Spencer v. Blanchard (In Re Blanchard)

201 B.R. 108, 1996 Bankr. LEXIS 1170, 1996 WL 546319
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 23, 1996
Docket19-10567
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 201 B.R. 108 (Spencer v. Blanchard (In Re Blanchard)) 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
Spencer v. Blanchard (In Re Blanchard), 201 B.R. 108, 1996 Bankr. LEXIS 1170, 1996 WL 546319 (Pa. 1996).

Opinion

OPINION

DAVID A. SCHOLL, Chief Judge.

A. INTRODUCTION

In the instant proceeding (“the Proceeding”), J. KAJ SPENCER and ELLEN SPENCER (respectively “the Husband Plaintiff’ and “the Wife Plaintiff,” and collectively “the Plaintiffs”) contest the grant of a discharge to ROBERT I. BLANCHARD and ADELE G. BLANCHARD (respectively “the Husband Debtor” and “the Wife Debtor,” and collectively “the Debtors”) on the basis of 11 U.S.C. §§ 727(a)(2), (a)(3) and (a)(4), and the dischargeability of their own particular claims against the Debtors pursuant to 11 U.S.C. §§ 523(a)(2)(A), (a)(4), (a)(6). In what we consider to be their three strongest claims, the Plaintiffs allege that (1) the Wife Debtor’s interest in the corpus of a testamentary spendthrift trust, and (2) the alleged undervaluation of certain personal property and misstatements of income of the Debtors on their bankruptcy Schedules, justify denial of their discharge; and (3) the sale of assets subject to Plaintiffs’ security interest without remitting the proceeds therefrom to the Plaintiffs justifies denial of the discharge of their particular debt.

*112 We find, first, that the sale of assets subject to Plaintiffs’ security interest without remitting the proceeds therefrom to the Plaintiffs was not done with the requisite fraudulent intent nor malice. Second, we conclude that the trust in question is not part of the bankruptcy estate; therefore, there is no need to disclose a value of the trust on the Schedules. Third, we find that the Plaintiffs presented little, if any, admissible evidence regarding the value of the personal property which they allege the Debtors undervalued on their Schedules. This being the case, this court finds that the values designated by the Debtors in their Schedules are not proven to be substantially incorrect valuations, noting that all of the property, even assuming the accuracy of the Plaintiffs’ valuations, may be exempted. Therefore, the Debtors’ discharge will not be denied, nor will this court find that the Debtors’ indebtedness to the Plaintiffs is not dischargeable.

B. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The Debtors filed the underlying joint voluntary Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition on December 15, 1995, along with the requisite Schedules listing their property and its claimed values. On January 18, 1996, after the creditors’ meeting of that date, the duly-appointed interim trustee, Gloria Satriale, Esquire (“the Trustee”), filed a Report of No Assets.

The only noteworthy filing in this case, prior to the Proceeding, was the Debtors’ motion to avoid the judicial lien of the Plaintiffs on March 15, 1996. The motion was uncontested, and it was granted on April 16, 1996.

The Plaintiffs filed the complaint in the Proceeding in issue (“the Complaint”) on March 18, 1996. Pending the initial trial date of the Proceeding of May 14, 1996, the Debtors, on May 9, 1996, filed Amended Schedules which increased the listed value of a piano referenced on the Schedules from $500 to $8,000. After a lengthy continuance of the trial in the Proceeding, and our denial of the Plaintiffs’ motion for a further continuance, the trial was held on July 23,1996. At the conclusion of the trial we issued an order giving the parties until August 16, 1996 (the Plaintiffs), and August 23, 1996 (the Debtors), to file post-trial briefs.

On August 1,1996, subsequent to the trial, the Plaintiffs filed a Motion for Declaration of an Asset Case and/or the Removal of Trustee (“the Motion”). The Motion requests our determination that the trust in issue, created by the Wife Debtor’s great aunt, Cecilia S. Brill, of which the Wife Debt- or is a beneficiary (“the Brill Trust”), is an asset of the Debtors’ bankruptcy estate and that the Trustee be obliged to administer the assets of the estate or be replaced. Attached to the Motion are letters sent to the United States Trustee in April 1996 similarly protesting the Trustee’s administration of this case as a no-asset case. The Motion appears to have been filed as a response to the court’s observations at trial, in response to the Plaintiffs’ reference to the April letters, that the Plaintiffs had delayed so long in following up on same that it was probably assumed that the claims had been abandoned, and that administration of the case was about to be completed. The Motion was listed for a hearing on September 17, 1996. After a colloquy at that hearing, the Plaintiffs submitted several authorities to us which allegedly supported their position, referenced at page 126 infra.

The factual history underlying the Proceeding begins with an Asset Purchase Agreement dated September 14,1993, pursuant to which a corporation solely owned by the Debtors purchased two Sylvan Learning Centers (“the Centers”), located in York and Lancaster, Pennsylvania, respectively, from the Plaintiffs. The total amount to be paid for the Centers was $90,000. The Debtors paid $25,000 in cash, and the corporation presented a note and a personal guaranty from the Debtors in favor of the Plaintiffs for the remaining $65,000 of the purchase price, plus interest at a rate of 6.5% per year. In conjunction with the sale, a Security Agreement in favor of the Plaintiffs was executed by the parties.. Pursuant to the terms of this Security Agreement, the Debtors gave the Plaintiffs a security interest in the furniture and equipment that was located in the Cen *113 ters, and executed UCC-1 financing statements in the Plaintiffs’ favor.

The Debtors made payments to the Plaintiffs on the note and guaranty for approximately one and a half years, through April 1, 1995. Having received no further payments, on May 22, 1995, the Plaintiffs confessed judgment against the Debtors in the amount of $60,374.18, with interest, in the Common Pleas Court of York County, Pennsylvania.

Shortly thereafter, in May 1995, the Debtors sold certain of the furniture and equipment that was subject to the Plaintiffs’ security interest to a third party for $5,000. The purchaser owned a Sylvan Center in Florida and was contacted by the Debtors about a possible purchase of furniture and equipment only after her name was provided to them by Sylvan’s franchise headquarters. None of the proceeds of the sale of the furniture and equipment were turned over to the Plaintiffs. By way of explanation, the Debtors both testified at trial that they did not recall that the Plaintiffs had a security interest in the furniture and equipment. Their counsel, George Zumbano, testified and supported their testimony that he did not recall the taking of the security interest of the Plaintiffs, nor did he mention it to the Debtors as consideration during their disposition of the assets.

The Husband Debtor advised that the Debtors have retained and stored in their garage the remainder of the furniture that was formerly utilized in the two Centers. He noted that the parties have been discussing the return of the furniture as part of a settlement of this matter. We will order that they do so as a condition of this decision favorable to them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
201 B.R. 108, 1996 Bankr. LEXIS 1170, 1996 WL 546319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spencer-v-blanchard-in-re-blanchard-paeb-1996.