Benchnotes May 1999
Benchnotes May 1999
Defining Abandonment
In In re Keller, 229 B.R. 900 (Bankr. S.D. Ohio 1998), Bankruptcy Judge Donald E. Calhoun Jr. again emphasized the irreversible effect of abandonment. The chapter 7 debtor had scheduled property of the estate subject to a debt, the property was subsequently abandoned by the chapter 7 trustee and there was an unopposed order granting the creditor relief from the automatic stay. After abandonment and entry of the order, the creditor discovered an inadvertent failure to describe all property in its mortgage. In state court, the creditor sought to reform the mortgage to reflect the parties' intent. The debtors and the chapter 7 trustee then reopened their bankruptcy case and attempted to avoid the reformed and refiled mortgages and the lien on the previously unperfected parts of real property. The bankruptcy court noted that, while the arguments on the effect of the trustee's status as a bona fide purchaser pursuant to §544 were "interesting," they unfortunately failed to address the dispositive issue of the effect of abandonment. Finding without question that the property was scheduled and that the lien against the property was not avoided during the pendency of the bankruptcy case (therefore surviving the discharge), after abandonment there was no trustee to assert the rights of the hypothetical lien creditor or bona fide purchaser, nor to challenge validity of the lien or include the reaffirmation of the mortgage. The court noted in this case that the abandonment was by street address and not by legal description, and the issue on the mortgage related to the legal description. If the abandonment had been the legal description, using the description as attached to the recorded mortgage, this issue might not have been before the court.
Discovery Abuse Sanctions
In In re Rimsat Ltd., 229 B.R. 914 (Bankr. N.D. Ind. 1998), Bankruptcy Judge Robert B. Grant addressed the difficulty of imposing sanctions for discovery abuse during a deposition, noting that the procedural rules did not provide a completely satisfactory vehicle for adequately responding to counsel's sanctionable conduct. Accordingly, the court found it necessary to supplement the rules by reliance upon §105(a). Judge Grant noted that Rule 30 (which is made applicable pursuant to Rule 7030) provides a vehicle for recovering expenses that have been needlessly imposed upon a litigant because a party does not proceed with the deposition as scheduled. However, in a case before the court, the deposition did indeed commence, although nothing in the substantive sense was accomplished. Improper discovery requests, responses and objections are governed by Rule 26(g), made applicable pursuant to Bankruptcy Rule 7026. The standard for imposing sanctions pursuant to Rule 26(g) is much the same as the standard for imposing sanctions under Rule 9011. However, the sanctions contemplated by those rules can only be imposed upon the individual attorney who actually signed the notice of deposition and the client on whose behalf it was submitted, and not the counsel who attended the deposition at which the abusive discovery occurred. The court then turned to 28 U.S.C. §1927, which gives the court authority to require an attorney who "multiplies proceedings in any case, unreasonably and vexatiously" to pay the excess costs, expenses and reasonable attorney's fees incurred because of such conduct. Although the counsel's conduct violated §1927, the court found that bankruptcy courts do not have authority to impose such sanctions pursuant to that statute, Matter of Voltert, 110 F.3d 494, 497 (7th Cir. 1997). However, that decision recognizes that bankruptcy courts do possess the authority to sanction such conduct under §105(a). In addition, recognizing that it was a "harsh sanction," the court found that counsel's unthinking "file and litigate anything we can think of, just for the sake of doing so" approach to the case justified revocation of the authorization to appear pro hac vice.
Original Issue Discounts
In In re ICH Corp., 230 B.R. 88 (Bankr. N.D. Texas 1999), District Judge Fitzwater addressed the issue of whether the bankruptcy court had erred in holding that a debenture did not, as a matter of law, include an Original Issue Discount (OID). An OID results when an entity issues a debt instrument for consideration that is less than its face value. The discount equals the difference between the debt instrument's face value (also called the stated principal amount or the redemption value) and the proceeds received by the issuer. This discount compensates for a submarket interest rate, and therefore is in the nature of additional interest. As OID is in the nature of interest, a creditor may not recover unamortized OID in a bankruptcy case. The court noted that the Bankruptcy Code does not provide guidance concerning how to determine the existence of an OID in a debt-for-stock transaction, and that the two circuits that have addressed OID issues have done so in a specific context of a debt-for-debt exchange in a consensual, out-of-court workout. Thus, absent a guiding precedent, the court noted that bankruptcy policy mandates that the court determine the existence of OID—which would never exist if the parties stated in the contract that the debt and the property given in exchange had the same value—by considering evidence outside the parties' agreement. The court determined that the Parol Evidence Rule, which would arguably permit creditors to make interest appear to be principal and then collect the unearned interest in contradiction to the policy underlining §502(b), would not bar extrinsic evidence of OID due to specific provisions contained in the debenture that was part of the overall contract, which must be viewed as a whole. The court also stated that the contract language was ambiguous, and thus the Parol Evidence Rule would not bar extrinsic evidence as to the value of the stock, as the parties' statement of the stock's aggregate price is a recitation of fact that may be contradicted by extrinsic evidence, not evidence of an agreement.
Miscellaneous
- In re Pilavis, 228 B.R. 808 (Bankr. D. Mass. 1999) (there is no right to a jury trial in an action for the avoidance of an alleged fraudulent conveyance);
- In re Whitmer, 228 B.R. 841 (Bankr. W.D. Va. 1998) (earned income credit that the chapter 7 debtor received in the tax year in which its bankruptcy case commenced was "property of the estate" and subject to turnover as pro-rated to the date on which the bankruptcy petition was filed);
- In re Williamson, 228 B.R. 910 (Bankr. N.D. Ill 1999) (§722 allows redemption of the debtor's automobile from a wholly unsecured second lien by payment of a nominal amount);
- In re Baird, 229 B.R. 361 (Bankr. D. S.C. 1997) (debt that was to be secured by a debtor's crop was non-dischargeable based on the debtor's false representation that he intended to plant crops that were not planted);
- In re Blue Cactus Post L.P., 229 B.R. 379 (Bankr. N.D. Tex. 1999) (county appraisal district that was a political subdivision created by the state to appraise property within the county for ad valorem tax purposes was not the arm of the state and not entitled to 11th Amendment sovereign immunity);
- In re Rimsat Ltd., 229 B.R. 914 (Bankr. N.D. Ind. 1998) (pursuant to §726(a)(6), any estate property remaining after all creditors have been paid in full is distributed to the debtor, not to the debtor's shareholders);
- In re Long John Silver's, 230 B.R. 29 (Bankr. N.D. Del. 1999) (Perishable Agriculture Commodities Act does not apply to french fries that were enhanced by a batter that was engineered to improve texture and allow fries to retain heat rather than to preserve the fries or to prepare them for freezing) (See "Last in Line," p. 32, for a full discussion); and
- In re Trans-End Technology Inc., 230 B.R. 101 (Bankr. N.D. Ohio 1998) (prior to seeking recovery from a subsequent transferee, the initial transfer must be first be avoided rather than merely proven to be avoidable).