In Re Steeley

243 B.R. 421
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Alabama
DecidedApril 25, 1999
Docket19-40150
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 243 B.R. 421 (In Re Steeley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Steeley, 243 B.R. 421 (Ala. 1999).

Opinion

Order Denying the Debtor’s Motion to Retain Jurisdiction and Granting Magna Mortgage Company’s Motion to Transfer

BENJAMIN COHEN, Bankruptcy Judge.

The matters before the Court are the Debtor’s Motion to Retain Jurisdiction filed on August 10, 1998, and the oral Motion to Transfer made by Magna Mortgage Company at the hearing on both matters held on September 23, 1998. Janet Steeley, the debtor; Thomas Tutten, the attorney for Magna Mortgage Company; and Alan Levine, the attorney for South-Trust Bank, appeared at that hearing. 1 The matters were submitted on the arguments of the parties and the record in this case.

I. Background

Ms. Steeley has filed six . Chapter 13 cases in this Court. 2 The fifth was filed in the Eastern Division of this Court on January 21, 1998. 3 Because of the possibility of a conflict between that court and the debtor, the judge in that division transferred the case to the Northern Division on February 2, 1998. On May 12, 1998, the judge in the Northern Division entered an order lifting the automatic stay in favor of Magna Mortgage Company, the creditor secured by a mortgage on the debtor’s home. On the same day the Court entered a similar order in favor of SouthTrust Bank, the secured creditor on the debtor’s automobile. On July 13, 1998, the Court dismissed the debtor’s case.

In May 1998 and June 1998 the debtor filed appeals of the above-three orders and made requests for stays on appeal. The requests for stays were denied.

On August 10, 1998, after filing her appeals, but before any decisions were rendered on those appeals, Ms. Steeley filed her sixth and most recent Chapter 13 case. That case was filed in the Southern Division of this Court along with the Motion to Retain Jurisdiction now pending before this Court. In that motion, Ms. Steeley asked this Court to retain control of her case rather than to transfer the case to another division.

At the hearing on her motion, Ms. Stee-ley argued that the orders in her fifth case lifting the stay for the secured creditors, the one dismissing her case, and the one denying her stays of those orders on appeal, were entered unfairly. Ms. Steeley explained that she filed the instant case to protect her home from foreclosure. And when asked by this Court why she filed the current case in this division, rather than in the division of her residence and the division in which she filed her previous cases, Ms. Steeley further explained, “All I want to do is pay my creditors and have a chance in a fair and equitable court in which to get my plan approved and pay my creditors.” Unofficial transcription.

At the same hearing, in response to Ms. Steeley’s motion and arguments, the attorney for Magna Mortgage Company made, without objection from Ms. Steeley, an oral *425 Motion to Transfer the case to either the Eastern or the Northern Divisions of this Court. After the hearing, and on October 1, 1998, the Chapter 13 trustee for the Southern Division of this Court filed a Trustee’s Objection to Confirmation and Motion to Dismiss, 4

II. Procedure

Clearly, Ms. Steeley’s reason for filing the current (and sixth) bankruptcy case was to protect her home from foreclosure. But equally clear is that Ms. Steeley’s motives for filing the case in the Southern Division of this Court were to prevent the operation of the orders entered against her in her fifth Chapter 13 case and to seek another forum in which she believed she could obtain a different result.

The Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit, in Shell Oil Co. v. Waldron (In re Waldron), 785 F.2d 936, 941 (11th Cir.1986), ce rt. dismissed, 478 U.S. 1028, 106 S.Ct. 3343, 92 L.Ed.2d 763 (1986), instructs that if a debtor’s Chapter 13 petition appears to be tainted, the debtor’s motives must be questioned. 5 The per curiam opinion in Waldron reads in part:

We hold that with section 1325(a)(3) Congress intended to provide bankruptcy courts with a discretionary means to preserve the bankruptcy process for its intended purpose. Accordingly, whenever a Chapter 13 petition appears to be tainted with a questionable purpose, it is incumbent upon the bankruptcy courts to examine and question the debtor’s motives. If the court discovers unmistakable manifestations of bad faith, ... confirmation must be denied.
Unmistakable manifestations of bad faith need not be based upon a finding of actual fraud, requiring proof of malice, scienter or an intent to defraud. We simply require that the bankruptcy courts preserve the integrity of the bankruptcy process by refusing to condone its abuse.
The cornerstone of the bankruptcy courts has always been the doing of equity. The protections and forgiveness inherent in the bankruptcy laws surely require conduct consistent with the concepts of basic honesty. Good faith or basic honesty is the very antithesis of attempting to circumvent a legal obligation through a technicality of the law.

Id. (emphasis added).

Although Ms. Steeley did not attempt to hide her desire to have another court consider her circumstances, (her motion for this Court to retain and adjudicate her pending petition was most certainly filed to promote that desire), this Court finds that Ms. Steeley’s petition does indeed appear to be tainted. 6 Thus, in ae- *426 cordance with Waldron, this Court must examine Ms. Steeley’s motives to determine whether this ease was filed in good faith. 7 Thereafter this Court must determine the proper venue of the case. 8

III. Was this Case Filed in Bad Faith?

To decide whether the case was filed in good faith, as a matter of law this Court has applied the standards required by Waldron, 9 Factually, the Court has *427 considered the above and the debtor’s bankruptcy history, her options, and her actions.

A. The Debtor’s Bankruptcy History

Although the debtor wishes this Court to do so, the instant case cannot be considered independent of the debtor’s previous cases, independent of the rulings made against her in her previous cases, or independent of the debtor’s appeals of the rulings made against her in previous cases, In contrast, a detailed review of some of Ms. Steele/s prior cases is necessary, not only because Ms.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
243 B.R. 421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-steeley-alnb-1999.