Pennsylvania Footwear Corp. v. Midlantic Bank, N.A. (In Re Pennsylvania Footwear Corp.)

204 B.R. 165, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 14, 1997 WL 16337
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 14, 1997
Docket15-00251
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 204 B.R. 165 (Pennsylvania Footwear Corp. v. Midlantic Bank, N.A. (In Re Pennsylvania Footwear Corp.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pennsylvania Footwear Corp. v. Midlantic Bank, N.A. (In Re Pennsylvania Footwear Corp.), 204 B.R. 165, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 14, 1997 WL 16337 (Pa. 1997).

Opinion

OPINION

DAVID A. SCHOLL, Chief Judge.

A INTRODUCTION

Presently before us in the instant bankruptcy case, recently converted from Chapter 7 to Chapter 11, is the disposition of an adversary proceeding (“the Proceeding”) instituted by PENNSYLVANIA FOOTWEAR CORPORATION (“the Debtor”) against MIDLANTIC BANK, N.A. (“the Bank”) seeking monetary damages for breach of an alleged forbearance agreement which caused the Debtor’s property, the Maple Plaza Shopping Center, located at 4233 Edgmont Avenue, Brookhaven, Pennsylvania (“the Property”), to be sold to a third party at a February 1992 sheriffs sale (“the February Sale”); and the Bank’s motion seeking relief from the automatic stay to foreclose on the Property once again (“the Motion”).

Although the February Sale was ultimately set aside, the Debtor alleged, in its initial Complaints in the Proceeding, that it suffered a loss of potential rents of $195,200 and a depreciation of the Property’s value of $160,000 as a result of the Bank’s action. In a Second Amended Complaint which the Debtor was permitted to file post-trial, it alternatively claimed that a loss of an opportunity to sell the Property in 1992 on account of the sheriffs sale resulted in damages of $330,157.07.

We find, first, that a contract did indeed exist between the Debtor and the Bank, whereby the Bank agreed to remove the Property from the February Sale list, and that the Bank’s failure to do so constituted a breach of its contractual duty to the Debtor. Second, in light of the proof of facts supporting the debtor’s earlier allegations, we reiterate our previous conclusion that the applicable statute of limitations did not bar the Debtor’s claims. Third, we provide support for an order in which we previously allowed the Debtor to amend its Complaint to assert a new theory of damages. Fourth, we believe that each of the measures of the various elements of damages submitted by the Debt- or, including the lost opportunity claims, have significant flaws except the claim for attorneys’ fees incurred in setting aside the February Sale.

We therefore will effect an equitable measurement of the Debtor’s damages, which minimizes adjustments for factors not considered by the Debtor. In so doing, we will also decide the Motion. We will grant the Motion on the conditions that the Bank remit damages of $3,500 on account of the Debtor’s reasonable attorneys’ fees incurred in setting aside the February Sale and that the Bank waive any deficiency claims against the Debt- or’s principal or his relatives individually arising from the underlying obligation to the Bank.

B. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The history of the Proceeding and the underlying bankruptcy ease, originally filed pro se as a voluntary Chapter 7 bankruptcy case on December 14, 1995, by Joel Karpo (“Joel”), its President and only officer, was related at length in a prior reported decision of August 14, 1996, denying the Bank’s motion for summary judgment in its favor in the Proceeding on the basis of limitations, In re Pennsylvania Footwear Corp., 199 B.R. 534 (Bankr.E.D.Pa.1996) (“Opinion I”). This recitation, id. at 537-40, will be reiterated only where it is necessary to update same and render this Opinion comprehensible. Ironically, it was the Bank’s elaborate motion to dismiss this case with prejudice which evoked the defensive pleading, filed on the last possible date to do so, id. at 545-46, which was found sufficient to toll limitations pursuant to the applicable Pennsylvania “sav *170 ing statute,” 42 Pa.C.S. § 5585(a), relative to the Debtor’s claims in the Proceeding. Id. at 546-51.

As we noted in Opinion I, both parties ultimately agreed to a non-jury trial which would be determined by this court. 199 B.R. at 538. That Opinion established September 12, 1996, as the trial date in the event that mediation, which turned out to be unsuccessful, did not result in a settlement. Id. at 538, 551.

As noted above, the original Complaint sought $195,200 on account of rents allegedly not collected and $160,000 for depreciation of the Property’s value as damages from the Bank in the Proceeding. On July 25, 1996, the Debtor obtained leave from this court to file an amended complaint adding claims for interest, attorney’s fees, and liability for subsequent real estate taxes as a result of the Bank’s actions. This amended complaint was, however, inexplicably not filed until shortly before trial on September 9, 1996.

The testimony at trial amplified certain aspects of the factual assumptions made in Opinion I, 199 B.R. at 538-40, but did not contradict any of them. Extensive testimony was adduced regarding the understandings of the interested parties and their counsel regarding the events surrounding the February Sale. Joel testified that he understood the agreement to mean that he would have six months to sell the Property after the anticipated sale of his other properties at 13 and 15 East Maple Avenue, Brookhaven, Pennsylvania (“the Maple Properties”), to Kahlil Farhat, and that he would pay the net proceeds of the sale of the Maple Properties to the Bank. Joel asserted that this understanding resulted in a second forbearance agreement (“the 2d Forbearance”), and was summarized in a letter dated February 4, 1992, from counsel for the Bank, Anthony D. Reagoso, Esquire, to Joseph Higgins, Esquire, the Debtor’s counsel. The letter stated that, “[i]f the shopping center is not sold within six months of the date of the transaction [to sell the Maple Properties] and/or [the Debtor] does not come up with the required amount of cash, the [P]roperty will be sheriffs sold.” The Property, however, was not taken off the February Sale list and was sold to a third party. Joel further testified that the Maple Properties’ sale did not take place until September 1993, but that,, after it finally did take place, the Debtor remitted the net proceeds of about $45,000 to the Bank. He also indicated that surgery which had resulted in the amputation of his legs caused by his severe diabetic condition was now completed and that consequently he anticipated providing better attention to the Property in the future.

In testimony presented on September 20, 1996, due to his unavailability on September 12, 1996, Reagoso testified that his understanding of the agreement memorialized in the February letter was that, if the Maple Properties sale transaction did not take place before the sale date, the Bank would sell the Property at the February Sale. He further testified that the only reason he did not attend the February Sale to represent the Bank’s interests was because the sale date was erroneously omitted from his calendar, and not because he was unaware that the sale was going to take place. Reagoso admitted that he indeed did not learn of the sale until March 4, 1992, when he received a phone call from the party who purchased the Property at the sale. That same day, Reago-so informed Higgins of the sale and also prepared a petition to set aside the sale, stating, inter alia,

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Bluebook (online)
204 B.R. 165, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 14, 1997 WL 16337, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pennsylvania-footwear-corp-v-midlantic-bank-na-in-re-pennsylvania-paeb-1997.