J & R Investment Co. v. Anthony (In re Anthony)

515 B.R. 831
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Utah
DecidedAugust 20, 2014
DocketBankruptcy No. 11-32787; Adversary No. 12-2561
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 515 B.R. 831 (J & R Investment Co. v. Anthony (In re Anthony)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
J & R Investment Co. v. Anthony (In re Anthony), 515 B.R. 831 (Utah 2014).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION

JOEL T. MARKER, Bankruptcy Judge.

Prosecuting a bankruptcy case without the assistance of competent counsel is a risky endeavor, and one that occurs with unfortunate frequency in the District of Utah. For some debtors with straightforward financial circumstances and nobody chasing them, errors and inconsistencies in their filings may require additional investigation and explanation but will not ultimately jeopardize their ability to complete a chapter 7 case and obtain a discharge of their prepetition debts. But for Michael Anthony, with a motivated creditor on his heels, his decision to file a chapter 7 case without an attorney has led to years of additional conflict culminating in a two-day trial as to whether his December 2011 discharge should be revoked under [833]*833§ 727(d)(1) or (2) of the Bankruptcy Code.1 The Court conducted this trial on July 10 and 11, 2014 and took the matter under advisement. After considering the evidence properly before the Court, assessing the credibility of the four witnesses, considering the arguments of counsel, and conducting an independent review of applicable law, the Court issues the following Memorandum Decision to explain why Mr. Anthony will retain his discharge.2

I. FACTS

The Debtor, Michael Anthony, began renting commercial storage space for his Freedom Storage business from the Plaintiff, J & R Investment Company, when it was run by John and Rita Billinis.3 After their deaths in 2005, their children Alex, Barbara, and Katherine took over J & R as partners, while lengthy and disputed probate proceedings got underway. J & R sued Anthony in July 2006 seeking unpaid rent and his eviction from the premises, but then Katherine married Anthony in January 2007. The Billinis siblings reached a global settlement in the probate proceedings in May 2007 that resulted, among other things, in Katherine receiving full ownership of some of J & R’s real properties in exchange for her interest in J & R, while J & R itself retained ownership of all claims against Anthony.4 With those properties, Katherine created E.Z. Storage, L.L.C. and One Unit Investments, L.L.C. in 2007,5 and she hired Anthony to work as the property manager for both companies.

J & R obtained an order of partial summary judgment against Anthony in December 2007 for $169,743.24, but J & R did not get that order certified as final until August 2010.6 Meanwhile, Katherine and Anthony got divorced in March 2008, with Katherine receiving full ownership of the E.Z. Storage and One Unit Investments businesses, all of her J & R-related real properties, and a house at 1666 West 2700 South in West Valley City — essentially everything except a 1997 Ford Explorer.7 Even so, Katherine retained Anthony as the property manager for One Unit Investments until approximately May 2012, and Anthony is still the property manager for E.Z. Storage. J & R ultimately served writs of garnishment on E.Z. Storage and One Unit Investments in late August [834]*8342011,8 and Anthony filed his chapter 7 bankruptcy case on August 31, 2011. The Chapter 7 Trustee collected $1,293 from tax refunds and the sale of household goods and a handgun back to Anthony, and her final report was filed on May 29, 2013.9 The main case was closed on June 20, 2014.

J & R had no apparent basis for seeking nondischargeability of Anthony’s debt under § 523, and J & R filed no such complaint before the December 5, 2011 due date despite receiving proper notice of the bankruptcy case and relevant deadlines. Anthony completed all of his bankruptcy requirements, and nobody filed a § 727 complaint, so the Court issued Anthony a general discharge of his debts on December 6, 2011. But Anthony left J & R an opening thanks to the content of his self-completed bankruptcy papers. J & R conducted (or attempted to conduct) substantial discovery in the main case before ultimately filing this adversary proceeding on December 4, 2012 — two days shy of § 727(e)’s one-year deadline for seeking revocation of a debtor’s discharge under § 727(d)(1). The kitchen-sink complaint and its attachments totaled 125 pages and alleged claims for relief under each of § 727(d)(1), (2), and (3).10 Even then, Anthony continued to represent himself in the adversary proceeding until finally making the wise decision to hire counsel in late August 2013.

At trial, J & R alleged that Anthony made a number of errors and omissions that justify the revocation of his discharge. These include the following: (1) filing a false Payment Advices Certification;11 (2) failing to list business income and expenses from Freedom Storage in the Schedules, Statement of Financial Affairs (SOFA), and Chapter 7 Statement of Current Monthly Income and Means-Test Calculation (Form 22A);12 (3) falsely referencing himself as a salaried employee; (4) understating the correct amount of income from E.Z. Storage and One Unit Investments in the Schedules, SOFA, and Form 22A; (5) failing to disclose any interests in real property; (6) failing to disclose two additional lawsuits in SOFA Question # 4a;13 (7) failing to list attached, garnished, or seized property in SOFA Question # 4b; (8) failing to list any gifts in SOFA Question #7; (9) failing to list the name of his accountant in SOFA Question # 19; (10) understating his cash on hand in Schedule B; and (11) failing to turn over estate property to the Chapter 7 Trustee.14 To support its case, J & R relied heavily on the testimony of Anthony, Katherine, Katherine’s accountant Victor Romero, and expert witness Craig McQuarrie as well as Anthony’s own bankruptcy papers, Anthony’s 2009-12 tax re[835]*835turn transcripts, certain tax returns of Katherine and One Unit Investments, and miscellaneous other documents including receipts and handwritten notes.15 Anthony relied heavily on J & R’s exhibits and his own Exhibit 2 in addition to his testimony and his counsel’s cross-examination of the other witnesses.

II. DISCUSSION

A. Automatic Dismissal Under § 521(i)

At the start of the trial, Anthony made an oral motion for the Court to find that his main bankruptcy case had been automatically dismissed under § 521(i) retroactively effective as of the 46th day after the August 31, 2011 petition date. He argued that this result was mandated because of his admitted failure to file “copies of [two] payment advices or other evidence of payment” under § 521(a)(l)(B)(iv) as referenced in his Amended Payment Advices Certification filed in the main case on July 9, 2014 as docket # 48.

Countless cases have addressed the meaning and effect of “automatic dismissal” under the awkward language of § 521(a)(1) and (i), and the Court will not belabor the point here. Suffice it to say that whatever discretion the Court retains to “order[ ] otherwise” under § 521(a)(1)(B), this is the quintessential case for exercising such discretion.16 Anthony filed his chapter 7 petition three years ago.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
515 B.R. 831, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-r-investment-co-v-anthony-in-re-anthony-utb-2014.