Charles Dallas Hunsucker

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Mississippi
DecidedAugust 3, 2021
Docket20-12226
StatusUnknown

This text of Charles Dallas Hunsucker (Charles Dallas Hunsucker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Charles Dallas Hunsucker, (Miss. 2021).

Opinion

SO ORDERED, ES a LAE POO - hi, □ A A ; "Mt ‘ Sy Judge Jason D. Woodard os ey United States Bankruptcy Judge Qiao The Order of the Court is set forth below. The case docket reflects the date entered.

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF MISSISSIPPI In re: ) ) CHARLES DALLAS ) Case No. 20-12226-JDW HUNSUCKER, ) ) Debtor. ) Chapter 138

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER This matter came before the Court on the Objection to Allowance of Claim 9filed by the debtor, Dallas Hunsucker (“the Objection”) (Dkt. # 47), and the Motion to Dismiss Case filed by the debtor’s ex-wife, Amy Hunsucker (the “Motion”) (Dkt. # 39). An evidentiary hearing was held June 24, 2021, where the Court heard testimony from Dallas and admitted exhibits into evidence. There are two questions before the Court, both related to the Hunsuckers’ divorce. The first is whether Dallas owed Amy an ongoing child

support obligation during his bankruptcy case that he failed to pay.1 This Court finds that at all times during the bankruptcy case, Dallas’s child support

obligation was either suspended or terminated. The Motion is therefore due to be denied. The second question is whether Amy’s claim was properly filed as a domestic support obligation or should be reclassified as an unsecured property

settlement. If the claim is domestic support, it is both nondischargeable and entitled to priority treatment in the plan.2 If it is a property settlement, it is dischargeable in a chapter 13 case and should be treated like all general unsecured claims in the plan.3 The Court concludes that the majority of the

claim is a property settlement, and the Objection is due to be sustained in large part. I. JURISDICTION This Court has jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 151, 157(a) and

1334, and the

dated August 6, 1984. This is a core proceeding as set forth in 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(A), (B), and (O).

1 A chapter 13 debtor who fails to keep postpetition domestic support current is subject to dismissal and may not have his plan confirmed. 11 U.S.C. §§ 1307(c)(11), 1325(a)(8). 2 11 U.S.C. §§ 507(a)(1)(A), 523(a)(5), 1322(a)(2). 3 11 U.S.C. § 1328(a). II. FACTS & PROCEDURAL HISTORY4 Dallas and Amy were married for fourteen years. The marriage

produced two daughters, both still under the age of majority. A Consent Agreement5 filed in the Chancery Court of Desoto County in April of 2019 signed by both Dallas and Amy provided that the chancery court would “make an equitable division of marital assets and marital debts accumulated or

acquired by the parties during the marriage” and determine “whether to award alimony to one or the other party. . . .”6 After hearing testimony and considering the evidence, Chancellor Mitchell M. Lundy, Jr. granted physical custody of the children to Amy and set

Dallas’s monthly child support payment at $1,000.00.7 Chancellor Lundy then extensively analyzed the factors for property division, one of which focuses on “the extent to which property division may, with equity to both parties, be utilized to eliminate periodic payments and other potential sources

of future friction between the parties. . . .”8 Chancellor Lundy awarded Amy the “remaining funds in a Fidelity account,”9 and entered judgment in favor of

4 To the extent any of the findings of fact are considered conclusions of law, they are adopted as such, and vice versa. 5 Creditor’s Ex. # 1. 6 at 5, ¶¶ (c), (d). 7 Creditor’s Ex. # 2, pp. 2, 6; Creditor’s Ex. # 3, p. 1, ¶ 3. 8 Creditor’s Ex. # 2, p. 11 (citing 639 So. 2d 921, 928 (Miss. 1994)). 9 Dallas had spent a portion of the funds. Amy was awarded the remainder in an attempt to achieve a roughly equal split. at 12. Amy “for her half of the equity [in their marital home] in the amount of $20,000.00.”10 This award, according to Chancellor Lundy’s well-reasoned

opinion, “would eliminate the need for an award of periodic alimony.”11 There is no analysis of the factors or other mention of alimony in the thirteen-page opinion,12 except that the chancellor did note that the award “could be satisfied in the form of monthly alimony payments.”13 That language

creates some ambiguity as to whether the award was alimony or a property settlement. The opinion was incorporated into the Final Judgment of Divorce on June 10, 2019.14 For reasons unknown to this Court and somewhat irrelevant to the

issues to be resolved here, the daughters were removed from Amy’s care and sent to live with Dallas in June of 2020. On July 27, 2020, Chancellor Vicki Daniels entered a temporary restraining order suspending Dallas’s child support obligation and formally ordering that the daughters reside with

Dallas.15 On March 18, 2021, Dallas filed a .16 He requested “an order declaring that he does not owe

10 Creditor’s Ex. # 2, p. 11. The home was sold four years prior to the divorce. Dallas spent the equity, which is why Amy was awarded a judgment for half of the money instead of cash. at 11, 12. 11 12 , 618 So. 2d 1278 (Miss. 1993) (enumerating factors to be considered by a chancellor when awarding alimony). 13 Creditor’s Ex. # 2, p. 11. 14 Creditor’s Ex. # 3, p. 4, ¶¶ 7(e), (f). 15 Creditor’s Ex. # 14, ¶¶ 2, 4. 16 Creditor’s Ex. # 12. any child support to [Amy] for the months of July 2020 to October 2020.”17 On April 5, 2021, Chancellor Daniels ordered that “any and all child support due

from [Dallas] for the months of July 2020 through October 2020 has been paid and 18 The import of these dates is that Dallas filed his chapter 13 bankruptcy

case on July 1, 2020.19 Because his child support obligation was either suspended or terminated during the entirety of his bankruptcy case, Dallas owes no postpetition child support. In his bankruptcy schedules, Dallas listed $6,000.00 of prepetition “child

support arrearage through July 2020”20 and $43,795.00 in unsecured debt for a “[d]ivision of property in divorce [judgment].”21 Amy later filed Claim # 9-1 for the $6,000.00 in prepetition child support arrearage, which is not at issue here. She then filed Claim # 9-2 to amend Claim # 9-1 and increased her claim

to $50,975.00, all as domestic support. Claim # 9-2 is comprised of the undisputed $6,000.00 prepetition child support arrearage, an additional $1,000.00 for postpetition child support for July 2020, and $43,795.00

17 at 2, ¶ 9. 18 Creditor’s Ex. # 15, ¶ 4 (emphasis added). 19 (Dkt. # 1). 20 (Dkt. # 1, p. 18). At the hearing, Dallas testified, and the Court finds, that “July” should have been “June.” At the hearing, the parties also stipulated that the $6,000.00 arrearage was prepetition debt. 21 (Dkt. # 1, p. 20). representing the chancellor’s award of her half of the home equity and the Fidelity account. Dallas then filed the Objection.22

III. CONCLUSIONS OF LAW Section 523 of the Bankruptcy Code includes two subsections pertaining to the dischargeability of claims arising from domestic relations. Section 523(a)(5) provides that a debtor may not discharge a “domestic support

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