First National Bank v. Woods (In re Woods)

465 B.R. 196
CourtBankruptcy Appellate Panel of the Tenth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 27, 2012
DocketBAP No. CO-11-083; Bankruptcy No. 10-38344
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 465 B.R. 196 (First National Bank v. Woods (In re Woods)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Bankruptcy Appellate Panel of the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First National Bank v. Woods (In re Woods), 465 B.R. 196 (bap10 2012).

Opinion

NUGENT, Bankruptcy Judge.

First National Bank of Durango (the “Bank”) appeals a bankruptcy court order confirming Reson Lee Woods and Shaun K. Woods’ Corrected Amended Chapter 12 Plan. The Bank argues that the bankruptcy court erred when it found that the Woods were family farmers, when it confirmed their proposed treatment of its secured claims, and when it denied the Bank’s application to add some of its attorneys’ fees and costs to its claim. After careful consideration of these issues, we AFFIRM.

I. Factual Background

The Woods have farmed hay and raised and boarded horses near Ignacio, Colorado since 1999. Before that, they ranched and sold real estate in Florida. In 2007, they purchased the tract of farm land that presently secures the Bank’s claim with a purchase money mortgage loan from Pine River Valley Bank. By the time they decided to build their home on that tract in 2008, their lending officer had gone to work in Durango for the Bank. He referred them to another officer who proposed to make a construction loan for the house and told the Woods that, barring changed circumstances, the Bank would make them a permanent loan when construction was complete. On April 15, 2008, the parties executed a Construction Loan Agreement, and the Woods signed a promissory note in the amount of $480,000.00 with a maturity date of October 15, 2009.1 Approximately $284,000.00 of that loan was used to pay off the Pine River purchase money loan.2 When it made the construction loan, the Bank also approved the Woods for a $482,000.00 permanent loan that would bear interest at an adjustable rate, be amortized over thirty years, and be payable with a balloon payment due in five years.3

But when the home was completed in 2009, the Bank balked. A dispute over whether the Bank had actually committed to the permanent financing developed, but appeared resolved in the fall of 2009 when the Bank proposed to lend the Woods enough to pay off the construction loan at 5.25% interest per annum, to be repaid in monthly payments amortized over thirty years with a balloon payment of all remaining principal and interest due in seven years. Before this loan could close, the Bank balked again, tendering a series of progressively less favorable loan proposals to the Woods. The Bank blamed its hesitancy on the Woods’ alleged lack of creditworthiness. Eventually the Woods sued the Bank in state court and the Bank foreclosed the construction mortgage. The looming sale of the house and land prompted the Woods to file their Chapter 12 case.

The Woods live on the farm at Ignacio (the “Property”). They raise hay and board horses there. They rent other hay ground. Their office and farm headquar[201]*201ters are located in the home built with the proceeds of the Bank’s loan. If the Bank’s principal and interest claim of approximately $503,000 (without the attorneys’ fees) is included in their farm debts, over half their debt is attributable to farming.

The Woods initially proposed a plan that provided for the Bank to be repaid at 5% fixed interest in monthly payments amortized over forty years and payable in full in twenty years. After the first confirmation hearing in May of 2011, the bankruptcy court sustained the Bank’s objection to that treatment, not least because the Woods’ plan did not specify that the Bank would retain its lien, but overruled its other objections.4 The Woods filed an Amended Plan, followed by a Corrected Amended Plan that proposed the same treatment that the Bank had offered in 2009, with the added feature that they would receive a forty-day grace period for payments twice a year. After a further confirmation hearing in August of 2011, the bankruptcy court confirmed the Corrected Amended Plan (the “Plan”), but struck the forty-day grace provision.

Based upon the detailed cash flow information and three-year income projection that the Woods and their farm financial expert witness presented, the bankruptcy court found that the Woods could make the payments they proposed. After hearing the testimony of the Woods’ and the Bank’s appraisers, the bankruptcy court concluded that the Woods’ land and water rights were worth $750,000. At the August hearing, for the first time, the Bank asked for additional attorneys’ fees and expenses that would have increased its allowed claim by more than $78,000. The Bank asserted that it had incurred these fees and expenses in enforcing its claim in bankruptcy, but the bankruptcy court did not allow this portion of the Bank’s claim because the Bank “presented no evidence as to the makeup [and] reasonableness of these collection costs and expenses.”5 After the bankruptcy court issued its order on August 22, 2011, the Bank appealed.

II. Appellate Jurisdiction and Standards of Review

We have jurisdiction of this appeal.6 The Bank raises a number of issues, but we focus on these. We consider whether the Woods are “family farmers” as defined in § 101(18); whether their proposed treatment of the Bank’s claim comports with the standards of § 1225(a)(5)(B)(ii); whether their plan is feasible; and whether the Bank should have been granted its attorneys’ fees. We review factual findings for clear error and legal conclusions de novo.7 Matters of discretion are reviewed for abuse of discretion.8

[202]*202With these familiar tools at hand, we review the bankruptcy court’s interpretation of § 101(18) afresh, as we do its interpretation and application of § 1225(a)(5).9 The bankruptcy court’s findings of fact that relate to the role of the Woods’ home in their operation, their means of making their plan payments, and the determination of an appropriate discount rate are afforded substantial deference and are reviewed for clear error.10 The bankruptcy court’s approval of the term of repayment of the Bank’s claim and its evidentiary rulings are matters of discretion.11 Finally, the bankruptcy court’s attorneys’ fees rulings are reviewed de novo,12

III. Discussion

A. The Bank’s loan “arises out of a farming operation” and must be counted as farm debt.

Only family farmers or fishermen may seek Chapter 12 relief. Section 101(18)(A) defines a “family farmer” as (1) an individual engaged in farming; (2) who has aggregate debt less than $3,792 million; (3) whose debt consists of more than 50 percent of debt arising out of his farming operation “excluding a debt for the principal residence of such individual or such individual and spouse unless such debt arises out of a farming operation;” and (4) who received more than 50 percent of his income from farming in the taxable year preceding the year of the petition’s filing.13 The bankruptcy court held that [203]*203the Bank’s claim arose from the Woods’ farming operation even though it is secured by their homestead. The court concluded that the debtors proved their house is an integral part of their operation. The Bank objected to the inclusion of the construction portion of the loan as part of the debt that arose from the operation because § 101(18)(A) requires exclusion of a debt incurred solely to build the farmer’s residence from the calculation.

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Bluebook (online)
465 B.R. 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-v-woods-in-re-woods-bap10-2012.