Wilson v. ALFA Companies (In Re Wilson)

207 B.R. 241, 1996 Bankr. LEXIS 1871, 1996 WL 819808
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Alabama
DecidedSeptember 27, 1996
Docket19-00373
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 207 B.R. 241 (Wilson v. ALFA Companies (In Re Wilson)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilson v. ALFA Companies (In Re Wilson), 207 B.R. 241, 1996 Bankr. LEXIS 1871, 1996 WL 819808 (Ala. 1996).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION

C. MICHAEL STILSON, Bankruptcy Judge.

This matter came before the court on the defendants’ removal of this lawsuit from Marion County Circuit Court to the Bankruptcy Court and the plaintiffs’ subsequent request that the Bankruptcy Court remand the suit back to state court. After reviewing the pleadings, documents and the briefs of the parties in the context of applicable law, the court finds that the equities require REMAND of the suit to Marion County.

FINDINGS OF FACT

On June 2, 1994, Jason Elgie and Desiree Lynn Wilson signed an installment note and security agreement agreeing to repay ALFA Financial Corporation 120 installments of $296.64 each beginning July 12, 1994 ($35,-596.80, including finance charges). The Wil-sons were borrowing the money to purchase a new 1994 Cavalier mobile home. The contract also granted ALFA a security interest in the mobile home to secure the debt. The interest was perfected by ALFA’s listing as first lienholder on the certificate of title to the mobile home dated July 24, 1994. (Attachments to BK Doc. 16, ALFA’s MOTION TO REOPEN THE CASE)

The copy of the loan document in the file is labelled “INSTALLMENT NOTE — SECURED” on the first line. The second line of the heading reads “ALFA FINANCIAL CORPORATION — ADJUSTABLE RATE INSTALLMENT LOANS.”

In the body of the agreement, the following paragraphs appear:

ADJUSTABLE INTEREST RATE INFORMATION: The annual percentage rate may decrease or increase during the term of this loan if the interest rate established as the “Bank Prime Loan Rate” as published in the “Federal Reserve Board’s Statistical Release” is lower or higher on the interest adjustment dates, which shall be 06/12 of each year. The Index Rate used to determine the Annual Percentage *243 Rate on this note is currently 6.75%. The Annual Percentage Rate will not increase or decrease more than once each year, and will not be adjusted unless the change is at least !é of one percent (1%). The Annual Percentage Rate will not increase or decrease more than two percentage points in a one year period. The Annual Percentage Rate on this note will not fall below 3.00% or will not exceed 17.00%. Any change in the Annual Percentage Rate will result in an increase or decrease in your monthly payments. For example, if your loan was for $10,000.00 at 12% for 12 years and the Annual Percentage Rate increased by two percentage points to 14% after the first year, your monthly payments would increase from $131.34 to $141.67.
ADJUSTABLE PAYMENTS: You will pay the amounts due under this note by making consecutive monthly payments on the $296.64 (sic) day of each month, beginning 07/12/94. Your monthly payment may adjust each year during the term of this note in order that you might repay the amounts due under this note by 06/12/04, which is the maturity date of this note.

The Wilsons stated in their subsequent lawsuit against various ALFA corporate entities that Butch McCarley, a resident of Marion County, was the ALFA agent who handled their credit transaction and also sold them ALFA homeowners insurance on the mobile home. (Attachments to BK Doc. 16)

On August 3, 1995, the Wilsons filed their Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition. (BK Doc. 1) Notice was sent out to creditors that the Chapter 7 liquidation would be a “no asset” case because “At this time there appear to be no assets available from which payment may be made to unsecured creditors....” (BK Doe. 3)

In the schedules filed with their bankruptcy petition, the Wilsons listed their mobile home, with ALFA Financial Corporation listed as a secured creditor, on SCHEDULE A — REAL PROPERTY. The Wilsons listed the value of the home at $22,500.00. In SCHEDULE B — PERSONAL PROPERTY, Question 20 asked the debtors to state their interests in “Other contingent and un-liquidated claims of every nature, including tax refunds, counterclaims of the debtor, and rights to setoff claims.” The Wilsons put down “None.”

Causes of action against creditors and others stemming from prebankruptey transactions would normally be listed as assets in this category. The Wilsons, obviously, did not list any prepetition causes of action against the ALFA corporations, McCarley or anyone else as assets in their SCHEDULE B — PERSONAL PROPERTY.

Nor did the Wilsons claim any prepetition causes of action and their proceeds as exempt from the bankruptcy liquidation process in their SCHEDULE C — PROPERTY CLAIMED AS EXEMPT. Both Jason El-gie and Desiree Lynn Wilson signed Debtor Statement of Intentions filed with the schedules which declared their intent to “Retain — reaffirm (524(c))” 1 the mobile home and the debt to ALFA. These documents were also filed with the petition on the day the bankruptcy was filed.

The Wilsons also stated they intended to “Retain — reaffirm (524(c))” their mobile home, a 1994 Suzuki four-wheeler; jewelry; and a 1989 GMC truck, all items of collateral on loans.

No creditor appeared at the Wilsons’ Section 341 meeting of creditors held September 15, 1995. (BK Doc. 4) Chapter 7 Trustee Joseph W. Hudson, Esq. filed his FINAL *244 REPORT OF TRUSTEE IN NO ASSET CASE on September 15 as well. (BK Doc. 5) Hudson’s report stated:

... I have not received any property nor have I paid any monies out on account of this estate; furthermore, I have made diligent inquiry into the whereabouts of property belonging to the estate; and there are, to the best of my knowledge,.no assets in the estate over and above the exemptions lawfully claimed by the debtor(s). Unless the Court orders otherwise, I deem abandoned any and all property of the estate that is unadministered as of the date of this report....

On October 10, 1995, ALFA Financial Corporation filed a proof of claim in the Wilson bankruptcy for $24,764.48 in debt secured by the 1994 mobile home.

On November 15, 1995, the First State Bank of Lamar County filed a reaffirmation agreement in which the Wilsons reaffirmed their debt to the bank on the GMC truck pursuant to 11 U.S.C. 524(c). (BK Doc. 6A)

On November 16, 1995, this court entered a discharge order which discharged the Wil-sons of personal obligation for all dischargea-ble prepetition debt. (BK Doe. 7) The court also entered an ORDER APPROVING TRUSTEE’S REPORT OF NO DISTRIBUTION AND CLOSING ESTATE that same day. (BK Doc. 8)

At that point, although the Wilsons had stated their intention to enter reaffirmation agreements with creditors on four items of collateral — their mobile home, the Suzuki four-wheeler, the GMC truck and jewelry— only one reaffirmation agreement had actually been filed with the court. That was Doc. No. 6A reaffirming the debt secured by the truck.

On December 20, 1995, ALFA Financial Corporation moved to reopen the Wilsons’ Chapter 7. ALFA’s motion stated:

5.The Debtors wish to reaffirm the said debt to the Movant and agreed to do so before discharge was entered.

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207 B.R. 241, 1996 Bankr. LEXIS 1871, 1996 WL 819808, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-alfa-companies-in-re-wilson-alnb-1996.