DECISION AND ORDER DENYING LEAVE TO FILE LATE PROOFS OF CLAIM
LEIF M. CLARK, Bankruptcy Judge.
CAME ON for hearing in the above-styled case (1) the Motion to Allow Late Filing of Claim or, Alternatively, to Excuse Filing of Claim of Fashionland, Inc.; (2) the Motion of Go Sales for Leave to File Proof of Claim After Bar Date or, in the Alternative, to Excuse Requirement of Filing Claim; and finally (3) the Joint Omnibus Response Opposing Motions to Allow Late Filing of Claim or, Alternatively, to Excuse Filing of Claim Filed by Reorganized Debtors and Class 7 Agent. The motions of Fashionland, Inc., and Go Sales seek leave of this court to file proofs of claim after the expiration of the claims bar date or, in the alternative, to be excused from the requirement to file proofs of claim. The Debtors and the Class 7 Agent object on the grounds that the now-confirmed plan of reorganization is res judicata as to the claims asserted and that the proofs of claim are late for inexcusable neglect.
Factual And Procedural Overview
The Reorganized Debtors initially filed their petition for chapter 11 on October 9, 1996. The clerk of court issued on October 21,1996 a standard order setting February 6, 1997 as the bar date for the filing of proofs of claim.
Shortly thereafter, the Debtors mailed out a supplemental notice of the bar date. Both notices emphasized that any creditors or interest holders whose claims were listed as disputed on the Debtors’ schedules would have to file proofs of claim by February 6, 1997, else they would not be included for purposes of distribution. The Debtors’ schedules listed all debts in excess of $10,000 as disputed, putting all creditors (including Fashionland and Go Sales) to their proof.
Fashionland and Go have averred that they placed proofs of claim in the mail prior to the bar date. As of that date, however, their proofs of claim were, not on file with the clerk of court. Later, on or about March 27,1997, the Debtors circulated a Disclosure Statement and a Joint Plan of Reorganization (“Disclosure Statement” and “Plan”). The solicitation package was served on these creditors and they had an opportunity to both vote and to object to the plan. The plan included a provision (discussed in more detail later in this opinion) which again excluded any creditors who had failed to timely file claims. The Debtors’ Plan was confirmed by this court on June 3, 1997.
In December 1997, Fashionland and Go contacted J.A. Compton & Co., the Plan’s specified disbursing agent, and first realized that, because the Debtors’ had scheduled their claims as disputed and because Fash-ionland and Go had not filed proofs of claim, the two claims were not eligible for distributions under the plan. Upon learning this,
Fashionland and Go filed the motions that are the subject of this proceeding, seeking leave to file late proofs of claim.
Legal Issues
I. Is The CreditoRs’ Failure To File A Claim Timely The Result Of Exousa-ble Neglect Under Federal Rule Of ■ Bankruptcy Prooedure 9006?
11 U.S.C. § 1111 provides that “[a] proof of claim or interest is deemed filed under section 501 of this title for any claim or interest that appears in the schedules filed under section 521(1) or 1106(a)(2) of this title,
except a claim or interest that is scheduled as disputed, contingent, or unliquidated.”
11 U.S.C. §1111 (italics added). Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure 3003 sets the general parameters for filing of proofs of claim in chapter 11 cases, while Rule 5005 addresses the filing of “papers” generally.
For those claims listed as disputed, contingent, or unliquidated, a proof of claim must be filed by a date set by the court pursuant to Rule 3003(e)(3).
Section 502(b)(9) in turn authorizes the disallowance of an untimely filed proof of claim, unless the claim is permitted to be filed “tardily” as provided under the Rules. Rule 9006(b) permits the court to enlarge the time frames for parties to file so-called late claims “where the failure to act was the result of excusable neglect.” Fed. R.Bankr.P. 9006(b); Fed.R.Bankr.P. 3003(c)(3).
Late claims are not, in the main, permitted in chapter 7 or chapter 13 cases, because Rule 9006(b)(2) expressly excludes application of the “excusable neglect” standard to the deadlines set by Rule 3002(c). See
In re Duarte,
146 B.R. 958, 962 (Bankr.W.D.Tex.1992) (creditors may not file late claims; debtors or trustees may however, under certain circumstances, file “late claims” for creditors, upon a showing of excusable neglect). The rule governing the filing of claims in chapter
11
cases (i.e., Rule 3003), by contrast, is
not
excluded by Rule 9006(b)(2), so that creditors in chapter 11 eases may be able to file claims after a court-set bar date, provided they can demonstrate the requisite “excusable neglect.”
Id.,
at 960 n. 3; Fed.R.Bankr.P. 9006(b).
The Supreme Court construed the meaning of the elusive phrase “excusable neglect” in the context of late claims in
Pioneer Investment Services Co. v. Brunswick Assocs. L.P.,
507 U.S. 380, 113 S.Ct. 1489, 123 L.Ed.2d 74 (1993). The Court explained that “the determination is at bottom an equitable one, taking account of all relevant circumstances surrounding the party’s omission.”
Id.,
507 U.S. at 395, 113 S.Ct. at 1498. No single circumstance controls, nor is a court to simply proceed down a checklist ticking off traits. Instead, courts are to look for a synergy of several factors that conspire to push the analysis one way or the other.
But we are wordsmiths, not painters, so we must, of necessity, resort to lists as one of the feeble tools with which to parse such problems. The Supreme Court furnished us such a list in
Pioneer,
which we may find useful, so long as we keep in mind that lists are rather blunt instruments as tools go when we are trying to figure out what neglect is excusable and what neglect is not. The Court’s Est included the foEowing factors: (1) the danger of prejudice to the debtor; (2) the length of the delay and its potential impact on judicial proceedings; (3) the reason for the delay, including whether it was within the reasonable control of the movant; and (4) whether the movant acted in good faith.
Id.
The Court disagreed with the lower court’s suggestion “that it would be inappropriate to penalize respondents for the omissions of their attorney....”
Id.
at 396, 113 S.Ct. at 1499.
In applying these tools, the Court noted that there was no appearance in
Pioneer
of bad faith on the part of the late claimant, of any prejudice to the debtor, or of any disruption of the efficient administration of the proceedings caused by the late filings. The Court then focused on the role that the form of notice of the bar date played in the late claimant’s faüure to file timely:
We ... consider significant that the notice of the bar date provided by the Bankruptcy Court in this case was outside the ordinary course in bankruptcy cases. As the Court of Appeals noted, ordinarily the bar date in a bankruptcy case should be prominently announced and accompanied by an explanation of its significance .... We agree ... that the ‘pecuHar and inconspicuous placement of the bar date in a notice regarding a ereditors[’] meeting,’ without any indication of the significance of the bar date, left a ‘dramatic ambiguity’ in the notification.
Id.
at 397-98, 113 S.Ct. at 1499-1500 (internal cites omitted). In the absence of any other factors, the Court found this ambiguity in notice controlling. This is the portion of
Pioneer
usuaEy cited, discussed, and critiqued. Yet it may not be the portion most revealing of the Court’s true sentiments, given its initial cautionary note that the process of parsing the problem is both fact-sensitive and equitable in nature. The Court indeed made it clear that, “were there any evidence of prejudice to [the debtor] or to judicial administration in this case, or any indication at aE of bad faith, we could not say that the Bankruptcy Court abused its discretion in declining to find the neglect to be ‘excusable.’ ”
Id.
at 398, 113 S.Ct. at 1500. Thus,
Pioneer Investments
leaves ample room to courts to find a given creditor’s neglect to be inexcusable, given the totahty of the circumstances.
The Fifth Circuit has recognized the necessarily elastic quality of the
Pioneer
excusable neglect test, adverting to
Pioneer’s
caution that “inadvertence, ignorance of the rules, or mistakes construing the rules [do] not usually constitute ‘excusable neglect.’”
In re Eagle Bus Mfg., Inc.,
62 F.3d 730, 736 (6th Cir.1995)
citing Pioneer,
507 U.S. at 391, 113 S.Ct. at 1496. In
Eagle Bus,
the court distinguished between situations in which reorganization plans are negotiated and concluded
after
receipt and notice of late-filed claims and situations in which the plan has been formulated, negotiated and consummated
before
late claims are presented, finding that there might be a potential for prejudice in the latter case (though concluding that the former applied to the facts of that case).
Eagle Bus,
62 F.3d at 737-38. The court acknowledges in
dicta
that allowing late-filed claims might prejudice
creditors
(as opposed to the debtor), because they may have relied on the claims register as it stood at the time of confirmation in deciding to support the plan. Allowance of late claims post-confirmation might dilute creditors’ distributions.
Id.
at 738.
The court in
Eagle
noted that the general creditor body in that particular case would not be prejudiced,
as it
had
had notice of the potential late claims
prior
to confirmation so that their allowance would not greatly upset creditor expectations. Indeed, the creditor’s committee in
Eagle
did not object to the allowance of these late claims (as the Class 7 creditors have done here), and the size of the late claims did not threaten to impair significantly the distributions to the timely filed creditors.
Eagle Bus
also addressed another of the
Pioneer
factors — the reason for the delay in filing. There, the delay in filing was attributed to a combination of factors which tended to induce the late filing claimants not to file. The claimants were part of a class of creditors who were the subject of a court-ordered alternative dispute resolution process. The debtor then continued negotiations with the claimants for several months, objecting to the late-filed claims only when their negotiations proved not to be fruitful.
Id.
at 739-40. Under those facts, the “delay” factor cut in favor of allowing the late claims.
Focusing on adequacy of notice,
Eagle Bus
cited
In re Robintech,
863 F.2d 393, 396 (5th Cir.),
cert. denied,
493 U.S. 811, 110 S.Ct. 55, 107 L.Ed.2d 24 (1989), for the proposition that due process requires notice that is “reasonably calculated to reach all interested parties, reasonably conveys all of the required information, and permits a reasonable amount of time for response,” and that allowing late claims is permissible if disallowance would violate due process.
See also Mullane v. Central Hanover Bank & Trust Co.,
339 U.S. 306, 70 S.Ct. 652, 94 L.Ed. 865 (1950). The court ruled that notice by mail is adequate (as a means of delivery) if the notice is sent to the creditor’s most recently known address; once it is sent, the presumption is in favor of adequacy, and a denial of receipt by the creditor does not rebut that presumption, although it does raise a fact issue.
In re Eagle Bus,
62 F.3d at 735;
See also
Fed.R.Bankr.Pro. 9006(e);
In re Robintech,
863 F.2d 393 (5th Cir.1989).
Eagle Bus
is not our facts. Neither is
Pioneer.
But the approach both cases take in applying the factors to the facts helps us decide this case. To be sure, as to the possibility for length of delay to and complication of judicial proceedings, we are not concerned that allowance of these two late claims would pose significant problems.
Nor are these particular two claims so large or so complex that their allowance would disrupt substantially this court’s administration of the case. Finally, the evidence does
not confirm any bad faith on the part of the movants.
On the other hand, there may indeed be a danger of prejudice to both the reorganized debtor and its existing creditors of record. The debtor and its creditors of record saw a somewhat risky plan of reorganization through to confirmation and consummation, based on the information furnished to them in the disclosure statement, and in the provisions of the plan. A certain amount of risk evaluation of necessity entered into the decision-making process for both the debtor (which proposed the plan) and its unsecured creditors (who chose to support it). We may liken a plan and its disclosure statement to a kind of “public offering” in the underlying entrepreneurial venture. Those who supported the reorganization venture made rational decisions to do so based on the information contained in the plan and disclosure statement. To permit the rather untimely inclusion of additional liabilities at this late date, resulting in a dilution of the expected return to those creditors who
did
timely file proofs of claim threatens to “surprise” the parties who proposed and who supported the plan, in a way that can only be described as prejudicial. Though any one of these claims alone may not be particularly onerous, allowance of such claims in general is disruptive of the reorganized debtor’s rehabilitation program and threatens to dilute the distributions to unsecured creditors who properly participated in the claims allowance and planning process. We note in this latter respect that, unlike the situation in
Eagle Bus,
the unsecured creditor body in the instant case did
not
have notice of these as-yet-unfiled claims prior to confirmation and, once the claims were filed late, were quick to object via their committee representative.
Finally, we consider the cause for the delay in filing these claims, and in doing so we first follow
Pioneer’s
emphasis on the role played by the form of the Debtor’s notice. In
Pioneer,
the notice of the claims bar date provided by the debtor was critical. There, the Court found that “the ‘peculiar and inconspicuous placement of the bar date in a notice regarding a creditors[’] meeting,’ without any indication of the significance of the bar date, left a ‘dramatic ambiguity’ in the notification.”
Pioneer Investment Services Co. v. Brunswick Assocs. L.P.,
507 U.S. at 398, 113 S.Ct. at 1500. In the instant case, the first notice of the bar date for claims was contained in a standard notice issued by the clerk of court on October 21,1996. While we note that the' type-size is not unusually large, and that the notice does contain information on at least four major components of a bankruptcy proceeding (commencement, stay, creditors’ meeting, and bar date), all of this information is contained on one single page, is broken down by issue under emboldened type, and, perhaps more importantly, is not over-burdened with technical language.
But even more important is the Supplemental Notice of Commencement of Case and Notice of Bar Date to File Proofs of Claim provided by the Debtor shortly after the clerk’s notice. This one-page notice contains in 18-point bold type
the statement “TAKE NOTICE: The Deadline for Filing Proofs of Claims Against any of the Debtors Listed above Is
February 6, 1997”.
Immediately below, the notice states “THIS DATE IS IMPORTANT,” and goes on to explain, in concise, non-teehnical terms precisely why
the date is important
. To echo
Pioneer,
we note that, while this form of notice may be somewhat dramatic, it is scarcely ambiguous.
Finally, the Debtors’ Joint Plan of Reorganization, Section 9.12 provides that:
The Debtors and the Committee are relying on the formal proofs of Claims on file and the Debtors’ Schedules currently on file in seeking confirmation of the Plan or, in the case of the Committee, in endorsing such plan. No informal proof of Claim shall be deemed filed in these Chapter 11 Cases ... No proof of Claim may be filed, amended, modified, or supplemented after the Confirmation Date without the consent of the Debtors.
Any filing prohibited by this paragraph shall be void.
Debtor’s Joint Plan of Reorganization, § 9.12 (emphasis added). By this provision, the debtor in effect provided a “bar date” for late claims in the plan itself, anticipating the potential
Eagle Bus
problem. The late claimants argue that, because this provision was not listed in the table of contents of the Plan of Reorganization, the disclosure statement cannot be taken as adequate notice that their positions might have been compromised. But this implies that the scope of the creditor’s inquiry when it reviews a plan does not extend beyond perusing the table of contents, an implication we do not endorse. Creditors who had not filed a proof of claim would, by the time they received (and read) the Plan and Disclosure Statement, have realized that their failure to get a claim on file prior to confirmation might have disastrous consequences.
At any rate, with respect to notice, we find the notice provided by the clerk and the Supplemental Notice provided by the Debtors paramount in determining that the late claimants here received adequate notice of the claims bar date and its significance to their rights and entitlements.
Pioneer’s
factors when applied to this case, then, militate
against
applying the excusable neglect standard here to permit the untimely filing (and allowance) of these late claims.
II. Does The Mailbox Presumption Apply To The Filing Of Proofs Of Claim Under Rule 3003(C)(2)?
The claimants next argue, and have submitted affidavits averring, that they
did
in fact submit proofs of claim by U.S. mail
before
the bar date, but that such proofs of claim apparently did not reach the clerk of court and so were not listed on the claims register as of the time of confirmation. They add that they did not learn of this “glitch” until after confirmation of the plan and shortly before they filed their motions for leave to file late claims, sometime in December of 1997. Thus, they argue, their claims were in fact
not
late at all, but were instead “timely filed,” by virtue of their having been placed in the mails far enough in advance to be presumed to have been received before the bar date set by the court. Movants seek to invoke the so-called “mailbox rule” in order to raise a presumption of delivery, such that the opponents of their motion would then shoulder the affirmative (and difficult) duty of putting on evidence sufficient to rebut that presumption.
There is a division of opinion among the circuits regarding whether the mailbox rule applies in the context of filing proofs of claim.
Compare Chrysler Motors Corp. v. Schneiderman,
940 F.2d 911 (3rd Cir.1991)
with In re Nimz Transp., Inc.,
505 F.2d 177 (7th Cir.1974). The Seventh Circuit in
Nimz
held
that the mailbox rule does apply to claims filings,
In re Nimz,
505 F.2d at 179, while the Third Circuit rule that it did not.
Schneiderman,
940 F.2d, at 912-13.
In
Schneiderman,
the Third Circuit emphasized that “restrictiveness is necessary in order to facilitate the expeditious administration of bankruptcy,” and focused on the need for finality in plan administration and certainty in the voting and distribution process under a chapter 11 plan of reorganization.
Schneiderman,
940 F.2d at 912-13. The Third Circuit drew a distinction between filing a proof of claim under Rule 5005 and the service of process and other documents under Rule 9006(e) (the Bankruptcy Rules’ codification of the mailbox presumption), noting that “[t]he reference to the use of the mails for service demonstrates that the framers of the rules knew how to provide for such use to complete a delivery and thus gives rise to an inference that filing within Bankr.R. 5005(a) means actual filing.”
Id.
at 914.
The conflict between these eases has been addressed by the bankruptcy court in
In re Pyle,
201 B.R. 547 (Bankr.E.D.Cal.1996). Although the Ninth Circuit had thus far only applied the mailbox presumption to the mailing of the
notice
of the bar date by debtors
to
creditors, the
Pyle
court chose to follow
Nimz
in applying the presumption to the
filing
of the claim
by
the creditor.
Id.
at 551. It distinguished
Schneiderman,
which was a chapter 11 case, noting that, even without the mailbox presumption, that court could have enlarged the time for filing the proof of claim, under the authority of Rule 9006(b) and
Pioneer Investment,
without needing to resort to the mailbox rule.
Id.
The court also noted Schneiderman’s emphasis on the need for certainty and finality in the chapter 11 plan confirmation and consummation process and the potential of “any prejudice to either the Debtor or some other creditor,” suggesting that, under such circumstances, it would “closely question the applicability of the mailbox presumption.”
Id. Pyle
thus suggests that perhaps
Nimz’s
mailbox rule ought to be limited to chapter 7 and 13 cases.
The Fifth Circuit has not yet ruled on this issue, though in
Robintech,
it may have given us some indicators.
Oppenheim, Appel, Dixon & Co. v. Bullock (Matter of Robintech),
863 F.2d 393, 398 (5th Cir.1989). In that case, the bankruptcy court had applied the Rule 9006(e) mailbox presumption to the notice of claims bar date served on the creditor by the debtor. In considering the propriety of that ruling, the Fifth Circuit noted in passing that
“claims
are not considered filed until actually received by the clerk and filed.”
Id.
(emphasis added). While the main issue on appeal to the Fifth Circuit was the adequacy of the
debtor’s
service and its effect on the creditor’s late filing (late by
three
days),
Robintech
also emphasized the importance of the strict application of the filing deadlines to the administration of the bankruptcy case.
Robintech
seems, in its approach to the issue, closer to
Schneiderman
than to
Nimz.
This court is not inclined to carve out a rule for claims filing that varies from chapter to chapter, as did the
Pyle
court, because Rule 5005, unlike Rules 3002 and 3003 is not “chapter-sensitive:”
The more straightforward application of ordinary rules of statutory construction to the plain language of the bankruptcy rules, employed by the Third Circuit in
Schneiderman,
seems far more defensible (and sensible). Moreover, the dis
tinction which that court drew between “service” and “filing” seems consonant with the tenor of the Fifth Circuit’s decision in
Robin-tech.
We conclude that the “mailbox rule” does not apply to the filing of claims, and that no presumption is therefore to be indulged in favor of the movants with regard to their contention that they mailed their claims to the bankruptcy court in a timely fashion. We are thus left with the admittedly self-serving evidence of the claimants that they mailed their claims, and the controverting evidence that neither of these claims appears in the files of the clerk’s office. That evidence does not, by a preponderance of the evidence, establish that movants timely filed their claims.
III. Does A Confirmed Chapter 11 Plan Of Reorganization Serve As Res Judioata As To The Allowanoe Of Claims?
The Debtors and the Class 7 representative argue that the confirmed Plan acts as
res judicata
to the allowance of any late proofs of claim. This issue, too, has attracted the attention of courts in several instances, including the Fifth Circuit. In
In re Simmons,
765 F.2d 547 (5th Cir.1985), a secured lien-holder filed a proof of claim between the debtor’s chapter 7 filing and its subsequent conversion to chapter 13, but pri- or to the confirmation of the chapter 13 plan. The debtor did not object to the proof of claim, but instead proposed a plan that substantially marked down the amount of the secured claim, leaving the creditor substantially under-secured. The creditor failed to object to the plan’s confirmation, but later sought to enforce his lien for the full value of his debt. The Fifth Circuit indicated that “[t]he purpose of filing an objection [to claim] is to join issue in a contested matter ... The parties are put on notice that the objection will have to be resolved before a final determination is made as to allowance or disallowance of the claim. In contrast, the filing of a Chapter 13 plan does not initiate a contested matter.”
In re Simmons,
765 F.2d at 552. It seemed important to the court, however, to note that the creditor’s proof of claim was on file before the plan was presented for confirmation, that the plan itself did not place the claim in issue, and that there was no statement in the plan that it was intended as an objection to the proof of claim. The court likened the proposal of a plan to the filing of a claim itself, which in turn acts as an invitation to other parties to object.
Id.
at 554.
We thus know that, at the very least, a debtor cannot use a plan as a substitute for Ken avoidance in the chapter 13 context. We do not know how much further
Simmons
goes, however. Does it apply to claims objections in the chapter 11 context?
The Debtor invites us to sidestep the entire question, invoking
Republic Supply Co. v. Shoaf,
815 F.2d 1046 (5th Cir.1987), which held that the confirmation of a plan of reorganization has
res judicata
effect as to the efficacy of an injunction against third-party actions, even though such injunctions are otherwise barred as a matter of law. The creditor there had notice of the plan, but failed to object, and the plan was confirmed. The creditor later argued that section 524(e) made injunctions of the sort contained in the plan unenforceable, but the Fifth Circuit found that principles of
res judicata
were controlling. Said the court, “[r]egardless of whether that [contested] provision [in the plan] is inconsistent with the bankruptcy laws ... it is nonetheless included in the Plan, which was confirmed by the bankruptcy court without objection and was not appealed.”
Id.
at 1050.
Shoaf
did not discuss
Simmons.
How could
res judicata
apply in one context, and not the other? The Fifth Circuit sought to resolve the apparent contradiction in
Matter of Howard,
972 F.2d 639 (5th Cir.1992).
Howard
took
Shoaf
to stand “for the proposition that a confirmed Chapter 13 plan is
res judicata
as to all parties who participate in the confirmation process,” and regarded
Simmons
as carving out a limited exception for
secured
creditors who rely on the certainty of their Ken, notwithstanding the bankruptcy, when no party in interest objects to their timely filed proofs of claim.
Id.
at 641.
Howard
regarded the limited exception to the general rule of
res judicata
as necessary to balance the Bankruptcy Code’s competing
concerns for secured creditors’ interest in the security of liens and debtors’ interest in the finality of the confirmation process. The purpose of an objection to a proof of claim (at least those of secured creditors) is, according to the court, to notify the affected creditor that its claim is in issue and may be modified by the plan.
Id.
at 642.
After
Howard,
then, we are left in the Fifth Circuit with a special exception to the
res judicata
rules. What is less than clear is how much further the circuit court is prepared to extend the exception (and why). Does it extend to
all
claims objections, or is there something about the nature of secured claims that merits their being insulated from the normally wide sweep of the principles of
res judicata
? In February 1998, the Fifth Circuit issued a decision which slightly expanded the “special exception” to include not only secured claims but also nondischargeable tax claims.
Matter of Taylor,
132 F.3d 256 (5th Cir.1998).
In
Taylor,
the debtor tried to compromise an IRS tax penalty claim via his plan. The claim was not secured, but it was apparently nondischargeable. The Fifth Circuit noted that nondischargeable claims, like the liens of secured creditors, also “ride through” bankruptcy, so that an effort to use the plan confirmation process to short-circuit that “ride-through” right should also not be permitted. The formal objection to a claim (or, as in
Taylor,
a motion for a determination of tax debt under 11 U.S.C. § 505)'puts the claim squarely in issue and commences a dispute as to the claim in a way in which the plan does not.
Id.
The court did
not
rule that
all
claims had to be adjudicated via the formal claims objection process — indeed, the opinion seems to have found the unique nature of nondischargeable and secured claims to be dispositive of the issue.
Our case is distinguishable from the entire line of cases which currently conclude with
Taylor.
First, while all but one
(Shoaf)
of the four eases involved a “ride-through” kind of claim (either secured or nondischargeable), the late claims we consider here are all ordinary unsecured claims, which do not have the option of “riding through” the bankruptcy process. Such claimants must participate in the bankruptcy process to get paid, and will be bound by a plan’s provisions regardless whether they participate or not.
See
11 U.S.C. § 1141. Second, in each of these four other cases,
the debtor was attempting to rely on the
res judicata
effect of the confirmed plan when the creditor had filed a claim prior to the plan confirmation hearing. In other words, the debtor in each of those cases
knew
about the claim, and could have placed the claims in contest through the more usual avenues — claims objections, lien avoidance actions, tax determination proceedings. In our case, by contrast, the debtor could not' “object” to these creditors’ claims prior to confirmation because it did not know which creditors would try to file late claims and which ones would not. After all, a debt- or (or committee, for that matter) can only object to claims that are on file. In
Simmons
and
Howard,
the debtor chose, in the view of the circuit court, to subvert the straightforward claims objection process, attempting instead to utilize the plan process as an indirect “end around” play.
See
11 U.S.C. §§ 1327; 1141. The equities are considerably more balanced in a case such as ours, where the debtor could not be expected to file pre-confirmation claims objections to claims that had yet to be filed. We. are left with the much narrower question regarding the propriety of a plan provision which purports to deal in advance with those creditors
who may attempt
in the future
to seek allowance of late-filed claims .
Finally, and perhaps most critically, the plan provision in question here did not actually purport to adjudicate any present claims. To the contrary, it provided one last clear chance, as it were, to creditors who might have already
missed
the bar date to “get in under the wire” with a request for allowance of late claims and the invocation of the “excusable neglect” rule. These creditors had every opportunity in which to put forward their late-filed claims argument prior to confirmation, without adverse impact. They simply squandered the opportunity.
For these reasons, we find it appropriate to find that
Shoaf,
and not
Taylor,
controls in this case. The confirmation of the Debtors’ Plan operates as
res judicata
to bar the allowance of these (and any other) late claims that might be filed in this case.
IV. Should The Filing Of Claims By Fashionland, Inc. And Go Sales Be Exoused?
Fashionland and Go Sales argue in the alternative that, as a matter of equity, their claims should be allowed because it was inequitable for the Debtor to place
all
of its unsecured claims in dispute in its original schedules. The difficulty with this argument is that the Official Forms
do
allow a debtor to dispute any claim. The real thrust of the late claimants’ argument, then, is that the
wholesale
disputation was unwarranted,
i.e.,
it violated Rule 9011. But the late claimants have not moved for relief under that rule, nor have they offered any affirmative proof beyond the schedules themselves that the Debt- or filed its Schedules (with the wholesale disputation of unsecured claims) for an improper purpose within the meaning of the rule. The late claimants ■ would have the court infer from the wholesale disputation of claims just such an improper purpose, but other facts of which this court is aware (and of which it now takes judicial notice) countenance against such an inference. For example, the decision to object to all unsecured claims was made in the first instance not by the Debtor’s management, but by the accountants who prepared those schedules. The accountants, in turn, could as easily have made that decision in an abundance of caution, being unwilling to ratify the bookkeeping of the Debtor on the relative short notice that they had to prepare these schedules (and unwilling to shoulder the resulting potential liability for such a ratification). The Debtor, of course, might have elected not to follow the advice of its accountants, but the Schedules were literally not ready for signature until scant days before the first meeting of creditors. The accountants were placed under a short deadline imposed by this court to complete the schedules without further delay, in order to assure that the first meeting of creditors could be timely held (and the United States Trustee was adamantly insisting on not further delaying the first meeting of creditors, which had been delayed once already). Under such circumstances, drawing the inference suggested by the late claimants would be precipitous, especially in light of the affirmative burden of proof laid on parties seeking sanctions under Rule 9011 to establish a violation.
See In re Mahendra,
131 F.3d 750 (8th Cir.1997);
In re Collins,
1992 WL 190471 (Bankr.N.D.Ill.1992).
Conclusion
For the foregoing réasons, the request of the movants in this case to permit the late filing of their claims is DENIED.
So ORDERED.