Case Law In re Engelman

In re Engelman

Document Cited Authorities (5) Cited in Related

Daniel Kaminsky, Kaminsky Law, S.C., Fond du Lac, WI, Christine Wolk, Oshkosh, WI, for Debtor.

DECISION ON YORK INVESTMENT LLC'S MOTION TO DISMISS

G. Michael Halfenger, Chief United States Bankruptcy Judge

Judith Engelman commenced this case by filing a voluntary petition under chapter 13 of the Bankruptcy Code. York Investment LLC filed a proof of claim for nearly $1.4 million owed on a promissory note, fully secured by a mortgage on Engelman's real property. York then moved to dismiss the case asserting that Engelman is not eligible to be a debtor under chapter 13 because, when she filed her petition, her "noncontingent, liquidated, secured debts" exceeded $1,184,200, the limit for such debts imposed in 11 U.S.C. § 109(e). See 11 U.S.C. § 104(a) ; Revision of Certain Dollar Amounts in the Bankruptcy Code, 81 Fed. Reg. 8748 (Feb. 16, 2016). Engelman objected that she is not liable on the note to York and that the mortgage is void because her signatures on those documents were forged. Excluding the debt to York, Engelman's prepetition debts are within the limits for chapter 13 debtors specified in § 109(e).

I

The parties dispute substantially all of the facts material to York's motion to dismiss, so the court held a three-day evidentiary hearing in October 2019.

Before the hearing commenced, the parties stipulated to the following facts: In 2012 an attorney named Russell Reff represented York's sole member, Stephen Landolt. At Landolt's request, using figures that Landolt provided, Reff drafted the note and mortgage at issue here. Reff asked Landolt to have Engelman and her husband, Lee, who has since died, come to his office to sign the note and mortgage, but Reff was later told that Lee wanted his cousin, an attorney named Walter Bush, to review the documents first. Someone then picked up the note and mortgage from Reff's office, but Reff does not know who.

These stipulated facts are largely inconsequential: the core of the parties' dispute is, what happened after the unexecuted note and mortgage left Reff's office? Answering that question was the focus of the evidentiary hearing, and the parties presented substantially conflicting evidence with respect to the relevant facts.

In York's case-in-chief, Walter Bush and Mona Eaton, who worked for Bush in 2012, both testified that Engelman signed the promissory note to York in their presence, at Bush's office, and that they then signed as witnesses, as the note itself reflects. No one testified to seeing Engelman sign the mortgage, but Bush testified that he was on the phone with her when she signed the mortgage, she generally described the mortgage to him during that call, and he later authenticated her signature on the mortgage based on the phone call and by comparing it with exemplars of her signature that he had on file. The mortgage bears Bush's signature authenticating Engelman's signature, as well as Lee's signature.

Engelman testified, to the contrary, in her case-in-chief, that she did not sign the note or mortgage. She then called Robin Williams, a forensic handwriting analyst, to testify. Williams opined that he eliminated Engelman as the writer of the signatures attributed to her on the note and mortgage after comparing those signatures with contemporaneous exemplars of her signature that Engelman provided.

In addition to disputing the circumstances in which the note and mortgage were executed, the parties presented virtually irreconcilable constructions of the personal and financial context in which the apparent deal arose in the first place.

In York's case-in-chief, Landolt testified as follows: Before retiring, he was a financial advisor and worked for a brokerage firm, where Engelman and Lee had an account. He first met Engelman and Lee at church in the 1980s, socialized and became good friends with them in the 1990s, and started loaning them money in the early 2000s. Lee had started a restaurant called Mr. Cinder's that was doing well, and he and Landolt had discussed possible new business ventures in which Landolt could invest. At Lee's request, Landolt started loaning Engelman and Lee money, including for a new restaurant called Kodiak Jack's. Landolt maintained his own records of the amounts he loaned and regularly applied interest on the amounts outstanding, though he never sought to profit from the arrangement. In 2012, with payments in default, Landolt agreed to consolidate the outstanding indebtedness in a single renewal note, the note at issue here. Lee suggested, and Landolt accepted, the mortgage at issue to secure repayment of the amount owed on the renewal note. Although Landolt generally dealt with Lee, he had several conversations with Engelman about her and Lee's debt to him both before and after the 2012 renewal note and mortgage were executed.

In her case-in-chief, Engelman testified, largely to the contrary, as follows: She and Lee owned some restaurants, but he ran them. She did not discuss money or loans with either Lee, who handled the finances for the businesses and the family, or Landolt, who was Lee's friend and a family friend. She went with Lee to Bush's office more than once to sign documents, but she does not remember what she signed because Lee did not let her read the documents before signing them or tell her what they were signing, other than to say at least twice that they were renewing a note. She did not know where the money for Kodiak Jack's came from or that Landolt provided it, and Lee never told her that he had borrowed as much from Landolt as Landolt says he did. She never would have agreed to borrow so much.

Further complicating all of this, the parties dispute whether Engelman gave Lee a financial power of attorney before 2012. York offered, and the court admitted into evidence, a document dated May 26, 2010, that appears to do exactly that. Bush testified that he prepared that document, which bears his signature twice, because he both witnessed its signing and notarized it. Engelman testified that she never gave Lee a power of attorney, though she identified the signature on the document as hers.

II

Based on the documentary evidence, the testimony and demeanor of the witnesses at the evidentiary hearing, the record, and the arguments of counsel, the court makes the following findings of fact and conclusions of law. See Fed. R. Bankr. P. 7052 & 9014(c) ; Fed. R. Civ. P. 52(a)(1).

A

Under the circumstances, the parties' respective burdens are the same as they would be if Engelman had filed an objection to York's claim. Engelman bears the initial burden of overcoming the presumption that York's claim is valid. See Fed. R. Bankr. P. 3001(f). York bears the ultimate burden of proving that its claim is valid under applicable nonbankruptcy law. See Raleigh v. Ill. Dep't of Revenue , 530 U.S. 15, 21, 120 S.Ct. 1951, 147 L.Ed.2d 13 (2000) ("[T]he burden of proof is an essential element of the claim itself; one who asserts a claim is entitled to the burden of proof that normally comes with it."); Capocasa v. First Nat. Bank of Stevens Point , 36 Wis.2d 714, 154 N.W.2d 271, 274 (1967) ("The burden of specifically proving the indebtedness secured by the mortgage is upon the mortgagee.").

B

The court first finds that Engelman did not sign either the note or the mortgage. Engelman offered, and the court admitted into evidence, several exemplars of her signature from April and May 2012, and she identified these signatures as hers. The exemplars differ from the signatures attributed to Engelman on the note and mortgage to such a degree that they were almost certainly written by different people. The exemplars differ from the attributed signatures in several ways, including that the exemplars consistently slant to the right, while the attributed signatures remain largely upright; the end of each exemplar tends to fall below the signature line, which is not true of either attributed signature; and the shapes of the letters in the exemplars are relatively consistent, but they vary significantly from those in the attributed signatures.

The exemplars also reflect a clear tremor in Engelman's hand that she testified started between 2009 and 2014 and has only gotten worse over time. The attributed signatures seem to reflect a tremor of sorts, too, but an undeniably dissimilar (and possibly manufactured) one. That the attributed signatures are markedly smaller than the exemplars suggests that they were written by someone less affected by a fine-motor-skills impairment than Engelman was in 2012.

Robin Williams's opinion testimony, which the court allowed over York's objection, bolsters the court's conclusion that Engelman did not sign the note or the mortgage. Minimally, Williams offered nomenclature and organizing principles from the field of handwriting analysis that helped the court to structure its own observations. Still, the court's findings would be the same even if Williams had not testified.

Mona Eaton testified that Engelman signed...

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