Chase Automotive Finance, Inc. v. Kinion (In Re Kinion)

207 F.3d 751, 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 5025, 2000 WL 305926
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 24, 2000
Docket99-10826
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 207 F.3d 751 (Chase Automotive Finance, Inc. v. Kinion (In Re Kinion)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chase Automotive Finance, Inc. v. Kinion (In Re Kinion), 207 F.3d 751, 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 5025, 2000 WL 305926 (5th Cir. 2000).

Opinion

EDITH H. JONES, Circuit Judge:

Chase Automotive Finance, Inc., an auto lender, thought it had secured a reaffirmation agreement with Chapter 7 debtors for their Cadillac. See 11 U.S.C. § 524(c). Instead, six months later, Chase was informed that not only had the reaffirmation agreement been disapproved by the court, but the court had voided Chase’s valid lien. We reverse the judgments of the bankruptcy and district courts, which approved the abrogation of Chase Automotive’s hen in an extraordinary train of events.

' The debtors financed the purchase of a $25,000 Cadillac through Chase in October, 1996. Less than a year later, the Kinions filed a voluntary Chapter 7 petition in bankruptcy and duly notified Chase. The case was processed as a no-asset case, in which creditors are instructed not to file proofs of claim because the trustee determines no unsecured, non-exempt assets are available for distribution. On September 30, Chase forwarded a proposed reaffirmation agreement to the debtors, who signed and returned it to Chase. Counsel for the Kinions, on receipt of the executed agreement, was to see to its filing with the bankruptcy court.

A local bankruptcy rule of the Northern District of Texas (Amarillo Division), is apparently predicated on the assumption that only secured debt should be reaffirmed by debtors. The rule consequently requires that the lender’s automotive finance contract and title be attached to the motion for reaffirmation. To comply with this rule, counsel for the Kinions wrote Chase twice seeking copies of the documents.

At the debtors’ discharge hearing in January, 1998, the bankruptcy court was informed by appellees’ counsel of the reaffirmation agreement and of the absence of security documents concerning the Cadillac. 1 Significantly, the Kinions did not dispute the secured status of the debt on the Cadillac and had listed Chase on their bankruptcy schedules as a secured creditor. Nevertheless, they requested the court to permit them to file the reaffirmation agreement along with a proposed order that would (1) deny the agreement, (2) find the debt unsecured, and (3) allow Chase 30 days to file a motion for rehearing on the matter. The court agreed to sign such an order. 2

Only three days later, Chase furnished Kinion with the necessary security documents. 3 Debtors’ counsel did not turn *754 those documents over to the court. Instead, on February 3, after the bankruptcy case had been closed, the Kinions filed the reaffirmation agreement with the denial order.

On February 10, the court reopened the case sua sponte, pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 350, and signed the order. In its order, the bankruptcy court enjoined Chase from attempting to collect any pre-petition indebtedness from the Kinions personally and from interfering with the Kinions’ possession of their property. The Kinions then sent the thirty-day notice concerning the order to Chase at an address different from the one to which their previous correspondence had been directed. 4

On March 17, the Kinions’ counsel wrote to Chase demanding that it cease collection efforts and turn over title to the Cadillac. Chase did not file a motion to reconsider the court’s order until April 13, and the bankruptcy court found this was too late. The district court affirmed the bankruptcy court’s decisions, and this appeal followed.

DISCUSSION

This court reviews the lower courts’ findings of fact under the clear error standard and their interpretations of the law de novo. Richmond Leasing Co. v. Capital Bank, NA, 762 F.2d 1303, 1307 (5th Cir.1985).

The upshot of these events is that the debtors made less than a year’s monthly payments on their Cadillac, filed bankruptcy, were discharged from personal liability for the debt, and have also been relieved of Chase’s hen on the car, even though they have repeatedly conceded that the debt was secured.

The Kinions employ the following reasoning in support of the bankruptcy court’s orders. Chase voluntarily “sought out” the bankruptcy court’s approval of its proposed reaffirmation agreement with the debtors and thereby subjected itself to the court’s further orders. Chase “put the debtors to a choice” whether to reaffirm their debt on the car or discharge the unsecured portion of the debt in bankruptcy while remaining liable for the secured portion. The Amarillo division’s unique local rule required Chase to provide copies of the definitive security documents along with the executed reaffirmation agreement. Having taken advantage of the possibility of reaffirmation, Chase failed to comply with the local rule and did not “prove” the validity of its security interest in the Kinions’ Cadillac.

According to the Kinions, the court was then justified in reopening their bankruptcy, after discharge had been granted and the case had been closed, in order to “deny” their incomplete reaffirmation agreement and void Chase’s automobile lien. The court was led to believe that the Chase loan was effectively unsecured, and hence, it should enjoin post-bankruptcy collection efforts directed at the Cadillac as well as the underlying debt. Although Chase had no prior notice that its lien could be avoided, any procedural defect arising from the lack of notice was allegedly cured by the bankruptcy court’s order permitting Chase to move for reconsideration within 30 days. Finally, Chase lost its chance to defend its indisputably valid lien by failing to move timely for reconsideration.

The Kinions’ self-serving interpretation of bankruptcy procedure has carried their case to a most unusual conclusion. Ordinarily, if a secured creditor failed to obtain the court’s approval for a reaffirmation agreement, the reaffirmation agreement would simply be rejected, and the creditor would retain its lien (if any) on the property. 5 Here, although the Kinions had the lien documents in their possession before the court entered its lien-stripping order, and although the Kinions admitted the secured status of the claim, the court voided *755 the lien. It takes little analysis to demonstrate that this result cannot be squared with the Bankruptcy Code and rules.

First, to the extent that the local bankruptcy rule, applicable only in the Amarillo division in the Northern District of Texas, implies that reaffirmations can only be approved for secured indebtedness, it is contrary to the Bankruptcy Code. The Code permits reaffirmations of unsecured as well as secured debt. The Amarillo division’s local rule may not impose a requirement of secured status upon a ^editor seeking court filing of a reaffirmation agreement. Moreover, the Code requires neither a court hearing nor court approval if the debtor is represented by counsel. 11 U.S.C. § 524

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Bluebook (online)
207 F.3d 751, 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 5025, 2000 WL 305926, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chase-automotive-finance-inc-v-kinion-in-re-kinion-ca5-2000.