Peoples State Rank of Mazeppa v. Drenckhahn (In Re Drenckhahn)

77 B.R. 697, 1987 Bankr. LEXIS 1378
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedSeptember 3, 1987
Docket19-50044
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 77 B.R. 697 (Peoples State Rank of Mazeppa v. Drenckhahn (In Re Drenckhahn)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peoples State Rank of Mazeppa v. Drenckhahn (In Re Drenckhahn), 77 B.R. 697, 1987 Bankr. LEXIS 1378 (Minn. 1987).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM TO ORDER OF JULY 81, 1987, DISPOSING OF PLAINTIFF’S AND DEFENDANT’S CROSS-MOTIONS FOR DISMISSAL AND/OR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

GREGORY F. KISHEL, Bankruptcy Judge.

On July 31, 1987, this Court entered an order denying Plaintiff’s motion for dismissal without prejudice, granting Debtor’s 1 motion for summary judgment, and abstaining from Debtor’s request for awards of attorney fees and punitive damages in this adversary proceeding for denial of discharge under 11 U.S.C. § 727(a). The motions were originally argued to the Court on November 24, 1986, and submitted on the basis of that short oral argument and a substantial pre- and post-hearing development of the record. The Court enters this memorandum to set forth the Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, and general rationale, underlying the order disposing of the motions.

*700 Debtor filed a voluntary petition under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code in this Court on July 24, 1985. At all times material to these adversary proceedings, Debtor was a Goodhue County, Minnesota farmer. Plaintiff was his major pre-petition secured creditor for a period of at least ten years, and held a claim against him in excess of $138,000.00 as of the date of filing.

Plaintiffs Complaint in these adversary proceedings seeks denial of Debtor's discharge in bankruptcy under 11 U.S.C. §§ 727(a)(2), 727(a)(3), and 727(a)(5). Plaintiff premises its cause of action on the course of dealing between its officers and Debtor on several secured loans from Plaintiff to Debtor, and specifically on events occurring on and after January 4, 1984. Plaintiff has not prayed in the alternative for a finding of nondischargeability of debt under 11 U.S.C. § 523(a). In a scheduling order dated May 2, 1986, the undersigned required the parties to make substantive motions by July 16, 1986. Counsel requested and were granted a two-month extension of this deadline. In early October, 1986, Debtor’s counsel (untimely) submitted a motion in the alternative for dismissal or summary judgment, without setting it on for hearing. On October 9, 1986, the Court entered a scheduling order for briefing. On October 17, 1986, the Clerk of this Court received Debtor’s Motion for Dismissal Without Prejudice. The Court then set November 24, 1986, as the date for hearing on the cross-motions.

Since then, the parties have submitted various “Objections,” amended motions, affidavits and memoranda. These pleadings have thickened the file in this adversary proceeding by over one inch, when both parties ostensibly want to put this litigation to an end. The memoranda are rife with misspellings, typographical errors, mis-cita-tions, inconsistent substantive arguments and conclusions, and numerous other failings burdensome to the Court in its review. The increasing stridency of the accusations summarily made by both parties’ counsel in the memoranda is nothing short of astounding. It is obvious that the joinder of these motions is only the lastest — and now the last — in a series of increasingly hostile legal confrontations between these parties, commencing in the throes of Debtor’s financial difficulties as a farmer, continuing through a replevin action and post-replevin accusations of fraud and conversion, going through the convening of a Goodhue County grand jury at Plaintiffs behest to determine whether Debtor should be charged with the state-law felony offense of misappropriation of Plaintiff’s security, and culminating in Debtor’s bankruptcy filing. If every minute charge and counter-charge were examined and treated in detail, review of the record made on these motions would be stultifying.

This Court’s function is not to assuage hurt feelings, perceived emotional slights, or a party’s sense of degradation and betrayal — regardless of whether those wrongs are alleged by a debtor claiming that a creditor failed to meet expectations born of assurances made in past credit transactions, or by a creditor claiming that a debtor fraudulently abused established trust. This Court's function is to fairly and promptly administer the Bankruptcy Code and Rules, applying appropriate procedural and evidentiary burdens and substantive law to reach a result consistent with Congressional intent. The record made on these motions has hampered rather than helped the Court to do this. All counsel are to blame. However, “using something more than a brush-hook but something less than a bulldozer,” it is possible to clear away the excess verbiage to consider and decide the issues at hand.

I. PLAINTIFF’S MOTION FOR DISMISSAL WITHOUT PREJUDICE.

Plaintiff’s motion may be treated summarily. Plaintiff's counsel failed to properly place its dismissal without prejudice before the Court by failing to fully comply with LOC.B.BANKR.P. (D.Minn.) 116(c); thus, the Court must deny its motion. 2 First, the affidavit of no considera *701 tion required by the rule is executed by Plaintiff’s counsel. There is no allegation on the face of the affidavit that counsel actually has first-hand knowledge that consideration has not passed between Plaintiff and Defendant. In any event, execution of such an affidavit by an attorney — rather than one of Plaintiff’s officers or another person with actual knowledge — is unwise, if for no reason other than the professional responsibility questions it raises. See MINN.R.PROF.CONDUCT 3.7. Attorneys should in all but the rare case refrain from executing factual affidavits on behalf of their clients — a practice currently all too common in this Court, and one which should be actively discouraged.

Further, Plaintiff did not notify all creditors of the hearing on its request for dismissal, as required by the local rule. An objection to discharge under 11 U.S.C. § 727(a) (as opposed to an exception to the dischargeability of a particular debt under 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)) affects all parties in interest to the bankruptcy case. A private creditor who commences a § 727(a) proceeding takes on some of the attributes of a trustee, advancing the interests of all of a debtor’s creditors. He challenges conduct on the debtor’s part which goes beyond a mere harm to the plaintiff-creditor’s individual pecuniary interests. Conduct properly addressed under § 727(a) is a broad, deliberate failure on the debtor’s part to act fairly, equitably, and responsibly in the conduct of debtor-creditor relations, resulting in a more pervasive injury to bankruptcy’s equitable process of adjustment of those relations. In re Harrison, 71 B.R. 457, 459 (Bankr.D.Minn.1987). BANKR.R. 7041 requires notice to the Chapter 7 Trustee of the proposed dismissal of a non-trustee creditor’s adversary proceeding objecting to discharge.

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Bluebook (online)
77 B.R. 697, 1987 Bankr. LEXIS 1378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peoples-state-rank-of-mazeppa-v-drenckhahn-in-re-drenckhahn-mnb-1987.