OPINION ON MOTION TO LIFT THE AUTOMATIC STAY PURSUANT TO 11 U.S.C. § 362(d)
Eileen G. Zuckerman and Albert J. Zuckerman move to lift the automatic stay so that they may conduct a foreclosure sale that was stayed by the Debtor’s chapter 11 petition. The Debtor objects to the motion; the City of New York Department of Finance supports it.
I.
The facts have been gleaned from the papers and the undisputed facts stated during oral argument at the hearing on October 22. The parties have been involved in lengthy litigation regarding the real property located at 236 West 22nd Street, a single room occupancy hotel in the Chelsea section of Manhattan. Prepetition, on October 27, 1992, an entity known as 234-
During that first proceeding, Judge Conrad directed the 1992 debtor to perform its obligations under a sales contract to convey the land and building at 234 W. 22nd Street to Albert Zuckerman. This left the 1992 debtor with title only to 236 W. 22nd Street, which was encumbered by a mortgage held by Eileen Zuckerman. On May 23, 1994, Judge Conrad granted the application of the United States Trustee to dismiss the case based in part on the 1992 debtor’s inability to reorganize.
Both Zuckermans hold judgments against the 1992 debtor; however, only Eileen, who holds a judgment in the amount of $155,-501.39 dated June 2, 1997 for obligations on the second mortgage, has been authorized to foreclose on the Debtor’s property. Although her judgment was appealed, the appeal was never perfected. Eileen noticed a
Interestingly, the Zuckermans point out that the 1992 debtor was dissolved by proclamation of the State of New York on March ■24, 1993, for failure to pay franchise taxes, and a new entity was incorporated with the same name on May 7, 1997. The Debtor acknowledges this and reports that upon incorporation the Debtor assumed all obligations and assets of the 1992 debtor including Eileen Zuckerman’s judgment. As for the real property which the 1992 debtor held, during oral argument the parties disclosed that on May 7, 1997, the 1992 debtor transferred its real property to the Debtor pursuant to an instrument called a “confirmatory deed” which was recorded on September 23, 1997, the day before the Debtor filed its petition, and two days before the scheduled foreclosure sale.
The Debtor’s chapter 11 petition identifies the property at 236 W. 22nd Street as its only asset. The Debtor has no employees and only one tenant, which it is attempting to evict for failure to pay rent. The Debtor lists among its liabilities two secured debts, the mortgage to Eileen Zuekerman in the amount of $160,000, and a real estate and tax lien in favor of New York City in the amount of $60,000. According to the City, as of October 16, 1997, it is owed the sum of $57,802.02 for unpaid real estate taxes dating back to 1994, plus any potential charges for water and sewer service. The Debtor listed only one unsecured debt, $4,500 to Con Edison, but now concedes that it is also hable to New York State for the unpaid franchise taxes which led the State to dissolve the Debtor.
The Debtor and the Zuckermans dispute the current value of the property. In its petition, the Debtor values the property around $625,000 based on the sales of other buildings in the immediate area. The Zuckermans respond that in the earlier bankruptcy the 1992 debtor had valued the property in the $200-300,000 range. According to the Debtor, that valuation was estimated in the midst of an economic recession at a time when the building was largely tenanted. Neither party offered any evidence to support their competing valuations.
At oral argument, both the Zuckermans and the Debtor agreed that a sale of the property is inevitable. The bone of contention between them is a question of who conducts the sale. Eileen Zuekerman, desirous of enforcing her remedies promptly, contends that if her motion is granted, she could renotice and conduct the foreclosure sale in approximately 32 days after lifting the stay. The Debtor asks that it be given as many as 90 days to market the property, during which time the Debtor hopes that besides evicting the building’s only tenant it would obtain an offer that would be higher than what would be achieved at a foreclosure sale.
In addition, the Debtor reported that its principal, Thomas Iveli, has been paying, and would continue to pay for, insurance on the property to protect it against fire, theft and other potential damage. The Debtor also offered as adequate protection to its secured creditors safeguarding the property with a working lock system, continuing its efforts to evict the remaining tenant and furnishing heat to prevent any damage to the building such as pipes bursting during the upcoming winter. Iveli committed that he would make up any shortfall necessary to fund the adequate protection just outlined.
II.
Eileen Zuekerman seeks relief from the automatic stay pursuant to §§ 362(d)(1) and (d)(2) in order to continue the foreclosure sale that was stayed by the Debtor’s filing for chapter 11 protection. Because the Debtor is a single asset real estate entity, a
At oral argument, counsel for Ms. Zuekerman conceded that because she did not carry her burden as to the issue of whether the Debtor had equity in the property, see 11 U.S.C. § 362(g)(1), she could not prevail on her motion to lift the stay under § 362(d)(2). Therefore, I am denying the motion to lift the stay under that section. Because only Eileen Zuekerman is a secured creditor, if I should grant the requested relief under § 362(d)(1) for cause, I will lift the stay only with respect to her.
I therefore turn to section 362(d)(1), which provides in pertinent part:
(d) On request of a party in interest and after notice and a hearing, the court shall grant relief from the automatic stay ... by terminating, annulling, modifying, or conditioning such stay — (1) for cause, including the lack of adequate protection of an interest in property of such party in interest.
Eileen Zuekerman argues that the totality of circumstances surrounding the filing of this ease provides the cause necessary to lift the automatic stay on the grounds that the Debtor filed its petition in bad faith. As a preliminary point, she questioned whether the Debtor even had standing to file its chapter 11 petition because the Debtor had no current relationship to the property, record title being held in the “original” 234-
Acknowledging that it did incorporate recently, the Debtor says its motivation was to preempt the anticipated argument of Zuekerman that a dissolved corporation has no standing to file for chapter 11. The Debtor maintains that its incorporating does not demonstrate bad faith because it assumed the assets and obligations of the 1992 debtor and the shareholders are identical. (No proof of these assertions was offered.) This behavior is in sharp contrast, according to the Debtor, from situations commonly referred to as the “new debtor syndrome,” whereby an entity is created to file bankruptcy whose purpose is to isolate an insolvent property and its creditors from other assets of a prior owner. The Debtor has not contradicted Zuckerman’s other allegations, namely, that the Debtor conducts no business, has no employees and few unsecured creditors.
The Debtor also states that circumstances have changed since the dismissal of the 1992 case which circumstances support maintaining the automatic stay. Specifically, the Debtor states that the liabilities that were present in 1992 have been sizeably reduced and the market value of the property has risen dramatically thereby providing a ready source of value to allow all interested parties to realize upon the substantial equity in the property.
The effect of the Debtor’s incorporation and its assumption of assets and liabilities of the 1992 debtor can be viewed in two ways. The first is to take these acts at face value and acknowledge the creation of the Debtor, a new corporate entity separate from the 1992 debtor, but with the same name, assets, liabilities and shareholders as the 1992 debt- or.
Under such a scenario, the Debtor’s assumption of assets and liabilities of the dissolved 1992 debtor is permissible. Although New York law prohibits a dissolved corporation from engaging in new business,
In re McGregor,
It is well-settled New York law that the transfer of title to real property can be accomplished only by the delivery and acceptance of an executed deed.
ERHAL Holding Corp. v. Rusin,
An alternative scenario is to consider the Debtor’s reincorporation as the revival of an inactive corporation. New York case law holds that after a corporation is dissolved for failure to pay franchise taxes, it may later reincorpórate under the same name. However, that entity cannot use its status as “newly-incorporated” to avoid outstanding franchise tax obligations.
Prentice Corp. v. Martin,
Eileen Zuckerman points out that the Debtor omitted any obligations for past due franchise taxes from its petition’s list of creditors. Under either of the above two scenarios, the Debtor, as it acknowledged at the hearing, is hable for these taxes. So Zuckerman is correct that the Debtor has failed to list the New York State Department of Finance as a creditor for outstanding obligations for franchise taxes that led to the Debtor’s previous dissolution. However, the Debtor has acknowledged this tax liability and has not attempted to deny its liability to Eileen Zuckerman. In any event, the question of whether the Debtor may properly invoke the automatic stay is answered because, under either scenario, it is the holder of title to the property.
Turning to the meat of the motion, Zuckerman cites to the
C-TC
case for the standards to determine whether bad faith filings can constitute the necessary cause for relief from the stay.
C-TC 9th Ave. Partnership v. Norton Co. (In re C-TC 9th Ave. Partnership),
The Debtor argues correctly that C-TC is inapposite here because the Debtor is not a partnership in liquidation but a corporation intending to reorganize, and there is potentially enough value in the property that any contemplated opposition of Eileen Zuckerman to a proposed plan will be mooted because her claim will not be impaired by a plan. (Remember that the burden of proof on the issue of equity lies with movant for relief from the stay, 11 U.S.C. § 362(g)(1), and that Ms. Zuckerman has not met that burden.) In fact, the Debtor contends that the property is readily marketable, enabling the Debtor to formulate and file a liquidating plan within a reasonably short time.
Ms. Zuckerman argues that filing a petition on the eve of foreclosure is evidence of bad faith especially when coupled with the fact that the a previous chapter 11 filing was dismissed. But, in and of itself, a filing on the eve of foreclosure is not
per se
indicative of bad faith.
Sonnax,
Courts construe the concept of a material change in circumstances quite narrowly.
Roxy Real Estate,
In the cases dealing with failure of a plan, a reorganized debtor has to demonstrate that a new filing is justified due to the unforeseeable negative changes that affects its ability to fulfill the terms of the reorganization plan.
Roxy Real Estate,
Reported cases say little as to who bears the burden of demonstrating that circumstances have changed. Nonetheless, it seems evident that where successive filings are separated by a short period of time, the Debtor must show that such circumstances exist to warrant the new filing.
See, e.g., Spectee Group,
With that in mind, I examine what the Debtor contends constitutes the changed circumstances that ought warrant my finding that its case was not filed in bad faith: (i) the dramatic increase in the market value of the property due to the “renaissance” in the Chelsea neighborhood of Manhattan; (ii) the instant proceeding only deals with one property as opposed to the two properties that were the subject matter of the 1992; and (iii) Albert Zuckerman’s unsecured judgment regarding the third mortgage has been satisfied, thereby leading to a decrease in liabilities.
On the issue of the value of the property, other than the affidavit of Mr. Iveli, its principal, that was filed in support of keeping the stay intact, the Debtor offered no admissible evidence to support its valuation of the property at $625,000 or to prove that parties exist who are interested in either financing or purchasing the property. Although that valuation by Mr. Iveli is admissible,
New Haven Radio, Inc. v. Meister (In re Martin-Trigona),
Even accepting Mr. Ivelf s valuation, however, does not mean that the Debtor prevails here. Commodities experience periods of rising prices that are counterbalanced by periods of declining prices. Case law from other circuits suggests that “changed market conditions alone” where a debtor experiences only the typical fluctuations of supply and demand are not sufficiently changed circumstances to warrant a second filing. A change in market conditions in a particular locality is not viewed as justifying a second petition.
Roxy Real Estate,
The Debtor must demonstrate something more — its own affirmative steps to improve its chances for a successful reorganization.
See, e.g., Downey Savings & Loan Ass’n v. Metz (In re Metz),
All that has happened in the last 2)f¿ years since dismissal is the attempted eviction of the last remaining tenant in the building. The Debtor has not taken any actions to prepare the building for potential sale; nor has it paid its taxes or mortgage. Neither has it identified any offerors to purchase the property despite the claimed renaissance of the Chelsea neighborhood.
This case resembles
In re American Property Corp.,
It is important to draw a distinction here. On the one hand, there is nothing inimical to the purposes of the Bankruptcy Code in the
But gambling is precisely what this Debtor is doing. For over two years since the dismissal of the previous case, the Debtor has not paid the secured creditors, paid taxes or sold the property. It has no employees and has conducted no business other than attempting to evict the final tenant. Only with a foreclosure sale looming which would have divested the Debtor of its property did the Debtor spring into action by recording a deed that confirmed the transfer of the property to it by the 1992 debtor that had allegedly occurred 4 months earlier. But this transaction was plainly effected solely in contemplation of filing for chapter 11 which would stay foreclosure and perhaps buy time to convince the court that a sale would generate greater value. Essentially, the Debtor has engaged in a speculative real estate venture at the creditors’ expense by pinning its hope on a rebound in the Chelsea real estate market. Simply attempting to evict a tenant is not demonstrative of the Debtor’s good faith when contrasted with the utter lack of other activity regarding the property. I would be more convinced of the Debtor’s good faith if it had demonstrated, for example, that it had marketed the building and had many expressions of interest, or it had obtained an offer from a potential purchaser or it had cured violations against the property. Instead, it embarked on a course of conduct that was calculated solely to frustrate foreclosure.
There are other indicia of bad faith as well.
See C-TC,
The 1992 debtor’s petition was dismissed on the grounds of its inability to reorganize. I have concluded that the Debtor filed this case solely to thwart the foreclosure sale that Eileen Zuckerman had noticed for the next day. In the intervening 2’i years between dismissal of the first case and the commencement of this one, the Debtor did nothing to improve its economic situation or change its circumstances to warrant keeping the stay in effect. The only action the Debtor has taken is to try to evict a tenant, which it has not yet accomplished. The shareholders have
A finding of bad faith must be made only after broadly viewing the circumstances of the individual ease.
In re Con Am Grandview Assocs., L.P.,
Notes
. The primary challenge in a single asset real estate case is providing for the claims of secured creditors.
