Moore v. Gilmore (In Re Gilmore)
This text of 31 B.R. 615 (Moore v. Gilmore (In Re Gilmore)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
ORDER
The essential facts in this appeal from the bankruptcy court are not in dispute. Appellant Gilmore’s husband had incurred debts which resulted in a workman’s lien being placed on the couple’s home. 1 On April 17,1981 the lien was reduced to judgment. On June 26,1981 a sheriff’s sale was conducted and the creditor, Mr. Lemon, bid in the amount of his judgment. The sale was confirmed by the state court on July 10, 1981. 2 On May 25, 1982 Mrs. Gilmore filed a Chapter 13 wage-earner plan. Two days later, on May 27, 1982 Mr. Lemon sold his interest in the property to Mrs. Moore. 3 It appears to be uncontested that Mr. Lemon’s investment consisted of the satisfaction of his judgment in the amount of $6,456, curing approximately $3,000 in arrearages on the underlying mortgage, and assuming the remaining balance of the mortgage in the approximate amount of $17,000 for a total investment of $26,456. 4 The fair market value (FMV) of the home was estimated *617 by Mr. Lemon at $35,000 and by Mrs. Gilmore at $42,000. The price actually paid, therefore, represents somewhere between 63 and 76 percent of FMY.
Mrs. Gilmore asserts that this percentage range does not constitute “reasonably equivalent value” within the meaning of 11 U.S.C. § 548. 5 The bankruptcy court granted Mrs. Moore summary judgment on the basis that the foreclosure sale was not a “transfer” within the meaning of the Act, and thus found it unnecessary to reach the question of value. 6
At the outset, I will assume without deciding that the sale constituted a transfer. The Act defines that term as follows:
“[Transfer means every mode, direct or indirect, absolute or conditional, voluntary or involuntary, of disposing of or parting with property or with an interest in property ....
11 U.S.C. § 101(41).
This language may well be sufficiently broad to encompass the divestiture of a debtor’s interest in property resulting from a foreclosure sale thereby triggering the inquiries contained in § 548. 7 Cf., In re Worcester, 28 B.R. 910, 914 (Bkrtcy.C.D.Cal. 1983).
The leading case in point emanating from this Circuit is In re Madrid, 21 B.R. 424 (Bkrtcy.App., 9th Cir.1982), appeal pending. In rejecting the mechanical analysis urged by the debtor, which would merely compare the price actually paid with FMV, the Court held:
If we consider the question of price adequacy in the context of foreclosure law we find, not surprisingly, that mere inadequacy will not upset a foreclosure sale. “[T]here must be in addition proof of some element of fraud, unfairness or oppression as accounts for and brings about the inadequacy of price.”
The law of foreclosure should be harmonized with the law of fraudulent conveyances. Compatible results can be obtained by construing the reasonably equivalent value requirement of Code § 548(a)(2) to mean the same as the consideration received at a non-collusive and regularly conducted foreclosure sale. Thus, in the absence of defects, such foreclosure withstands avoidance as a fraudulent conveyance.
21 B.R. at 427 (citations omitted). 8
Adding impetus to the force of Madrid is the observation that in that case, the debtor was attempting to avoid a transfer resulting from non-judicial foreclosure of a deed *618 of trust. In the instant matter, the debtor had available a myriad of state-imposed protections. The lien was judicially reduced to judgment. The sale was regularly conducted by a public officer, and thereafter judicially confirmed pursuant to RCW § 6.24.100. At all stages of the proceedings the debtor was free to present such legal and equitable defenses as may have been available to her. Further, as noted previously, the debtor, and her estate, enjoyed a , one-year statutory redemption period. Under these facts and circumstances, the rationale of Madrid is persuasive indeed.
To give effect to debtor’s position . would be tantamount to extending Washington’s redemption period from one year to almost two. No doubt Congress has the power to pre-empt state policy and to accomplish exactly that result. I am not persuaded, however, that such congressional intent is implicit in § 548. The Act is replete with examples demonstrating precisely the opposite intent, particularly in terms of avoidance powers conferred upon the trustee, 9 and the better reasoned approach would be that promulgated in Madrid; i.e., federal bankruptcy law should be harmonized with local law unless to do so would seriously compromise federal objectives.
Within the context of the instant factual scenario, it is not difficult to envision debt- or’s position as obtaining a result detrimental to state and federal concerns alike. If the existing one-year statutory redemption period is a factor affecting the price a bidder is willing to pay at a foreclosure sale, 10 then it would follow that a two-year redemption/avoidance period would have a similar, but more pronounced, impact. A bidder at a forced sale, knowing that the judgment debtor would have a year in which to redeem, and then potentially an additional year in which to avoid the sale if he or she should file bankruptcy, would adjust his bid accordingly to reflect the risks. In so doing, the bid price would invariably be even more disparate from the FMV obtainable in an armslength transaction. .This in turn would place the trustee in an even stronger position to raise § 548. The bidder, recognizing the specter of interminable delay and legal costs in protecting his investment during possible bankruptcy proceedings, would thus be inclined to bid even less. In short, we would be faced with an ever-spiraling dilemma feeding upon itself to the detriment of both the parties immediately concerned and the interests of society in promoting a predictable scheme of satisfying judgments and ascertaining title to real property.
This is not to say that Madrid should be read as standing for a per se rule that a state determination of regularity in a sale should necessarily be issue preclusive in subsequent bankruptcy proceedings. No doubt occasions could arise where a foreclosure sale would be so oppressive or otherwise inequitable that it would simply be unconscionable to let the result stand. See, e.g., In re Richard, 26 B.R. 560, 561 (Bkrtcy D. Rhode Island 1983).
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31 B.R. 615, 1983 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15669, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-gilmore-in-re-gilmore-waed-1983.