IS THERE RECOVERY AFTER BANKRUPTCY?
In fact, if you’re in Massachusetts or Rhode Island, you don’t even have to sweat this very much because under state law, the condo has an automatic lien for unpaid condominium fees. (Note that I said an automatic lien, not an automatic priority lien, which is different.) Thus, the association is a secured creditor in the bankruptcy case, which typically means—but does not guarantee—that unpaid fees will eventually be recouped. In New Hampshire, your association is a secured creditor only if there is a lien on record prior to the bankruptcy filing.
A bankruptcy filing triggers an “automatic stay,” requiring all creditors to immediately halt any debt collection efforts. So, if your board or management company receives notice of an owner’s bankruptcy case, the first thing you should do is notify counsel. You should also cease any collection efforts you have begun and you should not begin any new ones. Even seemingly innocuous actions, like sending the owner a ledger showing his/her balance, can be construed as an attempt to collect the debt. All communication with this owner, including (and especially) any collection efforts, should be handled by counsel.
If a court date is pending, that date is effectively cancelled. If a foreclosure sale has been scheduled, it will have to be postponed at a minimum, but it will most likely be cancelled outright.
What happens next depends on whether the owner is seeking to eliminate all debts under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code, or to restructure them under Chapter 13. A Chapter 7 filing eliminates the owner’s obligation to pay most outstanding debts, but it doesn’t eliminate the claims of secured creditors on the amounts owed to them. Under this bankruptcy process, the owners’ assets, often including the condo unit itself, will be liquidated and the proceeds distributed among the secured creditors.
Typically, a Chapter 7 case will play out like this
The owner receives a discharge for his personal obligations in the bankruptcy case. The bankruptcy case will then be dismissed, which allows the condo to resume lien enforcement efforts and seek to recoup the outstanding amount in the ordinary course from the lender, who will foreclose on the unit.
Sometimes an owner will attempt to retain the condo unit, in which case, he/she will be required to pay the entire amount of the arrearage.
Under Chapter 13, instead of liquidating his/her assets, a debtor retains ownership of at least some of them through a court-approved plan that requires repayment of the amounts owed, usually over a five-year period. As with a Chapter 7 filing, the association will usually recover the delinquent sums, but the recovery period will take longer.
In a Chapter 13, the unit owner must pay whatever is owed as of the time he/she files for bankruptcy over the period specified in the bankruptcy plan.
Simultaneously, that owner must also stay current with regular monthly fees or any supplemental assessment that comes due. In the long run, the association will be made whole.
If the owner fails to make the payments required under the Chapter 13 plan, or fails to remain current on post-petition payments, the association can file a motion seeking the court’s permission to resume collection actions including, if necessary, foreclosing on the owner’s unit. This is called obtaining “relief from stay.” By obtaining relief and resuming the lien enforcement process, your attorney can ensure the condo recovers all or most of what is owed.
Note that the association cannot assess late fees on the pre-petition delinquency balance; that amount is frozen once the bankruptcy petition is filed. But the association can assess penalties on late payments for condo fees and other assessments levied after the filing. The association can also assess fines for violations occurring after the bankruptcy filing.
But when dealing with the bankruptcy process patience is a necessity – and it will be rewarded.
Contact Dean Lennon for questions concerning recovery of delinquencies post-bankruptcy filing(s).