In Re Robrock

430 B.R. 197, 2010 Bankr. LEXIS 1575, 2010 WL 2142999
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedMay 21, 2010
Docket19-30448
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 430 B.R. 197 (In Re Robrock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Robrock, 430 B.R. 197, 2010 Bankr. LEXIS 1575, 2010 WL 2142999 (Minn. 2010).

Opinion

ORDER GRANTING MOTION OF UNITED STATES TRUSTEE FOR DISMISSAL PURSUANT TO 11 U.S.C. §§ 707(b)(l)-(2)

GREGORY F. KISHEL, Bankruptcy Judge.

This Chapter 7 case came on before the Court on April 20, 2010, for an evidentiary hearing on the motion of the United States Trustee for dismissal pursuant to 11 U.S.C. §§ 707(b)(1)-(2). The United States Trustee appeared by his attorney, Colin Kreuziger. The Debtor appeared personally and by his attorney, Chad J. Bolinske. The following decision is based on the evidence received at the hearing, and takes into consideration counsel’s arguments on the law. 1

FINDINGS OF FACT 2

1. The Debtor is a resident of Shako-pee, Minnesota. He filed a voluntary petition under Chapter 7 on September 25, 2009.

2. The Debtor is a physician in primary care (family practice). For the six months *200 prior to his bankruptcy filing, he was employed by Park Nicollet Health Services. He was still in that employment as of the date of the evidentiary hearing. On his Schedule I, the Debtor recited that he had had this employment for 18 years.

3. The Debtor is paid by his employer on a monthly basis, immediately after the end of the calendar month.

4. At the times relevant to this motion, the Debtor’s compensation had three possible components:

a. a base salary, fixed at the beginning of the calendar year by the number of hours for which the Debtor was contracted to work, and requiring a specified number of “relative value units” associated with the time commitment 3 ;
b. an income supplement for additional duty assumed (usually supervising a medical student in a clinical placement), calculated on the “activity points” assigned to the type and amount of the duty performed; and
c. a sort of profit-sharing, based on the income and profitability status of the clinic at which the Debtor practiced, and awarded annually if the clinic “ran in the black” for the previous year. 4

5. On a quarterly basis, the Debtor’s paid compensation is adjusted according to his actual performance, against the productivity goals fixed by his annual contract. If the number of RVUs that he actually generates does not match the minimum prescribed by his contract, he undergoes a “salary reconciliation” in the following quarter. This is effected by a deduction in the amount otherwise payable to him as wages after the end of the adjusted quarter.

6. The Debtor receives the portion of his compensation that is generated by activity points once per year, immediately after the end of the first quarter. It is disbursed in a lump sum.

7. Over the six calendar months that ended on August 31, 2009, i.e., for work performed during the months of March— August, 2009, the Debtor earned total gross wages of $121,543.67 from Park Ni-collet Health Services. The average per month from this figure is $20,257.68. 5 These gross and average amounts take *201 into consideration all of the miscellaneous, smaller earning components that were recited in the Debtor’s pay statements. 6 They also incorporate the two adjustments for salary reconciliation that were actually applied to wages earned during the relevant six months, via deductions of $5,041.61 each from the pay disbursements made on August 3 and September 1, 2009. 7

8. For the same six-month period, the average monthly total of amounts withheld from the Debtor’s wages for pre-tax payment of health insurance premiums, plus $1.25 per month for “AD & D” (apparently accidental-death and dismemberment insurance coverage), was $557.68. 8

9. Thus, considering only the transactions actually executed on payroll disbursements made for work performed during the six-month period from March 1 to August 31, 2009, the average monthly income that the Debtor received that was derived from employment during that period was $19,700.00. If one considers the third salary reconciliation event traceable to the second quarter of 2009 (that made against pay disbursed to the Debtor on October 1) as relevant to derived income, that six-month average is $19,417.01.

10.The Debtor’s actual federal income tax liability on the monthly average income identified in the last sentence of Finding of Fact 9 would be $2,594.00, or very close to it. His Minnesota state income tax liability would be $790.00, or very close to it. His Social Security withholding would be $552.00 (the maximum under current law), and his Medicare tax obligation would be $274.00. The calculations for these conclusions assume a deduction claimable for federal and state income tax purposes for the full annual amount of the Debtor’s spousal maintenance obligation to his ex-wife ($84,000.00), and the use of only one personal exemption ($3,650.00), plus the benefit of the standard deduction for one taxpayer filing singly ($5,750.00). 9

*202 11. Thus, the total of a maximum average monthly tax liability for the Debtor that would be due on his earnings from employment is approximately $4,210.00.

12. The Debtor’s marriage to Brenda Marie Latham Robrock was dissolved under a judgment and decree entered in the Scott County, Minnesota District Court in early 2008. The judgment and decree was based on a marital termination agreement. For the dissolution proceeding, both parties ostensibly appeared pro se. 10 The relevant terms of the judgment and decree, and the parties’ post-dissolution performance of them, were as follows:

a.The Debtor’s ex-wife was awarded all interest in their marital homestead in Prior Lake, Minnesota. The Debtor was to provide her with a quit claim deed to transfer record title to her upon entry of the judgment and decree; however, she could “effectuate the transfer of title” to her by recording the judgment and decree or an abridgement of it if he did not. The Debtor’s ex-wife was to indemnify and hold the Debtor harmless “from any financial obligation relating to the homestead including, but not limited to, principal, interest, taxes, insurance, maintenance and utilities.” The reference here to principal and interest denoted two different debts, secured by first and second mortgages against the property. The Debtor’s ex-wife was to “seek to refinance the underlying encumbrances in her own name as soon as she is qualified to do so and the new payment does not exceed the existing payment.” She had not closed on any such refinancing, as of the date of the Debtor’s bankruptcy filing.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
430 B.R. 197, 2010 Bankr. LEXIS 1575, 2010 WL 2142999, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-robrock-mnb-2010.