ERIC L. FRANK, UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY JUDGE.
In this chapter 13 case, Origen Capital Investments II, LLC ("Origen") filed an amended proof of claim on January 29, 2019 ("the Proof of Claim") in which it asserts that it holds a general unsecured claim of $50,529.18 ("the Claim"). The Claim is based on a personal guaranty ("the Guaranty") signed by Debtor, Finny George ("the Debtor").
The Debtor filed an objection to the Proof of Claim ("the Objection") (Doc. # 16) on February 28, 2019, raising several theories for total or partial disallowance of the claim:
At the April 9, 2019 hearing on the Objection, the parties requested that the hearing be bifurcated and that the court first decide the statute of limitations issue. I agreed to do so.
The Debtor alleges that the Guaranty does not give rise to an allowable claim because the statute of limitations has expired. Origen responds that the Guaranty was signed under seal, the applicable statute of limitations is twenty (20) years and therefore, the Claim is enforceable under Pennsylvania law and allowable in bankruptcy.
For the reasons stated below, I find that the Debtor signed the Guaranty under seal, the statute of limitations has not expired and the debt is enforceable under Pennsylvania law. I will overrule the Debtor's statute of limitations objection to the Proof of Claim and schedule a hearing on the remaining grounds raised by the Debtor in the Objection.
Bankruptcy courts typically employ a burden-shifting framework for claims objections. A properly filed proof of claim is
Here, the Debtor does not appear to contest the
This typical analytic framework for deciding an objection to a proof of claim has been altered somewhat by the parties' agreement to bifurcate the hearing on the Objection and submit a record with undisputed facts.
In ruling on this bifurcated Objection, the applicable standard of review mirrors that employed in deciding a motion for summary judgment, because there do not appear to be any disputed issues of material fact.
In 2006, the Debtor was the principal of a business called Sheena Studios, Inc. ("Sheena Studios"). On December 15, 2006, Sheena Studios applied for a $22,000 line of credit with Citizens Bank of Pennsylvania ("Citizens Bank"). The application document, titled "Business Credit Application" ("the Application") required a signature on the credit application from the business entity. The application also included a personal guaranty from the principal of the business,
The Debtor signed the credit application section of the document as President of Sheena Studios. The Debtor signed the Guaranty in his individual capacity.
The last sentence of the Guaranty, which was directly above the guarantor signature line, read:
(Origen Mem., Ex. A) (emphasis added).
On December 15, 2016,
Sheena Studios drew on the line of credit and subsequently, did not repay the debt in full.
On October 28, 2008, Citizen's Bank extended the maturity date of this loan to December 15, 2012.
On April 6, 2016, Citizen's Bank assigned the loan to Origen. Origen then demanded full payment of the outstanding indebtedness.
On May 31, 2017, Origen filed a civil complaint in the Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County against the Debtor and Sheena Studios ("the State Court Action"). (Debtor's Mem., Ex. A). The parties were sent to court-annexed arbitration, which returned an award in favor of Origen on May 2, 2018. (Origen Mem. at 4) (unpaginated). The Debtor and Sheena Studios appealed the award to the trial court, and a trial
Upon objection by a party in interest, a bankruptcy court may disallow a claim if it is "unenforceable against the debtor and property of the debtor, under any agreement or applicable law for a reason other than because such claim is contingent or unmatured." 11 U.S.C. § 502(b)(1). The expiration of the statute of limitations is a common rationale for disallowing a claim under § 502(b)(1).
The statute of limitations sets the deadline for commencing an action on a claim.
42 Pa. C.S. § 5525(a) provides a four (4) year statute of limitations for certain claims as follows:
Pennsylvania law also provides that "[n]otwithstanding section 5525(7) (relating to four year limitation), an action upon an instrument in writing under seal must be commenced within 20 years." 42 Pa. C.S. § 5529(b)(1).
These limitations periods create a two-tiered system for enforcing contracts. "Standard" contracts,
Under Pennsylvania law, a personal guaranty is an "instrument in writing."
Although sealing is a "vestige of the past," it is still legally effective to lengthen the statute of limitations.
The common law of sealing was highly formalistic: a seal indicated an especially solemn contract, expressed by means of a "design embossed or stamped on paper to authenticate, confirm or attest" the signatory's intent to sign.
The use of pre-printed contracts changed the analysis: documents came to the signatory with a seal already applied. The relevant inquiry became whether the signatory intended to adopt the pre-printed seal as his, her or its own.
Whether a signatory has adopted a pre-printed seal is a question of fact.
The parties agree that Origen did not commence the State Court Action within the four (4) year limitations of 42 Pa. C.S. § 5525, but did so within the twenty (20) year limitations period for claims concerning
In support of his position that the contract was not signed under seal, the Debtor emphasizes that there is no actual seal or words to that effect next to his signature on the Guaranty. He suggests that the text above the signature line stating that the Guaranty "is intended to take effect as an instrument under seal" is insufficient to solemnify the document as an instrument under seal.
When the parties briefed this issue, the Debtor's position was supported by a panel decision of the Pennsylvania Superior Court,
On June 17, 2019, (after the parties' briefs were filed in this case), the Superior Court issued its
The
In reaching its decision, the
As a federal court applying state law, my task is to predict how the Pennsylvania Supreme Court would resolve this issue. When the Pennsylvania Supreme Court has not provided guidance, a federal court must examine the decisional law of the Pennsylvania intermediate courts and the decisions of federal courts and other jurisdictions.
Here, I find the Superior Court's
Applying
The Guaranty states directly above the guarantor's signature line that it "is intended to take effect as an instrument under seal." This is an unambiguous
For the reasons stated above, the Objection on the ground that the statute limitations period has expired will be overruled.
Origen also appears to suggest that the statute of limitations may have commenced running in April 2011, about 18 months earlier, because it alleges the default occurred at that time. (Origen's Mem. at 7) (unpaginated). This potential argument works against Origen's legal position, but the difference is irrelevant. The precise date of the default does not affect the outcome.
Presently, Pennsylvania continues to recognize the distinction between sealed and unsealed contracts, thereby permitting the parties, by agreement, to substantially extend the limitations period for enforcing a contract after a breach. The
However, left undiscussed in