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IN RE PULLUM, C 15-05270 JSW. (2016)

Court: District Court, N.D. California Number: infdco20160815964 Visitors: 17
Filed: Aug. 12, 2016
Latest Update: Aug. 12, 2016
Summary: ORDER AFFIRMING APPEAL Re: Docket No. 1. JEFFREY S. WHITE , District Judge . This matter comes before the Court upon consideration of the appeal filed by Appellant Lee Anna Pullum ("Pullum") from the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of California's order denying the ex parte application to vacate dismissal of the Chapter 13 bankruptcy case. Appellee Eagle Vista Equities, LLC ("Eagle Vista") opposes the application and requests that this Court affirm the order of dis
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ORDER AFFIRMING APPEAL

Re: Docket No. 1.

This matter comes before the Court upon consideration of the appeal filed by Appellant Lee Anna Pullum ("Pullum") from the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of California's order denying the ex parte application to vacate dismissal of the Chapter 13 bankruptcy case. Appellee Eagle Vista Equities, LLC ("Eagle Vista") opposes the application and requests that this Court affirm the order of dismissal entered by the Bankruptcy Court.

Pursuant to Civil Local Rule 16-4, the Court deems this case submitted on the papers without oral argument. After review of the record on appeal, consideration of the parties' papers, and the relevant legal authority, the Court hereby AFFIRMS the Bankruptcy Court's ruling on Pullum's application to vacate dismissal.

BACKGROUND

The following facts are undisputed, unless otherwise noted. On August 14, 2015, Eugene Pullum ("Mr. Pullum") filed a petition for bankruptcy in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of California, Oakland Division. When he filed the petition, Mr. Pullum named his mother, Lee A. Pullum as debtor, used her social security number, and signed her name. Mr. Pullum filed the notice shortly before a trustee's sale was scheduled to occur in connection with non-judicial foreclosure proceedings on the family home located at 2311 Humboldt Avenue, Oakland, CA (the "Property").

The trustee's sale did go forward, and Eagle Vista purchased the property. Thereafter, Mr. Pullum filed a lawsuit in the Superior Court of California for the Count of Alameda against Wells Fargo Bank, Eagle Vista's predecessor in interest. In that complaint, Mr. Pullum alleged that Lee A. Pullum had died in December 2013, and that he and his brothers inherited the Property. (First Amended Complaint ¶ 12.)

On September 30, 2015, the Bankruptcy Court dismissed the case due to deficiencies. On that same day, Eagle Vista moved to annul the automatic stay (the "Motion to Annul"). On or about October 14, 2015, Ms. Lee Anna Pullum, Jr., Mr. Pullum's sister, through counsel, filed an Ex Parte Application to Vacate Dismissal of Chapter 13 Bankruptcy Case; Application to Correct Name of the Debtor; Application for Continuance of Hearing upon Eagle Vista Equities, LLC's Motion for Relief from the Automatic Stay (the "Ex Parte Application").

The Bankruptcy Court held a hearing on the motions on October 30, 2015. On November 3, 2015, the Court issued an Order on the Motion to Annul, in which it found that "[a]ny automatic stay that may have come into existence upon the filing of the hereinreferenced bankruptcy case did not apply to the debtor named in the chapter 13 petition or" the Property. On that same day, the Bankruptcy Court denied the Ex Parte Application. The bankruptcy case was closed on November 6, 2015.

On November 13, 2015, Ms. Pullum filed her Notice of Appeal, in which she stated that she appealed the Order denying the Ex Parte Application. Ms. Pullum did not reference the Order Resolving Motion to Annul in her Notice of Appeal. However, when she filed her Notice of Designation of Record and Statement of Issues on Appeal, Ms. Pullum asserted that the Bankruptcy Court erred "in declaring that there was no bankruptcy stay." This Court has denied Eagle Vista's motion to strike that portion of the appeal. Pullum filed a timely notice of appeal and elected to proceed before this Court. The merits of the appeal, regarding whether the Bankruptcy Court should have dismissed the bankruptcy case due to its filing deficiencies, is squarely before this Court. The Court will address additional facts as necessary in its analysis.

ANALYSIS

The district court reviews the bankruptcy court's findings of fact for clear error and it reviews the bankruptcy court's conclusions of law de novo. See In re Part-Helena-Corp., 63 F.3d 877, 880 (9th Cir. 1995). The appellate court must review findings of fact for clear error and must accept findings of fact made by the trial court unless the findings leave the appellate court with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed by the trial judge. See In re Banks, 263 F.3d 862, 869 (9th Cir. 2001)

Originally, the putative debtor in the bankruptcy filing was Lee Anna Pullum, Sr., who was at the time of the filing, deceased. According to the undisputed record, Mr. Pullum, untrained in legal matters but vested with power of attorney and in rushed anticipation of a foreclosure sale on the family home, filed the bankruptcy filing in his mother's name in an attempt to forestall the foreclosure. The parties agree that a deceased person cannot be a bankruptcy debtor. By her Ex Parte Application, Ms. Pullum sought to vacate dismissal of the Chapter 13 bankruptcy case and to correct the error in the original filing made by her brother in their deceased mother's name and to substitute her name as the debtor. The Bankruptcy Court found that it lacked authority to substitute an entirely different debtor retroactively and dismissed the matter.

Here, as in the Bankruptcy Court proceedings, Appellant argues that the Bankruptcy Code provides that the court "may issue any order, process, or judgment that is necessary or appropriate to carry out the provisions of this title." Bankruptcy Code § 105(a). However, no authority by statute or case law supports the analysis of this code provision to permit the court, in equity or otherwise, to retroactively substitute a new debtor in the place of an original debtor on the bankruptcy case filings.

In In re Bradley, 342 B.R. 783, 789 (Bankr. N.D. Ind. 2005), the bankruptcy court found that counsel had mistakenly filed the incorrect petition under the wrong name. The court found that it was not vested with the discretion to substitute one debtor for another, even assuming the original mistake in filing was unintended. Similarly, in In re Shepherd, 490 B.R. 338, 340-42 (Bankr. N.D. Ind. 2013), the bankruptcy court found that it was without discretion to substitute a representative of the decedent's estate for the debtor once he had passed during the pendency of the bankruptcy proceedings. The court held that "the opportunity to seek bankruptcy and the discharge that results from it are personal to the debtor." Id. at 342.

Just as the bankruptcy judge found, this Court is without authority or mechanism to remedy the error made in the original filing on August 14, 2015 by Eugene Pullum is his deceased mother's name. See id. at 340 (holding that there "is no mechanism in either the Bankruptcy Code or the rules of procedure for substituting another entity for the debtor in a bankruptcy case.") Accordingly, this Court AFFIRMS the decision by the Bankruptcy Court to deny the Ex Parte Application to vacate dismissal.

CONCLUSION

For the reasons set forth above, the Court AFFIRMS the bankruptcy court's order denying the Ex Parte Application for dismissal of the bankruptcy case.

IT IS SO ORDERED.

Source:  Leagle

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