MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER ON DEUTSCHE BANK’S MOTION TO REOPEN BANKRUPTCY CASE AND COMPEL SURRENDER
Whеn the Debtor filed this case, she indicated an intent to surrender her home
Under the facts of this case, the Court declines to reopen this case and grant the relief the secured creditor seeks. The secured creditor is correct that the Court can revoke a debtor’s discharge or compel a debtor to withdraw her defense to a state court foreclosure for perpetrating a fraud on the Court. But given the lapse in time between the time the Debtor obtained her discharge and the time she opposed the secured creditor’s foreclosure action, the Court cannot conclude the Debtor never intended to surrender her home. The Court concludes it should be left to the state court to detеrmine whether the Debtor, based on her contradictory positions, is judicially estopped from defending the state court foreclosure action. Accordingly, the Court will deny the secured creditor’s motion to reopen this case.
BACKGROUND
The Debtor owns real property located at 402 13th Street NE, Ruskin, Florida.
On December 6, 2011, the Debtor received her chapter 7 discharge.
So the Bank now asks the Court to reopen- this bankruptcy case and revokе the Debtor’s discharge.
CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
This Court addressed a similar issue in In re Metzler, where the Court consolidat
At first glance, the Court’s decision in Metzler would appear to dictate the outcome here. After all, in this case and in Metzler, the debtors have taken overt acts to impede a secured creditor’s ability to foreclose its interest in property after indicating an intent to surrender it. And in Metzler, the Court granted the precise alternative relief the Bank seeks here — i.e., require the Debtor to stop opposing thе state court foreclosure. The Bank’s other request for relief is for the Court to revoke the Debtor’s discharge. Metzler, however, is distinguishable from this case in one crucial respect.
In Metzler, the efforts to impede the state court fоreclosure took place immediately or soon after the debtors received their chapter- 7 discharge or the Court confirmed their chapter 13 plan. In fact, foreclosure actions had been filed against both debtors in Metzler before they sought bankruptcy relief. And the efforts to oppose summary judgment took place within two months in the case of one debtor and nine months in the case of the other. What went unstated in Metzler, but was the rationale behind the Court’s decision, was that the short time between the time the debtors received the relief they sought in bankruptcy, on the one hand, and opposed foreclosure contrary to their statement of intentions, on the othеr hand, led the Court to infer the debtors had no intention of surrendering their property— i.e., they had misled this Court.
The same is not true here. For one thing, the Bank did not even file its foreclosure action until more than two years after the Debtor received her discharge. The record is unclear why the Bank waited so long to foreclose its mortgage. But what is clear is that it was not until nearly three years after she received her chapter 7 discharge that the Debtor first took some affirmative action to impede the Bank’s foreclosure efforts. And then the Bank waited another year before seeking to reopen this case. Judge Olson confronted similar facts in In re Kourogenis.
In Kourogenis, the lender waited more thаn five years after the debtor received her discharge and her case was closed before it sought to reopen her case and
While the Court agrees with the outcome in Kourogenis, it is not clear laches is the proper grounds here. As Judge Olson points out, “[l]aches is a defense sounding in equity that serves to bar suit by a plaintiff ‘whose unexcused delay, if the suit were allowed, wоuld be prejudicial to the defendant.’ ”
The concern here is that the Debtor is making a mockery of the legal system by taking inconsistent positions. In an effort to obtain her chapter 7 discharge, the Debtor swears — under the penalty of perjury — an intention to “surrender” her property. In other words, the Debtor is representing to the Court that she will make her property available to the Bank by refraining from taking any overt act that impedes the Bank’s ability to foreclose its interest in the property. Yet, once she receives her discharge, the Debt- or in fact impedes the Bank’s ability to foreclose its mortgage. Courts, however, have a mechanism for dealing with parties taking inconsistent positions.
Under both federal and state law, the doctrine of judicial estoppel “generally precludes a party from ‘asserting a claim in a legal proceeding that is inconsistent with a claim taken by that party in a previous proceeding.’ ”
If a debtor, whо has indicated an intent to surrender real property, opposes a foreclosure while his or her bankruptcy case is still pending or within a relatively short time afterwards, then the bankruptcy court should be the one to address the issue. In that case, it would appear the debtor is perpetrating a fraud on the bankruptcy court or making a mockery of the bankruptcy system. But if years pass between the time a debtor indicates an intent to surrender аnd the time the debtor opposes a state court foreclosure, then the issue of judicial estoppel should be decided by the state court, which is in the best position to determine whether the debtor is making a mockery of the foreclosure action by taking a position inconsistent with the one she took in the bankruptcy case.
CONCLUSION
Here, years passed between the time the Debtor swore she would surrender her home and the first time she oppоsed the state court foreclosure action. Given that intervening lapse of time, the Court cannot conclude the Debtor intended to perpetrate a fraud on this Court or make a mockery of the bankruptcy system. Pеrhaps circumstances have since changed that would allow the Debtor to make the required mortgage payments.
Accordingly, it is
ORDERED that the Bank’s motion to reopen this case
Notes
. Doc. No. 1 at Schedule A.
. Id. at Schedules A & D.
. Id. at Statement of Intentions.
. Doc. No. 14.
. Doc. No. 18 at ¶ 5.
. Id, at ¶ 8.
. Id.
. Id.; see also Doc. No. 23.
. Doc. No. 18 at ¶ 10.
. In re Metzler,
. Id. at 896-97.
. Id. at 900.
. Id.
.
. Id. at 627.
. Id. at 628.
. Id. (quoting Black Warrior Riverkeeper, Inc. v. U.S. Army Corps of Eng'rs,
. The Court notes it is not unusual for a bank's bankruptcy counsel to be different from its foreclosure counsel. And foreclosure counsel cannot reasonably be expected to conduct а nationwide search to see if its borrower has previously filed for bankruptcy. That is why discharge in bankruptcy is generally an affirmative defense.
. In re Digital Comty. Networks, Inc.,
.
. Blumberg v. USAA Cas. Ins. Co.,
. It is not clear that is the case here since it is undisputed the Debtor has not made any
.Doc. No. 18. mortgage payments since 2009, which is troubling to the Court,
