Posted by NCBRC - December 7th, 2021
The standing chapter 13 trustee must return his percentage fee to the debtor when the debtor’s plan is not confirmed. Doll v. Goodman (In re Doll), No. 21-731 (D. Colo. Dec. 6, 2021).
The debtor filed for chapter 13 bankruptcy and made $29,900 in plan payments to the standing trustee prior to confirmation. Of that amount, $19,800 went to his counsel, $7,503.30 was disbursed to the Colorado Department of Revenue on a priority tax claim, and the remaining $2,596.70 was retained by the standing trustee as part of his statutory 10% trustee fee. The plan was not confirmed and the bankruptcy court allowed the trustee to retain his fee over the debtor’s objection. The debtor appealed to the district court. Read More
Posted by NCBRC - December 2nd, 2021
Nothing in the Code requires a debtor to provide for a claim secured by his principal residence in his chapter 13 plan. In re Jones, 2021 WL 4465554 (Bankr. E.D. N.C. Sept. 29, 2021) (case no. 20-03607).
When he filed for chapter 13 bankruptcy, the debtor listed food stamps and VA disability benefits as his only source of income. He also listed his principal residence as securing a debt to Bank of New York Mellon (BONY). The debtor’s second amended proposed plan omitted any provision for BONY’s claim relating to the residence. The plan also specified that the debtor could sell the property without notice to the court or the chapter 13 trustee. BONY objected to confirmation arguing that section 1325(a) required the debtor to provide for its secured claim in the plan. The trustee also objected to confirmation on feasibility grounds and because of the provision relating to non-notification in the event of sale. The standing chapter 13 trustee filed an amicus brief on the issue of notice and on the grounds that the debtor’s failure to treat the secured claim in his plan violated section 1325(a)(3) and (5). Read More
Posted by NCBRC - November 18th, 2021
The Supreme Court’s decision in City of Chicago v. Fulton, 141 S. Ct. 585 (2021), effectively overruled Ninth Circuit precedent to the effect that a creditor has an affirmative obligation to return pre-petition funds to a debtor even if those funds are held by a third party. Therefore, when the creditor here stayed its garnishment action and acquiesced to release of funds by the debtor’s bank, it maintained the status quo and fulfilled its automatic stay obligations. Stuart v. City of Scottsdale, No. 21-1063 (B.A.P. 9th Cir. Nov. 10, 2021). Read More
Posted by NCBRC - November 17th, 2021
The county’s tax foreclosure sale of the debtor’s real property was avoidable as a fraudulent conveyance, and the debtor’s annuity was properly excluded from the calculation of the debtor’s insolvency for avoidance purposes where the creditor failed to object to the debtor’s claim of exemption with respect to the annuity. DuVall v. County of Ontario, NY, No. 21-6236 (W.D.N.Y. Nov. 9, 2021).
In May, 2017, the debtor’s real property was sold to the Doe appellants in a tax foreclosure sale. In March, 2019, before title transferred, the debtor filed a chapter 13 bankruptcy petition, listing an annuity of an undisclosed amount. The debtor claimed the annuity as exempt under section 522(d)(11)(E) and proposed a 100% plan including paying off the county’s tax claim. The debtor then filed a petition to avoid the tax lien under sections 522(h) and 548(a)(1)(B). The county failed to object to the claimed exemption for the annuity but filed a motion in limine to admit evidence as to its value. The bankruptcy court denied the motion in limine, and, in a separate order, granted the debtor’s motion to avoid the lien. DuVall v. County of Ontario, 2021 Bankr. LEXIS 369 (W.D.N.Y. Bankr. 2021). Read More
Posted by NCBRC - November 12th, 2021
Where tax liens are specifically excepted from the debts to which a debtor’s exempt property cannot be liable, the debtors here could not exercise the trustee’s avoidance powers under section 522(h) to avoid their tax debt, nor could they benefit from the trustee’s successful avoidance action. Hutchinson v. IRS, No. 19-60065, amended opinion (9th Cir. Dec. 23, 2021).
When the debtors filed for chapter 7 bankruptcy, they owed taxes to the IRS. Of that debt, $162,000 represented penalties and was secured by a lien on the debtors’ home. The debtors filed a two-count adversary complaint. In the first count they alleged that because the IRS claim was tax penalty under section 726(a)(4), the lien securing it was avoidable by the trustee under section 724(a). They alleged that because the trustee had not avoided the lien, they could do so themselves under section 522(h), to the extent the lien encumbered their homestead. In the second count they sought to have the avoided lien preserved for their benefit rather than for the benefit of the estate. The trustee responded asserting his right to avoid the lien for the benefit of the estate. The IRS separately moved to dismiss the debtors’ complaint. The bankruptcy court granted the IRS motion to dismiss. Later, the court entered an order avoiding the lien upon motion by the trustee pursuant to section 724(a). The debtors appealed dismissal of their complaint, and the Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit affirmed. Read More
Posted by NCBRC - November 9th, 2021
An overpayment resulting from the debtor’s mistakenly making mortgage payments while the chapter 13 trustee was making the same payments through the plan was properly remitted to the trustee for distribution rather than being returned to the debtor. White v. Regions Bank, No. 20-5355 (6th Cir. Sept. 30, 2021) (unpublished). Read More
Posted by NCBRC - November 3rd, 2021
The appellants were liable for willful violation of the discharge injunction when they pursued post-discharge state litigation and garnishment based on pre-petition conduct even though the debtor could have but did not raise the discharge as a defense in the state litigation. Morgan v. Morgan, No. 20-291 (D. Utah Oct. 25, 2021). Read More
Posted by NCBRC - October 29th, 2021
Post-petition appreciation in a chapter 13 case becomes part of the chapter 7 estate upon conversion. In re Castleman, No. 19-12233 (Bankr. W. D. Wash. June 4, 2021).
When the debtors filed for chapter 13 bankruptcy their residence was valued at $500,000. At the time of conversion of the case to chapter 7, the property value had appreciated to $700,000. The trustee moved to include the appreciation in the chapter 7 bankruptcy estate and the debtors opposed the motion. Read More
Posted by NCBRC - October 25th, 2021
The Ninth Circuit affirmed the opinion of the bankruptcy appellate panel finding that a state-mandated notification to the state taxing authority of a change in the taxpayer’s federal taxes is a “return, or equivalent report or notice,” which, if not filed by the taxpayer, renders the state tax debt nondischargeable under section 523(a)(1)(B). Berkovich v. Cal. Franchise Tax Bd., No 20-60046 (9th Cir. Oct. 14, 2021) (see discussion of In re Berkovich, 619 B.R. 397 (B.A.P. 9th Cir. 2020) here). Read More
Posted by NCBRC - October 21st, 2021
The chapter 11 debtor could not modify her residential mortgage even though much of the property securing the mortgage was used for income-producing purposes. Lee v. U.S. Nat’l Bank Ass’n, No. 20-222 (M.D. Ga. Oct. 4, 2021).
The debtor’s residence was located on forty-three acres of land of which she rented out approximately thirty-five acres as farmland. She took out a mortgage on the property in 2007 and, acting on the advice of the mortgagee, in 2010, allowed the mortgage to go into default in the expectation of refinancing the loan under the federal Housing Action Resource Test (HART). When she was unable to refinance, she filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy seeking to modify the mortgage.
US National Bank filed a claim as trustee for RMAC Trust, Series 2016-CTT (the Trust), in the amount of $253,070.25, representing $139,195.75 in unpaid principal and $82,228.15 in interest. It moved for relief from stay, and the bankruptcy court granted the motion finding that section 1123(b)(5) prohibited modification of the mortgage. The debtor appealed to the district court. Read More