Ring v. Wittmeyer (In Re Wittmeyer)

311 B.R. 137, 2004 Bankr. LEXIS 1032, 2004 WL 1454397
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. New York
DecidedJanuary 30, 2004
Docket1-19-10186
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 311 B.R. 137 (Ring v. Wittmeyer (In Re Wittmeyer)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ring v. Wittmeyer (In Re Wittmeyer), 311 B.R. 137, 2004 Bankr. LEXIS 1032, 2004 WL 1454397 (N.Y. 2004).

Opinion

MICHAEL J. KAPLAN, Bankruptcy Judge.

The Court writes today because the simple facts presented by stipulation in this Adversary Proceeding offer a vehicle upon which to memorialize and reinforce two parallel lines of reasoning that have guided this writer’s decisions in all of the many, many times that this or a similar issue has been presented to this writer. Title to an asset is in the Debtor, but someone else who is not a debtor in a bankruptcy case claims that all equitable and beneficial interest in the asset belongs to him. The line of reasoning that has invariably guided this writer’s rulings in similar instances in the past, and in this case, is that where there is a recording statute, and a claimant seeks to prove ownership adverse to the public record, and he or she was a party to the decision to establish that public record, that claimant will not be heard to claim that public record is wrong.

The parallel line of reasoning is that when there exists a way that a claimant could have used a statute or public record to document the property claim that he is now asserting, but he chose not to ascertain its existence or to avail himself of it, he may not be heard to now claim that he should be treated here as if he had availed himself of the statute and had done *139 so with flawless documents. (We know that even car dealers, construction companies, and banks sometimes make a mistake that is fatal to their claim of a perfected lien). One may not be heard here to claim that he should be treated as if he were a perfected secured lienholder on a motor vehicle, or inventory, or land, when in fact he chose not to utilize the sometimes-treacherous statutory method to obtain a perfected lien on the asset (or land, or inventory, etc.).

The simple stipulated facts here are that the Debtor and her ex-husband were divorced sometime prior to her Chapter 7 filing. At the time of the divorce the ex-husband Michael Wittmeyer had in his possession a 1997 Harley Davidson Sportster Motorcycle which was “titled,” under New York Motor Vehicle Title Law, to Kimberly L. Wittmeyer only. He was the primary user of the motorcycle. He paid for the motorcycle (the source of funds is unknown to the Court), and it “was titled to his wife because he was unable to obtain a loan in his own name due to his poor credit.” (The Court presumes that whatever loan Kimberly Wittmeyer took out to purchase the motorcycle was fully paid off by Michael Wittmeyer and is not a claim here against her Chapter 7 bankruptcy estate.)

The matrimonial agreement and decree were silent as to any Harley Davidson motor vehicle and did not make any provision for distribution of any property, but “merely stated that all personal property had been divided to the parties’ mutual satisfaction.”

Kimberly Wittmeyer’s Chapter 7 Petition was filed on November 18, 2002, and on or about December 20, 2002, Michael Wittmeyer sold the motorcycle over an internet auction service to a purchaser in Tacoma, Washington for the sum of $5,000. The question is whether the Trustee is entitled to the $5,000 simply because title was in the Debtor.

Initially, the Court notes that the fact that the motorcycle was sold post-petition probably makes that sale avoidable under 11 U.S.C. § 362 and 11 U.S.C. § 549. 1 However, the Trustee does not wish to avoid the sale, he wishes to obtain the proceeds of the sale. Consequently, the Court will ignore the fact that the sale was post-petition for purposes of this decision.

This type of fact pattern is presented in many different contexts. For example, in the Bench Ruling by this writer in the case of Allen Clark, Bankruptcy No. 97-10930 K, something akin to the “reverse” of this fact pattern was addressed. There, a motor vehicle was titled to a man’s daughters. He asserted that he bought the vehicle for their use on the understanding that it would eventually be sold and he would get the proceeds. His children held clear record ownership on the title certificate. The car was stolen and then was later recovered by the Buffalo police and towed to an impound lot. Because the daughters were record owners, the City of Buffalo notified them that if they did not come to pick up the car from the impound lot and pay off the impound charges by a specified date, the City would auction off the motor vehicle. Instead of redeeming the car from the impound lot, the dad — again he was not the record owner of the motor vehicle — filed a Chapter 13 petition through his Pre-paid Legal Services Plan, and his Pre-paid Legal Services lawyer called the City Attorney to tell the attorney that the Debtor was claiming ownership of the ve- *140 hide, that the Chapter 13 Petition had been filed, and that it would violate the automatic stay for the City to auction off the vehicle. The City auctioned off the vehicle anyway, selling the vehicle that had a book value of approximately $1600 for a $130 bid. The matter was brought before this Court on a motion to hold the City in violation of 11 U.S.C. § 362, and seeking damages. In ruling that the City had not violated the automatic stay when it relied on the record ownership status and ignored the attorney’s verbal assertion that his client had an equitable or beneficial interest in the vehicle, this Court said

“innocent third parties relying on official records of the State, and who otherwise have no duty to inquire beyond the record status, are not subject to the kind of ‘ownership by declaration’ that the Debtor seeks to make operative here.... There is no agreement or other instrument memorializing the Debt- or’s claim to the vehicle, ... The sum total of the Debtor’s claim against the City as of the time that that claim was first asserted was that these were the facts
as I have just related, as related by the Debtor to the Debtor’s counsel, and that counsel had reason not to believe his client, and the present argument is that counsel’s assertions thereof to the City should suffice to invoke the § 362 stay. Were that such under law, it would be bad policy. Whole new vistas of abuse, harassment, and delay would be opened. It would not longer be necessary even to execute conveyance documents to acquire standing to lead someone a merry and improper chase.... [The] argument that one has an equitable or beneficial interest simply by declaring it to be so, but having done nothing of record, would mean that you wouldn’t even have to bother with a conveyance.... File a bankruptcy, no conveyance, nothing executed, and saying ‘well, we, had an agreement that it belonged to me and that I would have equitable beneficial interest in it.’ This would open a whole new vista of abuse, harassment and delay. As a matter of statutory interpretation, the Debtor’s argument would necessitate a finding that property of the Debtor, for purpose of the statute, presumptively includes property that the Debtor’s attorney says that his or her client says the Debtor has some sort of interest in that could ultimately be found in a court to be a legally cognizable interest. That is simply too ephemeral, simply too vague, and no such rule can be made.

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311 B.R. 137, 2004 Bankr. LEXIS 1032, 2004 WL 1454397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ring-v-wittmeyer-in-re-wittmeyer-nywb-2004.