’s Short Calendar Procedure
or otherwise) certifying that the Motion has been duly served on the Other Creditors, a separate marginal order will enter denying the Motion.