Philadelphia Gas Works v. Esola

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 29, 2019
Docket19-00015
StatusUnknown

This text of Philadelphia Gas Works v. Esola (Philadelphia Gas Works v. Esola) 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
Philadelphia Gas Works v. Esola, (Pa. 2019).

Opinion

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA IN RE : Chapter 7 DEBBIE ESOLA, : Bankruptcy No. 18-17737-AMC DEBTOR :

PHILADELPHIA GAS WORKS, PLAINTIFF : Adv. Proc. No. 19-00015-AMC v. : DEBBIE ESOLA, DEFENDANT

Ashely M. Chan, United States Bankruptcy Judge OPINION I. INTRODUCTION In this adversary proceeding, Philadelphia Gas Works (“PGW”), a municipally owned gas utility in Philadelphia, seeks to have this Court determine that the $8,982.03 unsecured obligation owed to PGW by Debbie Esola (“Debtor”), on account of unbilled gas usage at her residence, is nondischargeable pursuant to 11 U.S.C. §§ 523(a)(2), 523(a)(4), or 523(a)(6). Because the Court finds that the Debtor fraudulently intended to misappropriate gas from PGW that was worth $8,982.03, the Court concludes that such debt arose from larceny and, therefore, is nondischargeable pursuant to § 523(a)(4).

Il. FACTUAL FINDINGS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY Upon consideration of the testimony and evidence presented at trial, the Court makes the following findings of fact. Prior to filing for bankruptcy, the Debtor had rented a property at 2625 S. Darien Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (“Darien Street Property’’) where, initially, gas payments were included in her rent. PGW Ex. 14; Trial Tr. 93:16-17, 96:24-97:2, 98:14-17, Oct. 18, 2019 (“Trial Tr.”). Because gas payments were included in her rent, she did not receive any gas bills directly. Trial Tr. 94:20-95:3. At some point during her tenancy at the Darien Street Property, the landlord informed her that her rent would no longer include gas. /d. at 95:1-3, 98:18-20. At that point, she called PGW to have gas service put into her name and began receiving PGW bills. Id. at 95:1-3, 98:21-99:3. Before the Debtor entered into a lease at 2537 S. 8" Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (“Property”), the Property was occupied by tenant John Lejko (“Tenant”). PGW Ex. 10; Trial Tr. 90:14-22. On May 6, 2010, PGW terminated gas service at the Property on account of Tenant’s non-payment. Pre-Trial St. [ 8; PGW Ex. 4, 5; Trial Tr. 32:22-33:4, 112:8-12. Terminating gas service involves a PGW technician shutting off the gas meter valve and locking the valve in the off position with a “bike lock.” Trial Tr. 26:4-6, 32:18-34:1. Separately, on November 1, 2011, the Philadelphia Department of Licenses and Inspections issued a violation against the Property finding that the Tenant had been stealing electric service, creating a hazard for the entire block. Ex. D-1; Trial Tr. 60:2-14. The Property’s owner had the electrical hazard fixed. Ex. D-1; Trial Tr. 61:2-6. Ultimately, the Tenant was evicted in 2011. Trial Tr. 90:14-22. In February 2012, the Debtor entered into a residential lease for the Property with a rental term beginning April 1, 2012. PGW Ex. 11 p. 1. She had to initial every page of the lease, which

clearly states on page three that she is responsible for paying for gas and electric service. Id. at p. 3. Although the Debtor’s lease term for the Property began in April 2012, the lease states that she would not move in until May 15, 2012. Jd. She was unable to take immediate possession of the Property because the Tenant had stolen pipes and damaged the Property, rendering repairs necessary before she could begin her occupancy. Trial Tr. 87:4-12. After the repairs were completed, the Debtor spent the spring and summer of 2012 moving her belongings into the Property. /d. at 87:15-17, 108:10-21. At the time she began moving her belongings into the Property, the gas service at the Property was already turned on, despite PGW’s 2010 termination. Id. at 87:23-24. At some point after the Debtor began moving her belongings into the Property, the Debtor called PECO to set up an account for electrical service in her name. Jd. at 88:4-6. On July 9, 2012, the Debtor also called PGW to set up an account in her name. PGW Ex. 6; Pre-Trial St. {| 21. Because PGW’s records indicated gas service had been terminated at the Property in 2010, PGW would require a technician to come out to the Property to restore gas service. PGW Ex. 5, 6; Trial Tr. 50:5-51:7. The PGW customer contact record from that call reflects that the Debtor told the PGW customer service representative that she would call back later to schedule the service appointment. PGW Ex. 6. However, the Debtor never called back to make this appointment. Pre-Trial St. { 21. Around October 2012, the Debtor began residing in the Property full time. Trial Tr. 87:4-6, 1-5, 97:19-23. Later, on March 4, 2016, after the Debtor had resided continuously at the Property for almost four years, a PGW technician visited the Property in response to an unbilled usage tip. Id. at 5:24-6:1, 55:18-56:2; PGW Ex. 7. The technician was unable to gain access and posted a

“Meter Access Notice” to the Property which provides a phone number for the occupant to call to schedule a time for PGW to return. Trial Tr. 56:4-17; PGW Ex. 7. The Debtor never responded to the Meter Access Notice. Trial Tr. 56:24-57:1. Ultimately, on October 26, 2018, PGW went to the Property to “abandon” gas service. PGW Ex. 8; Pre-Trial St. 9, 11. The abandonment process involves PGW technicians digging down to the gas main and disconnecting the gas pipe leading to the property from the gas main. Pre-Trial St. { 10. While PGW was in the process of abandoning gas service, the Debtor ran out of the Property to ask what was going on. Trial Tr. 96:8-12, 113:12-13, 115:3-5, 120:8-9. She was told that gas service at the Property was being abandoned and that she needed to call PGW to restore service. Jd. at 96:11-16, 113:12-13, 115:5-6, 120:9. The Debtor thereafter called PGW to set up an account in her name and restore service. PGW Ex. 3, 15; Pre-Trial St. { 12. Notably, the Debtor never called her landlord to ask about the abandonment of gas service, nor did she ever challenge the abandonment of service while on the call with PGW. Ex. 15; Trial Tr. 114:6-115:3, 115:10-116:2, 117:13-16. Instead, the Debtor simply asked for service to be restored. See PGW Ex. 15. In response to questioning by the PGW customer service representative for a required credit check, the Debtor stated that she had not had an account with PGW for years, she was a tenant at the Property, and her lease had started on “October 1.” Id. However, the Experian credit check flagged that the Debtor had been “linked” to the Property since June 2012, not October of 2018. PGW Ex. 3, 14, 15; Pre-Trial St. { 13. During the call, the customer service representative also told the Debtor that PGW had been conducting an unbilled usage investigation of the Property. PGW Ex. 15; Trial Tr. 14:18-21. As result of the call, PGW’s Revenue Protection Unit (“RPU”) was alerted to the Debtor’s request for service and the possibility of gas theft at the Property. Pre-Trial St. { 14;

Trial Tr. 32:3-9. In response, the RPU scheduled a safety check/unbilled usage investigation for October 31, 2018. Pre-Trial St. J 16. On October 31, 2018, a PGW field service technician visited the Property and discovered that (1) the bike lock used to lock the meter valve in the closed position in 2010 was missing; (2) the meter valve was turned to the “on” position; (3) there was a significant amount of natural gas in the fuel line, indicating that gas usage had occurred recently; and (4) the Electronic Reading and Transmitting (“ERT”) device, known as the “ERT head,” which actually tracks gas usage, had been removed, causing it to cease recording and transmitting gas usage.'! PGW Ex. 1, 2; Pre- Trial St. (17; Trial Tr. 24:8-20, 25:13-17, 26:4-17, 29:3-8, 37:15-39:8. In fact, during numerous remote checks on the Property’s ERT device by PGW between the time that the gas was shut off in 2010 and the technician’s visit, the ERT device never reflected any change in gas usage at the Property.

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Philadelphia Gas Works v. Esola, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/philadelphia-gas-works-v-esola-paeb-2019.