In Re Wilkinson

457 B.R. 530, 2011 Bankr. LEXIS 2837, 2011 WL 3025602
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Texas
DecidedJuly 22, 2011
Docket19-60097
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 457 B.R. 530 (In Re Wilkinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Wilkinson, 457 B.R. 530, 2011 Bankr. LEXIS 2837, 2011 WL 3025602 (Tex. 2011).

Opinion

Memorandum Decision on Motion for Reconsideration of Order Disallowing Claim

LEIF M. CLARK, Bankruptcy Judge.

Marix, as the mortgage servicer and attorney-in-fact for EMC Mortgage (“EMC”), has requested reconsideration, pursuant to section 502(j) of the Bankruptcy Code and/or Rule 60(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (applicable in bankruptcy by virtue of Rule 9024 of the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure), of an order sustaining the chapter 7 trustee’s objection to EMC’s claim. The order disallowed the claim in its entirety. This decision constitutes the court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law with respect to that motion.

*534 Background Facts

The debtors originally filed for chapter 13 on January 31, 2007. In their schedules they listed EMC Mortgage as a secured creditor with a lien on property in Band-era, Texas. The debtors scheduled this property as exempt. Pursuant to this court’s standing order, the Notice of First Meeting of Creditors Pursuant to Section 341 was issued out of the office of the Chapter 13 Trustee on February 7, 2007. Among other things, the Notice stated that, absent timely objection, all claims would be deemed allowed as set forth in the Trustee’s Recommendation Concerning Claims.

On March 12, 2007 EMC filed a proof of claim as a secured creditor, in the amount of $122,534.29 with arrears of $27,392.04. EMC attached a copy of a note and deed of trust to the proof of claim. The Note and Deed of Trust were both in favor of San Antonio Savings Association. The attachments themselves do not show how (or whether) EMC came to be the holder of this claim.

The proof of claim was submitted on the Official Form in effect as. of that time (Official Form 10, eff. 10/05). In the block entitled “Name and address to which notices should be sent,” the Proof of Claim says “EMC Mortgage, Post Office Box 293150, Lewisville, Texas 75029-3150.” The Proof of Claim was electronically signed (and filed) by two attorneys, Hilary B. Bonial and Joe M. Lozano, “as Creditor’s Authorized Agent.” Ms. Bonial and Mr. Lozano are attorneys with the law firm of Brice, Vander Linden & Wernick, P.C. That firm had earlier filed a Request for Service of Notices on March 1, 2007. The notice requested that notices of any hearing, proceeding or report be served on counsel at P.O. Box 829009, Dallas, Texas 75382-9009, and was signed by the firm as “Authorized Agent for EMC Mortgage Corporation.”

A chapter 13 plan was eventually confirmed on October 3, 2007. The confirmation order stated that “[ujnless an objection or response is timely filed as to the treatment of any claim, the claim will be allowed only in the manner and amount listed in the Trustee’s Recommendation Concerning Claims, and such treatment will be final and binding on all parties without further order of the court.” (See Docket No. 93). The order further stated that “[rjesponses or objections to the Trustee’s Recommendation Concerning Claims, must be filed within thirty (30) days from the date of service of the Trustee’s Recommendation Concerning Claims.” On December 7, 2007, the chapter 13 trustee filed a claims recommendation listing EMC as a secured creditor and proposed to “allow” the claim in the amount of $122,534.29 [Docket No. 95]. No objection to EMC’s claim was filed by anyone within the 30 day objection period.

The debtor had failed to list a contingent creditor on his schedules — a malpractice claim. The claimant learned of the case after confirmation, entered an appearance, and asked that the case be converted to chapter 7. On July 25, 2008, the debtors’ case was in fact so converted. Once the debtors’ case was converted to chapter 7, a new claims bar date of October 27, 2008 was established, per Bankruptcy Rule 1019(2). [Docket No. 125]. However, as EMC’s actually filed proof of claim in the debtors’ chapter 13 case was deemed filed in the new chapter 7 case, per Rule 1019(3), EMC filed no further claim.

After conversion, EMC sought relief from the automatic stay, claiming that regular payments on its loan had ceased and that there was at that time over four months of post-petition arrears due to it. The chapter 7 trustee sought a continuance, on grounds that there was some uncertainty whether some part of the *535 property claimed to be subject to EMC’s mortgage was exempt or not exempt. The debtor also responded to the motion, contending that EMC needed to prove that it was in fact the rightful owner and holder of the note. EMC thereafter withdrew its motion. The trustee, meanwhile, worked to resolve disputes over exemption claims and retained a surveyor. EMC took no further steps to seek relief from the stay. Its counsel was presumably following the course of events in the case (as electronic filers, they were notified of every pleading filed in the case).

The exemption issue was finally resolved in January 2010. EMC, it will be recalled, had claimed a security interest, by virtue of the mortgage granted to San Antonio Saving Association, on 52 acres of property in Bandera County, Texas. Only 1.22 acres of these 52 acres were later found to be the debtors’ exempt homestead, with the balance of the acreage now available for administration by the chapter 7 trustee. The chapter 7 trustee then combined the remaining 51.23 acres with a 46.21 acre tract also owned by the estate to form a 97.44 acre tract of land, which the trustee then sought to sell by motion filed July 28, 2010 pursuant to section 363(f) of the Code. The motion to sell acknowledged that EMC Mortgage had asserted a lien on all or part of this property but noted the trustee’s concern that EMC had not shown that it was the rightful owner and holder of the claim. The motion proposed that EMC be paid from the proceeds of the sale, but only as and when it first furnished the trustee and the court with proof of its entitlement to a portion of the sale proceeds, and in what amount — this as a result of questions that had arisen regarding the validity of EMC’s asserted security interest. 1 EMC claims that it was never properly served with the Trustee’s motion to sell, but the certificate of service shows service on EMC at the address listed in their proof of claim, as well as service to the post office box of the firm of Brice, Vander Linden, EMC’s attorneys in the case, at the address the firm had supplied to the court in their Request for Service of Notices. EMC raised no objection to the sale, and neither did anyone else. The sale was approved in August 2010.

On October 7, 2010, the chapter 7 trustee, having heard nothing further from EMC, filed a formal objection to EMC’s claim, asserting that, absent proof, EMC had not established that it was the owner and holder of either the note or the deed of trust on the property. 2 EMC asserts that it was never properly served with this pleading either, but, once again, EMC was served at the address it had listed on its proof of claim as the address to which notices were to be sent in the case.

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Bluebook (online)
457 B.R. 530, 2011 Bankr. LEXIS 2837, 2011 WL 3025602, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-wilkinson-txwb-2011.