Jasinski v. Monongalia General Hospital (In Re Jasinski)

406 B.R. 653, 2009 WL 1566160
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 4, 2009
Docket19-20803
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 406 B.R. 653 (Jasinski v. Monongalia General Hospital (In Re Jasinski)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jasinski v. Monongalia General Hospital (In Re Jasinski), 406 B.R. 653, 2009 WL 1566160 (Pa. 2009).

Opinion

*654 MEMORANDUM OPINION

JEFFERY A. DELLER, Bankruptcy Judge.

The matter before the Court is the Debtor’s objections to eight proofs of claim. The Court has consolidated the objections for purposes of this Memorandum Opinion. The Court has consolidated these proceedings because the facts are undisputed and each of the objections raise a common question of law. That question is: whether a claimant who has timely filed a proof of claim in a chapter 7 bankruptcy case is required to file another proof of claim when the case is subsequently converted to a chapter 13 case? The Debtor would like the answer of this question to be “yes, creditors are required to file another claim,” because none of the creditors at issue did so. The Court, however, concludes that creditors are not required to file another layer of claims under the facts of this case.

I.

This matter is a core proceeding pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(B), and this Court has proper subject matter jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1334(b).

II.

The Debtor, James E. Jasinski, filed a voluntary petition under chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code on March 27, 2007. In papers filed with this Court, the Debtor listed several undisputed debts on his Schedule F. Among these debts were unsecured debts owed to: GE Money Bank d/b/a JC Penney Credit Services, 1 Monongalia General Hospital, Roundup Funding, LLC, FIA Card Services, and LVNV Funding, LLC. Timely proofs of claim in the Chapter 7 case were filed by each creditor in interest.

On February 15, 2008 an order Granting Motion to Convert Case from Chapter 7 to Chapter IS was entered. On March 4, 2008 the Clerk’s office mailed a Notice of Chapter 13 Bankruptcy Case, Meeting of Creditors, & Deadlines (the “Chapter 13 Notice”) to all creditors indicating June 30, 2008 as the deadline for filing all proofs of claim.

No claimants re-filed a proof of claim in the chapter 13 case. On January 5, 2009 the Debtor filed his Objection to Claims, alleging that all claims should be disallowed as new proofs of claim were not filed prior to the deadline set forth in the Chapter 13 Notice. Only Roundup Funding, LLC (on behalf of Bank of America) holding claims # 6 and # 10, and Recovery Management Systems Corporation (on behalf of GE Money Bank d/b/a JC Penney Credit Services) holding claim # 2 responded to the Debtor’s objections.

The Debtor asserts in his Objection to Claims that because no proofs of claim were filed in the converted chapter 13 ease, the original claims filed in the chapter 7 case should be disallowed. The two responding claimants insist that following the conversion up from chapter 7 no requirement exists requiring them to re-file their proofs of claim in the chapter 13 case; these creditors also assert that disallowing the timely filed chapter 7 claims would be inequitable and would be tantamount to providing the Debtor with an undeserved windfall.

III.

The Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure do not explicitly state whether *655 claims must be re-filed, when a case is converted from chapter 7 to chapter 13. The Debtor insists that creditors who, “timely filed proofs of claim in the prior chapter 7 are required to file new proofs of claim in the chapter 13 case.” Conversely, the responding claimants assert it would be, “inequitable to disallow,” the claims as the Debtor has already recognized their validity by scheduling them in his Schedules of Assets and Liabilities.

In support for the Objection to Claims, the Debtor cites In re Dorothy D. Sorge, 149 B.R. 197 (Bankr.W.D.Okla.1993). In Sorge the Debtor converted from a chapter 11 to a chapter 13 filing and confirmed a plan that allowed for payments to the IRS on account of an allowed claim of the creditor. I d., 149 B.R. at 199. However, the payments were not made by the debtor and upon completion of the plan the debtor received a discharge which the IRS challenged. Id. at 200. The court held pre-petition tax debts in that case were dis-chargeable after completion by the debtors of all payments under the plan because no proof of claim was filed by the taxing authority. Id. at 203. In its opinion, the Court stated, “The fact that a proof of claim was timely filed in the Chapter 11 case prior to conversion avails a creditor nothing in the Chapter 13 Case after conversion.” Id. at 201. The Court reasoned that because the requirement for filing a proof of claim was set out in notices issued by the court, the creditors in Sorge should have filed their proof of claim prior to the bar date. Id. at 201.

Both responding claimants cite to In re Adams, 76 B.R. 908 (Bankr.D.Conn.1987) as persuasive authority for this Court to deny the Objection to Claims. In Adams a creditor who filed a proof of claim in a chapter 11 case did not re-file its claim after the debtor converted the case to chapter 13. In re Adams, 76 B.R. at 909. Upon hearing the objection to the claims by the chapter 13 trustee, the Adams Court held that claimants who filed pre-conversion proofs of claim did not need to re-file them after the case was converted to chapter 13. Id. at 909. The court noted that chapter 13 treatment of claims timely filed in the pre-converted chapter 11 case was omitted in Bankruptcy Rule 1019. 2 For guidance as to how such claims should be treated in the chapter 13 context under the Bankruptcy Code, the court therefore looked to former Bankruptcy Rule 13—302(f) (1973), which provided that in cases converted from chapter 7 to chapter 13 “all claims filed in the superseded bankruptcy case shall be deemed filed in the Chapter XIII case....” Id. The Court reasoned that following the adoption of the Bankruptcy Code in 1978, the failure to include this section in the Bankruptcy Rules, “is most likely the result of inadvertence.” Id.

While neither the Sorge case nor the Adams case constitutes binding precedent, this Court finds the Adams opinion to be more persuasive and more consistent with the purpose of the Bankruptcy Rules.

The Bankruptcy Rules were written to encourage the efficient processing of cases. Fed. R.Bankr.P. 1001 states that the “rules shall be construed to secure the just, speedy, and inexpensive determination of every case and proceeding.” Fed. R. Bankr.P. 1001.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
406 B.R. 653, 2009 WL 1566160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jasinski-v-monongalia-general-hospital-in-re-jasinski-pawb-2009.