IN RE: RONALD M. TAMECKI, SR., Debtor RONALD M. TAMECKI, SR., Appellant v. LAWRENCE G. FRANK
No. 99-4061
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
September 27, 2000
2000 Decisions. Paper 206.
ALITO, RENDELL and DUHE, Circuit Judges.
ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA (Dist. Court No. 99-cv-01240) District Court Judge: James F. McClure, Jr. Argued: May 25, 2000
2000 Decisions
Opinions of the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit
9-27-2000
In Re Ronald Tamecki
Precedential or Non-Precedential:
Docket 99-4061
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Recommended Citation
“In Re Ronald Tamecki” (2000). 2000 Decisions. Paper 206. http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_2000/206
FRANK E. GARRIGAN (Argued)
Garrigan & Rosini
112 East Independence Street
Shamokin, Pennsylvania 17872
Attorney for Appellant
* Honorable John M. Duhe Jr., United States Circuit Judge for the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, sitting by designation.
Law Office of Lawrence G. Frank
2023 North Second Street
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania 17102
Attorney for Appellee
OPINION OF THE COURT
DUHE, Circuit Judge:
We AFFIRM the decision of the district court affirming the bankruptcy court‘s dismissal of Ronald M. Tamecki‘s (“Debtor“) Chapter 7 petition.
BACKGROUND
Debtor filed for Chapter 7 protection seeking discharge of an approximately $35,000 credit card debt owed to MBNA America. He possesses only one substantial asset, his share of a tenancy by the entirety in his home, which he holds with his estranged wife. Debtor and his wife have accrued over $100,000 of equity in the home.
The Tameckis had been separated for approximately five years at the time Debtor filed for bankruptcy, and they have now been separated for more than seven years. Debtor and his wife live in different towns, and each lives with a significant other. Mrs. Tamecki filed for divorce in July 1993 but, for unknown reasons, the action is still pending. The most recent trial date was continued either on joint motion of the parties or without objection by the Debtor.
In his petition Debtor claimed an exemption under
DISCUSSION
Dismissal based on lack of good faith . . . should be confined carefully and is generally utilized only in those egregious cases that entail concealed or misrepresented assets and/or sources of income, lavish lifestyles, and intention to avoid a large single debt based upon conduct akin to fraud, misconduct or gross negligence.
Zick, 931 F.2d at 1129. Courts can determine good faith only on an ad hoc basis and must decide whether the petitioner has abused the provisions, purpose, or spirit of bankruptcy law. See Marks, 174 B.R. at 40. The parties agree that the decision to dismiss a petition for lack of good faith rests within the sound discretion of the bankruptcy court. See Zick, 931 F.2d at 1126, In re Atlas Supply Corp., 857 F.2d 1061, 1063 (5th Cir. 1988).
Once a party calls into question a petitioner‘s good faith, the burden shifts to the petitioner to prove his good faith. See Marks, 174 B.R. at 40 citing In re Sky Group Int‘l, Inc., 108 B.R. 86, 90 (Bankr. W.D. Pa. 1989) (“Once the good faith issue is placed in question, the party bringing the
Debtor testified that he accrued over $35,000 in debt at a time when he was earning less than one-tenth this amount. Debtor could point to no marked calamity or sudden loss of income that precipitated his need to accrue such a comparatively large consumer debt. Moreover, Debtor‘s testimony concerning the state of his marriage confirmed the Trustee‘s assertion that divorce and dissolution of the tenancy by the entirety were “right around the corner.1” The district court did not abuse its discretion in determining that together these facts are sufficient to shift the burden to Debtor to prove his good faith.2
Debtor‘s response was three-fold: first, that the Trustee must prove “extreme misconduct“; second, that ability to repay is not, in and of itself, evidence of bad faith, see Marks, 174 B.R. at 41 and third; that he did no more than avail himself of a proper exception under the Code. While we agree with Debtor and the court in Zick that we should not lightly infer bad faith, Debtor‘s response is insufficient to carry his burden of proving good faith. Debtor proffered no evidence of good faith other than his testimony that he
AFFIRMED.
I join the opinion of the Court, but I add a few words to clarify the narrow point of disagreement between the majority and the dissent. As I understand the position of our dissenting colleague, she agrees (a) that a Chapter 7 consumer case may be dismissed for “bad faith” and (b) that, once a debtor‘s good faith is appropriately put at issue, it is the burden of the debtor to produce evidence of good faith. I do not understand the dissent to argue that in this case the debtor produced evidence of good faith, and thus the only apparent point of disagreement concerns the question whether, on the particular facts of this case, the debtor‘s good faith was sufficiently put at issue to require him to demonstrate good faith.
The dissent apparently believes that, in order to put Tamecki‘s good faith at issue, it was incumbent upon the trustee to produce evidence that, among other things, there is no good reason for the unusual delay in the completion of the Tameckis’ divorce proceeding. See Dissenting Opinion at 9 (“[T]he trustee offered no evidence that put Tamecki‘s good faith at issue. He only made bald allegations, without proffering any evidence about the timing of Tamecki‘s still unconsummated divorce. . . .“). But the trustee, who is obviously not a party to the divorce proceeding, is in a comparatively poor position to show the reason for the delay. The known facts about the divorce proceeding are sufficient to place upon the debtor the burden of explaining the reason for the delay, which has now reached seven years. It may be that there are entirely legitimate reasons for the delay. If so, it should have been easy for Tamecki to show what they were. But he made no effort to do so.
Under the particular circumstances of this case-- which, contrary to the implication of the dissent, is not the average consumer bankruptcy case -- the bankruptcy judge did not commit an abuse of discretion is dismissing the petition.
Some background is necessary to understand the framework in which we analyze this dispute and why I strenuously disagree with the outcome in this case, the reasoning, and the rule implicitly set forth by the majority. The Bankruptcy Code contains no explicit good faith filing requirement.1 It does, however, permit the court to dismiss cases, including chapter 7 consumer cases, “for cause.” See
In nearly all respects, Tamecki fits the profile of the average consumer debtor. He has marital problems, health problems, and employment problems. He has a large credit card debt that he incurred for subsistence purposes by using unsolicited “live checks” that MBNA sent to him while he was experiencing a lull in income and ability to perform
One would expect, therefore, that this case was dismissed for bad faith because the trustee put forth evidence of some type of misconduct or fraud. However, the trustee offered no evidence that put Tamecki‘s good faith at issue. He only made bald allegations, without proffering any evidence, about the timing of Tamecki‘s still unconsummated divorce and his accrual of debt to MBNA, to which Tamecki provided responses that were not discredited by the Bankruptcy Court. The trustee, who is the primary advocate of dismissing Tamecki‘s case, conceded at oral argument that even after conducting considerable research, he knows of no case with an analogous fact pattern or remotely on point; he could not name one. Having canvassed the landscape, I have not found a case bearing any resemblance to this one in which bad faith was found to exist. Simply put, our ruling breaks new ground in the law regarding good faith filing.
In dismissing Tamecki‘s case, the Bankruptcy Court made no specific findings of bad faith. However, in upholding the dismissal of Tamecki‘s case, the majority focuses on Tamecki‘s accrual of debt to MBNA and his pending divorce, both of which I will discuss in turn.
Tamecki accrued most of his debt to MBNA within the two years prior to filing for bankruptcy. In addressing this accrual of debt, the Bankruptcy Court made no finding that Tamecki ran up his debts in contemplation of bankruptcy or made extravagant purchases in reckless disregard of his financial situation. To the contrary, the Bankruptcy Court
The majority ruling also relies on Tamecki‘s still unconsummated divorce proceedings. Tamecki‘s wife filed for divorce more than five years prior to the bankruptcy filing, but the proceedings have been dormant for much of that time. Tamecki claims he would never divorce his wife of his own accord; he testified that he wants to remain married to her. The trustee opined, with no evidence, that Tamecki‘s divorce is “right around the corner,” in which event he could be forced to sell his home, break the tenancy by the entirety protected by Pennsylvania law, and pay MBNA what he owes. I might find this contention persuasive if the trustee had offered any specific evidence, and the Bankruptcy Court had specifically found, that Tamecki had timed his bankruptcy and divorce to defraud his creditors. However, the Bankruptcy Court made no such finding, nor did it indicate that the possibility of Tamecki‘s divorce played any role in its ruling. In fact, the Court never shared its view on this issue; it did not explicitly accept the trustee‘s argument in this regard, nor did it discredit Tamecki‘s assertion that he did not want to be divorced from his wife (and therefore had no intention to break the tenancy by the entirety on his own accord).6 The majority takes a quantum and unprecedented leap by
A closer look at the trustee‘s argument reveals its slippery slope. Failing to put forth any evidence that Tamecki has schemed with his wife to postpone the divorce for their mutual benefit, the trustee‘s position on the divorce issue, as clarified in oral argument, is that Tamecki had an obligation “to move his divorce along” before filing for bankruptcy so that the state-law-protected tenancy by the entirety would be broken to make his home equity available for creditors, regardless of whether Tamecki actually wants to save his marriage.7 In addition to being concerned about the result in the case before us, I am concerned that by endorsing this argument, the majority is announcing an unprecedented rule that insolvent individuals must refrain from filing for bankruptcy if they may have more assets in the future, such that filing before realization of such assets, even absent proof of bad intent, is grounds for dismissal of one‘s bankruptcy case. For example, is an insolvent individual barred from filing for bankruptcy if his wealthy parent is ill, absent any evidence that he is timing his filing so as to deprive creditors of his potential inheritance? I submit that there is no such restriction in the Bankruptcy Code, and the courts should not create one.
I will refrain from refuting a variety of specific statements made by the majority, with one exception, namely, its assertion that a court may dismiss a chapter 7 case for cause if the debtor fails to demonstrate good faith in filing, citing the Zick decision. Zick does not require consumer debtors to affirmatively demonstrate good faith absent any challenge. Zick says that lack of good faith may be a valid basis for dismissing a bankruptcy case for cause under
I respectfully dissent.
A True Copy:
Teste:
Clerk of the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit
