Shenberg v. Village of Carpentersville
Shenberg v. Village of Carpentersville
Opinion of the Court
This appeal is by a creditor who seeks review of an order entered in separate bankruptcy proceedings filed by a husband and wife. The issue presented is whether a municipality can be restrained from withholding or refusing water service to bankrupts who fail to pay water bills that became due after the bankruptcy petitions were filed. This court holds that the municipality cannot be so restrained; that the bankruptcy judge erred in entering the order from which the appeal is taken; therefore, the cause is reversed and remanded for further proceedings consistent with the views expressed in this memorandum.
I.
Jay and Patricia Shenberg, husband and wife filed separate bankruptcy petitions in which each scheduled the Village of Carpentersville as a creditor to whom they owed $289.00 for water and sewer service. On March 21, 1977, they petitioned the bankruptcy court for a preliminary injunction to restrain the village from cutting off their supply of water and denying them immediate and future services “. . . for non-payment of bills up to the filing of the petitions in bankruptcy. . . .” Their motion was granted, the court finding that a stay of actions against the bankrupts and their property had been entered as provided in Bankruptcy Rules 401 and 601. The order decreed “. . . that the Village of Carpentersville, Department of Water be, and it is restrained from withholding or refusing water service to Jay C. Shenberg and Patricia A. Shenberg, bankrupts herein residing at 2008 Berkshire, Carpentersville, until further order of court.” As can be seen, the injunction was not limited to the denial of services for non-payment of bills the Shenbergs owed up to the filing of the petitions in bankruptcy. This fact becomes important because at the time of the injunction, the municipal code of the Village of Carpentersville provided that
In the event of customer shall not pay any past water bill of sewer use charge bill within 105 days after the same is rendered, it shall be the duty of the proper officers of the Village to shut off the water supply to such customer until such time as all past due bills for water and sewer service are fully paid, together with a service Charge of Five Dollars ($5.00) for the restoration of water service.
The decision of the village to terminate water service to the Shenbergs was not to collect the $289.00 debt that had been scheduled in the bankruptcy petitions; it was to enforce the provisions of its municipal code and compel payment of water bills that became due after the petitions were filed. In this appeal, the village contends that while it could not, by shutting off water service to the Shenbergs, compel payment of the scheduled debt, it cannot be restrained from withholding or refusing water service for non-payment of bills that became due after beginning of bankruptcy proceedings because to do so would require it to violate the ordinance that regulates its proprietary functions. The village argues that the order entered by the bankruptcy court was not a stay order; it was a mandatory injunction that requires it to continue furnishing water and sewer services to the bankrupts in violation of its municipal code.
These points are argued by the village in a brief filed in compliance with Rule 808, Bankruptcy Rules. The Shenbergs have not answered. Instead, Patricia Shenberg appeared before this court, pro se, and stated that she and her husband had moved from the Village of Carpentersville; and consequently, they had no desire to contest this appeal. It appears, then, that it may no longer be necessary to enforce the injunction order. However, because similar questions may arise again, this court will explicate its resolution of the issue presented by this appeal.
II.
Section 11(a) of the Bankruptcy Act, 11 U.S.C. § 29(a), provides that a suit
In the case before the court, the Village of Carpentersville did not seek to compel payment of the scheduled debt by threatening the bankrupts with a cut off of water service. These are wage earner bankruptcy proceedings; the services of the village to the Shenbergs were of no conceivable benefit to the bankruptcy estates; no enforceable contract which could be anticipatorily breached existed between the parties at the time petitions were filed; nor was this a case of service rendered on an open account so as to give rise to a provable claim or debt. Manufacturer’s Trading Corporation v. Roberts, 138 F.2d 806 (5th Cir. 1943); 11 U.S.C. § 103(a)(4), (b).
Under Illinois law, the village, a municipality rendering service in a proprietary capacity, had the right to discontinue service for non-payment of current bills. Koontz v. Public Service Co. of Northern Illinois, 328 Ill.App. 587, 66 N.E.2d 490 (1946). The decretal portion of the injunction order did not distinguish between collection of the scheduled debt and cut off of service to compel payment of water bills that became due after the bankruptcy petitions were filed. Therefore, under the circumstances, the injunction order was improper. It stayed an action that did not involve a dischargeable debt; it compelled a municipality to violate an ordinance that expressed a public policy against continued service to delinquent customers. On remand of this cause, the bankruptcy judge should reconsider, amend or vacate the order in its entirety, as evidence may require. In re Mountjoy (W.D.Mo. 1973), 368 F.Supp. 1087.
So ordered.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- In re Jay C. SHENBERG, Bankrupt-Appellee. Patricia A. SHENBERG, Bankrupt-Appellee v. VILLAGE OF CARPENTERSVILLE, a Municipal Corporation
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published