In Re Zersen

189 B.R. 732, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 1820, 1995 WL 755279
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Wisconsin
DecidedSeptember 29, 1995
DocketBankruptcy 95-50786-13
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 189 B.R. 732 (In Re Zersen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Zersen, 189 B.R. 732, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 1820, 1995 WL 755279 (W.D. Wis. 1995).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION, FINDINGS OF FACT, AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

THOMAS S. UTSCHIG, Bankruptcy Judge.

The matter presently before the Court is the confirmation of the debtors’ chapter 13 plan. The Baraboo National Bank has objected to confirmation for two reasons. First, the bank contends that the debtors have undervalued their homestead, upon which it claims assorted liens. Second, the bank objects to the plan provision which directs that the bank must apply plan payments to an obligation eosigned by Robert and Darlene Hill, who are Mrs. Zersen’s parents, before applying payments to any other claims. The bank contends that it should be free to pursue the Hills upon the cosigned obligation, and that all payments made by the debtors under the plan should be applied instead to a business note executed by the debtors alone.

The Court held an extended hearing on this matter on August 16,1995. The debtors were represented by Terrence J. Byrne, while the bank was represented by William F. Greenhalgh. Each side presented appraisal testimony concerning the value of the debtors’ homestead. There was also testimony concerning the various loans made by the bank to the debtors and the collateral which was intended to secure those obligations. At the close of argument, the Court took the matter under advisement in order to more fully address the issues pertaining to the debtors’ right to direct the application of plan payments and the ability of the bank' to pursue its claims against the Hills. Before addressing these issues, however, the Court will first set forth the factual background of *736 this case, and then resolve the valuation issue which was also presented at the hearing.

A. Factual Background

For a number of years, the debtors lived in Baraboo, Wisconsin. Scott Zersen was self-employed and operated a carpentry business. In the course of his business operations, he obtained a series of loans from the Baraboo National Bank. Ultimately, in December of 1993 these obligations were consolidated into one business note in the principal amount of $131,727.87. Prior to the execution of the business note, the debtors decided to move from Baraboo, in part due to their belief that it was no longer a safe place to raise their children. As they had vacationed in the area around Boulder Junction, Wisconsin, on several occasions and liked it, they decided to move there. They located a house that they liked for $58,500 and attempted to locate financing as well. The sellers were apparently willing to finance the bulk of the purchase price through a land contract, but the debtors needed a $20,000.00 down payment. Despite the rather modest size of the necessary loan, their requests for financing at a bank in Boulder Junction were denied for unspecified reasons.

At this point, the debtors approached Gene Higgins, their loan officer at the Baraboo National Bank, and asked for help. According to the debtors, 1 Mr. Higgins told them that he would help them get the loan for the down payment, no matter how it needed to be structured. Scott Zersen testified that at this time Mr. Higgins mentioned that they might need a cosignor for the loan. Mr. Zersen subsequently discussed the matter with his wife, who then asked her parents if they would be willing to cosign a loan. The Hills agreed to do so.

Mr. Zersen testified that after his wife obtained the Hills’ promise to cosign the loan, he went back to the bank and obtained the bank’s approval. According to Mr. Zer-sen, the arrangement with the bank was that as soon as the loan documents were completed their account would be credited with the loan amount, but in the meantime they had access to the funds so as to proceed with the closing. Prior to the closing on October 15, 1993, Mr. Zersen wrote a check to the bank and obtained an $18,500.00 cashier’s check. This check, together with $1,500.00 Mrs. Zer-sen withdrew from her pension fund, constituted the down payment on the house. It is uncontroverted that by accepting the $18,-500.00 check and providing Mr. Zersen with the cashier’s check, the bank permitted the Zersens’ account to become overdrawn in that amount. It is also uncontroverted that the loan documents were not executed until October 28,1993, and the loan proceeds were deposited into the Zersens’ account on October 29, 1993.

Despite acknowledging that the bank allowed the debtors’ account to become overdrawn in the amount of $18,500.00 and deposited the loan proceeds directly into the debtors’ account to rectify that overdraft, the bank would have the Court accept a rather different view of the loan transaction. Mr. Jicinsky, on behalf of the bank, testified that the loan was actually made to the Hills, who in turn lent the money to the Zersens for whatever purpose they desired. According to Mr. Jicinsky, the bank would not have loaned the money to the Zersens given the precarious status of their outstanding loans with the bank. Mr. Jicinsky seemed to suggest that the Zersens’ names were simply added to the loan paperwork as co-borrowers as an afterthought, or at the Hills’ request.

In this regard, it is true that the Hills’ names appear first on the $18,500.00 mortgage note dated October 28, 1993, and that Mrs. Zersen’s name is not even typed on the document, although she did sign it. The bank also submitted several other documents which tend to support its contention. On the loan information and record sheet prepared by the bank regarding the loan, Robert and Darlene Hill are listed as the borrowers, while Scott and Mary Zersen are described as the co-borrowers. The purpose for the *737 loan is specified as a “personal loan for daughter.” Similarly, there is a declaration of purpose relating to the loan which reflects that Robert and Darlene Hill applied for an $18,500.00 loan, labelled a “personal loan for daughter.” The declaration also specifies that the primary collateral for the loan is “personal income” and the secondary collateral is an assignment of land contract, but it is not clear whose income or what assignment of land contract is involved.

Beyond these internal bank documents, however, the bank produced nothing signed by the Hills which expressly indicates that they were the primary borrowers. Neither the Hills nor the Zersens were required to fill out a credit application. The Hills apparently never received the loan proceeds they allegedly borrowed from the bank. There is also no evidence that they directed the bank to deliver those proceeds to the Zersens. In this regard, the debtors submitted a credit voucher from the bank indicating that their account had been credited with $18,500.00 in “loan proceeds,” which they argue supports their theory that the loan was to them. Further, the debtors have apparently made all the payments on the loan. After examining the documents, the Court agrees that, when taken as a whole, they tend to support the theory that Mr. Higgins fulfilled his promise to get the Zersens the loan, and simply structured the paperwork to make it work. This interpretation of the facts is further bolstered by Mr. Jicinsky’s testimony that, although he was the Hills’ loan officer at the time, he had no involvement whatsoever in the preparation of what the bank now claims was a loan to his customers.

In any event, the story continues. On December 28, 1993, Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
189 B.R. 732, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 1820, 1995 WL 755279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-zersen-wiwd-1995.