Cavaliere v. Sapir

208 B.R. 784, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10944, 1997 WL 306554
CourtDistrict Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedMay 30, 1997
DocketCiv. 3:96CV833 (JBA)
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 208 B.R. 784 (Cavaliere v. Sapir) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cavaliere v. Sapir, 208 B.R. 784, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10944, 1997 WL 306554 (D. Conn. 1997).

Opinion

Ruling on Appeal from Decision by United States Bankruptcy Court

JANET BOND ARTERTON, District Judge.

This is an appeal from the dismissal of the Chapter 13 ease of the debtors-appellants John and Kathleen Cavaliere (“debtors”). See In re Cavaliere, 194 B.R. 7 (Bankr.Conn.1996). The dismissal was granted pursuant to the motion of the appellee Chapter 13 trustee (“trustee”) on the grounds that the debtors’ debt exceeded the limits permitted in a Chapter 13 action under 11 U.S.C. § 109(e). The debtors contend that the bankruptcy court erred in calculating their debt under § 109(e) by taking into account certain debts discharged in a previous Chapter 7 action.

Background

On July 16,1993, the debtors commenced a bankruptcy case under Chapter 7, which resulted in a discharge of their dischargeable debts four months later. On June 2, 1995, the debtors commenced the present case under Chapter 13. The debtors’ filings indicate that the market value of their home was $350,000; the total value of secured claims was $1,191,079.18, of which $1,172,750.28 was secured by the home; and all but $90,996.42 of the secured claims predated the Chapter 7 discharge. The trustee moved to dismiss in light of § 109(e), which limits Chapter 13 to debtors with noncontingent, liquidated, secured debts of less $750,000, and noncontingent, liquidated unsecured debts of less than $250,000.

Subsequent to the trustee’s motion, the debtors moved for a determination of the status of claims under § 506(a) which provides as follows:

An allowed claim of a creditor secured by a lien on property in which the estate has an interest ... is a secured claim to the extent of the value of such creditor’s interest in the estate’s interest in such property ... and is an unsecured claim to the extent that the value of such creditor’s interest ... is less than the amount of such allowed claim.

The bankruptcy court determined that the § 506(a) motion should be addressed in conjunction with the motion to dismiss. 1 With respect to debt secured by the house, the court deemed only $390,000 to be secured under § 506(a). 2 The remainder of the debt was deemed to be unsecured. Although this determination brought the debtors within the § 109(e) limitations on secured debt, the bankruptcy court concluded that the debtors were simultaneously moved out of compliance with the limitations on unsecured debt. Accordingly, the court granted the trustee’s motion to dismiss.

Discussion

The debtors’ argument in the present appeal is simple, of the claims deemed unsecured pursuant to § 506(a), $691,253.80 predated the Chapter 7 discharge. Although liens may pass through Chapter 7 undisturbed, a discharge serves to eliminate the *786 debtor’s personal liability for the debt. See Johnson v. Home State Bank, 501 U.S. 78, 84, 111 S.Ct. 2150, 2154, 115 L.Ed.2d 66 (1991). Therefore, the debtors argue that by the time the present Chapter 13 action was commenced, the $691,253.80 of discharged claims were enforceable only through an in rem action against the debtors’ home, but the claims were not enforceable against the debtors personally. See id. at 86, 111 S.Ct. at 2155 (“Insofar as the mortgage interest that passes through a Chapter 7 liquidation is enforceable only against the debtor’s property, this interest has the same properties as a nonrecourse loan.”). Then, pursuant to the § 506(a) determination, the claims were deemed unsecured, precluding enforcement of the liens. What remained was, in effect, an unsecured nonrecourse loan. Under § 502(b)(1), a claim is not allowed if it is “unenforceable against the debtor and the property of the debtor, under any agreement or applicable law.” Therefore, the debtors conclude, the $691,253.80 of discharged claims should have been disallowed as unenforceable against either the debtors (pursuant to the discharge) or their property (pursuant to the § 506(a) determination), and not counted towards either the secured or the unsecured debt limits of § 109(e). Such dis-allowance would have brought the debtors into compliance with the Chapter 13 jurisdictional requirements.

Although few published cases address the interplay of § 506(a), § 502(b)(1), and the Chapter 7 discharge mechanism, at least three prior decisions from this district, including one by this Court, have accepted the reasoning advanced by the debtors. See EMC Mortgage Corp. v. Quast, Civ. No. 3:94cv1919(JBA) (D. Conn. filed Jan. 31, 1997) (Arterton, J.) (affirming decision by Krechevsky, J.); In re Winder, 171 B.R. 728, 731 n. 5 (Bankr.Conn.1994) (Dabrowski, J.). Other than the decision at issue in the present appeal, the Court has been provided with no contrary authority.

The trustee argues that the debtors misstate the effect of the § 506(a) determination. While the trustee concedes that the Chapter 7 discharge eliminated the debtors’ personal liability with respect to the discharged debt, the trustee suggests that the § 506(a) determination actually restored the unsecured aspect of the debt. In other words, the trustee views § 506(a) as a two-step process: first, the court removes an undersecured secured debt; then, “by operation of law,” a new unsecured debt, equal in amount to the lien that has been effectively stripped, is imposed. However, the Court finds no case law, other than the decision below, in support of the trustee’s interpretation. Indeed, the Second Circuit takes a rather different view of § 506(a). Under the trustee’s two-step approach, any type of nonrecourse debt going through the § 506(a) process would be transformed into an enforceable unsecured debt. Yet, the Second Circuit has observed that sections 506(a) and 502(b)(1) operate to disallow undersecured claims of “a creditor when the financing that provides the basis for the claim was advanced on a nonrecourse basis.” In re PCH Associates, 949 F.2d 585, 604 (2d Cir.1991). The Second Circuit was plainly of a mind that a nonrecourse debt deemed unsecured under § 506(a) was unenforceable within the meaning of § 502(b)(1). The Court has been offered no reason in this regard to distinguish between debts without recourse by virtue of an agreement and debts without recourse by virtue of a Chapter 7 discharge.

In the alternative, the trustee argues that, even if the unsecured discharged debts were unenforceable, they would nonetheless not be disallowed under § 502(b)(1), which disallows only those claims that are “unenforceable against the debtor and the property of the debtor, under any agreement or applicable law.” The trustee contends that “applicable law” should be read as “applicable nonbankruptcy law”; because the claims at issue are unenforceable only by virtue of bankruptcy law, the trustee concludes that the claims should be allowed and, hence, counted towards the § 109(e) jurisdictional limitations. However, even the bankruptcy judge below expressed ambivalence with respect to this interpretation of § 502(b)(1). See Cavaliere, 194 B.R.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
208 B.R. 784, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10944, 1997 WL 306554, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cavaliere-v-sapir-ctd-1997.