United States Trustee v. Gavita (In Re Gavita)

177 B.R. 43, 1994 Bankr. LEXIS 2103, 1994 WL 738979
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 27, 1994
Docket19-20901
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 177 B.R. 43 (United States Trustee v. Gavita (In Re Gavita)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States Trustee v. Gavita (In Re Gavita), 177 B.R. 43, 1994 Bankr. LEXIS 2103, 1994 WL 738979 (Pa. 1994).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

BERNARD MARKOVITZ, Bankruptcy Judge.

Several matters are before the court at this time.

The United States trustee argues that granting debtors relief would be a substantial abuse of chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code and has moved to dismiss debtors’ chapter 7 petition pursuant to § 707(b) of the Code. Debtors oppose the motion and deny that granting such relief would constitute substantial abuse.

Debtors in turn have moved to amend Schedule I and Schedule J of their petition to reflect an alleged decrease in their net monthly income and a decrease in certain anticipated monthly expenses.

The United States trustee’s motion will be granted. In light of this outcome, it will not be necessary to address debtors’ motion to amend. By way of amplification, the court, after a review of the record, is of the distinct impression that the schedules, including the *44 budget, were put together by merely placing numbers in slots. In matching the testimony with the writings we feel confident that little effort was expended pursuing accuracy. These amendments bolster that impression wherein numbers are reduced in income and, thereafter, numbers are reduced in the budget. We have no feeling of confidence as to accuracy.

-I-

FACTS

Debtors have been married since April of 1991 and have a daughter who was born in December of 1992.

Michael Gavita has been employed since 1980 as a truck driver on a full-time basis by the City of Pittsburgh. He also has been employed on a part-time basis since 1992 as a service station attendant.

The record does not disclose much information relating to gross income and even less relating to deductions. We are left to wonder why this information was not disclosed. We do have evidence and/or testimony which, while inconsistent, does indicate that Mr. Gavita’s bi-weekly net take home from the City of Pittsburgh in 1994 ranged between $517.71 and $696.66. His testimony indicated that his monthly net pay during that period ranged from $1477.00 and $1700.00. Mr. Gavita further testified that his net pay from his job as a service station attendant during that same period approximated $90.00 per week or $881.00 per month.

' Leslie Gavita was unemployed until 1992, when she began working on a part-time basis for Burlington Coat Factory. Her net income during that time was approximately $400.00. She began working on a full-time basis in October of 1993. Her monthly take-home pay since then has been approximately $900.00.

Debtors aver their combined gross income for 1992 was approximately $29,000.00. In 1993 it was $37,389.00. Their combined gross income for the first six months of 1994 was $17,307.61.

Debtors filed a voluntary joint chapter 7 petition on May 23, 1994. A chapter 7 trustee was appointed immediately thereafter.

Amended schedules and statement were filed on June 7, 1994. The schedules and statement list total assets of $73,800.00 and total liabilities of $106,886.00.

Schedule A, Real Property, lists debtors’ marital residence with a declared fair market value of $60,000.00. Michael Gavita purchased the residence in 1990 for an undisclosed price, approximately one year before debtors were married. The property is now apparently owned by debtors as tenants by the entirety and is subject to secured claims in excess of its declared value.

Schedule B, Personal Property, lists assets having a declared total value of $13,800.00. Included among the items listed are the following:

Checking Account $ 300.00

Household Goods 3,000.00

Clothing 200.00

Jewelry 2,000.00

Firearms 1,800.00

Pension 0.00

Automobile 500.00

Truck 2,000.00

Motorcycle 4,000.00

$13,800.00

In Schedule C, Property Claimed As Exempt, debtors claimed exemptions in the amount of the declared values of the automobile, truck, motorcycle, jewelry, firearms, clothing, and household goods. They also claimed an exemption of $1.00 in their residence. However, as the security interests burdening said realty are in excess of its value, we question the propriety of this exemption. Debtors cannot take an exemption in equity that does not exist. In re Simonson, 758 F.2d 103 (3d Cir.1985).

Schedule D, Creditors Holding Secured Claims, listed Midland Mortgage Company as holding a first mortgage against their residence in the amount of $43,000.00.

Zelie Consumer Discount Company also is listed on Schedule D as holding a second mortgage against the residence in the amount of $19,934.00. Michael Gavita first borrowed money from Zelie Consumer in 1981 or 1982. Zelie was granted a second *45 mortgage in 1994 when Michael Gavita borrowed an additional $4,000.00 to purchase a truck. This amount was “rolled over” into the previous unpaid balance owed to Zelie.

Schedule D also lists City of Pittsburgh Employees Credit Union as having a claim in the amount of $10,668.00. The claim was secured to the extent of $3,800.00, the amount in a savings account Michael Gavita had with the credit union. The remaining $6,868.00 is listed as unsecured. Michael Gavita has owed a debt to the credit union on a continuing basis since 1980 or 1981, when he borrowed money for the first time to purchase an automobile. Since then he has borrowed money to purchase a motorcycle, an engagement ring for Mrs. Gavita, and to finance several personal trips by Mrs. Gavita to Ohio, Arizona, and Florida. The debt owed to the credit union was never paid down to zero at any time. Each loan from the credit union was “rolled over” into the previous outstanding balance.

Schedule F, Creditors Holding Unsecured Nonpriority Claims, lists debts in the amount of $43,952.00. 1

Prior to June of 1993, Michael Gavita owed more than $7,000.00 to Citibank, VISA, Discover Card, and Sears. In June of 1993, he borrowed the sum of $8,000.00 from Commercial Credit to consolidate and pay off these debts.

Debtors were “broke” after paying their bills and had to make credit purchases and obtain cash advances to méet living expenses. According to Michael Gavita, they often had less than $20.00 to live on towards the end of the month. Almost immediately after paying off their above balances, debtors began charging purchases of consumer goods to these accounts.

Within two months after borrowing $8,000.00 from Commercial Credit, debtors began using their VISA card to purchase clothing. They last used it in May of 1994, the month they filed for bankruptcy. The amount owed to VISA is listed as $1,746.00. They used their Discover Card for cash advances and to pay for several motorcycle trips they took. It also was last used in May of 1994. The amount owed to Discover Card is $1,869.00. Finally, debtors used their Sears account to purchase household good and clothing. The amount owed to Sears is $1,100.00.

Debtors borrowed money from The Associates in 1993 to replace fourteen windows in their marital residence.

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Bluebook (online)
177 B.R. 43, 1994 Bankr. LEXIS 2103, 1994 WL 738979, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-trustee-v-gavita-in-re-gavita-pawb-1994.