Opel v. Daly (In Re Daly)

344 B.R. 304, 2005 Bankr. LEXIS 2933, 2005 WL 4114108
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 6, 2005
Docket5:02-BK-00605
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 344 B.R. 304 (Opel v. Daly (In Re Daly)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Opel v. Daly (In Re Daly), 344 B.R. 304, 2005 Bankr. LEXIS 2933, 2005 WL 4114108 (Pa. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

JOHN J. THOMAS, Bankruptcy Judge.

Statement of Facts & Procedural History

In 1989, Debtor purchased a disability insurance policy from New York Life Insurance Company (NYL). Debtor made a claim in July 1993 against the policy. NYL paid Debtor $400 a month for approximately four years before it terminated the policy.

On October 20, 1995, NYL filed a complaint in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania against the Debtor seeking the return of monies paid under the policy. Debtor responded, in part, by filing a counterclaim in an attempt to claim the policy’s benefits.

Without the assistance of counsel, Debt- or 1 filed a voluntary Chapter 13 petition on February 5, 2002. Of the documents filed in tandem with his petition, a handwritten notation was made on lined yellow paper that Debtor’s Schedule B encompassed “$400 in Fleet Bank” and “$2,700 in HSBC Bank.” The Court has not identified any other declaration of property ownership in the documents filed with Debtor’s original Chapter 13 petition. Included with his petition was a handwritten document with a declaration under the heading of “Schedule C” that “All property listed I declare as exempt.” See Doc. 1 at 2(3). Although Debtor did not disclose any additional assets in his “Schedule C”, he did list on his Statement of Financial Affairs (Official Form 7) three causes of action to which he is or was a party to within one year immediately preceding the filing of his case. See Doc. 1. These actions were listed as “Daly vs Dr. Fried Phil CCP Dec 517,01”, “Daly v. Dr Richmond N.Y. County”, and “NY Life v. Daly USDC E District Pa.” See id. Under the “NY Life v. Daly USDC E District Pa” heading, Debt- or further additionally listed “1st 2-negli-gence cases” and “3rd Disability ease”. See id.

On July 29, 2002, Debtor filed a handwritten document entitled Debtor’s Supplement “ADD" to Schedules and “ADD" to the matrix of creditors. See Doc. 52. In- *307 eluded in this document is the following passage:

In the USDC for the E Dist of Pa,
NY Life Ins Company vs ATerryDaly Civil XN# 95-6702 Contested debt of Debtor $167,000 Contested asset of Debtor $1,000,000 Based on a Private Disability Insurance Policy Lawyers
Debtor Rep. N.Y. Life Jeff Johnson, Esq Jeff Dailey

See id. at 1.

On August 9, 2002, Debtor filed a handwritten document with a primary heading of Amendment to Schedule A, Matrix of Creditors. See Doc. 60. This document contains a handwritten passage identical to the one written in the July 29, 2002 amendment.

Debtor’s Chapter 13 case was dismissed on September 3, 2002. The case was reinstated on October 10, 2002.

Debtor’s Chapter 13 was converted to a Chapter 7 on March 3, 2003 and Robert Opel was appointed soon after as the Interim Trustee.

Through the aid of an attorney, Debtor filed an amended petition and amended schedules on July 11, 2003. See Doc. 139. These amendments included a declaration on Schedule B that a number of lawsuits 2 involving Debtor and various entities, had a “Current Market Value of Debtor’s Interest in Property, without Deducting any Secured Claim or Exemption” of “25,-000.00.” On Schedule C, Debtor attributed “25,000.00” as the collective “Value of Claimed Exemption” of these causes of actions. He also listed “25,000.00” as their “Current Value of Property Without Deducting Exemption” based on “11 U.S.C. 522(d)(5) and 522(d)(ll)(D) and (11)(E).”

Debtor filed an identical amended Schedule C on July 23, 2003.

Debtor’s meeting of creditors was held on August 8, 2003 and “continued generally” by the Trustee. As of the date of this Court’s hearing on the present matters, the meeting of creditors had not concluded.

On October 1, 2003, the Trustee filed a motion to approve a $35,000.00 settlement of Debtor’s litigation with New York Life Insurance Co. 3

Debtor elected, yet again, to amend Schedules B & C on October 16, 2003. See Doc. 156. Once again, Debtor described eight lawsuits 4 on his Schedule B. Immediately above their descriptions, he included the statement “THE VALUE OF EACH OF THESE CLAIMS IS UNKNOWN; THEY (the claims) ARE IN *308 LITIGATION.” In addition, Debtor listed “UNKNOWN” in the column labeled “Current Market Value of Debtor’s Interest in Property, without Deducting any Secured Claim or Exemption” with regard to the lawsuits. Identical notations were made on Schedule C with regard to the “Value of Claimed Exemption” and the “Current Value of Property Without Deducting Exemption.” Debtor based these exemptions on “11 USC: 522(d)(5), 522(d)(ll)(D), 522(d)(ll)(E), 522(d)(10)(C), and/or 522(d)(10)(E).”

On November 13, 2003, the Trustee and New York Life Insurance Co. (“NYL”) filed individual objections to Debtor’s October 16, 2003 amendment.

Debtor filed responses to each objection on December 24, 2003, along with supplements to the exemptions claimed on Schedule C. These documents contained an unsigned declaration that “should this exemption Table be deemed in any way materially different from the Amendments to Exemptions filed by Debtor on October 16, 2003, then the parties are hereby placed on Notice that the debtor hereby elects, as per his right under 11 U.S.C. 1009, to exempt his property as per the exemptions and amounts herein listed.” Debtor lists a total of nine lawsuits between himself and various entities. Included in this amendment is detailed information regarding each cause of action, its current procedural posture, the specific law upon which his exemption claim is based, the exemption’s value and the asset’s current market value. 5 With regard to the NYL litigation, Debtor listed “$675,000” as the “Value of Claimed Exemption” and “$675,000” as the “Current Market Value.... ” Under the column entitled “Specify Law Upon which Debtor is Relying in Claiming Exemption,” Debtor lists sections 522(d)(10)(C) and 522(d)(ll)(E). 6

In response, the Trustee filed Chapter 7 Trustee’s Objections to Debtor’s Amendments to Schedule C (Property Claimed as Exempt) Filed on December 2b, 2003 on January 23, 2004. NYL also filed its Motion to Strike Amendments To Claim of Exemptions Filed on December 2b, 2003, or in the Alternative Objections of New York Life Insurance Company to the Exemptions Claimed by the Debtor by Amendment Filed on December 2b, 2003 on January 23, 2004. Debtor filed a response to these objections on February 17, 2003.

On February 19, 2004, Debtor’s counsel filed a

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
344 B.R. 304, 2005 Bankr. LEXIS 2933, 2005 WL 4114108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/opel-v-daly-in-re-daly-pamb-2005.