In Re Thomas

236 B.R. 573, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 900, 1999 WL 557695
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. New York
DecidedJuly 28, 1999
Docket1-19-40502
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 236 B.R. 573 (In Re Thomas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Thomas, 236 B.R. 573, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 900, 1999 WL 557695 (N.Y. 1999).

Opinion

Memorandum Decision on Trustee’s Application for the Court to “So Order” a Stipulation

MARVIN A. HOLLAND, Bankruptcy Judge.

The Case Trustee, ex parte, submits a stipulation (the full text of which is reproduced in the appendix) to be “so ordered” in an attempt to resolve a chapter 7 trustee’s persistent dilemma: how to handle a debtor’s personal injury cause of action which does not appear to have a value substantially in excess of the exemption which the debtor has claimed. At the present time there does not appear to be any great likelihood that there will be an ultimate recovery sufficient to permit a dividend to creditors, but if the trustee keeps the bankruptcy case open until the cause of action goes to trial, it may be many years before the matter is resolved. Meanwhile the trustee will have incurred the scrutiny not only of the office of the United States Trustee as the agency *575 charged with supervision of the case trustee and which controls the trustee’s future appointments, but also that of the Clerk’s Office of this court upon which will be imposed the burden of continually monitoring and reporting the activity of a dormant case.

On the other hand, if a trustee abandons the cause of action consistent with his obligation to liquidate and administer the estate as expeditiously as possible, 1 there is the unlikely possibility that the personal injury cause of action may produce a substantial recovery, in which case not only will the trustee have lost commissions on the dividends which would have been paid to creditors, but the trustee then faces the possibility of a malpractice action by unhappy creditors if and when they discover that what could have been their recovery has been discarded by a fiduciary obligated to act on their behalf.

What to do?

The diligent and innovative Trustee in this case seeks court approval of a stipulation which he has entered into with the debtor which contemplates that the Trustee will file a No Asset Report and have the ease closed, but that notwithstanding, the personal injuries action will remain property of the estate and will not be abandoned to the debtor. Further, under the terms of the stipulation, the Trustee reserves the right to reopen the case, to object to the debtor’s exemptions and to seek revocation of the debtor’s discharge at any time, while the debtor waives any right to object to any such efforts by the Trustee, or to question the timeliness of the Trustees actions. As to the resolution of the personal injury claim, the stipulation reserves to the Trustee the exclusive power to settle the claim upon receiving the notice required to be provided by the debt- or of any proposed resolution of the claim or judgment that “would yield any significant amount for the benefit of creditors.”

Sensitive to the trustee’s dilemma, and notwithstanding my desire to be of service to the Trustee, the U.S. Trustee, and the already overworked and under appreciated clerical staff of this court, I am unable to “so order” the stipulation for the following reasons:

1. Party-iwr-Interest As King Canute demonstrated when he directed the tide not to rise, my ordering not to happen that which a higher authority has pre-ordained will serve only to demonstrate the impotence of my order; it will not effect the desired result. While a court pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 349(b)(3) 2 may direct that properly scheduled property of the estate not revest in the debtor upon a dismissal (and assuming, without so holding, that the statute authorizes such an order to be effective with regard only to a single specific asset rather than “property of the estate” as a whole), the retention of the personal injuries cause of action by a closed estate which retains the right to object to the debtor’s claimed exemption *576 renders the injured debtor a non party-in-interest incapable of prosecuting the personal injury claim. 3

Moreover, by becoming a party to an agreement which contemplates prosecution of this cause of action in the name of a debtor who may no longer have any interest in it, signatories to the stipulation participate in a concealment that may constitute a fraud on the insurer. Sophisticated defense counsel are well aware that a cause of action owned by a trustee is likely to bring a smaller jury verdict than that same cause of action pursued by the injured entity. The insurer is entitled to knowledge of these facts in evaluating and negotiating a prudent settlement and opposing counsel are entitled to the facts from which an absolute defense can be interposed.

While the trustee and the debtor may be willing enter into this type of arrangement without notice to the insurer, the court in which the action may be pending, and the named defendants, I am not willing to consider the trustee’s application unless a full disclosure and an opportunity to be heard has been provided to all such entities.

2. Trustee’s Standing Furthermore, were the stipulation to be approved, who would receive the notice required to be given by the debtor in paragraph 4 of the stipulation? 4 While a debtor may still be a debtor after a case has been closed 5 , the Trustee then will have become a former trustee. As such, he or she can not again become the trustee until some time after a reopening in view of Fed. R.Bankr.P. 5010 which calls for judicial determination as to the need for a trustee in the reopened case. 6 Since such a determination can not be made until the court is asked to reopen, how can a former trustee seek reopening of a closed case? Even were notice called for in the Stipulation to be given to the then discharged former trustee, the then former Trustee would no longer have any greater interest, right, duty or authority to act with regard to the estate than any other non-party. In short, there would be no estate representative in existence with authority to receive the notice required by the stipulation, much less with authority to act upon it. 7 We are *577 thus left with a situation in which neither the named plaintiff — former debtor, nor the former trustee would have authority to pursue the cause of action or to collect upon it.

On the other hand, if the application for approval of the Stipulation were to be made on notice to all members of the creditor body and to the United States Trustee, and if notice of the verdict or settlement were required to be given to The United States Trustee and to all members of the creditor body, all entities with standing to seek a reopening 8 would at least be in a position to consider such action as they might deem necessary to protect their own best interests.

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Related

In re: Frank J. Levesque and Bonnie R. Levesque
473 B.R. 331 (Ninth Circuit, 2012)
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275 B.R. 730 (W.D. Pennsylvania, 2002)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
236 B.R. 573, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 900, 1999 WL 557695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-thomas-nyeb-1999.