Musso v. Tesmetges (In Re Tesmetges)

47 B.R. 385, 1984 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21185
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedDecember 17, 1984
DocketCV-84-3001, Bankruptcy No. 180-07354, Adv. No. 183-0085
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 47 B.R. 385 (Musso v. Tesmetges (In Re Tesmetges)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Musso v. Tesmetges (In Re Tesmetges), 47 B.R. 385, 1984 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21185 (E.D.N.Y. 1984).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

PLATT, District Judge.

This action comes here on appeal by the debtor and defendants and on cross-appeal by the Trustee from a decision rendered by Judge Manuel J. Price of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court of the Eastern District of New York after a three day trial held in January of 1984. In that decision, Judge Price awarded the Trustee an equitable lien of $18,559.95 on the property held by the debtor’s sister. For the reasons stated below, both the appeal and cross-appeal are denied and the decision of the Bankruptcy Judge is affirmed.

Background

The debtor, Harry Tesmetges, filed for voluntary bankruptcy under Chapter 7 on November 28, 1980. In February of 1982, the Trustee in Bankruptcy, Robert Musso, filed a complaint which was subsequently amended in March of 1983, seeking to have certain improved property consisting of a residential dwelling located at 168-44 89th Avenue, Jamaica, New York, declared to be that of the debtor’s on the grounds that the debtor’s transference of title to his sister for no consideration in 1972 was a fraudulent conveyance. Alternatively, the Trustee sought a ruling declaring that the debt- or’s estate included an equitable lien retained on the 89th Avenue property to the extent of the payments made by him on the property through November of 1983 after transferring title in 1972.

According to Judge Price, the Trustee subsequently withdrew his declaratory judgment action based on his fraud claim, and thus, the only issue before Judge Price was whether and to what extent an equitable lien existed on the 89th Avenue property in favor of the Trustee. In the Matter of Harry Tesmetges, No. 180-07354, Adv. Pro. No. 182-0085, Slip Op. at 28 (Bkrtcy.E.D.N.Y. June 22, 1984). It should be noted that the Trustee, in the present appeal, claims that he did not intend to drop his declaratory judgment action and that it was error for Judge Price to find that he had not preserved it.

Before proceeding further, it will be useful at this point to summarize the ownership history of the 89th Avenue property as the debtor alleged it to have existed and then, review the events in which the Bankruptcy Judge found contrary evidence. *387 The debtor claimed that at the time of his sister Mary’s second marriage at age 19 in 1965, his parents transferred the 89th Avenue property to him. Title to the property was allegedly given to him to hold for his sister as her dowry 1 because of her minority and because her parents wanted to determine whether her second marriage would be “successful” before delivering the title to her. The second reason proffered for giving the debtor title was because his parents had wanted to take out a mortgage on the property in order to give their daughter the money; however, because they were unable to take out a mortgage, they asked their son to do it. The debtor alleged that this was his reason for taking out an $11,000 mortgage from Greenpoint Savings Bank shortly after receiving title. The money was allegedly used by his sister and her new husband, William Lombard, as a down payment on the new home they were purchasing.

Between 1965 and 1972, the debtor paid the real estate and water taxes on the property and made payments on the mortgage. In May of 1972, the debtor transferred the title of the property to his solely owned corporation, Arcadia Realty. Then, on behalf of Arcadia, the debtor took out a second mortgage on the property for $22,-000. Shortly thereafter, in September of 1972, the debtor transferred the title of the property to his sister for the alleged reason of fulfilling his parents’ intent to give his sister a dowry. Between 1972 and November of 1983, three years after his bankruptcy filing, the debtor continued paying the taxes on the property and making payments on the first mortgage and the second until 1977. The debtor’s sister first learned of this second mortgage in 1977 when its holder threatened to foreclose on the property because the debtor had fallen in arrears on his payments. The debtor’s sister paid the amount due and owing on this second mortgage.

Finally, the debtor alleged that the monies used to pay the taxes and first mortgage on the property came from his mother’s social security checks; he claimed that he had merely acted as a conduit for her by cashing her checks and making these payments on her behalf as a means of completing his parents’ gift of a dowry to his sister.

Having summarized the debtor’s version of the ownership history of the 89th Avenue property, we may now review the aspects in its history which the Bankruptcy Judge found to be contrary to the debtor’s version. First of all, Judge Price found no evidence to substantiate the debtor’s allegation that the $11,000 first mortgage was ever given to his sister and her new husband to purchase a home. In the Matter of H. Tesmetges, slip op. at 4-5, 9-12, 21-22. The newlywed couple executed their own mortgage for $18,000 two weeks before the debtor executed the first mortgage; moreover, at the time the couple executed the mortgage, they claimed to have only received about $6,000 in wedding gifts. Id.

Secondly, Judge Price found that the debtor’s claim that he transferred the property’s title to his sister in order to fullfill his parents intent to give her a dowry and because he, himself, was marrying a non-Greek, was simply “incredible.” In the Matter of H. Tesmetges, slip op. at 12. Judge Price noted how seemingly odd it was that the debtor, supposedly an experienced real estate broker, would transfer the property to his sister for no consideration, without telling her of the second mortgage, and moreover, for the two of them, to permit the property to sit idle, unrented and unused for so many years.

Thirdly, Judge Price found the debtor’s contention that he had continued making payments on the property from 1965 to *388 1983 in order to fulfill his parents’ dowry to his sister and that the monies for the payments had come from his mother’s Social Security checks, were similarly “incredible.” In the Matter of H. Tesmetges, slip op. at 25. As Judge Price observed, in order for him to believe that the mother’s monthly checks of $313 were used to cover “all her expenses, including the heating for [her] twelve room house, and the monthly payments to Greenpoint Savings Bank [the first mortgage], I would have to suspend all common sense.” Id. at 25. The judge went on to note that “the debtor’s story is contradicted not only by common sense but other portions of his testimony.” Id. For example, how could the debtor have used his mother’s checks while he himself was listing her as a dependent for tax purposes? Or, for example, why did the debt- or not list his alleged obligation to pay on the first mortgage when he filed for bankruptcy, and yet still continue making those payments while he was “bankrupt?”

Finally, Judge Price concluded that even though there was no concrete evidence of an understanding between the debtor and his sister, one must have existed between them. In the Matter of H. Tesmetges, slip op. at 34-35.

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Bluebook (online)
47 B.R. 385, 1984 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/musso-v-tesmetges-in-re-tesmetges-nyed-1984.