In Re Wingerter

376 B.R. 221, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 3330, 2007 WL 2932809
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedOctober 1, 2007
Docket19-11096
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 376 B.R. 221 (In Re Wingerter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Wingerter, 376 B.R. 221, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 3330, 2007 WL 2932809 (Ohio 2007).

Opinion

OPINION RESOLVING SHOW CAUSE ORDER ENTERED MARCH 8, 2007

MARILYN SHEA-STONUM, Bankruptcy Judge.

INTRODUCTION

Over the last two decades, there has been an exponential increase in trading of *223 claims against debtors who have filed bankruptcy petitions. Once a fairly low-volume activity restricted to chapter 11 cases (and primarily undertaken to achieve strategic influence in chapter 11 cases), claims trading now also routinely occurs through the purchase and sale of “claims portfolios” in consumer cases:

The market in creditors’ claims has matured dramatically in recent years. Claims of all kinds are traded frequently in small and large workouts and bankruptcy cases. Although institutional and trade creditor debt are most commonly perceived as the subject of claims trading, even Chapter 13 consumer debts and Chapter 7 debts have become the targets of investors.

Business Workouts Manuals, § 25.3 (2007 Thomson/West). See also Siegel, Introduction: ABI Guide To Trading Claims In Bankruptcy, ABI Committee On Public Companies And Trading Claims (“Perhaps nothing has changed the face of bankruptcy in the last decade as much as the new found liquidity in claims”).

Undoubtedly contributing to the extraordinary growth of an industry devoted to the purchase and sale of claims in consumer cases is the implementation of electronic case filing (“ECF”) and earlier technological developments in bankruptcy courts such as PACER (“Public Access to Court Electronic Records”). Prior to these innovations, firms engaging in the business of providing information on new bankruptcy filings routinely sent people to each bankruptcy court on a daily or weekly basis to compile lists of newly-filed petitions. Thus, although the fact of a petition filing and all pleadings filed in each case have always been matters of public record, ECF makes identifying individual debtors markedly simpler than in the era of paper filing. In the ECF age, search firms need only do a computer search for each bankruptcy court location throughout the country. Reportedly those searches have been further simplified through proprietary software programs that perform the search with limited human attention.

The ECF system also streamlines the filing of proofs of claims for claims purchasers. No longer does a creditor need to mail an original hard copy for filing, nor does it need to request return of filed-stamped copies of the document.

This opinion examines the standard operating procedures of one creditor whose entire business centers on purchasing and filing of bankruptcy claims and the receipt of dividends on account of such claims 1 : what information did that creditor possess before filing its proof of claim and what information did it choose to disclose or withhold in the process of filing that document? The creditor would have this and *224 other bankruptcy courts accept “industry standards” as excusing its noncompliance with Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure 3001 2 and the requisite full completion of the official form adopted in conjunction with that Rule. Thus, this case poses the central question whether an industry that has grown up solely to operate within the bankruptcy system can expect courts to ignore procedural rules that were in place prior to the birth of the industry because compliance with those rules would not promote maximum efficiency for the claims trading industry.

In 2006, B-Line purchased, at a significant discount, a portfolio of alleged bankruptcy claims that led B-Line to file a claim against Debtor Gerald Wingerter, purportedly originating from Mr. Wingerter’s dealings with GTE. As described more fully below, when the Debtors objected to B-Line’s proof of claim, B-line first asked for an extension of time purportedly to locate originating documents that it promptly decided not to pursue. Some months later and long after it was clear that no such documents could be obtained, B-Line purported to withdraw its proof of claim, ignoring a specific court order as well as Rule 3006. That B-Line admitted it did not have any original documents evidencing an alleged debtor-creditor relationship between GTE and Mr. Wingerter nor any understanding of the purported dealings between those parties raised, from the Court’s perspective, serious questions whether the advent of bulk claims purchasing in consumer cases is accompanied by sufficient assurances that valid claims existed in the files of an originating creditor, or its assignee. Phrased differently, when the purported originating creditor or one of its assignees is not listed on the debtor’s schedules, should a claims purchaser be allowed to file its claim first and look for originating documents later? With these concerns in mind, the Court issued a show cause order to B-Line. B-Line presented evidence both with respect to the processing of the specific proof of claim filed in the Wingerter case and its standard procedures in filing claims in bankruptcy cases.

The Court concludes that, particularly where a debtor has not scheduled any claim resembling the purportedly assigned obligation that a claims purchaser wants to file in the debtor’s case, the claim purchaser needs to discharge its obligations under Rule 3001 and Rule 9011 at the time it files a proof of claim. The assignee should not be able to shift the expense of the initial examination of claims to other interested parties, e.g., chapter 7 trustees and chapter 13 debtors and trustees. More specifically, the Court finds that when the debtors have not scheduled any claim listing the originating creditor or any direct or indirect assignee of the originating creditor, Rule 9011 requires a claim purchaser, before filing a proof of claim with a bankruptcy court, to obtain originating documents or, when such documents are not available, a clear understanding of the nature of the original dealings that support the assertion of a claim against the particular debtor. Having obtained those documents or that clear understanding, the claim purchaser should then attach to the proof of claim form the originating documents or an affidavit explaining the nonavailability of such “media” to the proof of claim form so the debtor and other interested parties are given fair notice of the source and particulars of the claim.

JURISDICTION

This matter is a core proceeding pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 157(b)(2)(A), (B), and *225 (0). This Court has jurisdiction over this matter pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1334(b), 157(a) and (b)(1) and by the Standing Order of Reference entered in this District on July 16,1984.

FACTUAL FINDINGS 3

1. B-Line filed its proof of claim (the “B-Line POC”) on March 17, 2006, which was 38 days after Gerald A. Wingerter and Janet G.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
376 B.R. 221, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 3330, 2007 WL 2932809, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-wingerter-ohnb-2007.