Transamerica Credit Corp. v. Bullock (In Re Bullock)

206 B.R. 389, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 406, 1997 WL 166835
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedJanuary 13, 1997
Docket19-30914
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 206 B.R. 389 (Transamerica Credit Corp. v. Bullock (In Re Bullock)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Transamerica Credit Corp. v. Bullock (In Re Bullock), 206 B.R. 389, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 406, 1997 WL 166835 (Va. 1997).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

DOUGLAS O. TICE, Jr., Bankruptcy Judge.

On October 23, 1996, the court held a preliminary hearing on Transamerica Credit Corporations’s motion for relief from the automatic stay. The court then scheduled a final hearing for November 27,1996, at which time the court ruled from the bench that the motion would be denied. This memorandum opinion supplements the court’s bench ruling.

Findings of Fact

On April 28, 1989, the debtor executed a promissory note in favor of ITT Financial Services for $10,650.67 and provided, as security for the note, a second deed of trust on her home. Although the debtor used the loan to pay down existing debt, her financial condition continued to decline over the next 14 months. Finally, with creditors becoming more vociferous in their demands for timely payment, the debtor filed a petition under Chapter 13 of the Bankruptcy Code on July 24,1990.

On August 7, 1990, the debtor proposed a 36-month plan under which she would pay unsecured creditors 34% of their claims. With no objection from the trustee, the court on October 26, 1990, confirmed the plan as proposed. The case then proceeded normally until the debtor’s counsel, Ivan Morton, had his license to practice law revoked by the Virginia State Bar on January 18, 1991. Since Morton neglected to submit a motion to withdraw in the debtor’s case or to inform the court that he had been disbarred, he was not removed as counsel of record until July 7, 1992. The debtor at that time decided not to employ new counsel, electing instead to proceed in her Chapter 13 case pro se. On February 22, 1994, she successfully concluded her plan and received a discharge.

The debtor testified at the hearing that, in the early months of the Chapter 13 case, Morton had informed her that her debt to ITT would be paid in full under the plan. The repayment schedule on the mortgage, however, extended well beyond February 1994. With the debtor having owed ITT $10,801.48 when the petition had been filed, the plan provided only that payments on the note would be kept current until the court closed her ease. Unaware of this fact, and relying on the advice of her former counsel, the debtor made no payments on the ITT debt once she received her discharge.

To make matters worse, no one from ITT ever informed the debtor that a balance remained outstanding under the note. In fact, the record is unclear as to who actually owned the note when the debtor received her discharge. Either while the Chapter 13 case had been pending or at some time afterward, ITT had assigned the note to Thorp Consumer Discount Company. When Thorp later merged into Computer & Equipment Leasing Corporation, the latter took legal title to the note as successor in interest. Finally, on March 20, 1996, Computer & Equipment Leasing assigned the note to Transamerica Credit Corporation.

In this confusion, the debtor did not receive any communication concerning her delinquent mortgage until late 1995 or early 1996, when she was informed only that an action to foreclose would be commenced in *391 the near future. Faced again with the prospect of losing her home, the debtor retained new bankruptcy counsel, who advised her to file a petition under Chapter 7 of the Code. On June 10,1996, she did so.

With the debtor apparently contemplating liquidation, Transameriea immediately moved for relief from the automatic stay. On August 30, 1996, the court granted the motion, and Transameriea scheduled a sale of the debtor’s home for October 3, 1996. In the interim, the debtor dismissed her second attorney and retained her present counsel, Bruce White. On October 2, 1996, while her case was still pending and before she had received a discharge, the debtor filed a petition under Chapter 13 and proposed a 36-month plan. In her schedules, the debtor listed $61,207.28 in secured debt and no unsecured debt. While the debtor finally did procure a discharge in the Chapter 7 ease on October 6, 1996, that case remained open on the date of the hearing.

On October 3, 1996, Transameriea filed an emergency motion for relief from the stay in this second Chapter 13 ease. Calling the debtor an “abusive filer,” Transameriea argued that she had misused the bankruptcy process by filing a Chapter 13 petition before she had received a discharge in her Chapter 7 case. 1 The debtor responded that good cause existed for the Chapter 13 filing, particularly since no one had not contacted her for over a year after the first Chapter 13 case had been closed.

Discussion and Conclusions of Law

This dispute raises a specter which has tormented the judiciary for well over half a century — the propriety of simultaneous bankruptcy cases. Not surprisingly, the haphazard manner in which Congress, developed a uniform federal law on bankruptcy appears to have contributed significantly to the problem. 2 In its original form, the Bankruptcy Act of 1898 did not isolate substantive forms of relief within separate segments of the law. Petitioners filed for bankruptcy generally, not under any particular “chapter.” With the advent of the Great Depression, however, Congress began to tack on “emergency legislation” designed to meet the particular needs of certain classes of debtors. For instance, the Act of March 3, 1933, added Chapter VIII as “Provisions for the Relief of Debtors”; 3 the Act of June 7,1934, added § 77B to Chapter VIII in order to provide for the reorganization of corporations; and the Act of August 6, 1937, added Chapter X as “Municipal Debt Readjustments.”

In 1938, Congress passed the Chandler Act to refine and to structurally reorganize both these and additional changes. Chapters I through VII, though modified extensively, were left as “ordinary bankruptcy” provisions. Chapter VIII was stripped of all its sections except those regulating agricultural compositions and the reorganization of railroads. The provisions encompassing municipal debt readjustment were retained but moved to Chapter IX. Section 77B, governing the reorganization of corporations, was materially revised and enacted as Chapter X. Chapters XI and XII were designated to address general arrangements and real property arrangements respectively, while Chapter XIII was established to allow wage earners the opportunity to reschedule their debt in a plan. And in the final hours of debate, Chapter XIV was added to ensure the continued operation of financially distressed steamship lines.

By dividing the Act, and later the modern Code, into chapters which offered more specialized relief, Congress fashioned a “track approach” to bankruptcy. Debtors under the new system were forced to choose a chapter at the time of filing and then follow its corresponding track, to discharge. Unfor *392 tunately, Congress did not look beyond the linear structure of its law and foresee that some debtors would attempt to run more than one “train” at a time. As a consequence, the statutory law made little provision for the manner in which the chapters would interact and remained altogether silent as to whether a debtor could maintain two petitions under different chapters at the same time.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
206 B.R. 389, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 406, 1997 WL 166835, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/transamerica-credit-corp-v-bullock-in-re-bullock-vaeb-1997.