In re Aguero

597 B.R. 190
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Florida.
DecidedDecember 13, 2018
DocketCASE NO. 17-17333-RAM
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 597 B.R. 190 (In re Aguero) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Florida. primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Aguero, 597 B.R. 190 (Fla. 2018).

Opinion

Robert A. Mark, Judge, United States Bankruptcy Court

If a secured creditor files a proof of claim in a chapter 13 case that reserves the right to amend to seek a deficiency if the collateral is liquidated, should the Court allow the amended claim for an unsecured deficiency even if the amended claim is filed after confirmation? While recognizing that this type of post-confirmation amended claim should not always be allowed, the Court finds that in this case, allowing the amended claim benefits the Debtor with minimal, if any, prejudice to other creditors.

Procedural and Factual Background

The Court conducted a hearing on August 14, 2018, on the Trustee's Objection to Claim [DE# 102], objecting to the amended proof of claim (the "Amended Claim") filed on May 9, 2018 by World Omni Financial Corp. ("World Omni") [Claim 1-2]. World Omni's Amended Claim is an unsecured claim for $ 9,959.59, representing the deficiency remaining on a car loan when the car was repossessed and sold after the filing of this case. See World Omni's Repossession Account Statement [DE# 107-4]. Following the hearing, both World Omni and the chapter 13 Trustee (the "Trustee") filed supplemental memoranda [DE#s 107 and 108].

World Omni filed a timely proof of claim on August 3, 2017 (the "Original Claim") [Claim 1-1]. The Original Claim was filed as a $ 25,867.11 secured claim, but expressly stated that "Creditor reserves the right to amend its claim to seek a deficiency balance, if any, in the event Creditor's collateral is liquidated." Original Claim, ¶ 7.

*192The vehicle at issue was purchased by the Debtor less than 910 days before the petition date. As such, under the so-called hanging paragraph placed at the end of 11 U.S.C. § 1325(a), section 506 of the Bankruptcy Code does not apply and the Debtor was required to treat the car debt as fully secured. The Debtor chose to do so by providing for direct payments to World Omni outside the Debtor's chapter 13 plan [DE# 82]. The February 28, 2018 Confirmation Order [DE# 95] granted World Omni in rem stay relief because the car debt was not being treated in the plan.

On April 2, 2018, less than two months after confirmation, the car was repossessed. The car was sold on April 20, 2018, and three weeks later World Omni filed its Amended Claim for the deficiency that remained after applying the sale proceeds to the total debt. At the August 14th hearing on the Trustee's Objection, World Omni stipulated that if its Amended Claim is allowed, it would only seek pro rata payment of future distributions to unsecured creditors under the plan. This concession was not necessary because the plan does not provide for any payments to unsecured creditors until the final month of the plan.

Discussion

The Trustee argues that the Amended Claim should be disallowed because it was filed after the bar date. Alternatively, the Trustee argues that the Amended Claim should be disallowed because the confirmed plan provided for direct payments to World Omni outside of the plan and therefore, World Omni should not be permitted to participate in plan distributions to unsecured creditors.

Whether the Court will allow World Omni's Amended Claim depends on (i) whether the Amended Claim is a true amendment as opposed to a new claim, and (ii) whether the Court will allow a post-confirmation amendment. In International Horizons , the Eleventh Circuit laid out the framework for deciding whether an amendment to a proof of claim should be allowed. United States v. International Horizons, Inc. (In re International Horizons, Inc. ), 751 F.2d 1213 (11th Cir. 1985). The Circuit recognized that, traditionally, a court's inquiry should be focused on fair and timely notice to other interested parties, like the debtor, the chapter 13 trustee, and other creditors whose plan treatment will be impacted by allowance of an amendment. Id. at 1217. World Omni easily satisfies these traditional considerations because World Omni expressly reserved the right to assert an unsecured deficiency claim in its timely-filed Original Claim.

However, International Horizons did not rest exclusively on the historical standard for evaluating whether a claim amendment should be allowed. The Eleventh Circuit articulated its own standard as follows:

[I]n a bankruptcy case, amendment to a claim is freely allowed where the purpose is to cure a defect in the claim as originally filed, to describe the claim with greater particularity or to plead a new theory of recovery on the facts set forth in the original claim. Still, the court must subject post bar date amendments to careful scrutiny to assure that there was no attempt to file a new claim under the guise of amendment.

Id. at 1216-17 (internal citations omitted).

Two threshold considerations from the standard set forth above must be satisfied before the Court can assess the equities in this case. First, does the Amended Claim plead a new theory of recovery on the facts set forth in the Original Claim? And second, is the Amended Claim merely an attempt to file a new claim under the guise of amendment?

*193Pleading a new theory of recovery is the only one of the three grounds for amending a claim that might apply in this case. Some courts have concluded that seeking allowance of an unsecured deficiency claim is more than pleading a new theory of recovery - it is asserting a new claim. In re Jackson , 482 B.R. 659, 665 (Bankr. S.D. Fla. 2012) ("The filing of an unsecured deficiency claim for the first time after the bar date cannot be an amendment to a timely filed, wholly secured claim; it is a completely new claim"). The Jackson decision cited In re Matthews , 313 B.R. 489, 494 (Bankr. M.D. Fla. 2004) ("the attempt to change the status of a claim from secured to unsecured is not considered an amendment, in the traditional sense, that is to be freely allowed").

In both Jackson and Matthews , the original claims were filed solely as secured claims with nothing in the claim referring to or preserving a potential deficiency claim. In fact, the Matthews court specifically acknowledged that the result would have been different if the original claim had reservation language.

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Bluebook (online)
597 B.R. 190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-aguero-flsb-2018.