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In re Cameron

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS EASTERN DIVISION
Apr 18, 2013
Case No. 13-10115-FJB (Bankr. D. Mass. Apr. 18, 2013)

Summary

dismissing bankruptcy case, where that the debtor failed to meet her obligations by, among other things, failing to appear and submit to an examination under oath at the § 341 meeting

Summary of this case from Moya v. U.S. Eagle Fed. Credit Union

Opinion

Case No. 13-10115-FJB

04-18-2013

In re HELEN CAMERON, Debtor


Chapter 13


MEMORANDUM OF DECISION ON

MOTION FOR ORDER DISMISSING CASE

In this fourth bankruptcy case filed by debtor Helen Cameron ("Cameron") in twenty-nine months, the Chapter 13 Trustee has moved for dismissal on the basis of Cameron's failure to attend a session of the first meeting of creditors and to make plan payments. The United States Trustee has joined in the motion, urging as additional grounds for dismissal that Cameron has made contradictory statements in this case regarding her residence, a factor relevant to her choice of venue, and that she has a history of multiple bankruptcy filings. For these same reasons, the United States Trustee further moves that Cameron be barred from filing a new petition for at least 180 days after dismissal. Cameron, acting pro se, filed an objection to the motion but elected not to appear at the hearing on it. For the reasons that follow, the Court will dismiss the case and bar Cameron's refiling for two years.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

i. The Current Case and Present Motion

On November 13, 2012, Cameron commenced the present case by filing a petition for relief under chapter 13 of the Bankruptcy Code in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Rhode Island. She moved for and was granted leave to pay the filing fee in installments but has failed to make last of the four payments, leaving an overdue balance of $71. In the schedules of creditors she filed in the case, she has failed to disclose her obligation to the United States Courts for unpaid filing fees incurred in her previous bankruptcy cases. She has filed a chapter 13 plan in the case that calls for 36 monthly payments of $1 each, includes contradictory provisions regarding her secured debt, fails to propose payment of her unsecured debt (not even the fees she owes to the U.S. Courts), and is patently unconfirmable and proposed in bad faith.

In the District of Rhode Island, the case was No. 12-13573. Upon transfer to the District of Massachusetts, the case was assigned a new case number. All citations for the instant case shall reflect the District of Massachusetts case number and docket. Notwithstanding the change of number, the case commenced in District of Rhode Island is the same case as that which is presently before this court in the District of Massachusetts.

It provides, on the one hand, that she will pay these debts "outside the plan" according to the original contract terms without modification, with liens retained, and, on the other, that, for no articulated reason, she will modify them to a $0 balance and avoid the mortgages securing them.

At 2:31 p.m. on December 12, 2012, the thirtieth day of the case, Cameron filed a motion under 11 U.S.C. § 362(c)(4)(B) to extend the automatic stay, and the certificate of service she filed with the motion shows no service on creditors. A motion of this type must be adjudicated no later than the thirtieth day of the case, see 11 U.S.C. § 362(c)(4)(B), and is a matter of concern to all creditors. Judge Finkle denied the motion to extend the automatic stay, adding that "the Debtor had two bankruptcy cases dismissed in the District of Massachusetts in the one year prior to the present case," and consequently that "pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 362(c)(4)(A)(i), there is no stay in effect."

Shortly thereafter, Judge Finkle ordered Cameron to show cause why the bankruptcy case should not, for improper venue, be either transferred to the District of Massachusetts or dismissed, and she set a hearing on the same. Cameron failed to appear at the hearing, whereupon, on January 4, 2013, Judge Finkle initially dismissed the case but then, on January 9, 2013 and upon reconsideration sua sponte, vacated the order of dismissal and transferred the case to the Bankruptcy Court for the District of Massachusetts. In doing so, she entered findings and rulings that Cameron had made contradictory representations in the bankruptcy case regarding the location of her principal residence, that she had used a different social security number on her petition in this case than she had used on the petitions in her previous cases, that her principal residence remained in Massachusetts, that her choice of the District of Rhode Island as the venue for her bankruptcy case had been improper, and that, "obviously dissatisfied with the outcome of her multiple bankruptcy filings before the Massachusetts Bankruptcy Court, [she] has engaged in improper forum shopping." Judge Finkle concluded:

[I]n light of the Debtor's contradictory representations regarding the location of her principal residence in her amendments to the Initial Petition and the use of two different social security numbers, dismissal of this case, rather than transfer of the case to the Massachusetts Bankruptcy Court where venue properly lies, is not in the interests of justice. FED. R. BANKR. P. 1014(a)(2) confers discretion on the bankruptcy court to dismiss or transfer a case filed in the wrong district. . . . The interest of justice is best served by the Massachusetts Bankruptcy Court addressing these contradictory representations by the Debtor and the serious issues raised by this fact pattern.

After transfer of the case to the District of Massachusetts, the original chapter 13 trustee in the case, John Boyajian, the standing chapter 13 trustee for the District of Rhode Island, was replaced with the standing chapter 13 trustee for the Eastern Division of the District of Massachusetts, Carolyn Bankowski, who, on January 10, 2013, scheduled a continuation of the first meeting of creditors for February 6, 2013. Cameron failed without permissible excuse to appear at the continued meeting.

The Chapter 13 Trustee then filed the present motion to dismiss this case, stating as grounds that Cameron failed to appear at the § 341 meeting of creditors and that she had failed to make the first plan payment, as required by 11 U.S.C. § 1326(a)(1). The United States Trustee joined in this motion and stated that cause may exist to bar the debtor from filing another case under any subchapter of title 11 for 180 days following dismissal. As such cause, the United States Trustee cited, in addition to the two grounds for dismissal advanced by the Chapter 13 Trustee, (i) Cameron's multiple bankruptcy filings and (ii) Cameron's contradictory statements regarding her place of residence that Judge Finkle had identified in support of her order transferring venue.

In a written response, Cameron addressed the arguments of both the Chapter 13 Trustee and the United States Trustee. Regarding the continued meeting of creditors, she did not deny that she had not attended the February 6 continuation of the meeting of creditors but argued that a meeting of creditors had already been held while the case was in Rhode Island, which original meeting she did attend, and therefore that another meeting of creditors in Massachusetts was duplicative, untimely, and unnecessary. Regarding plan payments, Cameron asserted that she had made all of her plan payments (of one dollar) and that they had been accepted and cashed by the Rhode Island Chapter 13 Trustee. As to the United States Trustee's motion, Cameron stated that she had not made any intentional contradictory statements regarding her place of residence in her petition and that any error did not affect any party's substantial rights. As to the allegation of multiple filings, she stated, without elaboration or explanation, (i) that in two other Massachusetts bankruptcy cases she was not a debtor but a creditor, (ii) that she had neither sought nor received any discharge of her debts, (iii) that she had instead sought to negotiate a 100% repayment plan, and (iv) that each repeat filing within the previous eight years was the result of errors and mistakes made by the Massachusetts Clerk's Office and the Chapter 13 Trustee.

The Court scheduled a hearing on the Trustee's Motion to Dismiss for April 4, 2013. On April 2, 2013, Cameron filed a motion to continue the hearing so that she could obtain counsel. The Court denied the motion, stating Cameron had had ample opportunity to obtain counsel and therefore that the reason stated in support of the motion was disingenuous. On April 4, 2013 at 10:00 a.m., Cameron filed by facsimile transmission a further document entitled "Appearance and Waiver of Rights to Physical Presence." This was date stamped by the Clerk's office at 10:20 a.m. and docketed at 10:24 a.m. It stated: "Notice is hereby given of Appearance and Waiver of Right to Physical Presence at Hearing on April 4, 2013 at 10:30 AM on Trustee's Motion to Dismiss, et al." I read the document into the record and informed the parties present that the document could be interpreted in two ways: as an indication that Cameron did not intend to attend the hearing or, alternatively, as an indication that she would be available telephonically. Per my instructions, the courtroom deputy tried contacting Cameron at three different telephone numbers that could be found in her filed papers and one number that was proffered by the Chapter 13 Trustee but was unable to reach her at these numbers. Cameron was not present at the hearing.

During the hearing, the Chapter 13 Trustee conceded that Cameron had attended a meeting of creditors while the case was pending in the District of Rhode Island on December 14, 2012, but the Trustee further noted that this meeting had been adjourned to January 4, 2013 at 9:30 a.m. The continued meeting of creditors in Rhode Island was never held, Judge Finkle having indicated, at a hearing on January 3, 2013, that she would enter an order dismissing the case, which order entered on January 4. The Chapter 13 Trustee argued that the meeting of creditors scheduled in Massachusetts was a continuation of the initial December meeting, which had been adjourned and never completed. Additionally, the Chapter 13 Trustee indicated that she needed to examine this debtor; she pointed out that Cameron had never presented herself for examination in her prior Massachusetts bankruptcies. The Chapter 13 Trustee also conceded that the Debtor had made two plan payments to the Rhode Island Trustee, Mr. Boyajian, which payments were being transferred to the Massachusetts Trustee's office, but she added that no other payments have been received from Cameron, who therefore is at least two payments in arrears under her proposed plan. Finally, the Chapter 13 Trustee argued that the proposed Chapter 13 plan is unconfirmable as it does not propose to pay any creditors and uses the Rhode Island form of plan, a form that does not conform to the local rules of the District of Massachusetts. Had Cameron attended the meeting of creditors in February, she would have been instructed that she needed to file a new plan, using Massachusetts Official Local Form 3. The United States Trustee relied on his papers as filed and joined in the arguments made by the Chapter 13 Trustee during the hearing.

ii. Previous Cases

This case is not Cameron's first before me, nor is this the first time that she has failed to appear at the meeting of creditors and to make plan payments. These failures—and repeated failures to file required documents and to pay filing fees—led to the dismissals of Cameron's prior bankruptcy cases. Cameron had three bankruptcy cases pending and dismissed in the District of Massachusetts in the two years immediately preceding her commencement of the instant case. She has exhibited a continued inability to comply with court orders and to satisfy the obligations of a chapter 7 or 13 debtor.

In addition, between 1993 and 1995, she filed three more bankruptcy cases in this district. See Case No. 93-20635-CJK, Case No. 94-12799-CJK, and Case No. 95-12189-CJK.

Cameron filed the first of these, a case under Chapter 13, on June 29, 2010, Case No. 10-17060. The Court granted her application to pay the filing fee in installments, of which she paid the first two, totaling $182, but not the third, of $92. During the pendency of that case, Cameron sought and received multiple extensions of time to file required documents yet still failed to file a required document, for which her case was dismissed on August 16, 2010. When she moved to vacate the order of dismissal, the court indicated that it would not act on the request until she filed the missing document; four weeks later, when she still had not filed the document, the court denied the motion to vacate. No meeting of creditors was ever held in the case, which was dismissed prior to the scheduled meeting.

Cameron commenced her next case, another under Chapter 13, on October 21, 2011, Case No. 11-19943. Again the court permitted her to pay the filing fee in installments, of which again she paid the first two but never the third, for $89. Notably, in the schedules of creditors she filed in this case, she failed to disclose her obligation to the United States Courts for the balance of the filing fee from the previous case. Again, Cameron did not timely file the required documents, which resulted in the dismissal of her case on November 17, 2011. Cameron then belatedly filed the outstanding documents and moved for and obtained an order vacating the dismissal, thus reinstating the case. The first meeting of creditors was rescheduled for February 2, 2012. Cameron failed to appear at the meeting of creditors, for which the Chapter 13 Trustee moved to dismiss the case. Cameron failed to respond to the motion, whereupon the court allowed the motion and dismissed the case again. Upon Cameron's motion for reconsideration and after a hearing, on March 29, 2012, I vacated this order of dismissal on the condition that Cameron fully participate in a rescheduled meeting of creditors. Despite the Trustee's efforts to accommodate her—by allowing Cameron to appear at the meeting of creditors by telephone provided a notary was present to verify her identity and provided Cameron gave the Chapter 13 Trustee, prior to the rescheduled meeting, a written note from a medical doctor verifying the her inability to travel—the Debtor failed to satisfy these requirements for two rescheduled meetings. The Trustee consequently filed a second motion to dismiss the case, which, after a hearing, I granted on June 21, 2012.

As in the first case, the case was dismissed prior to the first scheduled date for the meeting of creditors. Once the case was reinstated, the Trustee rescheduled the meeting of creditors.

Cameron commenced a third bankruptcy case, this time under chapter 7, on August 9, 2012, Case No. 12-16699. She once again sought and was granted multiple extensions of time to file documents, and again she failed to file the documents. She also moved for a continuance of the scheduled meeting of creditors. I issued an order instructing her to contact the Chapter 7 Trustee, as the Court does not schedule the meeting of creditors. At a hearing on September 5, 2013 on the Debtor's motion to extend the automatic stay, I ordered Cameron to appear in person at the meeting of creditors scheduled for the next day, and I continued the hearing on the motion to extend the automatic stay. I also ordered the Chapter 7 Trustee to file an affidavit of non-compliance if she failed to attend the meeting. On September 6, 2013, the Chapter 7 Trustee filed an affidavit of non-compliance, indicating that Cameron had failed to appear at the scheduled meeting of creditors. The court dismissed the case on September 19, 2012 for failure of Cameron to file a certificate of credit counseling. Cameron moved to vacate the order of dismissal, but without correcting deficiencies in her filings, and I denied the motion. In the schedules of creditors she filed in this case, she again did not list her debt to the United States Courts for the fee obligations that accrued in her previous two cases.

I have not recounted the procedural history of Cameron's multiple appeals to the Bankruptcy Appellate Panel, which have uniformly resulted in dismissal. See BAP No. MB 11-061, BAP No. MB 11-093, BAP No. MB 12-044, BAP No. 12-047, BAP No. 12-057, BAP No. 12-088, BAP No. 12-089. I have also not recounted the procedural history of the cases in which Cameron filed involuntary petitions as to a person jointly liable with her on certain secured debt. See Case No. 11-13543-JNF and Case No. 12-18527-JNF.

Less than two months later, Cameron commenced the present case, this time with a petition filed in the Bankruptcy Court of the District of Rhode Island.

DISCUSSION

A debtor in bankruptcy has obligations. Among these are the obligations to pay the filing fee, to file the schedules and other documents, to appear and submit to examination under oath at the meeting of creditors under 11 U.S.C. § 341(a), (in a chapter 13 case) to make plan payments, to appear at hearings on matters as to which she has taken a position, and to be honest in her representations to and dealings with the court. See 11 U.S.C § 521 (schedules, lists, statement of financial affairs, and other required documents), § 343 (attendance at meeting of creditors), and § 1326(a) (chapter 13 plan payments), § 727(a)(4) (denial of discharge for false oaths, accounts, and claims, for bribery, and for withholding information), and 28 U.S.C. § 1930(a) (filing fee). Cameron is a serial filer and well known to the Court. In this case, she has failed to meet the obligations of a debtor by (i) failing to appear at the continued meeting of creditors that was scheduled for February 6, 2013, (ii) failing to make plan payments for at least the last two months, (iii) misrepresenting her place of residence on her petition to obtain an improper venue for her case, (iv) misstating her social security number on her petition, (v) failing without excuse to appear at the hearing before Judge Finkle on her order to show cause, (vi) failing without excuse to appear at the April 4 hearing before me on the Trustee's Motion to Dismiss, (vii) misrepresenting to the court that she intended to obtain counsel when in fact she had no such intent and merely was attempting to delay the hearing on the motion to dismiss, (viii) failing to pay the balance of the filing fee, and (ix) failing to schedule outstanding debts to the United States Courts and thereby denying to the United States, as a creditor, notice of her filing. Each of these individually, and certainly in combination with the others, is "cause" under § 1307(c) to dismiss a chapter 13 case. 11 U.S.C. § 1307(c) (court may dismiss a case under chapter 13 or convert it to one under chapter 7, whichever is in the best interest of creditors). As between dismissal and conversion to chapter 7, dismissal is in the best interest of creditors: no creditor has an interest in her receiving a discharge, and her schedules show no likelihood of a distribution to creditors. I therefore will grant the motion to dismiss.

The United States Trustee has further asked that I bar Cameron from filing a new bankruptcy petition under any chapter of the Bankruptcy Code for 180 days following dismissal. Under § 349(a) of the Bankruptcy Code, "[u]nless the court, for cause, orders otherwise," the dismissal of a bankruptcy case "does not prejudice the debtor with regard to the filing of a subsequent petition under this title." 11 U.S.C. § 349(a) (emphasis added). Section 349(a) thus expressly recognizes that the court may for cause order that an order of dismissal shall function to prohibit a debtor from filing a subsequent bankruptcy petition for a specified period.

The record is replete with cause to bar refiling. Though she has commenced multiple bankruptcy cases under chapter 13, Cameron has not successfully prosecuted any of these even through confirmation of a plan. She has many times failed to attend scheduled meetings of creditors. In general, she has exhibited an unwillingness—not mere incompetence or inability, as may at first have seemed to be the case—to prosecute her cases in accordance with the law. She has consistently shown a cavalier disregard for the truth in her filings and dealings with the court. I have no confidence in the accuracy of her schedules or even that she has afforded to her creditors due notice of these proceedings. Her repeated invocations of the protections of bankruptcy have consistently been abuses of the Bankruptcy Code, reeking of bad faith at every turn. Based on this egregious behavior and the above-enumerated failings, I conclude there is ample cause to supplement the order of dismissal with a bar to filing another bankruptcy petition in any jurisdiction for two years. An order of dismissal will enter accordingly.

The United States Trustee has asked for a bar of 180 days, but the facts warrant a bar of much longer duration. By absenting herself from the hearing without permission, Cameron forfeited the opportunity to respond to the questions I would have posed to her regarding the duration of the bar. I have no doubt that Cameron would have argued to me that, as a pro se debtor, she has been unable to meet the requirements of the Bankruptcy Code and Rules. A pro se debtor is surely entitled to careful treatment by the court and I and Judge Finkle have treated Cameron with extreme care. But even a pro se debtor must act honestly and diligently. Cameron emphatically has not.
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____________________

Frank J. Bailey

United States Bankruptcy Judge


Summaries of

In re Cameron

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS EASTERN DIVISION
Apr 18, 2013
Case No. 13-10115-FJB (Bankr. D. Mass. Apr. 18, 2013)

dismissing bankruptcy case, where that the debtor failed to meet her obligations by, among other things, failing to appear and submit to an examination under oath at the § 341 meeting

Summary of this case from Moya v. U.S. Eagle Fed. Credit Union
Case details for

In re Cameron

Case Details

Full title:In re HELEN CAMERON, Debtor

Court:UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS EASTERN DIVISION

Date published: Apr 18, 2013

Citations

Case No. 13-10115-FJB (Bankr. D. Mass. Apr. 18, 2013)

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