United General Title Insurance Co. v. Karanasos

561 B.R. 316, 2016 WL 7442654, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 178806
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedDecember 27, 2016
Docket15-cv-06931 (ADS)
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 561 B.R. 316 (United General Title Insurance Co. v. Karanasos) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United General Title Insurance Co. v. Karanasos, 561 B.R. 316, 2016 WL 7442654, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 178806 (E.D.N.Y. 2016).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION & ORDER

SPATT, District Judge:

Before the Court is an appeal from an order by the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of New York (Trust, J.) by appellant creditor United General Title Insurance Company (“UGT”). UGT contends that that Bankruptcy Court’s denial of its complaint objecting to the discharge of appellee debtor Chris Karanasos’ (the “Debtor”) was reversible error. Specifically, UGT states that the Debtor’s debt should not be discharged pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 727 (“Section 727”) because it proved, by a preponderance of the evidence, during a stipulated trial that was supplemented with testimony, that the Debtor fraudulently concealed a secret interest in prop[319]*319erty and made false oaths with fraudulent intent. For the reasons that follow, the Court finds that the Debtor’s discharge should be denied under both theories put forward by UGT; and remands the case for further proceedings consistent with this order.

I. BACKGROUND

A. The Relevant Facts

Although the facts in this case have been substantially set forth in three different decisions, the Court will once again briefly review the facts. They are drawn from the parties joint pre-trial memorandum; the stipulated record; and the brief testimony from the supplemental trial. The bankruptcy record, comprised of six hundred and sixty-nine pages, includes all of these items as well as complaints, petitions, schedules, memoranda and orders. Any references to the bankruptcy record will be denoted as “R.”

1. Real Property Interests of the Debtor

The two pieces of real property at issue throughout this case are the “Rockville Centre Property” and the “Manhattan Property.” The Rockville Centre Property is located at 390 Woodbridge Road in Rockville Centre, New York, and the Manhattan Property is located at 408 East 120th Street in New York, New York.

The Debtor and his wife, Rosa Karana-sos (“Mrs. Karanasos”), have resided in the Rockville Centre Property since 2002, when Mrs. Karanasos acquired title to the property. She financed the purchase with a mortgage from Interamerican Bank. Mrs. Karanasos and the Debtor paid that mortgage with funds from their joint checking account. On June 20, 2003, Mrs. Karanasos conveyed title to herself and the Debtor. Thereafter, the Debtor and Mrs. Karana-sos obtained a mortgage from Flagstar Bank with a principal amount of $265,000, and Mrs. Karanasos satisfied her mortgage with Interamerican Bank. The Debt- or and Mrs. Karanasos made payments on the Flagstar Bank mortgage with funds from their joint checking account. The Debtor and Mrs. Karanasos also obtained a home equity line of credit with JP Morgan Chase Bank (the “Chase HELOC”) in 2003 for $210,000.

On December 17, 2008, the Debtor and Mrs. Karanasos re-conveyed title for the Rockvfflé Centre Property back to Mrs. Karanasos by deed (the “2008 Transfer”). The deed was recorded on April 9, 2009 in the Nassau County Clerk’s Office. Subsequent to the transfer of title, the Debtor remained liable on the Flagstar Bank mortgage and the Chase HELOC, and the Rockville Centre Property served as collateral for both loans.

The Debtor continued to use and enjoy the Rockville Centre Property after he conveyed his interest to his wife. He and his wife took a deduction on their 2010 joint federal tax return for real estate taxes and mortgage interest payments on the Rockville Centre Property; they shared the mortgage and utility obligations related to the Rockville Centre Property; and he identified the Rockville Centre Property as his primary address in his bankruptcy petition.

Throughout the proceedings, the Debtor has claimed that one of the reasons for the 2008 Transfer was his desire to acquire the Manhattan Property as an investment property. In September 2008, the Debtor allegedly invested $200,000 in the Manhattan Property using $100,000 from the Chase HELOC and $100,000 from a personal line of credit. He loaned this $200,000 to Mohammed Khan (“Khan”), who would acquire title to the Manhattan Property with the Debtor as a joint tenant. [320]*320Khan agreed to repay the Debtor the full $200,000 with interest, and, as collateral, Khan gave the Debtor an unrecorded deed conveying Khan’s interest in the Manhattan Property. If Khan had paid the Debtor in full, the Debtor would have conveyed full title to the Manhattan Property to Khan, However, Khan defaulted and the Debtor acquired sole title to the Manhattan Property.

Mrs. Karanasos did not approve of the Manhattan Property investment, and the Debtor claims that she only permitted him to draw $100,000 from the Chase HELOC on the condition that she obtain full title to the Rockville Centre Property. The Debtor said in his deposition that “for her[,] the only way to let me borrow the money from my home line of credit as investment to [the Manhattan] property, I had to take off my name from the [Rockville Centre] deed to protect her and our children.” (R. at 39). The deed for the 2008 Transfer states that the consideration for the conveyance was $100,000. While the parties agreed in their joint pre-trial memorandum that the Debt- or did not pay or transfer any consideration to Mrs. Karanasos for the 2008 Transfer, the deed recording that transfer indicates that the consideration for the conveyance was $100,000.

Mrs. Karanasos filed for bankruptcy protection on October 5, 2010, and again on December 3, 2010. Mrs. Karanasos’ bankruptcy petition in her first filing identified her interest in the Rockville Centre Property as a “Fee Simple” and a “Tenant by the entirety.” Her first petition was dismissed without her receiving a discharge of her debt. In her second bankruptcy petition, she did not identify the nature of her interest in the Rockville Centre Property—she left the “Nature of Debtor’s Interest” blank in relation to that property on her Schedule A for that petition. She received a discharge of debt in her second case.

The Debtor identified the Rockville Cen-tre Property as his street address in his bankruptcy petition, but did not identify, disclose or explain any interest he maintained in that property in his schedules or his statement of financial affairs. He used the term “sole tenant” to describe his ownership interest in the Manhattan Property.

2. Lawsuits Against the Debtor

On February 4,2008, UGT commenced a civil action in New York State Supreme Court civil term against the Debtor and two other parties, GE Abstract and Esther Serrano, for damages sustained in connection with breaches of an agency agreement and related personal guarantees (the “GE lawsuit”). The 2008 Transfer occurred while the Debtor was defending the GE lawsuit. A judgment of $677,351 was entered against the Debtor and his co-defendants in the GE lawsuit.

On November 5, 2010, UGT commenced a separate action in New York State Supreme Court against the Debtor and Mrs. Karanasos, seeking a judgment declaring that the 2008 Transfer was fraudulent and void (the “fraudulent conveyance action”). The Debtor did not answer or otherwise appear in the action, and he is in default. It is unclear from the record whether any type of judgment was entered in .that action.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
561 B.R. 316, 2016 WL 7442654, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 178806, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-general-title-insurance-co-v-karanasos-nyed-2016.