Bank of New York v. Kogut ( 2023 )


Menu:
  •                                
    2023 IL App (1st) 210886-U
    SECOND DIVISION
    August 8, 2023
    No. 1-21-0886
    NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and is not precedent except in the
    limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1).
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    IN THE
    APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
    FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    BANK OF NEW YORK AS TRUSTEE FOR THE                  )
    CERTIFICATE HOLDERS CWALT, INC,                      )
    ALTERNATIVE LOAN TRUST 2005-76                       )
    MORTGAGE PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES,                  )
    SERIES 2005-76,                                      )
    )
    Plaintiff,                           )
    )
    v.                                           )
    )
    WIESLAWA KOGUT, STEPHAN KOGUT a/k/a                  )
    STEFAN KOGUT, MARTA KULESZA, JPMORGAN )
    CHASE BANK, N.A., UNKNOWN OWNERS AND                 )
    NON-RECORD CLAIMANTS,                                )   Appeal from the Circuit Court of
    )   Cook County, Illinois
    Defendants.                         )
    _____________________________________________ )          No. 2008 CH 3118
    )
    MARTA KULESZA,                                       )   Hon. Edward J. King,
    )   Judge Presiding
    Petitioner-Appellant,               )
    )
    v.                                           )
    )
    THE BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON, f/k/a Bank of )
    New York as Trustee on behalf of the Holders of the  )
    Alternative Loan Trust 2005-76 Mortgage Pass-Through )
    Certificates, Series 2005-76,                        )
    )
    Respondent-Appellee.                 )
    No. 1-21-0886
    JUSTICE ELLIS delivered the judgment of the court.
    Presiding Justice Fitzgerald Smith and Justice Cobbs concurred in the judgment.
    ORDER
    ¶1     Held: Affirmed. Section 2-1401 petition was properly dismissed for lack of standing.
    ¶2     This case began as a mortgage-foreclosure action filed by plaintiff Bank of New York,
    now Bank of New York Mellon (BoNYM), on a residential property in which Marta Kulesza
    (Petitioner) held an interest. That action resulted in foreclosure and a judicial sale of the property
    that was confirmed in 2016. Presently before us is a petition under section 2-1401 of the Code of
    Civil Procedure to vacate all judgments in the foreclosure proceeding as void for lack of personal
    jurisdiction over Petitioner. See 735 ILCS 5/2-1401 (West 2016).
    ¶3     Petitioner’s argument is that she was never properly served with notice of the foreclosure
    action because service took place at the resident property, and she did not live there at that time
    or ever. BoNYM argued, among other things, that Petitioner lacks standing to assert this
    argument in light of a bankruptcy action she filed. We agree with BoNYM and affirm the
    judgment on that basis.
    ¶4                                        BACKGROUND
    ¶5              I. Petitioner’s Interest in the Prospect Heights Property (2005-06)
    ¶6     In 2005, Petitioner’s relatives, Wieslawa and Stephan Kogut, obtained a mortgage from
    BoNYM to purchase residential property in Prospect Heights (the Prospect Heights property). (It
    appears that Petitioner is the Koguts’ niece, but elsewhere in the record there is a suggestion that
    she is a cousin—they are relatives, in any event.) By all accounts, the Koguts resided at the
    Prospect Heights property.
    ¶7     Petitioner’s interest in the Prospect Heights property began in August 2006, when the
    Koguts executed a quitclaim deed to her and themselves. The Koguts executed the deed in
    2
    No. 1-21-0886
    connection with a $300,000 home equity line of credit (HELOC) that the Koguts and Petitioner
    obtained from JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. (Chase Bank).
    ¶8     In applying for that HELOC, Petitioner told Chase Bank that the Prospect Heights
    property was her “primary residence.” She listed the Prospect Heights property under the listing
    of “current address.” She stated that the purpose of the HELOC was “home improvement.” And
    when identifying “real estate owned,” she listed another residential property in Wheeling, Illinois
    (the Wheeling property) as “rental property.”
    ¶9                            II. BoNYM’s Foreclosure Action (2008)
    ¶ 10   In January 2008, BoNYM filed a complaint to foreclose the mortgage on the Prospect
    Heights property. The suit named both the Koguts and Petitioner as defendants. On January 27,
    2008, BoNYM purported to serve the summons and complaint on Petitioner via substitute
    service on Weislawa Kogut at that Prospect Heights property. (The issue of service, as noted, is a
    contested issue in the section 2-1401 petition under review, as Petitioner claims she never lived
    at the Prospect Heights property, making substitute service improper.)
    ¶ 11   In any event, Petitioner did not answer or appear in the foreclosure action. In June 2008,
    the circuit court found her in default, entered summary judgment against her and in favor of
    BoNYM, and issued a judgment for foreclosure and sale. (As Petitioner was not the only
    defendant, the litigation did not terminate at that time.)
    ¶ 12                    III. Petitioner files for personal bankruptcy (2010)
    ¶ 13   About two years after that June 2008 judgment against her, Petitioner and her then-
    husband filed for personal bankruptcy. Specifically, she and her husband filed a “no-asset” case
    on August 25, 2010. Petitioner did not list the Prospect Heights property, or the HELOC with
    3
    No. 1-21-0886
    Chase Bank, on her schedule of assets and liabilities. The bankruptcy court discharged Petitioner
    in December 2010.
    ¶ 14                   IV. The foreclosure action ends (May-August 2016)
    ¶ 15   Though Petitioner was defaulted and had judgment entered against her in 2008, the
    foreclosure litigation on the Prospect Heights property continued with the other defendants,
    including the Koguts. Ultimately, BoNYM prevailed, and the Prospect Heights property was sold
    on May 19, 2016. The court approved the sale on August 15, 2016.
    ¶ 16            V. Petitioner reopens her bankruptcy case (November-December 2016)
    ¶ 17   On November 1, 2016, Petitioner moved the bankruptcy court to reopen her case. She
    formally disclosed to the bankruptcy court on an amended “schedule” that, at the time she filed
    her bankruptcy action in August 2010, she “had an interest in some real estate, located at
    [address in Prospect Heights], improved with a single family home” that “she held in common
    with relatives, Stefan and Wieslawa Kogut.”
    ¶ 18   She further explained that, as of the date she originally filed for bankruptcy in August
    2010, the Prospect Heights property “was subject to a foreclosure proceeding in the Circuit Court
    of Cook County” in which Petitioner “was named as a defendant.” She told the bankruptcy court
    that “Judgment of foreclosure was entered in May, 2015, on June 1, 2016, the Property was sold,
    and on August 15, 2016, the foreclosure court entered an order for possession.”
    ¶ 19   She further noted that “[t]he foreclosure has not been concluded. Notwithstanding the
    order for possession, Stefan and Wieslawa Kogut are still living in the Property, and as of the
    date of this motion there has been no attempt to evict them.”
    ¶ 20   Petitioner conceded in that bankruptcy filing that the Prospect Heights property “should
    have been listed on Schedule A, Real Property; [BoNYM] should have been listed on Schedule
    4
    No. 1-21-0886
    D, Secured Claims; the Koguts should have been listed in Schedule H, Co-Debtors; and the
    foreclosure suit should have been included on the Statement of Financial Affairs.”
    ¶ 21    The trustee then issued a written report of “no distribution” in which he stated that
    “I have neither received any property nor paid any money on account of this
    estate; that I have made a diligent inquiry into the financial affairs of the debtor(s) and the
    location of the property belonging to the estate; and that there is no property available for
    distribution from the estate over and above that exempted by law. *** I hereby certify
    that the estate of [Petitioner] has been fully administered. I request that I be discharged
    from any further duties as trustee.”
    ¶ 22    On January 9, 2017, the bankruptcy court closed the case and discharged the trustee once
    more.
    ¶ 23                       VI. Petitioner files her section 2-1401 petition
    ¶ 24    Two and a half months after her bankruptcy case was closed for the second time, on
    March 20, 2017, Petitioner filed her section 2-1401 petition in the foreclosure action, alleging
    that all judgment orders entered in the foreclosure action were void for lack of personal
    jurisdiction, as she was never properly served with the complaint. Petitioner attached four
    affidavits, each of which stated that Petitioner did not live (and indeed had never lived) at the
    Prospect Heights property. Thus, when the process server placed the summons and complaint
    with her relative, that service was not effective as “substitute service” as to Petitioner.
    ¶ 25    As noted, BoNYM objected on several grounds. It alleged that Petitioner lacked standing
    to bring this claim, as her section 2-1401 claim belonged to her bankruptcy estate and was never
    properly discharged. Second, BoNYM claimed that her petition was barred by the doctrine of
    judicial estoppel. And third, said BoNYM, the petition was barred by laches.
    5
    No. 1-21-0886
    ¶ 26   Petitioner moved for judgment on the pleadings. An oral argument was held, but we lack
    a transcript of those proceedings. The circuit court denied the motion for judgment on the
    pleadings and dismissed the petition with prejudice. This appeal followed.
    ¶ 27                                        ANALYSIS
    ¶ 28   Our review here is de novo, as the court decided the section 2-1401 petition on
    documentary evidence and legal argument alone, without hearing any live witness testimony; we
    thus sit in the same position as the trial court and owe its judgment no deference. See Cleeton v.
    SIU Healthcare, Inc., 
    2023 IL 128651
    , ¶ 26; Addison Insurance Co. v. Fay, 
    232 Ill. 2d 446
    , 453
    (2009); Dowling v. Chicago Options Associates, Inc., 
    226 Ill. 2d 277
    , 285 (2007). We lack a
    transcript of the oral argument, and the court’s written judgment order does not specify the basis
    for dismissing the section 2-1401 petition. But because our review is de novo, our review is not
    hampered. Fields v. Schaumburg Firefighters’ Pension Bd., 
    383 Ill. App. 3d 209
    , 223 (2008).
    And in any event, we may affirm the dismissal of a section 2-1401 petition on any basis in the
    record, regardless of the trial court’s reasoning. In re Marriage of Buck, 
    318 Ill. App. 3d 489
    ,
    497 (2000).
    ¶ 29   BoNYM’s standing argument, as well as its argument regarding judicial estoppel and to
    some extent its laches argument, revolve around the same basic core facts. In a nutshell, when
    Petitioner first filed for bankruptcy in 2010, she did not include her interest in the Prospect
    Heights property on her “schedules”—her disclosures of assets, liabilities, and the like. It is
    uncontested that she should have done so; she claimed to have “no assets” when, in fact, she did.
    Petitioner reopened her bankruptcy action in 2016 to amend her schedules to include the
    Prospect Heights property and to list BoNYM’s foreclosure action on the property. She included
    the detail that the property had already been sold, that the sale was judicially confirmed, and that
    6
    No. 1-21-0886
    an order of possession had been entered. All that remained, she told the bankruptcy court, was to
    evict the Koguts from the property.
    ¶ 30   But in that written motion to the court, Petitioner omitted one rather crucial detail—that
    she had a cause of action to reclaim her interest in that property, to unwind that entire foreclosure
    proceeding as void for lack of personal jurisdiction, a claim that she was about to file via a
    section 2-1401 petition. Instead, she waited until after the Trustee determined that “there is no
    property available for distribution from the estate” and “the estate of [Petitioner] has been fully
    administered,” resulting in the closing of the bankruptcy action, before she filed that section 2-
    1401 petition.
    ¶ 31   We first address BoNYM’s standing argument, an affirmative defense. See In re
    Application for Tax Deed, 
    2018 IL App (5th) 170354
    , ¶ 41. BoNYM claims that the section 2-
    1401 petition is a separate legal claim. See Hanson v. De Kalb City State’s Attorney’s Office, 
    391 Ill. App. 3d 902
    , 906 (2009) (though it is collateral attack on existing judgment, section 2-1401
    petition is independent cause of action). When she reopened the bankruptcy case in 2016,
    Petitioner had a duty to schedule that claim as an asset, like any other cause of action. But she
    did not do so. Thus, says BoNYM, while claims not pursued by the bankruptcy trustee before the
    case is closed are typically deemed “abandoned” and revert back to the debtor (here Petitioner),
    the doctrine of abandonment does not apply here, because a trustee can only be deemed to have
    abandoned scheduled claims, not unknown ones.
    ¶ 32   In a Chapter 7 bankruptcy, or “straight bankruptcy,” the debtor’s estate falls under the
    control of a trustee who is “responsible for managing liquidation of the estate’s assets and
    distribution of the proceeds.” Law v. Siegel, 
    571 U.S. 415
    , 417 (2014). “All legal or equitable
    interests of the debtor in property as of the commencement of the case” are part of the estate (11
    7
    No. 1-21-
    0886 U.S.C. § 541
    (a)(1)), including causes of action that have already been brought by or that have
    accrued to the debtor at the time of the bankruptcy petition. In re Senior Cottages of America,
    LLC, 
    482 F.3d 997
    , 1001 (8th Cir. 2007).
    ¶ 33   Once a trustee has been appointed, the “ ‘Chapter 7 debtor no longer has standing to
    pursue a cause of action which existed at the time the Chapter 7 petition was filed. Only the
    trustee, as representative of the estate, has the authority to prosecute and/or settle such cause of
    action.’ ” Harris v. St. Luke University, 
    114 B.R. 647
    , 648 (E.D. Mo. 1990) (quoting Cain v.
    Hyatt, 
    101 B.R. 440
    , 442 (E.D.Pa. 1989)); see Bauer v. Commerce Union Bank, 
    859 F.2d 438
    ,
    441 (6th Cir.1988); Jones v. Harrell, 
    858 F.2d 667
    , 669 (11th Cir.1988).
    ¶ 34   As Petitioner is quick to note, if the asset is abandoned by the trustee—that is, if the
    bankruptcy case closes without the trustee administering that asset—then the asset reverts back
    to the debtor (here, Petitioner). 
    11 U.S.C. § 554
    (c); Bledsoe v. Midland Funding, LLC, 4:19-CV-
    02779-JAR, 
    2021 WL 694825
    , at *5 (E.D. Mo. Feb. 23, 2021).
    ¶ 35   If, on the other hand, the asset or claim is not scheduled, it cannot be deemed abandoned
    by the trustee. Cusano v. Klein, 
    264 F.3d 936
    , 945–46 (9th Cir. 2001) (“If [debtor] failed
    properly to schedule an asset, including a cause of action, that asset continues to belong to the
    bankruptcy estate and did not revert to [debtor]”); Jeffrey v. Desmond, 
    70 F.3d 183
    , 186 (1st
    Cir.1995); Stein v. United Artists Corp., 
    691 F.2d 885
    , 893 (9th Cir.1982) (only property
    “administered or listed in the bankruptcy proceedings” reverts to debtor); accord Hutchins v.
    IRS, 
    67 F.3d 40
    , 43 (3d Cir.1995); Vreugdenhill v. Navistar International Transportation Corp.,
    
    950 F.2d 524
    , 526 (8th Cir.1991) (property is not abandoned by operation of law unless debtor
    “formally schedule[s] the property before the close of the case”). “It is not enough that the
    8
    No. 1-21-0886
    trustee learns of the property through other means; the property must be scheduled pursuant to
    section 521(1).” Vreugdenhill, 950 F.2d at 526; see 
    11 U.S.C. § 521
    (a)(1).
    ¶ 36   And the duty to schedule an asset includes a duty to disclose it accurately and completely.
    It is long settled that “[a]ny debtor who files a Chapter 7 petition has a continuous, affirmative
    duty to disclose the following in a complete and accurate manner: (a) a list of creditors; (b)
    schedules of assets, liabilities, current income, and current expenditures; and (c) a statement of
    financial affairs.” In re Guenther, 
    333 B.R. 759
    , 766 (Bankr. N.D. Tex. 2005) (quoting In re
    Gartner, 
    326 B.R. 357
    , 367 (Bankr. S.D. Tex. 2005)); see In re Kirtley, 
    533 B.R. 154
    , 164
    (Bankr. S.D. Miss. 2015); In re Schultz, 
    509 B.R. 190
    , 202 (Bankr. N.D. Ind. 2014); In re Wells,
    
    426 B.R. 579
    , 599 (Bankr. N.D. Tex. 2006).
    ¶ 37   The reason for this affirmative, continuous duty is obvious. “Full disclosure of assets and
    liabilities in the schedules required to be filed by one seeking relief under Chapter 7 is essential,
    because the schedules ‘serve the important purpose of insuring that adequate information is
    available for the Trustee and creditors without need for investigation to determine whether the
    information provided is true.’ ” Matter of Beaubouef, 
    966 F.2d 174
    , 179 (5th Cir. 1992) (quoting
    In re Urban, 
    130 B.R. 340
    , 344 (Bankr. M.D.Fla. 1991)).
    ¶ 38   Thus, an asset will not be deemed abandoned by the trustee if “ ‘the trustee is given
    incomplete or false information of the asset by the debtor, thereby foregoing a proper
    investigation of the asset.’ ” Cusano, 264 F.3d at 946 (quoting In re Ozer, 
    208 B.R. 630
    , 633
    (Bankr. E.D.N.Y.1997); see In re Adair, 
    253 B.R. 85
    , 89 (B.A.P. 9th Cir. 2000); In re DeVore,
    
    223 B.R. 193
    , 198 (B.A.P. 9th Cir. 1998); In re Shelton, 
    201 B.R. 147
    , 155 (Bankr.
    E.D.Va.1996) (revoking technical abandonment of property, as information contained in debtor’s
    9
    No. 1-21-0886
    schedules did not contain full and complete information about trustee’s residential property
    sufficient for trustee to make informed decision).
    ¶ 39    “ ‘[T]here are no bright-line rules for how much itemization and specificity is required’ ”
    in determining whether an asset has been sufficiently disclosed on a schedule. Cusano, 264 F.3d
    at 946 (quoting In re Mohring, 
    142 B.R. 389
    , 395 (Bankr. E.D.Cal.1992)). But it is clear that “a
    debtor is not entitled to pick and choose which information it will give the trustee and what it can
    withhold.” In re Wheeler, 
    503 B.R. 694
    , 697 (Bankr. N.D. Ind. 2013). At a bare minimum, “all
    material information must be disclosed.” 
    Id.
     The information must be sufficient to give the
    trustee “the ability to make a decision in the best interests of the estate or the relevant creditors.”
    In re Shelton, 
    201 B.R. at 155
    . “[T]he issue is best viewed from the perspective of the trustees
    and creditors. Is it the kind of thing they would want to know?” In re Wheeler, 
    503 B.R. at 697
    .
    ¶ 40    With these principles in mind, we have little hesitation in concluding that Petitioner did
    not sufficiently disclose the Prospect Heights property and its status in her amended schedules.
    The case law repeatedly emphasizes the need for complete disclosure of assets, liabilities, and
    related financial affairs. Petitioner’s amendment of the schedules was not sufficient for the
    trustee to have abandoned her section 2-1401 claim regarding the Prospect Heights Property.
    ¶ 41    In scheduling the property and disclosing the existence and status of the foreclosure
    lawsuit—that the bank had foreclosed on the property and sold it at a judicially confirmed sale—
    Petitioner was telling the trustee that the property was all but lost; for all practical purposes, it
    had ceased to be an asset, and all that remained was evicting the occupants, the Koguts.
    Petitioner was not entitled to withhold the fact that she was about to drop a bomb in that
    proceeding, a section 2-1401 petition that, if meritorious, would render every single judgment in
    that foreclosure void from start to finish and reinstate Petitioner’s claim to that property. See In
    10
    No. 1-21-0886
    re Tennyson, 
    313 B.R. 402
    , 405–06 (Bankr. W.D. Ky. 2004) (scheduling residential property as
    asset and listing mortgage was insufficient information, given that debtor did not list his claim
    for rescission of mortgage; “the real property and the individual claims against the mortgagor are
    distinct, separate assets,” and “setting aside a mortgage could result in non-exempt equity going
    to unsecured creditors;” thus, trustee did not have sufficient information to have abandoned
    property, and “the claims remain property of the bankruptcy estate and the Chapter 7 trustee is
    the party with proper standing to pursue any or all of these claims.”).
    ¶ 42    Allowing Petitioner to play that game would run against every decision we have cited
    above regarding the duty of complete and accurate disclosure. Returning back to the question
    posed in the decision of In re Wheeler, 
    503 B.R. at
    697: After scheduling the Prospect Heights
    property and listing the foreclosure and judicially-confirmed sale of that property on her
    schedules, is the fact that Petitioner was about to file a claim that could upend the entire
    foreclosure action and restore her interest in the property “the kind of thing [a trustee and
    creditors] would want to know?” The answer is obviously yes.
    ¶ 43    Petitioner raises objections of a technical nature. For one, she says that her assertion of
    her due-process right to service of process is not a “claim” that required scheduling as an asset.
    For another, even if it did constitute an asset, it was not an asset she possessed circa 2010, when
    she first filed her petition; she had no right to file a section 2-1401 petition until 30 days after
    final judgment, which did not occur until 2016. See 735 ILCS 5/2-1401 (West 2016) (petitions
    may be filed “after 30 days from the entry” of “final orders and judgments”). Thus, says
    Petitioner, the trustee validly abandoned any claim that the estate may have had on the property,
    and she regained standing to raise this argument.
    11
    No. 1-21-0886
    ¶ 44   We do find these arguments compelling. As already noted, a section 2-1401 petition is, in
    fact, its own freestanding cause of action, even if it relates to another judgment it is collaterally
    attacking. Hanson, 391 Ill. App. 3d at 906. True, Petitioner’s theory is grounded in a claim of
    due process, but the theory is no import; it is the fact that she had a cause of action that matters.
    ¶ 45   Nor are we convinced by Petitioner’s argument that she was only required to schedule
    assets that she possessed as of the date of her original bankruptcy petition in 2010, and the
    section 2-1401 petition did not accrue until 2016 after final judgment and judicial confirmation
    of sale. For one thing, it is nobody’s fault but Petitioner’s that she did not schedule the Prospect
    Heights property back in 2010, when she told the bankruptcy court that she had “no assets.” Had
    she scheduled it back in 2010 as required, she likewise would have been required to list the
    foreclosure action against that property in the Statement of Financial Affairs, as she concedes.
    ¶ 46   And even if Petitioner did not have actual knowledge of the foreclosure action back in
    2010 (we recognize that legal notice of a lawsuit via service of process is different than actual
    knowledge of the suit), she obviously knew of her interest in the Prospect Height property back
    in 2010. Had she disclosed that property as an asset back then, the trustee surely would have
    discovered the existence of the foreclosure lawsuit. The property (at least according to
    Petitioner’s HELOC application) was valued at over a million dollars. It is impossible to imagine
    that the trustee, back in 2010, would not have taken at least a cursory look at the property as a
    source for making Petitioner’s creditors whole. Even a cursory review would have revealed the
    existence of the foreclosure lawsuit.
    ¶ 47   The trustee could then have taken whatever action he deemed necessary at that time,
    including challenging the default judgment against Petitioner for improper service. Or maybe the
    12
    No. 1-21-0886
    trustee would have passed on the entire matter, deeming the case (and thus the property)
    unsalvageable. But the trustee would have had the information to make that informed decision.
    ¶ 48   Instead, Petitioner waited until the very convenient moment when the dye was all but cast
    in the foreclosure action to reopen her bankruptcy action, schedule the property as an asset along
    with a statement about the status of the foreclosure action that portrayed the foreclosure action as
    a fait accompli, but leave out the undeniably material fact that she was on the verge of attacking
    that foreclosure action and reclaiming her interest in the property.
    ¶ 49   Under no reading of bankruptcy law that we have cited above could we countenance
    Petitioner’s actions. While we, as a state appellate court, do not often wade into bankruptcy law,
    there is no doubt that Petitioner owed a duty to disclose to the bankruptcy court that she was
    about to take a crack at invalidating the entire foreclosure action and reclaim her interest in the
    Prospect Heights property. Whether she was required to schedule her section 2-1401 petition as
    an “asset” or whether she was supposed to include it in her amended Statement of Financial
    Affairs, the conclusion is the same: Petitioner gave materially incomplete and misleading
    information to the trustee.
    ¶ 50   We thus hold that any claim that Petitioner might have on the Prospect Heights property,
    including her section 2-1401 petition, was not abandoned by the trustee. It remains with her
    bankruptcy estate. The trustee, and the trustee alone, would have standing to file that petition.
    Regardless of the reason that the circuit court may have dismissed it, Petitioner’s section 2-1401
    petition was properly dismissed for lack of standing.
    ¶ 51                                      CONCLUSION
    ¶ 52   The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
    ¶ 53   Affirmed.
    13