Paine v. Dickey (In Re Paine)

250 B.R. 99, 44 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1021, 2000 Bankr. LEXIS 843, 2000 WL 943770
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJune 1, 2000
DocketBAP No. SC-99-1524. Bankruptcy No. 95-03045-PB7
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 250 B.R. 99 (Paine v. Dickey (In Re Paine)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paine v. Dickey (In Re Paine), 250 B.R. 99, 44 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1021, 2000 Bankr. LEXIS 843, 2000 WL 943770 (bap9 2000).

Opinion

OPINION

MARLAR, Bankruptcy Judge.

The debtors appeal the bankruptcy court’s order reopening their closed, no-asset chapter 7 1 case upon the motion of secured creditors. The creditors sought declaratory relief concerning the effect of the discharge injunction on their deficiency judgment, and alleged that there were previously undisclosed, non-exempt assets that were property of the estate. In its order, the bankruptcy court required the debtors to amend their schedules to add any omitted creditors or assets, and set a 30-day deadline for the creditors in which to file a complaint for nondischargeability.

The creditors seek to distinguish this case from In re Beezley, 994 F.2d 1433 (9th Cir.1993), which held that it is not necessary for a no-asset case to be reopened for the limited purpose of amending schedules to list an omitted creditor. However, we find that the debtors lack standing to appeal this order.

FACTS

In 1990 and 1991, Lloyd DeLaus Paine and Lorna Joyce Paine, (the “debtors”), executed two promissory notes for the sum of $1,020,000, which were secured by undeveloped real property located in Jamul, California (“Jamul Property”). The notes were executed in favor of Howard C. Dickey, Ruth P. Dickey, Henry Mortensen, Emil F. Jarosic, Lumn Family Trust, Leon S. Finnerty and Evelyn H. Finnerty (the “Finnerty Group”), Marjorie M. Brazil, and the predecessor in interest to, and the Howard C. Kuhle 1980 Trust (collectively the “creditors”). 2 By 1992, the debtors *102 had defaulted on the payments of both notes.

On March 28, 1995, the debtors filed a chapter 7 petition. At the time of the filing, they owed the creditors approximately $2 million on the notes, as well as several thousands of dollars in property taxes. The debtors listed neither the Jam-ul Property nor their obligations to the creditors in their schedules and statements. The debtors also allegedly failed to list as an asset a carved wooden eagle, which the creditors alleged was worth about $700,000 at the time of filing.

No deadline was set for filing proofs of claim in the case, as there appeared to be no assets. The deadline for nondischarge-ability complaints was July 3, 1995. The creditors, who, undisputedly, did not receive notice, nor did they have actual notice of the bankruptcy filing until 1998, did not file any complaints before the deadline passed. The debtors’ discharge was entered in July 1995. In August 1995, the bankruptcy court approved the trustee’s “no-asset” report, and closed the case.

In February 1997, the creditors filed a complaint in state court for judicial foreclosure of the first deed of trust on the Jamul Property. The debtors filed a declaration in that action stating that they intended to file a chapter 13 bankruptcy. They did not mention the prior chapter 7 case, nor did they plead the defense of discharge. The state court summary judgment proceedings and trial were continued pending the anticipated filing of the chapter 13 case.

The debtors filed a voluntary chapter 13 petition on March 2, 1998. It was at that time that the creditors first became aware of the prior chapter 7 case. The debtors’ chapter 13 schedules and statements listed the Jamul Property with a value of $1.3 million, and hens totaling $845,000. The wooden eagle was not listed as an asset, but, apparently, had been previously transferred to a family trust. The creditors immediately moved to dismiss the chapter 13 case, but, instead, the debtors voluntarily dismissed their case. The bankruptcy court granted the creditors’ request that the case be dismissed with a 180-day bar to refiling, and the dismissal order was entered on May 11,1998.

On June 19, 1998, the state court granted summary judgment in favor of the creditors, awarding them approximately $1.5 million, as well as ordering the foreclosure and sale of the Jamul Property. It further ordered that the debtors were personally liable for any deficiency judgment, and that the state court would retain jurisdiction to determine the amount of such deficiency.

At the sale held on September 1, 1998, the creditors obtained the property by credit bid in the amount of $845,000. The creditors applied for a deficiency judgment, but three days before the scheduled hearing on January 8, 1999, the debtors filed a Notice of Automatic Stay and Statutory Injunction in the state court, asserting for the first time that the unsecured deficiency debt had been discharged in the prior chapter 7 case. On January 21, 1999, the state court entered an order granting the deficiency judgment in the amount of $779,886.99. The state court declined, however, to rule on the legal effect of the discharge, leaving that matter to the bankruptcy court.

The following June 1999, the creditors filed in bankruptcy court a motion to reopen the debtors’ closed chapter 7 case, for the purpose of obtaining an order granting them relief from the discharge injunction “or any other appropriate rehef’ in order to enforce and collect their deficiency judgment, and for “any additional relief which is just and proper.” The creditors alleged that cause existed to reopen the case because the debtors “fraudulently procured *103 their discharge by failing to disclose substantial non-exempt assets which should have been made available to the chapter 7 trustee for liquidation to pay claims including the claims of Movants.”

The creditors presented Mr. Paine’s deposition testimony that the Jamul Property, which had not been scheduled in the chapter 7 case, had been appraised at $1.8 million in 1990, and that Mr. Paine had offers to purchase the property ranging from $1.3 to $1.7 million between 1990 and 1993. Mr. Paine also testified in the deposition that in October 1997 he owned a life-sized, hand-carved wooden eagle, which he acquired before the chapter 7 petition was filed. The creditors also presented declaration evidence which established the value of the eagle as $700,000 at the time of the bankruptcy filing. There was also evidence presented that the debtors owned other wooden sculptures which allegedly were transferred to a family trust.

The debtors filed an objection to the motion to reopen, and attached Mr. Paine’s declaration in which he attempted to explain that the assets were not property of the estate available for distribution to the creditors, or that they were worthless. The debtors objected to reopening the case because: (1) the time for seeking a revocation of the discharge had long since passed; (2) the creditors’ debt was an alleged contract debt which had been discharged in the chapter 7 case; and (3) the creditors had not filed a § 523 complaint. The debtors argued that reopening the case would be a meaningless gesture, citing Beezley.

A hearing took place on July 19, 1999. The United States Trustee, who had not filed a pleading, appeared and argued in favor of reopening, based on concerns about the debtors’ conduct and alleged failure to disclose assets.

The bankruptcy court ruled that Beezley was inapplicable to these facts.

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Bluebook (online)
250 B.R. 99, 44 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1021, 2000 Bankr. LEXIS 843, 2000 WL 943770, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paine-v-dickey-in-re-paine-bap9-2000.