Sylvia Ngozi Emiabata

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedJuly 22, 2022
Docket21-30197
StatusUnknown

This text of Sylvia Ngozi Emiabata (Sylvia Ngozi Emiabata) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sylvia Ngozi Emiabata, (Conn. 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT DISTRICT OF CONNECTICUT NEW HAVEN DIVISION

In re: : Case No. 21-30197(AMN) SYLVIA NGOZI EMIABATA : Chapter 13 Debtor. : : ROBERTA NAPOLITANO : Chapter 13 Trustee : : RE: ECF No. 95

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION AND ORDER DISMISSING CHAPTER 13 CASE

For the reasons that follow, this Chapter 13 case will be dismissed because it was filed in the wrong place and in bad faith. This case centers on a dispute about a defaulted 2002 mortgage against residential property located in Texas. The creditor claims the debt now totals more than $730,000, with most of the amount representing accrued interest. ECF No. 63. The debtor claims the property is worth approximately $396,000. ECF Nos. 1, 63. The creditor claims the borrower is “contractually due for July 1, 2006.” ECF No. 63, p.4. The property is located at 508 Evening Grosbeak Drive, Pflugerville, Texas (the “Property”). Although the case has been pending more than a year, the debtor failed to complete a completed meeting of creditors pursuant to Bankruptcy Code §341(a) and failed to propose a confirmable Chapter 13 Plan. The procedural posture is non-sensical due to incomplete and misleading information from both the debtor Sylvia Ngozi Emiabata (“debtor”) and her primary creditor NewRez LLC d/b/a Shellpoint Mortgage Servicing as servicer for MTGLQ Investors, L.P. (“creditor”). The court raised its venue concern by issuing an Order directing the debtor to show cause why the case should not be transferred or dismissed. ECF No. 95. Section 1408, Title 28, United States Code permits a Chapter 13 case to be commenced in a district that is the domicile, residence, principal place of business, or location of the principal

assets of a person that is the subject of a case for the longer portion of the one and eighty (180) days immediately preceding such commencement. 28 U.S.C. § 1408. Here, the relevant time period is the 180-day period preceding the petition date of February 24, 2021, i.e., the period from August 28, 2020 through February 23, 2021 (the “Venue Period”).1 The debtor asserted in her petition that at times relevant to venue she resided in Connecticut. But the court has reason to doubt the veracity of her statement and it is unsupported by the record. In her petition, the debtor stated her mailing address was the Property in Pflugerville, Texas and that she lived at 857 Post Road, Fairfield, Connecticut. ECF No. 1, p. 2. But the Fairfield address is for a UPS Store, not a residence. About a

month after the petition date, the debtor filed a change of address notice stating her mailing address would be 857 Post Road, #139, Fairfield, Connecticut (the UPS Store) and stating a second address of 570 May Street, Naugatuck, Connecticut.2 After notice and an opportunity to be heard, the debtor offered the following evidence to support her claim that venue was proper in Connecticut:

1 The court is aware of the debtor’s litigation history in Connecticut, including an order entered by United States District Judge Dooley on July 16, 2020 (immediately preceding the Venue Period in this case) dismissing the case concluding it was brought in bad faith and for an improper purpose. See, ECF No. 62 in Philip Emiabata and Sylvia Emiabata v. Bank of New York Mellon Trust Company, N.A., et. al., Case No. 3:19-cv-01507(KAD). 2 The debtor consented to electronic service of notice and orders in this case. ECF Nos. 33, 34. • An unsworn statement that she was a member of “The Howard Whittemore Memorial Library” at 243 Church Street, Naugatuck, Connecticut;

• an affidavit from her husband, Philip Emiabata, including an undated printout from the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration showing that Nova Express – a business both the debtor and her husband claim to own – has a physical address of 570 Mat (sic) Street, Naugatuck, Connecticut; and

• a Verizon Wireless bill, with a billing period of August 20, 2021, to September 19, 2021 (a post-petition date time period) and containing a mailing address of 570 May Street, Naugatuck, Connecticut.

None of this information supports the debtor’s position. During at least two hearings the debtor claimed she would file a copy of a lease or other evidence of a rental arrangement for the property located at 570 May Street, Naugatuck, Connecticut during the relevant Venue Period. Despite the opportunity to do so, the debtor failed to supplement the record and as a result it is insufficient to establish Connecticut as the debtor’s domicile, residence, principal place of business, or location of principal assets during the Venue Period. Fed.R.Bankr.P. 1014(a)(2) provides the court with the authority to dismiss this case. In addition to the venue issue, there is cause to sua sponte dismiss this case as a misuse – and abuse – of the bankruptcy system. The debtor’s filing of this Chapter 13 case appears to be part of a years-long quest by the debtor and Philip Emiabata to invoke the bankruptcy automatic stay and to prevent the foreclosure of the Property. Review of the federal court records via the Public Access to Court Electronic Records (PACER) reveals the debtor and/or Philip Emiabata have filed approximately thirteen (13) bankruptcy cases in seven (7) Districts -- all of which were dismissed -- as summarized in the following table. Sylvia Emiabata_ | Case No. 04-10113 | Dismissed: 7/7/2004 Sylvia Emiabata_ | Case No. 04-14490 | Dismissed: 2/14/2005 Sylvia Emiabata | Case No. 05-12492 | Dismissed: 9/17/2007 Sylvia Emiabata_ | Case No. 08-12211 | Transferred: 1/8/2009 Sylvia Emiabata_ | Case No. 08-38275 | Dismissed: 8/5/2009 Case No. 09-37104 | Dismissed: 10/26/2009 Baecaae (Site ere eso Sylvia Emiabata_ | Case No. 13-10609 | Transferred: 6/18/2014 Sylvia Emiabata_ | Case No. 14-10949 | Dismissed: 7/8/2014 Saninoes [Siete enue aenec stan Sylvia Emiabata | Case No. 15-12120 | Dismissed: 6/18/2015 Case No. 15-48954 | Dismissed: 4/7/2016 Pare |e ease [pees ae Case No. 16-21626 | Dismissed: 7/28/2016 Case No. 17-13905 | Dismissed: 12/7/2017 Case No. 18-50001 | Dismissed: 5/18/2018 Philip Emiabata; | Chapter 13 Filed: 3/1/2019 Conn. Sylvia Emiabata | Case No. 19-50288 | Dismissed as to Philip Emiabata: 3/6/2019 Dismissed as to Sylvia Emiabata: 8/28/2019 Sylvia Emiabata_ | Case No. 19-31645 | Dismissed: 10/10/2019 A recent decision in /n re G.L.A.D. Enterprises, LLC, 19-50604, 2019 WL 5586962, at “4 (Bankr. D. Conn. Oct. 28, 2019)(Manning, J.) succinctly summarized the court’s inherent power to sua sponte dismiss a bankruptcy case for abuse of process.

3 Notably, ten (10) of these cases were filed after the “contractually due” date of July 1, 2006. Four (4) cases including this one were filed in Connecticut in the past four (4) years. This list does not include the numerous appeals or District Court civil cases initiated by Sylvia and Philip Emiabata

[A] court is within its right to conduct a bad faith inquiry on its own. See, In re Blumenberg, 263 B.R. 704, 711-12 (Bankr. E.D.N.Y. 2001) (citing Chambers v. NASCO, Inc., 501 U.S. 32, 43-44, 111 S.Ct. 2123, 115 L.Ed.2d 27 (1991) for the proposition that courts have “an array of inherent judicial powers necessary ... manage their own affairs,” and quoting In re Khan, 172 B.R. 613, 622 (Bankr. D.Minn. 1994) to support the point that Chambers enables courts to “inquire into a debtor's motivation for filing as part of its inherent power ‘to regulate its own docket to ensure that its process is not being abused.’”).

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Related

Chambers v. Nasco, Inc.
501 U.S. 32 (Supreme Court, 1991)
Blumenberg v. Yihye (In Re Blumenberg)
263 B.R. 704 (E.D. New York, 2001)
In Re Khan
172 B.R. 613 (D. Minnesota, 1994)
Wilk Auslander LLP v. Murray (In Re Murray)
900 F.3d 53 (Second Circuit, 2018)
In re Wimmer
512 B.R. 498 (S.D. New York, 2014)

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