In Re Rice

126 B.R. 189, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 503, 1991 WL 58819
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 19, 1991
Docket19-10525
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 126 B.R. 189 (In Re Rice) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Rice, 126 B.R. 189, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 503, 1991 WL 58819 (Pa. 1991).

Opinion

OPINION

DAVID A. SCHOLL, Bankruptcy Judge.

A. INTRODUCTION

In its present procedural posture as an apparent motion of the Debtor seeking to avoid a mortgage pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 522(f)(1), it is clear that we must deny relief to the Debtor in this contested matter. However, we recognize that the Debt- or could refile this matter in the posture of an adversary proceeding attacking the mortgage in the shoes of the Trustee, pursuant to 11 U.S.C. §§ 522(h), (g)(1), and 544(a). We therefore address, but do not decide, the issue which underlies the substance of this matter: whether the Debtor, standing in the shoes of the Trustee, can avoid a mortgage which is defectively acknowledged.

B. PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL HISTORY

SHARON I. RICE (“the Debtor”) filed the underlying individual Chapter 7 bankruptcy case on November 3, 1989. A discharge order was entered in the Debtor’s favor without incident on December 3, 1990. However, on February 6, 1991, before the case was closed, the Debtor filed the “Motion to Reconsider Issue of Discharge for Avoidance of Lien and Injunc-tive Relief” (“the Motion”) which is presently before us. The Motion, directed against FLEET CONSUMER DISCOUNT CO., trading as Fleet Finance Co. (“Fleet”), reads, in pertinent part, as follows:

4. Debtor would like to avoid the lien [of Fleet] which this Court has jurisdiction over pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 522 to avoid and cancel the lien held by Fleet.
5. The lien impairs an exemption that debtor has claimed in the property.
WHEREFORE, debtor prays for an order to reconsider the order of discharge for the sole purpose of avoiding the lien on her residential property and to enjoin Fleet Financial from collecting any funds fro [sic] payment on the lien. Debtor prays for such other relief as may be just and proper. 1

Understandably puzzled as to the thrust of the Motion, Fleet filed a Response indicating that it was owed a loan balance secured by a mortgage, which it asserted could not be avoided pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 522(f)(1). It also averred that, since the Debtor’s discharge had already been entered, it was too late to attack its mortgage. After two continuances, a hearing on the matter was scheduled on the Motion on March 28,1991, on a must-be-tried basis.

The Debtor testified at length at that hearing. She stated that Fleet’s obligation arose from a transaction of October 28, 1987, in which she agreed to purchase vinyl siding for her home at 1910 Elston Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19138 (“the Home”) from Neptune Pool Installers, Inc., trading as Hallmark Builders (“Hallmark”). She stated that the only agent of Hallmark whom she met was a salesman named Mr. Repici, who had her execute, in the Home, a document describing the work to be per *191 formed and a Home Improvement Installment Contract (“the HIFC”) to memorialize the transaction. The HIFC, naming Fleet as assignee, and thus apparently prepared by Fleet, states that the Debtor granted a mortgage on the Home to Hallmark, to be assigned to Fleet, as security for the loan. Although the signature of her name upon the mortgage appears very similar to her signature on other documents and to samples signed in court, the Debtor firmly denied executing the mortgage. Fleet’s mortgage of the Home was duly-recorded, was attested by Alan Portnoy, and notarized by Carol Portnoy. The Debtor denied having ever met either Mr. or Ms. Portnoy.

The Debtor also testified that, subsequent to her discharge in this case, she sold the Home for $40,000, paying off a first mortgage and receiving net proceeds of about $1,800. However, she stated that a sum of about $2,500 had been held in escrow by her realtor in light of the presence of Fleet’s recorded and unsatisfied mortgage of record. The Debtor’s only complaint about the siding was that some of it blew off in a storm, and she did not make any complaint about this occurrence to Hallmark or Fleet. She did not deny her liability to Fleet for the siding. The Motion was nevertheless filed to obtain the release of the escrowed funds, since the Debtor’s personal obligation to Fleet, if unsecured, could be eliminated by her discharge.

None of the other witnesses, including a Fleet employee who testified as custodian of its records, provided any additional evidence which we found to be of assistance in resolving the Motion. The Debtor’s counsel represented that she had served a subpoena upon Carol Portnoy which Ms. Port-noy failed.to honor. We allowed the Debt- or several days to file a motion to seek a bench warrant to compel the attendance of Ms. Portnoy, but the Debtor ultimately eschewed this opportunity. We allowed the parties to file, and serve upon the court in chambers, Briefs supporting their respective positions by April 12, 1991. Only Fleet offered a submission.

We also requested the Trustee, Lawrence T. Phelan, Esquire (“the Trustee”), to investigate the circumstances of the Debt- or’s transfer of the Home during the pend-ency of the case. The Trustee advised us, in correspondence, that he had no interest in the transaction or the Motion because of the low amount of equity of the Debtor in the Home.

Two findings of fact, both of which we announced in open court at the close of the testimony, are relevant to the resolution of this controversy. Firstly, despite the Debt- or’s vigorous protestations to the contrary, we find that she did execute the mortgage. As noted, the signature certainly appears to be hers. We think that it is quite likely that the Debtor simply did not remember the execution of all of the several documents tendered to her by Mr. Repici when she entered into the contract with Hallmark.

Secondly, we find that the purported notarization by Carol Portnoy was defective. We credit the Debtor’s testimony that she executed all of the papers in the Home and that only Mr. Repici was present when she did so. We have no doubt that the Debtor would have clearly recalled the presence of Ms. Portnoy (or Mr. Portnoy, apparently the principal of Hallmark and the husband of the notary) in the Home or a trip to Hallmark’s office in the course of this transaction. Therefore, we find that the mortgage was not acknowledged in the presence of the notary public who so attested.

These findings, unfortunately, leave us with a thorny issue regarding the Debtor’s ability to avoid Fleet’s mortgage. Fortunately, we need not decide this issue to rule upon the Motion, due to its substantial procedural shortcomings.

C. LEGAL DISCUSSION

1. THE MOTION, APPARENTLY PRESENTED AS AN ATTACK ON THE MORTGAGE PURSUANT TO § 522(f)(1), MUST BE DENIED.

The Motion, on its face, see page 190 supra, appears to represent an attack upon Fleet’s mortgage on the basis of 11 U.S.C.

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126 B.R. 189, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 503, 1991 WL 58819, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-rice-paeb-1991.