Landmark Finance Corp. v. Cox

2 B.R. 739, 1980 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17788
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Georgia
DecidedJanuary 22, 1980
DocketBankruptcy 377-25
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2 B.R. 739 (Landmark Finance Corp. v. Cox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Landmark Finance Corp. v. Cox, 2 B.R. 739, 1980 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17788 (S.D. Ga. 1980).

Opinion

ORDER ON APPEAL

BOWEN, District Judge.

This is an appeal from an order of the Honorable Herman W. Coolidge, Bankruptcy Judge for this district. The appeal has been decided by the undersigned District Judge under Local Rule 2.1 regarding assignment of cases. The record on appeal is deficient. It does not even contain a copy of the contract on which the case turns. The contract is not absolutely essential to this Court’s review however, and because of the age of the case, expansion of the record has not been directed. Bankruptcy Rule 806 casts the burden of preparation of the record on the parties. Nevertheless, it is transmitted by the Bankruptcy Judge, and it should contain the documentation necessary to afford the reviewing Court a complete understanding of the case. The Bankruptcy Judge should require amendments to the designation of contents of the record on appeal after careful inspection thereof.

I

Appellant, Landmark Finance Corporation, a creditor of the bankrupt, filed a complaint on February 14, 1978, seeking to have its debt excepted from discharge alleging the bankrupt’s fraud under section 17a(2) of the Bankruptcy Act 1 , 11 U.S.C. § 35(a)(2). In denying the complaint on April 19,1978, the Bankruptcy Judge determined that the issue of fraud was moot because the loan contract in question violated the Georgia Industrial Loan Act (GILA) and was therefore void in its entirety. Landmark appeals from the Bankruptcy Judge’s order.

The original loan contract between the parties was dated February 11, 1976. Renewal contracts were dated November 18, 1976, and September 30,1977. The validity of the contracts was never raised by the parties. Su a sponte the Bankruptcy Judge inquired whether the loan complied with the Georgia Court of Appeals decision in Consolidated Credit Corporation v. Peppers, 144 Ga.App. 401, 240 S.E.2d 922 (1977). On this issue Judge Coolidge said:

The “Peppers” decision holds that the proper meaning of “face amount of contract” as defined in Section 25-315 of the Georgia Code Annotated is the amount necessary for the borrower to borrow in order to obtain the amount of money he desires.
All contracts in this case are for more than eighteen (18) months. The amount necessary for the borrower to borrow from Landmark in order to obtain the amount needed did not include interest. Under these contracts the interest was calculated and was to be included in and repaid monthly under the repayment plan. In applying the rules set forth in “Peppers”, this court concludes that Landmark did include the interest that was to be paid in the future in the computational base used to calculate the loan fee and such calculation did result in a fee in excess of that permitted by the Georgia Industrial Loan Act.

The penalty for violation of the GILA is prescribed in section 25-9903 of the Georgia Code. At the time the loan contracts were executed, this section provided in pertinent part that “[a]ny loan contract made in violation of [the GILA] shall be null and void.” This provision was amended in its entirety effective March 14, 1978. The “null and void” language was retained with the added proviso that “ . . . there shall be no forfeiture of the principal amount of the loan contract if the lender shows by a preponderance of the evidence that the violation is the result of a bona fide clerical or typographical error.” Act of March 14, *741 1978, No. 1035, § 1(a), 1978 Ga.Laws 1033 [codified at Ga.Code Ann. § 25-9903(a) (Cum.Supp.1979)].

At issue in the Bankruptcy Court’s ruling was subsection “c” of the amended statute which provides:

If a contract is made in good faith in conformity with an interpretation of [the GILA] by the appellate courts of this State or in a rule or regulation officially promulgated by the commissioner after public hearings, no provision in this section imposing any penalty shall apply, notwithstanding that after such contract is made, such rule or regulation is amended, rescinded, or determined by judicial or other authority to be invalid for any reason.

Appellant contended that this statute precludes application of the “null and void” penalty in a Peppers -type situation when the loan in question antedates Peppers. In response, the Bankruptcy Judge noted that all pertinent transactions in the controversy preceded the effective date of the amendment. The Bankruptcy Court determined that the Act was not retroactive in its application, and therefore the “null and void” penalty applied to the loan contracts.

In this appeal Landmark advances three arguments: (1) the Bankruptcy Court passed upon the validity of the loan contract when it issued an Order of Abandonment at the First Meeting of Creditors, hence the issue was res judicata between the parties; (2) since neither party questioned the validity of the contract, the bankrupt effectively waived this issue, and the court should not have raised it independently; (3) the 1978 amendment to the GILA, codified at section 25 — 9903(c) of the Georgia Code Annotated, insulates the loan contracts from the “null and void” penalty despite their non-conformance with Peppers.

II

Although this Court was not supplied with a copy of the Order of Abandonment, it appears from appellant’s brief that Judge Coolidge issued the order in favor of Landmark at the First Meeting of Creditors on January 18, 1978. Peppers had been decided at this time, and Landmark asserts that the Order of Abandonment “based on the subject contract” determined the validity of the loan and was therefore res judicata between the parties.

This contention prompts consideration of the basic principle that “[b]efore res judicata can be invoked, a valid judgment, usually in another action, between the same parties or their privies must have adjudged some matter with finality.” IB Moore’s Federal Practice ¶ 0.409[1] at 1001. The summary abandonment of collateral security or burdensome property does not meet these criteria. It is not a final judgment, rather its purpose is to dispose of property “which is either worthless, or overburdened, or for any other reason certain not to yield any benefit to the general estate.” 4A Collier ¶ 70.42[2] at 502. Thus, in entering an Order of Abandonment, the Bankruptcy Court performed an administrative function and did not finally adjudicate the validity of the loan contracts. Accordingly, the Bankruptcy Judge’s action at the First Meeting of Creditors did not preclude later consideration of the validity issue.

Ill

In the order determining the dischargeability of the debt, the Bankruptcy Judge questioned the validity of the loan sua sponte. Appellant’s second argument challenges the propriety of this action.

The statutory provisions for discharge are remedial in nature. 1A Collier ¶ 14.02 at 1262. As the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals stated in Jones v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 B.R. 739, 1980 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17788, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/landmark-finance-corp-v-cox-gasd-1980.