When the debtors filed for chapter 7 bankruptcy, they had two outstanding mortgages on their residence. The first was partially secured and the second was fully underwater. The debtors filed an adversary complaint seeking to strip down the partially secured senior lien. The bankruptcy court, compelled by Dewsnup v.Timm, 502 U.S. 410 (1992) and Bank of America, N.A. v. Caulkett, 575 U.S. 790 (2015), granted the creditor’s motion to dismiss. In re Vasquez, No. 19-1841, Adv. Proc. No. 19-100 (Bankr. E.D. N.C. March 25, 2020). Agreeing with the bankruptcy court’s “thorough analysis and conclusions,” the district court affirmed. In re Vasquez, No. 20-62 (E.D. N.C. Aug. 2020). [Read more…] about Challenge to Dewsnup Moving Up
Funds Fraudulently Transferred Pre-Conversion Are Recoverable by the Chapter 7 Trustee
Funds fraudulently transferred during a chapter 13 case remain in the debtor’s “constructive possession” and become part of the chapter 7 estate upon conversion. Brown v. Barclay, No. 18-60029 (9th Cir. March 23, 2020).
The chapter 13 debtor received an inheritance while in bankruptcy which he divided between himself and his three brothers without notifying the chapter 13 trustee. When the trustee learned of the unauthorized transfer, he moved the court to convert the debtor’s case to chapter 7 as a sanction. Finding the debtor had acted in bad faith, the bankruptcy court ordered the conversion. The chapter 7 trustee sought turnover of the funds from all the brothers. One of the brothers, the appellant in this case, fought turnover on the basis that because the debtor was not in control of the funds at the time of conversion, they did not become part of the chapter 7 estate. The bankruptcy court disagreed, and the bankruptcy appellate panel affirmed. [Read more…] about Funds Fraudulently Transferred Pre-Conversion Are Recoverable by the Chapter 7 Trustee
First-In First-Out Applies to Commingled Account
The Bankruptcy Court correctly used the first-in first-out approach to determine how much of a commingled account could be attributed to exempt funds. Tydings v. Reed (In re Tydings), No. 20-4057 (W.D. Mo. Sept. 3, 2020).
After her husband died, the chapter 7 debtor received surviving widow’s social security benefits which she deposited into her bank account where she also deposited her weekly pay checks. Prior to receiving the social security payments, the debtor had $581.27 in her bank account. In the three months prior to her bankruptcy filing, the debtor deposited $15,171.57 in social security funds and $6,670.38 in wages into the account. During that same period, the debtor withdrew $13,461.07 from the account, leaving a balance of $8,939.15 on the petition date. The debtor claimed the entire balance in her account as exempt in bankruptcy. The trustee objected on the grounds that not all the funds in account were exempt. The trustee argued that the court should apply a first-in first-out (FIFO) analysis which would allow the debtor to exempt $3,981. The bankruptcy court sustained the objection and the debtor appealed to the district court. [Read more…] about First-In First-Out Applies to Commingled Account
Texas District’s Treatment of Tax Refund In Chapter 13 Invalidated
Finding that it encroached on a below-median debtor’s substantive rights, the Fifth Circuit invalidated a local form chapter 13 plan provision that required all debtors to turn over any tax refund in excess of $2,000. Diaz v. Viegelahn, No. 19-50982 (5th Cir. Aug. 26, 2020).
NCBRC filed an amicus brief on behalf of the NACBA membership in support of the debtor in this case. [Read more…] about Texas District’s Treatment of Tax Refund In Chapter 13 Invalidated
10th Circuit – Student Loan Not Excepted from Discharge as Educational Benefit
An educational benefit is not a student loan for nondischargeability purposes under section 523(a)(8)(A)(ii). McDaniel v. Navient Solutions, LLC, No. 18-1445 (10th Cir. Aug. 31, 2020).
When the debtors filed their chapter 13 petition, they had many outstanding student loans including six private educational loans held by Navient totaling approximately $107,000 (the Loan). The trustee objected to confirmation of the plan citing its failure to provide for nondischargeable student loans. The debtors filed an amended plan specifically to correct certain inaccuracies not related to student loans. They also added the provision that “[s]tudent loans are to be treated as an unsecured Class Four claim or as follows: deferred until end of plan.” The plan defined unsecured Class Four claims as “[a]llowed unsecured claims not otherwise referred to in the Plan.” Navient agreed that class four claims were dischargeable. [Read more…] about 10th Circuit – Student Loan Not Excepted from Discharge as Educational Benefit
Social Security Benefits May Be Considered for Abuse under 707 and Good Faith under 1325
A debtor’s social security income is a proper factor to consider in an abuse analysis under section 707(b)(3)(B) and in a good faith analysis under section 1325(a)(3). Meehean v. Vara (In re Meehean), No. 20-10380 (E.D. Mich. Aug. 18, 2020).
When they filed their chapter 7 petition, debtors listed $5,842 in monthly income ($4,007 in Social Security benefits and $1,835 in pension income) and $4,446 in monthly expenses. They had $142,871 in secured mortgage debt and $43,100 in unsecured non-priority debt. The trustee moved to dismiss the petition as an abuse of bankruptcy, arguing that, if the debtors committed their social security income to a chapter 13 plan, they could pay off their unsecured debt over five years. The bankruptcy court agreed and granted the trustee’s motion. In re Meehean, 611 B.R. 574 (Bankr. E.D. Mich. 2020).
The debtors appealed to the district court arguing that the bankruptcy court erred by considering social security income as a factor in a totality of circumstances test for abuse of bankruptcy under section 707(b)(3)(B). [Read more…] about Social Security Benefits May Be Considered for Abuse under 707 and Good Faith under 1325
Standing to Bring Claims in State Court Relating to Estate Property
The Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Tenth Circuit found that the bankruptcy court erred when it declined to exercise its exclusive jurisdiction to determine whether state causes of action raised by investors in the debtor’s pre-bankruptcy Ponzi scheme belonged to the Debtor’s bankruptcy estate: an issue which the panel found was “central to whether the investors had standing to pursue those claims and whether they violated the discharge injunction” by doing so. Hafen v. Adams (In re Hafen), No. 19-31 (B.A.P. 10th Cir. July 30, 2020). [Read more…] about Standing to Bring Claims in State Court Relating to Estate Property
9th Circuit Equates Lease Assumption with Waiver of Discharge
The Ninth Circuit found that a debtor who assumes a lease under Section 365(p) of the Bankruptcy Code waives her right to discharge of debt arising out of that lease. Bobka v. Toyota Motor Credit Corp., No. 18-55688 (9th Cir. Aug. 3, 2020).
The debtor filed her chapter 7 petition in 2016. She had an ongoing lease with Toyota Motor Credit on her Toyota Rav4. The trustee opted not to assume the lease. In September 2016, the debtor called Toyota about keeping the vehicle. Toyota agreed and sent her and her attorney a lease assumption agreement. She did not return the agreement until December 5, well more than 30 days after she orally told Toyota she wanted to keep the vehicle. The next day, the debtor received her bankruptcy discharge. [Read more…] about 9th Circuit Equates Lease Assumption with Waiver of Discharge
Great Decision on Judicial Estoppel
In a lengthy decision addressing a challenge to its order reopening the debtor’s chapter 13 case, a Bankruptcy Court for the District of South Carolina found that the debtor had no duty under the Bankruptcy Code or Rules to disclose a lawsuit that accrued and was filed post-confirmation. In the face of a judicial estoppel defense raised by the Defendants in the debtor’s state personal injury lawsuit, the court stated, “[w]ithout such a duty or knowledge that one existed, Debtor cannot be found to have acted intentionally to mislead this Court.” In re Boyd, No. 13-2924 (Bankr. S.C. July 17, 2020). [Read more…] about Great Decision on Judicial Estoppel
Lienholder May Seek Value for Post-Discharge Release of Lien
The discharge injunction does not prohibit a lienholder from seeking value for release of its lien so long as, under the specific facts of the case, its conduct is not an improper attempt to coerce repayment of the discharged debt. Bentley v. OneMain Financial Group, No. 19-8026 (B.A.P. 6th Cir. July 8, 2020). [Read more…] about Lienholder May Seek Value for Post-Discharge Release of Lien