OPINION AND ORDER GRANTING MOTION TO CONVERT CASE FROM A CASE UNDER CHAPTER 13 TO A CASE UNDER CHAPTER 7
Eric Gordon Jensen (“Debtor”) filed this chapter 13 case on August 3, 2009. On February 12, 2010, the Chapter 13 Trustee (“Trustee”) moved to dismiss the case pursuant to Bankruptcy Code § 1307(c)(1). (ECF # 45.) Debtor opposed the motion to dismiss, but argued, in the alternative, that if the Court is going to dismiss the case, it should instead convert the case to a case under chapter 7. (Objection to Proposed Order, dated March 1, 2010 (“Debt- or’s Objection”) ¶ 19, ECF #48.) The Court heard argument on the matter on March 4, 2010. During the argument, the Trustee’s counsel argued, in the alternative, that if the case is not dismissed, it should be converted to a case under chapter 7. For the reasons explained below, the Court grants the Trustee’s motion to convert the case to a case under chapter 7 because that result is in the best interests of creditors and the estate.
BACKGROUND
Debtor had previously filed a chapter 13 bankruptcy petition in the Northern District of New York on October 12, 2007 (Case No. 07-13199-1-rel (Bankr. N.D.N.Y.)). After the chapter 13 trustee moved to dismiss the earlier case for failure to file a plan, statements and schedules, and for delay prejudicial to creditors
(see id.,
ECF # 11), the Debtor voluntarily dismissed the case on February 19, 2008 without prejudice.
(Id.,
ECF # 15.) The Trustee moved to dismiss Debtor’s current case on the grounds that the Debtor has caused unreasonable delay prejudicial to creditors because (a) the Debtor failed to amend his schedules by January 21, 2010,
This case has been troubled from the start. The Debtor and his counsel did not timely file (i) a credit counseling certificate, (ii) his schedules or (iii) the chapter 13 plan. Debtor’s counsel failed to appear at the scheduled bankruptcy court hearing on November 5, 2009. The Court was required to enter an order dated November 5, 2009, setting forth a schedule of deadlines for filing an amended chapter 13 plan and all missing schedules by November 19, 2009, providing the Trustee with all missing documents, filing delinquent operating reports by November 19, 2009, filing claims objections by December 11, 2009, filing a written status report, and appearing at an adjourned confirmation hearing on January 14, 2010. (ECF # 16.) The order warned that failure to comply with the order may result in dismissal of the case, or sanctions against the Debtor or Debtor’s counsel. (Id.) One day before the November 19, 2009 deadline for filing an amended plan and missing schedules, Debtor’s counsel requested and was given an extension until November 24, 2009 to file those documents.
The First Amended Plan, filed one day late on November 25, 2009, remains inadequate and infeasible, as Debtor’s counsel has been repeatedly told at court hearings on January 14, 2010, February 11, 2010, and March 4, 2010. The First Amended Plan provides for plan payments of “$100 each month, from September 1, 2009, through August 1, 2012.” (ECF # 20, at 1.) Additionally, the plan provides:
“Lump-sum payment(s) in the following amount(s): Totaling $175,000 or minimum amount needed to pay balance of all allowed claims. If applicable ... tax refunds and proceeds from liquidation or hypothetication of unliquidated assets as follows: 100%, or amount not needed to exceed the amount required to pay 100% of all allowed claims, for each of the following taxable years: 2004-2008.”
Id.
This statement regarding lump-sum payments is nearly incomprehensible, but more significantly, the Debtor has never shown the remotest chance that he can make lump sum payments totaling $175,000, or any amount approximating that sum. The Court has repeatedly told Debtor’s counsel that the schedules remain inadequate, and despite being ordered to file amended schedules, the Debtor’s counsel has failed to do so. See Order dated January 14, 2010, ¶ 3 (ECF # 37) (“File all missing or amended schedules on or before January 21, 2010.”). Debtor’s counsel did file numerous claims objections, all but one overruled, with the Court admonishing Debtor’s counsel about filing frivolous claims objections. See Opinion and Order Overruling Debtor’s Objection to Proof of Claim # 4, dated February 3, 2010, at 3 n. I. 1 (ECF # 40.)
In Debtor’s Amended Schedules, filed on November 24, 2009 (ECF # 19), Debtor estimates that he has assets in the amount
Debtor asserts that he has a “contingent asset” in the form of a claim against certain unknown defendants who conducted an improper foreclosure sale of Debtor’s Warren County property. 2 See Debtor’s Objection ¶ 9. In his amended Schedule B Debtor approximates the potential recovery at $100,000, but in the Debtor’s Objection, Debtor suggests that the potential recovery would be the difference between the price paid at the foreclosure sale, $131,887, and the purchase price offered to Debtor in the $175,000 sale contract he had at the time, or $43,113. Id. ¶ 15. Debtor has not commenced an adversary proceeding on this matter for various reasons set forth in Debtor’s Objection, including the “unavoidable delay until the Debtor was able to make a special trip to the Warren County Courthouse to copy the entire file....” Id. ¶ 9.
Debtor proposes, in the alternative, that if recovery on the foreclosure claim falls short, Debtor could fund the plan with his interest in the family limited partnership, Jensen Family LP, the subject of which is real property located in Massachusetts. Debtor avers that his interest in the partnership will not be capable of liquidation until Debtor’s mother, who is in good health and refuses to sell the Massachusetts property, dies, or until an investor lends Debtor cash in exchange for an interest in the partnership. Id. ¶ 16 (“At the present time, that interest is effectively not capable of liquidation, since it is completely dependent upon the general partner (the Debtor’s mother), who is in good health and refuses to sell the real property in Massachusetts which is the subject of the limited partnership. However, upon her death the property could be (and may well have to be) sold in order to partition ....”) Debtor has not made any apparent efforts to obtain an investor.
With respect to the possible $1,000 tax refund, not only is it insufficient to satisfy 100% of the claims, but it is also contingent on the Debtor consulting with an accountant and having “sufficient time to earn enough to pay the accountant’s fee for amending his income-tax returns for the years 2007 and before.”
See
Debtor’s Status Report No. 1, ¶ 5 (ECF # 29). Furthermore, this $1,000 tax refund was anticipated by Debtor before the IRS filed its Proof of Claim in the amount of $17,655.97.
See
Proof of Claim No. 8. According to Debtor’s Objection, Debtor has persuaded the accountant who had
DISCUSSION
Under Bankruptcy Code § 1307(c), a court may dismiss or convert a chapter 13 case to case under chapter 7 in 11 circumstances. 11 U.S.C. § 1307(c)(1)-(11). This list is “not exhaustive,” but exemplary. 9 CollieR on BANKRUPTCY ¶ 1307.04 & n. 33 (15th ed. rev.2007) (noting the use of the term “including”). Two of the 11 circumstances apply here. Subsection (c)(1) provides that a court may dismiss or convert a chapter 13 case to a case under chapter 7 where there has been “unreasonable delay by the debtor that is prejudicial to creditors.” 11 U.S.C. § 1307(c)(1). Subsection (c)(5) provides that a court may dismiss or convert a chapter 13 case in the event of “denial of confirmation of a plan under [11 U.S.C. § 1325] and denial of a request made for additional time for filing another plan or a modification of a plan.” 11 U.S.C. § 1307(c)(5). The Court may convert the case rather than dismiss it if conversion “is in the best interests of creditors and the estate.” 11 U.S.C. § 1307(c). For the following reasons, there is cause to convert Debtor’s case under subsections (c)(1) and (c)(5), and conversion rather than dismissal is in the best interests of creditors and the estate.
A. There Is Cause to Dismiss or Convert Under Bankruptcy Code § 1307(c)(1) Because Debtor’s Delays Are Prejudicial to Creditors
Courts have dismissed cases under subsection (c)(1) where, for example, “the debtor, even having been granted extensions of time by the court, had failed to comply with a court order that he file tax returns necessary to compute taxing authorities’ proofs of claim, without which a plan could not be confirmed,” or where a debtor “who had converted from chapter 11 did not deny that plan was fraught with problems and he had made no efforts to market property that was to be sold under plan.” 9 CollieR on BankRuptoy ¶ 1307.04 (citing
Howard v. Lexington Investments, Inc.,
Here, Debtor’s delay is unreasonable. As noted above, part of the delay in this case has been caused by Debtor’s often groundless claims objections. 9 Collier on Bankruptcy ¶ 3007.01 (claim objection “should ... at a minimum, allege those facts necessary to support the objection” including “allegations sufficient to overcome the prima facie validity of the filed proof of claim”). The Debtor has done nothing to address the infeasibility of the plan or move ahead with the potential lawsuit regarding the foreclosure or the sale of his interest in the limited partnership. Nor has Debtor amended his Schedules as directed by a Court Order, having already been granted an extension of time. {See ECF # 16.) In light of these delays, the Court concludes that Debtor cannot confirm a plan in a timely fashion.
B. There Is Cause to Dismiss or Convert Under Bankruptcy Code § 1307(c)(5) Because Debtor’s Plan Is Infeasible
The Court also finds that Debt- or’s plan is not feasible. Subsection (c)(5), allowing a court to dismiss a case where the plan is not confirmable, references Bankruptcy Code § 1325(a)(6), “[b]y far the most important criterion for the confirmation of a chapter 13 plan.” 9 Collier on BaneruptCy ¶ 1325.07. Section
1. Debtor’s Plan Is Infeasible Because It Is Premised in Part on a Speculative Lawsuit
A chapter 13 plan cannot be premised on the successful litigation of a claim.
Ewald v. Nat’l City Mortgage Co. (In re Ewald),
Bankruptcy courts in the Southern District of New York and elsewhere have converted chapter 11 cases to cases under chapter 7 where the debtor proposed to fund a plan out of the proceeds of potential litigation.
See In re FRGR Managing Member LLC,
As to Debtor’s interest in its family limited partnership, a chapter 13 plan cannot be premised on the unlikely sale of an asset.
First Nat'l Bank v. Fantasia (In re Fantasia),
C.Conversion Is in the Best Interests of Creditors and the Estate
Having determined that cause is present to convert or dismiss, the Court turns to whether conversion or dismissal is in the best interests of creditors and the estate. The Court finds conversion to be the preferable remedy in light of the fact that Debtor has potentially valuable assets to administer in the estate.
See
Kieth M. Lundin, ChapteR 13 BaNkruptcy, 3d Ed. § 312.1 (2000 & Supp.2004) (“If there are assets to be administered, conversion will usually be the better bet for the general creditor.”). Furthermore, the appointment of an independent and disinterested trustee upon conversion would ensure the prompt liquidation of assets, including the pursuit of litigation and the sale of debtor’s interest in its family partnership. Debtor has demonstrated by his delays that judicial and administrative oversight is essential to move forward on these pursuits.
See, e.g., In re Blaise,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the Trustee’s motion to convert the case from a case under chapter 13 to a case under chapter 7 is GRANTED.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. "The original and amended Schedules E and F, filed by Debtor's counsel, list every unsecured priority claim (2 tax claims totaling $19,603) and unsecured nonpriority claim (19 claims totaling in excess of $156,000) as disputed. It appears to the Court that Schedules E and F, listing all claims as disputed, have not been filed in good faith. Additionally, the claims objections filed by Debtor's counsel appear to border on being frivolous. Debtor’s counsel is warned that if he persists in what appears to be bad faith conduct, the Court will hold a hearing to determine whether sanctions should be imposed against counsel." Id. (emphasis in original).
. The Debtor acknowledges that he commenced his prior bankruptcy case for the purpose of staying the foreclosure of the Warren County Property. See Debtor's Objection ¶ 3. The Warren County Property was nonetheless sold at a foreclosure sale. Id.
