STEVEN D. MERRYDAY, UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE.
After Terence Nero petitioned for bankruptcy protection three times to delay foreclosure, failed to receive pre-petition credit counseling, and failed to disclose aliases, other residences, and a bankruptcy action in the Southern District of Florida, the United States Trustee moved to dismiss Nero's third bankruptcy action and to bar Nero for two years from petitioning for bankruptcy. After the Trustee moved to dismiss, The Florida Bar suspended for
Appearing pro se, Nero appeals (Doc. 1) and argues that the bankruptcy court deprived Nero of due process by holding a hearing during the pendency of the attorney's suspension. Because a bankruptcy debtor possesses no right to counsel, because Nero received notice of the hearing, and because the bankruptcy court's dismissal and bar order enjoys substantial evidentiary support, Nero's appeal lacks merit and the bankruptcy court's order commends affirmance.
In 2012, Jennifer McClean sued in state court to foreclose her interest in property owned by Nero. McClean v. Nero, Case No. 2012-CA-10683 (13th Judicial, Circuit Hillsborough County, Florida). Brandon Kolb, a lawyer, appeared on behalf of Terence Nero and identified Nero by six aliases.
In February 2016, Nero petitioned in the Middle District of Florida for chapter 13 bankruptcy protection. In re Nero, Case No. 8:16-bk-01281-CPM. Attempting to halt foreclosure, Nero filed in state court a copy of the bankruptcy petition. (Doc. 4-30 at 2) On February 20, 2016, the state court denied Nero's emergency motion for relief from judgment. (Doc. 4-32 at 1) About a year later, the bankruptcy court dismissed Nero's bankruptcy action because Nero failed to remit payments in accord with the proposed chapter 13 plan. (Doc. 4-2 at 2)
About two weeks after dismissal of Nero's bankruptcy, Nero petitioned in the Southern District of Florida for chapter 13 bankruptcy protection. (Doc. 4-2 at 2; In re Nero, Case No. 17-12225-RBR (Bankr. S.D. Fla. Feb. 24, 2017)). In the petition, Nero states that he lived in Hollywood, Florida, but — unlike Nero's first bankruptcy petition — Nero failed to disclose that he had lived in Tampa, Florida. (Doc. 4-30 at 3) Again attempting to halt foreclosure, Kolb filed in state court a copy of the second bankruptcy petition. (Doc. 4-30 at 3) On May 22, 2017, the Southern District of Florida denied confirmation and dismissed Nero's second bankruptcy. (Doc. 4-2 at 2)
In January 2018, Nero filed an emergency motion to stay the state foreclosure pending appeal. (Doc. 4-32) In the motion, Nero states that he had unsuccessfully attempted twice to obtain relief in bankruptcy because Nero lacked the ability to remit regular payments in accord with the proposed plan. (Doc. 4-30 at 4) Nero stated that he "is literally too broke to file Bankruptcy." (Doc. 4-30 at 4) In February 2018, the state court denied the motion to stay, which denial the appellate court approved. (Doc. 30 at 4)
Three days after the state court denied Nero's motion to stay, Nero filed in the Middle District of Florida a third petition for chapter 13 bankruptcy. (Doc. 4-7; In re Nero, 8:18-bk-01320-CPM) The petition and accompanying documents failed to disclose (1) that Nero had petitioned earlier
On April 10, 2018, the Trustee moved (Doc. 4-30) to dismiss with prejudice Nero's third bankruptcy petition and requested an injunction barring Nero from petitioning for further bankruptcy. The Trustee argued that Nero had devised a scheme to frustrate foreclosure by filing serial bankruptcy petitions and by purposefully omitting from the third petition (1) Nero's aliases, (2) the bankruptcy action in the Southern District of Florida, and (3) Nero's failure to receive credit counseling within 180 days before filing the third petition for bankruptcy. (Doc. 4-30 at 1-3) Responding (Doc. 4-36) to the motion to dismiss, Nero argued that he had improved his financial circumstance before the third petition and that he had inadvertently omitted the bankruptcy in the Southern District of Florida. The next day, the clerk of the bankruptcy court scheduled (Doc. 4-37) for May 9, 2018, a hearing on the motion to dismiss and the request for an injunction.
On April 22, 2018, Nero supplemented (Doc. 4-41) the response to the motion to dismiss and stated (Doc. 4-39) that he had received on April 16, 2018 — six days after the Trustee moved to dismiss — the credit counseling required by 11 U.S.C. § 109(h). The same day, Kolb, on behalf of Nero, moved (Doc. 4-39) to stay the bankruptcy action because The Florida Bar had suspended from Kolb from April 21, 2018, to May 21, 2018.
Neither Nero nor Kolb attended the May 9, 2018 hearing.
Appealing pro se, Nero argues (1) that the bankruptcy court deprived Nero of due process by holding the hearing during Kolb's suspension, (2) that the bankruptcy court erred by dismissing the bankruptcy because of Nero's failure to receive credit counseling, and (3) that the bankruptcy court erred by determining that Nero's serial bankruptcy petitions warranted a bar order.
Nero accuses the Trustee of intentionally requesting that the bankruptcy court schedule the hearing during Kolb's suspension and argues that the bankruptcy court "forced [Nero] to proceed]" despite Kolb's suspension.
And the hearing otherwise comported with the requirements of due process and the bankruptcy code. Under 11 U.S.C. § 1307(c), a bankruptcy court may dismiss a bankruptcy action after "notice and a hearing," which 11 U.S.C. § 102(1) defines as "such notice as is appropriate in the particular circumstances, and such opportunity for a hearing as is appropriate in the particular circumstances." Nero received twenty-two days' notice of the hearing and twice objected to the motion to dismiss. Instead of securing alternate counsel, appearing pro se at the hearing, or requesting a continuance,
Nero argues that the bankruptcy court erred by dismissing the bankruptcy
Nero argues that, because the requirement to receive credit counseling is waivable, the bankruptcy court abused discretion by dismissing the bankruptcy action. Although the requirement is waivable, no waiver occurred because the Trustee expeditiously moved to dismiss Nero's bankruptcy action because of the failure to receive prepetition credit counseling. In re Littlejohn, 2019 WL 2246146, at *3, 2019 Bankr. LEXIS 1573, at *7 (Bankr. N.D. Ga. May 23, 2019) (Baisier, J.) (holding that "[w]aiver requires the `intentional and voluntary relinquishment of a known right'" and finding that the Trustee timely objected to the putative debtor's failure to comply with 109(h)). And although Nero received credit counseling after petitioning for bankruptcy, "an individual must establish that a request was made for credit counseling before the petition was filed." In re Davenport, 335 B.R. at 221 (dismissing a bankruptcy action despite the putative debtor's receiving credit counseling two days after petitioning for bankruptcy). Because Nero admittedly failed to receive credit counseling within 180 days before Nero petitioned for bankruptcy, the bankruptcy court properly granted the Trustee's motion to dismiss.
Also, the bankruptcy court correctly dismissed the bankruptcy action after determining that Nero petitioned in bad faith. Under 11 U.S.C. § 1307(c), a party may move to dismiss a bankruptcy action "for cause," which exists if the debtor petitioned in bad faith. In re Gros, 173 B.R. 774, 776 (Bankr. M.D. Fla. 1994) (Funk, J.); In re McGovern, 297 B.R. 650, 655-56 (S.D. Fla. 2003) (Hurley, J.); see also In re Piazza, 719 F.3d 1253, 1262 (11th Cir. 2013) (holding that bad faith constitutes cause to dismiss a chapter 7 case under section 707(a)). And bad faith exists if the debtor petitions for bankruptcy "only for the purpose of inhibiting or forestalling a foreclosure action without the intention of financial rehabilitation." In re Earl, 140 B.R. 728, 739 (Bankr. N.D. Ind. Jan. 10, 1992). Nero thrice petitioned for bankruptcy during the pendency of the foreclosure action and asserted in state court days before filing the third petition that Nero was "literally too broke to file Bankruptcy." Accordingly, the bankruptcy court correctly found that Nero petitioned for bankruptcy to stall foreclosure and that Nero lacked a genuine intent to remedy his financial circumstance. Further, Nero
Under 11 U.S.C. § 349(a), a bankruptcy court may "for cause" bar a debtor from filing a subsequent petition.
The issues raised by Nero's appeal lack merit, the bankruptcy court's determination enjoys substantial evidentiary support, and the bankruptcy court did not abuse discretion. The June 4, 2018 dismissal and bar order is
ORDERED in Tampa, Florida, on August 26, 2019.