In re Einset, Case No. DK 05-15663 (Bankr. W.D. Mich. 11/19/2009)

Decision Date19 November 2009
Docket NumberCase No. DK 05-15663.
PartiesIn re: BARBARA REBECCA EINSET, aka BARBARA REBECCA BELL, Chapter 7, Debtor.
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Courts. Sixth Circuit. U.S. Bankruptcy Court — Western District of Michigan

SCOTT W. DALES, Bankruptcy Judge

I. INTRODUCTION AND JURISDICTION

Phillip R. Hercik, Jr. ("Mr. Hercik") and the Debtor Barbara Rebecca Einset ("Debtor") jointly owned an 82.5-acre parcel of real estate at the end of Bailey Road, in Pipestone Township, Berrien County, Michigan (the "Property"). During the pendency of the Debtor's case, Mr. Hercik made five mortgage payments on a loan secured by the Property, and performed work on the Property. On May 7, 2009, he filed an Application for Compensation and Administrative Expenses ("Administrative Claim," DN 72), itemizing $16,224.67 in expenses for which he seeks recovery under 11 U.S.C. § 503(b). Chapter 7 Trustee Stephen Langeland ("Trustee") opposes the Administrative Claim. After permitting the parties to conduct discovery over several months, the court held a bench trial on November 16, 2009 in Kalamazoo, Michigan.

The court has jurisdiction over the Debtor's Chapter 7 bankruptcy case pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1334(a), and the proceeding to consider Mr. Hercik's Administrative Claim is a core proceeding within the meaning of 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(A) & (B).

This opinion constitutes the court's findings of fact and conclusions of law in accordance with Fed. R. Civ. P. 52, made applicable to this contested matter by Fed. R. Bankr. P. 7052 and 9014(c).

II. LEGAL STANDARDS AND ARGUMENTS

Section 503(b)(1)(A) defines "administrative expenses" to include "the actual, necessary costs and expenses of preserving the estate." 11 U.S.C. § 503(b)(1)(A); see also In re Federated Dept. Stores, Inc., 270 F.3d 994 (6th Cir. 2001); In re Reid, 399 B.R. 470 (Bankr. E.D. Ky. 2008). To qualify as an actual and necessary expense, the expenditure must benefit the estate as a whole. In re Jartran, Inc., 886 F.2d 859, 871 (7th Cir.1989). Mr. Hercik, as the party seeking to recover an administrative expense claim, must therefore prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the work he performed and the mortgage payments he made were "actual" and "necessary" expenses that benefitted and preserved the estate.

III. FACTS AND ANALYSIS

Mr. Hercik sought to establish his right to relief by offering four exhibits, admitted into evidence as Exhibits A-D, and by offering his own testimony, and the Debtor's testimony. In opposition, the Trustee offered his own testimony, and a single exhibit — a settlement agreement between the Trustee, Mr. Hercik, and Mr. Hercik's Chapter 12 bankruptcy trustee. The court credits the testimony of each witness.

The Debtor said she met Mr. Hercik in 1995, and they have been together as a couple since 1997. In 1999, she became a co-owner of the Property, which she described as "barren land." She did not use the Property herself, but she testified that Mr. Hercik used it for hunting.

Mr. Hercik testified that he and the Debtor live together with their child. He always considered the Property to be his, and added the Debtor to the deed purely for estate planning purposes, "in case something should happen" to him. Mr. Hercik said the Property consists mainly of two square, forty-acre parcels, and a two and one-half acre "dog leg" parcel adjacent to Little Black Lake. Mr. Hercik considers much of the Property to be registered as "wetlands." Other than a modest pole barn of twenty by twenty-four feet, a gate where the road meets the Property, a primitive dirt drive on the Property, and some dirt foot bridges over marshy places, the Property is unimproved.

In addition to allowing his sons to use the Property for hunting and fishing, Mr. Hercik testified that he was preparing it for organic farming, a process that evidently required the land to lie fallow for several years in order to rid itself of the chemicals used in contemporary farming operations. Even though Mr. Hercik eventually intended to use the Property as a small organic farm, during the relevant times, it was not producing any income, or contrary to the Trustee's argument, any fruit.

The parties agreed that Greenstone Farm Credit Services ACA and Greenstone Farm Credit Services, FLCA (collectively "Greenstone") had a mortgage on the Property to secure Mr. Hercik's debt. Mr. Hercik testified, without contradiction, that he made five mortgage payments, totaling $8,744.57, which he seeks to recover from the Debtor's estate as part of his Administrative Claim. His testimony did not establish, however, what portion of these mortgage payments was for interest, and what portion, principal. He offered no bank statements or other documentary evidence shedding light on the question.

When the Debtor filed a voluntary Chapter 7 petition with this court on October 7, 2005, her interest in the Property became part of her bankruptcy estate under 11 U.S.C. § 541. Mr. Hercik, though he filed his own bankruptcy cases1 in this court with the benefit of counsel, evidently did not understand this, or that the Debtor's Trustee had any authority over the Property. Indeed, Mr. Hercik expressed surprise that the Trustee had taken steps to market the Property, which Mr. Hercik regarded as his own.

From the Trustee's testimony, it appears that after reviewing the Debtor's schedules and conducting the first meeting of creditors, the Trustee contacted a Kalamazoo-area realtor, Roxanne Cantu, who in turn contacted a local realtor, Cressy & Everrett Real Estate, to perform a market analysis in preparation for selling the Property. Although the Trustee initially sought to retain the realtors in early 2006, he withdrew the applications after Mr. Hercik objected to the retention, and the Honorable Jeffrey R. Hughes, who was then assigned to the case, suggested that the Trustee ought to resolve the issues with Mr. Hercik under 11 U.S.C. § 363(h) before marketing the Property. Therefore, the Trustee never formally retained, and the court never appointed, Cressy & Everrett as realtor.

Nevertheless, according to Mr. Hercik, in early 2006, Tim Mitchell, a real estate agent with Cressy & Everett, tore down the gate at the end of Bailey Road, and put up "For Sale" signs without Mr. Hercik's knowledge or permission. Mr. Hercik did not understand what authority the realtor or, for that matter, the Trustee, had to sell the Property which, as Mr. Hercik noted several times from the stand, he regarded as his own. Indeed, it appears that the Trustee was also somewhat confused about the effect of Mr. Hercik's co-tenancy on his sale efforts, given that he began the process of selling the Property before resolving the Section 363(h) issues that Judge Hughes raised when considering the realtor employment applications.

Thereafter, the Trustee commenced an adversary proceeding against Mr. Hercik and his Chapter 12 Trustee, under 11 U.S.C. § 363(h), seeking authority to sell the Debtor's estate's interest in the Property, and the interests of Mr. Hercik or his Chapter 12 estate. The parties settled that adversary proceeding by entering into the Stipulation for Settlement of Adversary Proceeding, which the Trustee introduced as Exhibit 1. As set forth in that stipulation, the Trustee agreed that Mr. Hercik could purchase the interest of the Debtor's estate in the Property, for $30,000.00, provided he did so within 18 months. However, if Mr. Hercik failed to make the payment by February 28, 2009 or if his Chapter 12 bankruptcy case was dismissed at any time before February 28, 2009, the parties agreed that the Trustee would have the authority to sell all interests in the Property, and split the net sale proceeds. In fact, Mr. Hercik's Chapter 12 case was dismissed prior to February 28, 2009,2 and the court authorized the Trustee to sell the Property to a third party for $175,000.00 earlier this year. Mr. Hercik has filed an appeal from the court's sale order.

There is no dispute that Mr. Hercik actually made the mortgage payments, or that he actually performed the tasks enumerated on Exhibit A by installing and maintaining gates and drainage ditches, moving a road on the Property, and building three dirt bridges. Rather, the Trustee contends that these were not expenses necessary to preserve the Property. The court will consider each item in order.

The court agrees with the Trustee that Mr. Hercik did not meet his burden of proving that the mortgage payments benefitted the estate. He failed in this regard because he could not quantify what portion of the payments was allocable to interest, and what portion, to principal. Moreover, the only mortgage introduced into evidence, Exhibit D, bears the Trustee's signature evidently as an accommodation to Mr. Hercik. The mortgage secured $83,180.00 in debt from Mr. Hercik to Greenstone under two earlier notes. It is clear from the document itself that the Trustee had "no obligations to pay or perform this Mortgage," and did not encumber the Debtor's estate's interest in the Property. See Exhibit D at p. 3, ¶ 22. It is conceivable that another mortgage encumbered the Debtor's estate's interest, but Mr. Hercik did not offer it into evidence. The court will not presume that making the five mortgage payments forestalled foreclosure, because it is equally plausible to infer that Greenstone might have preferred to await the faster and perhaps richer recovery that a bankruptcy sale promised, as opposed to the...

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