MEMORANDUM OPINION
This matter comes before the Court on the Motion of Jessica L. McCullough (the “Debt- or”) for a voluntary dismissal of her Chapter 7 bankruptcy case (the “Motion”). This is a core proceeding under 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(A); venue is proper under 28 U.S.C. § 1409. Upon consideration of the parties’ pleadings, and after a hearing held on this matter on December 16, 1998 (the “Hearing”), the Court makes the following Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law.
FINDINGS OF FACT
The Motion was filed on November 17, 1998; the Debtor’s underlying bankruptcy petition was filed on September 24,1998. In the Motion, Debtor states that she attended the Bankruptcy Code (the “Code”) § 341 meeting and provided all documents, agreed to the entry of a consent order lifting the § 362 automatic stay regarding her real property, and agreed to surrender voluntarily her automobile. Debtor seeks to dismiss her present Chapter 7 case without prejudice to her ability to file another Chapter 7 proceeding within 180 days of the dismissal of the present Chapter 7. Debtor states that dismissal would not be a substantial abuse of the Code nor would it work to the detriment of any of her creditors. Debtor also states that her minor son, while driving an automobile titled and owned by her, was involved in an accident post-petition (the “Accident”),
Responses objecting to the Motion were filed by Gregg R. Nivala, the Assistant United States Trustee, and by Lynn L. Tavenner, the Chapter 7 Trustee in the case, both on December 8, 1998. Both objections essentially state that dismissal of the ease may serve as a prejudice to the creditors in the case as the value of any assets which may be recovered and distributed to creditors in this case will be depleted by the amount of the additional claims of creditors which the Debt- or wishes to add in a subsequent Chapter 7 case. The Fourth Circuit has held that the Chapter 7 trustee has standing to object to a voluntary dismissal.
See Penick v. Tice,
CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
I. Relevant Code Section and the Standard
The relevant Code section is § 707(a), which states as follows: “The court may dismiss a ease under this chapter only after notice and a hearing and only for cause, including....” This section, with the use of the discretionary word “may,” clearly differs from the dismissal provision for Chapter 13 eases, § 1307, which provides that the Court “shall” dismiss a case on the request of the debtor at any time. Section 707 goes on to provide three instances of a debtor’s actions which would lead to dismissal; because of the word “including,” these three instances are not the exclusive and only ones which will result in dismissal. It is to be noted, however, that these enumerated provisions allude to a debtor’s wrongdoing which would enable a creditor to pursue dismissal of the case. Although some courts, including this one in
In re Wirick,
The decision on dismissal falls squarely within the sound discretion of the Court and such a decision will be reversed only if the exercised discretion has been abused.
See In re Marks,
Counsel for the Debtor notes in the Motion and argued during the Hearing that the presumption in Code § 707(b) is applicable here. That presumption states as follows: “There shall be a presumption in favor of granting the relief requested by the debt- or.” Counsel, however, misreads this presumption. Normally, in a Code § 707 proceeding, another party, usually the trustee or a creditor, is moving for the Chapter 7 case to be dismissed because of some misconduct on the part of the debtor, such as delay, nonpayment of fees, or failure to file certain
II. Debtor’s Purpose in Seeking Dismissal Does Not Rise to the Level of “Cause”
The Debtor’s sole reason for seeking dismissal of the present Chapter 7 case so that she can file another Chapter 7 case is the potential liability which may arise from the Accident. The Debtor testified during the Hearing that this was the only reason why the Motion was filed.
1
This reason does not rise to the level of “cause” which the Court must find in order to grant the Motion. Case law is clear in holding that the dismissal of a voluntary bankruptcy proceeding for the purpose of refiling another case is not cause for dismissal.
Carroll,
There are two reported decisions which are similar to the case at bar in that potential liability from a car accident arose post-petition. In
In re Compston,
Underwood is the other decision similar to the case at bar. There, the Court held that debtors seeking to dismiss their voluntary petition in order to refile and add a post-petition tort creditor in order to erase a claim which arose out of an automobile accident which occurred three months after the initial bankruptcy filing were seeking to abuse the periodic statutory right to relief which Congress decreed and did not establish cause for dismissal. Id. at 572. In light of this authority, it is clear that the Debtor’s reason for seeking dismissal here, to add potential post-petition creditors arising out of the Accident, does not rise to the required level of cause.
Debtor argues that dismissing the current Chapter 7 case so that she can file another Chapter 7 case will provide her with the fresh start which is contemplated by the Code. The Court finds this argument to be without merit. The Debtor has already sought the fresh start by filing her first petition and seeking a discharge of her debts; filing this petition had significant legal consequences as stays were issued, an estate was created, and a trustee was appointed. Dismissal for the sole purpose of filing a new petition would circumvent these provisions of the Code and would set a dangerous precedent. For example, creditors often establish credit or perform services subsequent to the filing of a petition in reliance on the fresh start; knowing that a case can be dismissed and then refiled may reduce such creditor willingness. Starting, stopping, and then restarting such a chain of events only for the purpose of adding post-petition creditors does not constitute sufficient cause under Code § 707. Also, the six-year limitation between discharge and refiling a Chapter 7 case is thwarted if the debtor can treat the prior filing as if it never happened.
In addition, the Debtor argues that her Chapter 7 case is a no asset case and that there will be no prejudice to the pre-petition creditors as a result of enlarging the discharge. The Court disagrees with this argument. Many petitions are filed as no asset cases only for it to be later determined to be otherwise. There could be preference actions or fraudulent transfer actions which, if successful, would result in more assets being available for distribution to creditors. The problem with a voluntary dismissal and subsequent refiling is the possibility that these preferences or fraudulent transfers may be able to be set aside if they fall within the required time limits from the present filing, but may fall beyond the required time limits from a subsequent filing.
[13] Finally, to buttress her argument, the Debtor cites the following ease,
In re Sole,
1998 Bankr.LEXIS 801 (Bankr.E.D.Va. 1998), for the proposition that the Court has the authority to allow a debtor to file another bankruptcy proceeding within 180 days of dismissal despite the language of the Code in § 109(g)(2). In
Sole,
nearly twenty months had expired between the motion for relief under Code § 362 and the voluntary dismissal of the case. Three days following the dismissal, the debtor sought to file another Chapter 13 petition, and the Chapter 13 trustee moved to dismiss the case pursuant to Code § 109(g)(2) because the required 180 days had not lapsed since the dismissal. The Court in
Sole
allowed such a refiling because it found that there was no causal connection between the voluntary dismissal and the motion for relief from stay. This holding is not applicable to the case at bar; this is a Chapter 7 matter, while the
Sole
case dealt with the absolute right of the debtor to dismiss and subsequently refile a Chapter 13 petition.
2
The case at bar has to do with the
CONCLUSION
According to Code § 707(a), the Debtor must establish cause in order for the Court to grant the voluntary dismissal sought here. As provided above, the Court finds that cause has not been established. The case law is clear in providing that seeking to dismiss a Chapter 7 case for the sole purpose of refiling is not sufficient. The Court finds that such a dismissal with the intended purpose of a subsequent refiling would result in an enlarged discharge and would subvert the statutory limitation of Code § 727(a)(8), which allows Chapter 7’s to be filed only once in six consecutive years. Granting the dismissal would also establish a bad precedent for future cases as creditors would be hesitant to rely on the fresh start of a debtor if the debtor could dismiss the case and quickly refile another one. The Debtor’s situation here may be unfortunate, but as provided above, the Debtor is not without recourse as a Chapter 13 petition following the discharge of the current Chapter 7 case may be available. Whether that Chapter 13 proceeding can withstand a challenge is not an issue before the Court. An appropriate Order will be entered simultaneously herewith in conformity with this Memorandum Opinion.
Notes
. In terms of the notice requirements for the Motion, Rules 1017 and 2002 of the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure, along with case law, require that all creditors, including post-petition ones, be given proper notice of a debt- or’s motion to dismiss a voluntary petition if dismissal is sought only for the purpose of listing post-petition creditors, as is the case here.
See In re Compston,
. While the Court does not necessarily agree with the holding in
Sole,
nor with the opinion in
In re Duncan,
It might be added that
Sole
involved the dismissal of a Chapter 13 case which does not require the "requesting and obtaining” of a dismissal. Dismissal is a right granted to a Chapter 13 debtor unless the case was originally filed as a Chapter 7. For that reason it may well be argued that only one of the conditions of Code § 109(g)(2) has occurred, i.e. the request for relief from stay, and therefore, the debtor may not
