In re Rehman

479 B.R. 238, 2012 WL 4757801, 2012 Bankr. LEXIS 4699
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedOctober 5, 2012
DocketNo. 11-42485-MSH
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 479 B.R. 238 (In re Rehman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Rehman, 479 B.R. 238, 2012 WL 4757801, 2012 Bankr. LEXIS 4699 (Mass. 2012).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION AND ORDER ON DEBTOR’S OMNIBUS OBJECTION TO CLAIMS

MELVIN S. HOFFMAN, Bankruptcy Judge.

Ms. Rehman, who filed her chapter 13 petition commencing this case on June 9, 2011, seeks by an omnibus objection the disallowance of 13 out of the 15 proofs of claim for unsecured debts filed by creditors in her case. The two unsecured proofs of claim not objected to were for the unsecured portion of federal and state income taxes owed to the Internal Revenue Service and the Massachusetts Department of Revenue.

On schedule F accompanying her chapter 13 petition (creditors holding unsecured nonpriority claims), Ms. Rehman listed 18 creditors holding general unsecured claims totaling $69,404.96. Apart from a service contract indebtedness on her 2007 Cadillac Escalade of $2555, a water and sewer obligation to the Town of Andover, Massachusetts of $1122.37 and a dental bill of $1213.84, all the unsecured debts listed on schedule F arose from credit card or retail installment purchases. Except for the debt to her dentist, Ms. Rehman listed every unsecured debt on schedule F as disputed.

In her omnibus objection, Ms. Rehman alleged as grounds for each objection the creditor’s failure to comply with Rule [240]*2403001(c)(1) and (e)(2)(A) of the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure which require proofs of claim to be accompanied by certain supporting documentation.1 In 7 out of 13 objections she also alleged the creditors’ failure to provide evidence of standing.

The only opposition to the debtor’s omnibus claim objection was filed by eCAST Settlement Corporation with respect to claims # 14 and # 15. In its opposition, eCAST pointed out that Rule 3001(c)(2)(A) was added to the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure in 2011 and applies only to cases filed after December 1, 2011 and that Ms. Rehman’s bankruptcy case was filed in June 2011. eCast also noted that on her schedule F, Ms. Rehman listed the indebtedness in the identical amounts and with the identical account numbers as set forth in eCAST’s proofs of claim, but rather than listing eCAST as the creditor on schedule F, Ms. Rehman listed eCAST’s assignor, Citibank, as the creditor. eCAST had attached to its proofs of claim copies of bills of sale and assignments from Citibank as well as account summaries.

At a hearing on June 19, 2012, I overruled Ms. Rehman’s objection to eCAST’s claims and in the process ruled that Ms. Rehman’s bankruptcy ease is governed by the version of Rule 3001 in effect prior to the 2011 amendments and that, therefore, Ms. Rehman’s creditors were not obligated to include with their proofs of claim the documents required by Rule 3001(c)(2)(A).2 I also referred Ms. Rehman’s counsel to my orders in other cases overruling debtors’ objections to claims by assignees where the debtors had scheduled the very same claims but in the names of the original claim holders so long as the assignees provided some evidence of the assignments. In re Gauthier, 459 B.R. 526, 527 (Bankr.D.Mass.2011). Ms. Rehman’s counsel pointed out that in those cases the debtors had listed the indebtedness on schedule F as undisputed while in this case Ms. Rehman listed each and every claim objected to in her omnibus objection as disputed on Schedule F. As a result, I ordered Ms. Rehman to file an affidavit setting forth the basis upon which she disputed each schedule F claim.

On August 3, 2012, Ms. Rehman filed her affidavit. Instead of stating the basis for disputing each schedule F claim, Ms. Rehman’s affidavit sets forth the basis for disputing the claims related only to the proofs of claim included in her omnibus objection — not quite the same thing but close enough. A sufficiently consistent pattern emerges from the testimony set forth in Ms. Rehman’s affidavit to establish that the following occurred. Prior to completion of her bankruptcy schedules, Ms. Rehman had among her financial records copies of monthly billing statements for each of her unsecured debts.3 Most statements were not for the current month. A credit report obtained on her behalf by her attorney listed the same debts with the exception of the one to Home Depot. In every instance save one, the balances as listed on the credit report [241]*241and in Ms. Rehman’s statements were within $150 of each other. In the case of Macy’s (claim # 6) the difference was about $500. Despite having both the account statements and the credit report, Ms. Rehman did not believe she had sufficient documentation to determine the amount she owed her creditors. She, therefore, caused her attorney to complete schedule F by listing each debt in the amount as between her account statements and the credit report which was the greater, and disputing them all with the exception of the debt owed to her dentist.

Based on Ms. Rehman’s affidavit, I now proceed to rule on the remaining objections in her omnibus objection to claims. As indicated previously, with the exception of eCAST, no creditor has seen fit to respond to the debtor’s objection.

To begin with, it is important to remember that the packaging and selling in bulk of defaulted credit card and retail accounts to debt buyers has in recent years become a growth industry.4 In addition, many large merchants and lending institutions have engaged affiliates or servicing companies to handle collection of defaulted accounts on their behalf. The result has been that when account debtors file bankruptcy, the proofs of claim being filed in their cases are by parties, often unknown to the debtors, describing themselves as assignees, successors in interest, agents, servicers and the like.5 Documentation supporting such proofs of claim is often limited to a one or two page account summary. This in turn has led debtors to object to such claims either because the claim holder has failed to establish its standing to assert the claim or because the claim holder has failed to accompany the claim with sufficient supporting documentation. In many cases the very claim to which the debtor has objected is listed on the debtor’s schedule F in an identical or almost identical amount with a reference to the identical account number, but in the name of the original creditor.

In Ms. Rehman’s omnibus objection, aside from raising certain creditors’ lack of standing, the common thread binding all her objections is first, that a one page account detail attached to each proof of claim does not satisfy the requirements of the Bankruptcy Rules nor does it enable her to determine “how the alleged debt was incurred, what amounts comprise the principal, interest, late fees, etc., what ser[242]*242vices were provided in consideration, or what payments may have been credited to the account” and second, that since each claim is based on a writing, under the Rules, the original or a duplicate of the writing was supposed to have been filed with the proof of claim.6

Even though Rule 3001(c) requires that when a claim is based on a writing, the writing must accompany the proof of claim, the failure to include the writing or for that matter any backup documentation is not grounds for disallowance of the claim. In re MacFarland, 462 B.R. 857, 881 (Bankr.S.D.Fla.2011).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
479 B.R. 238, 2012 WL 4757801, 2012 Bankr. LEXIS 4699, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-rehman-mab-2012.