In Re Schmitt Farm Partnership

161 B.R. 429, 1993 WL 469805
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedNovember 15, 1993
Docket93 C 5885, 93 B 12008
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 161 B.R. 429 (In Re Schmitt Farm Partnership) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Schmitt Farm Partnership, 161 B.R. 429, 1993 WL 469805 (N.D. Ill. 1993).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

SHADUR, Senior District Judge.

Debtor Schmitt Farm Partnership (“Schmitt Farm”) has appealed the August 12, 1993 order of Bankruptcy Judge Thomas James, in which he granted the motion of mortgagee USAA Real Estate Company (“USAA”) to lift the automatic stay imposed by Bankruptcy Code § 362,11 U.S.C. § 362. 1 That order, if upheld, will permit USAA to proceed with its state court foreclosure proceedings against Schmitt Farm’s sole asset— a 150-acre tract of vacant real estate in Aurora, Illinois (the “Property”).

Briefing on the appeal has been completed, and this Court has read through the entire record comprising:

1. both sides’ written submissions filed before Judge James;
2. the Real Estate Sale Contract (“Contract”) between “Noddle Development Company [“Noddle”] or Nominee” as designated purchaser and Merchants National Bank of Aurora, Trust No. 4481 (“Land Trust 4481”) as designated seller relating to the Property; 2
3. 177 pages of transcript (cited “Tr. — ”) of the August 12 hearing before Judge James; and
4. Judge James’ one-paragraph minute order of that same date, granting USAA’s motion “[f]or the reasons stated in open court_”

For the reasons stated in this memorandum opinion and order, Judge James’ order lifting the stay is affirmed.

Facts 3

Until a few months before Schmitt Farm sought to wrap itself in the mantle of Chap *431 ter 11, both the Property (which lies north of Indian Trail Road on the east and west sides of Orchard Road in Aurora) and some 350 acres to the south of Indian Trail Road (the “South Acreage”) were equitably owned by Orchard Valley Partnership (“Orchard Valley”). Originally USAA had owned both parcels and had sold them to Primus West Corporation (“Primus”) in December 1989 (Pri-mus placed title in a different land trust with Merchants National Bank, its Land Trust 4251) for about $2.4 million in cash and about $9.7 million represented by a nonrecourse purchase money mortgage having a one-year maturity.

Primus assigned the beneficial interest in Land Trust 4251 to Orchard Valley Partnership, a partnership among Primus (which had a 37.5% interest), Dearborn Investments Limited Partnership (“Dearborn Limited,” which had a 57.5% interest) and Crislar Enterprises, Inc. (“Crislar,” which had a 5% interest). 4 In December 1990 another $2.6 million was paid to USAA, and at that time the relationship among the parties took a different form:

1. USAA released its mortgage on the South Acreage (thus facilitating the separate development of that parcel, for which purpose Orchard Valley obtained a development loan from Continental Bank, which took a first mortgage on the South Acreage).
2. USAA’s remaining mortgage of some $7.1 million (now encumbering only the Property) was extended for one year to December 1991.

Instead of Land Trust 4251 remaining in title to both parcels, new Land Trust 4481 took title to the Property (subject, of course, not only to USAA’s mortgage but also to its right to approve or disapprove any assignments of beneficial interest in that land trust 5 ).

When USAA’s mortgage remained unpaid at maturity, the parties engaged in post-default negotiations for the possible further restructuring of the debt. Those negotiations collapsed in March 1992, and on April 13 of that year USAA filed a state court action to foreclose on the Property and collect its indebtedness. Orchard Valley and other defendants delayed that action for nearly a year by filing groundless counterclaims asserting that USAA had breached a draft letter agreement (one never signed by USAA) looking to the possible restructuring of the indebtedness.

In March 1993 the state court granted partial summary judgment in favor of USAA, finding (1) that USAA was entitled to judgment as to liability on its Complaint and (2) that defendants’ counterclaims raised no genuine issues to preclude such a judgment. That left open for determination only the amount due under the USAA note and mortgage, a subject that was set for trial before the state court on June 4, 1993.

Meanwhile, in March 1993 (either shortly before or after the entry of summary judgment in the state court) Orchard Valley executed an assignment of its beneficial interest in the Property to Schmitt Farm. That assignment was not consented to by USAA, so that it never took effect in the records of the Trustee under Land Trust 4451. As with the other entities already referred to, Schmitt Farm had no other assets and no employees — its only function was to hold the beneficial interest in the Property, and it had no expected source of income other than from a potential sale of the Property.

Originally the partners and their percentage interests in Schmitt Farm were identical to those already reflected in this opinion as to Orchard Valley. Then just one day before the June 4 trial date in the state court forc- *432 closure proceeding, those interests were reorganized: Primus and Dearborn Limited traded their interests, so that Primus then owned 95% of Orchard Valley and Dearborn Limited owned 95% of Schmitt Farm. Cris-lar assigned the other 5% interest in Schmitt Farm to Dearborn Investments, Inc. (“Dear-born Inc.,” the general partner of Dearborn Limited and another single-asset entity).

" Less than two hours before the June 4 state court trial, Schmitt Farm filed' its Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition. Nearly two months after that Chapter 11 filing — and just two weeks before the August 12 evidentiary hearing before the Bankruptcy Judge— James Avgeris (“Avgeris”) as the purported agent for Land Trust 4481 entered into the Contract with Noddle.

After the August 12, 1998 evidentiary hearing, during which Judge James heard testimony from Primus’ sole shareholder and President Richard Faltz (“Faltz”) and Dear-born Inc.’s President Avgeris, followed by counsel’s oral argument, Judge James concluded that “neither the Bankruptcy Courts nor the creditors in this ease should be subjected to the costs and delays of a bankruptcy proceeding under the conditions that [have] been brought to the Court’s attention” (Tr. 171). Judge James found that Schmitt Farm’s filing lacked good faith, and he lifted Code § 362’s automatic stay to allow USAA to continue with the state foreclosure action.

Schmitt Farm’s Lack of Good Faith

Judge James’ determination that Schmitt Farm’s filing lacked the requisite good faith poses a substantial hurdle for the debtor. As In re Love, 957 F.2d 1350, 135.4 (7th Cir.1992) (citations omitted) teaches:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
161 B.R. 429, 1993 WL 469805, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-schmitt-farm-partnership-ilnd-1993.