When the debtor’s mother made a direct payment to one of the debtor’s creditors from an account over which the debtor had no interest or control, the transfer was not an avoidable preferential transfer under section 547(b). Walters v. Stevens, Littman, Biddison, Tharp and Weinberg, LLC. (In re Wagenknecht), No. 19-1206 (10th Cir. Aug. 24, 2020). [Read more…] about Debt Paid by Mother Pre-Bankruptcy Not Preferential Transfer
Sanctions Against Student Loan Servicer
A student loan servicing company’s failure, over the course of five years, to respond to an adversary complaint and multiple court orders, justified a finding of contempt and sanctions against the servicer requiring it to pay off the debtor’s student loans to the DOE in the amount of $354,629.62, and pay damages to the debtor in the amount of $24,000. Leary v. Great Lakes Educational Loan Services, No. 15-11583, Adv. Proc. No. 15-1295 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. Sept. 8, 2020).
Lifting the Stay only for Debtor in Serial Filings
Where a debtor makes serial filings for bankruptcy, the automatic stay is lifted after 30 days only with respect to the debtor and not with respect to property of the estate. Rose v. Select Portfolio Servicing, Inc., No. 19-50598 (5th Cir. Dec. 10, 2019).
Five years after the debtor and her then husband bought their residence, they divorced and the debtor’s husband retained the house on the condition that, if he defaulted on the mortgage, he would transfer ownership to the debtor. He defaulted. Although the house did not actually transfer to the debtor until five years after the last payment on the mortgage, the debtor became actively involved in battle with the mortgage creditor. On four occasions, the creditor set a foreclosure date and the debtor filed for bankruptcy to forestall the sale of the property. The bankruptcy cases were pending for a total of 269 days. [Read more…] about Lifting the Stay only for Debtor in Serial Filings
Trustee Absolutely Immune from Personal Liability
A trustee who collects fees from the debtors’ exempt property has absolute immunity from personal liability when the fees were incurred in accordance with a bankruptcy court order authorizing sale of the debtors’ homestead. Holley v. Corcoran (In re Holley), No. 20-11096 (E.D. Mich. Oct. 7, 2020). [Read more…] about Trustee Absolutely Immune from Personal Liability
Change in Circumstances Not Required for Plan Modification
A change in circumstances is not a pre-condition to modification of a confirmed chapter 13 plan under section 1329(a). Whaley v. Guillen (In re Guillen), No. 17-13899 (11th Cir. Aug. 25, 2020).
When the debtor filed for chapter 13 bankruptcy, she listed two creditors with security interests in her home. Her proposed plan included payments toward her bankruptcy attorney’s fee of $4,900, as well as a challenge to Wells Fargo’s junior lien. She then initiated an adversary proceeding seeking to avoid that lien. The debtor and Wells Fargo eventually settled the adversary complaint with Wells Fargo agreeing to be treated as an unsecured creditor. Finding that it met the statutory requirements, including section 1325’s “best interest of creditors” test, the bankruptcy court confirmed her plan. [Read more…] about Change in Circumstances Not Required for Plan Modification
Post-Petition Appreciation Not Part of Chapter 7 Estate upon Conversion
A Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Tenth Circuit found that appreciation in value of the debtors’ homestead while in chapter 13 belongs to the debtors upon conversion to chapter 7. Rodriguez v. Barrera (In re Barrera), No. 20-3 (B.A.P. 10th Cir. Oct. 10, 2020) (unpublished).
When the debtors filed for bankruptcy, their homestead was valued at $396,606, encumbered by two liens totaling $336,209. They claimed their $75,000 homestead exemption leaving no equity for the bankruptcy estate. During the course of their chapter 13 bankruptcy, they sold the homestead for $520,000. They then converted to chapter 7. The trustee sought turnover of the sale proceeds in excess of the debtors’ exemption. The bankruptcy court denied the trustee’s motion, holding that the value of the property consisted of the value it had on the original petition date. [Read more…] about Post-Petition Appreciation Not Part of Chapter 7 Estate upon Conversion
IRA Funds Garnished Pre-Petition Not Part of Bankruptcy Estate
Where the judicial lien against the debtor was fully satisfied before the debtor filed his bankruptcy petition, the transfer of funds from his IRA used to satisfy the lien was not an avoidable transfer under section 547 or section 522(f) or (h). Elliott v. Pacific Western Bank, No. 18-17421 (9th Cir. Aug. 12, 2020).
When the debtor defaulted on a loan held by Pacific Western Bank, PWB obtained a state court judgment against him and instituted a levy against the debtor’s employee retirement plan (IRA). Under California law, the funds in the debtor’s IRA were exempt only to the extent they were necessary for the debtor’s post-retirement support. The state court issued an executory lien against the debtor’s IRA, and PWB garnished the funds to cover the amount owed. Three months later, the debtor filed chapter 7 bankruptcy. After he received his discharge, he filed an adversary complaint seeking to recover the funds garnished from his IRA under the theory that they were exempt under state law and section 522(f) of the Bankruptcy Code. PWB argued that the funds were not exempt in the bankruptcy proceeding because the lien had been fully executed prior to the filing of the bankruptcy and, therefore, they did not become part of the bankruptcy estate. The bankruptcy court agreed. The district court affirmed. [Read more…] about IRA Funds Garnished Pre-Petition Not Part of Bankruptcy Estate
6th Circuit Clarifies Treatment of 401(k) Contributions in Chapter 13
Rejecting its own dictum in Seafort v. Burden (In re Seafort), the Sixth Circuit held that a chapter 13 debtor’s post-petition voluntary contributions to an employer-sponsored retirement plan are not part of her disposable income so long as they are a continuation of pre-petition contributions. Davis v. Helbling (In re Davis), No. 19-3117 (6th Cir. June 1, 2020).
Well before she filed for bankruptcy, the debtor began making monthly contributions in the amount of $220.66 to her retirement account. When she filed for bankruptcy, she included those contributions in her schedule of expenses. The trustee objected to confirmation of the debtor’s proposed chapter 13 plan on the basis that, because of the monthly contributions to her 401(k), she was not proposing to contribute all of her disposable income to the plan. Adhering to dictum in Seafort v. Burden (In re Seafort), 669 F.3d 662, 674 n.7 (6th Cir. 2012), the bankruptcy court sustained the trustee’s objection. The debtor amended her plan to incorporate the 401(k) amount, and the bankruptcy court certified the case for direct appeal to the Sixth Circuit. [Read more…] about 6th Circuit Clarifies Treatment of 401(k) Contributions in Chapter 13
Dischargeability of Sanctions Against Attorney
State law discovery sanctions owed to a non-governmental entity for compensatory purposes do not fall under section 523(a)(7)’s exception to discharge for fines or penalties, and are therefore dischargeable. Costs related to the State Bar’s disciplinary actions are owed to a governmental agency, are punitive rather than compensatory in nature, and are therefore excepted from discharge. Where the debtor’s law license suspension was contingent upon her paying nondischargeable costs, the suspension was not discriminatory in violation of section 525(b). Albert-Sheridan v. State Bar of Calif., No. 19-60023 (9th Cir. June 10, 2020). [Read more…] about Dischargeability of Sanctions Against Attorney
Debtor’s Assumption of Lease Removes Property from Estate
Once the trustee declines to assume an ongoing lease, the leased property drops out of the estate and new debt based on the debtor’s failure to make payments on the lease is not an administrative expense under section 503(b). Microf LLC v. Cumbess, No. 19-12088 (11th Cir. June 3, 2020).
When he filed for chapter 13 bankruptcy, the debtor’s plan provided that the arrears owed on an unexpired lease for an HVAC unit would be paid through the estate and he would assume the ongoing lease, paying for it outside the plan. He failed to maintain the lease payments and the HVAC creditor, Microf, sought to have the new arrears treated as administrative expenses by the bankruptcy court and given priority for repayment. The trustee objected. The bankruptcy court sustained the objection, finding that when the debtor assumed the lease, the property exited the bankruptcy estate and the new debt could not be deemed an administrative expense. The district court affirmed. [Read more…] about Debtor’s Assumption of Lease Removes Property from Estate