In Re Auernheimer

437 B.R. 405, 2010 Bankr. LEXIS 2913, 2010 WL 3636143
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Kansas
DecidedSeptember 8, 2010
Docket08-13170
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 437 B.R. 405 (In Re Auernheimer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Auernheimer, 437 B.R. 405, 2010 Bankr. LEXIS 2913, 2010 WL 3636143 (Kan. 2010).

Opinion

*406 MEMORANDUM OPINION

ROBERT E. NUGENT, Chief Judge.

This case considers what the “effective date” of a modified plan is for purposes of 11 U.S.C. § 1329(a) and (b). 1 The debtors and the Trustee stipulate that items of their non-exempt, unencumbered personal property are worth less than the amounts reflected in the schedules and the original confirmed plan. Some of the assets are now worthless. The debtors seek to modify their confirmed plan, decreasing the amount they are required to pay the unsecured creditors. 2 The Trustee objects and contends that the value of the debtors’ non-exempt assets was determined at confirmation of the first plan and that the “effective date” is, and always remains the effective date of the confirmed plan, not the modified plan. This matter was submitted to the Court on stipulated facts and briefs. 3

Jurisdiction

This is a core proceeding pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(1) and (b)(2)(L) over which this Court has subject matter jurisdiction. 4

Findings of Fact

Debtors filed their chapter 13 petition, statement of financial affairs and schedules on December 5, 2008. On Schedule B, debtors listed several items of non-exempt, unencumbered personal property, including a small amount of funds in four checking accounts, three separate “receivables” valued at $13,000, a camera and guns, three older model vehicles valued at $800 and a 1964 aluminum U-Hull boat without motor. The total value of the debtors’ personal property was shown as $14,907.04, but the debtors now assert that the present value of some of the assets is less than what is shown on Schedule B.

*407 In debtors’ Chapter 13 plan, First Amended Chapter 13 Plan and Second Amended Chapter 13 Plan, debtors calculated the estate’s liquidation value at $14,932.40. The Court confirmed the Second Amended Plan on April 8, 2009. The Trustee projects that $15,960.90 would be distributed to general unsecured creditors under the confirmed Second Amended Plan.

On January 13, 2010, the debtors filed the current post-confirmation motion to modify the plan. 5 Debtors seek to cure a post-petition mortgage arrearage through the plan, and pertinent to the issue before the Court, seek to “reestablish” the liquidation value of the estate based upon a decline in value in the personal property and the receivables being uncollectible. The Trustee projects that under the proposed post-confirmation amendment, debtors would pay general unsecured creditors $3,130.85 from plan payments and an unknown amount from liquidation of nonexempt assets. The Trustee objects to the post-confirmation amendment under § 1325(a)(4), contending that the plan does not pay the liquidation value of the property. 6

The three receivables in the amount of $13,000 are for all practical purposes un-collectible and worthless. The McCartney and Graham receivables were contracted in 2005 and the Taylor receivable was contracted in late 2007 and early 2008. The Taylor receivable was based upon an undocumented oral agreement whereby debtors loaned Taylor $1,000. Taylor has not repaid this loan and now disputes the debt, contending that he worked it off. The McCartney receivable was based upon an oral agreement whereby debtors loaned McCartney $7,000. This debt was not repaid and was discharged in McCartney’s own chapter 13 case on December 12, 2008. The Graham receivable is based upon an oral contract for rent in the amount of $5,000. This debt was not repaid and was scheduled in the Grahams’ own chapter 13 case. Any dividend to general unsecured creditors under the Grahams’ confirmed plan will be insignificant.

A 1998 Dodge Caravan scheduled with a value of $500 now has a bad transmission and electrical system and can be salvaged for no more than $100. The Suzuki motorcycle also has an electrical problem and is more appropriately valued at $1,200, rather than the $2,000 shown on Schedule B. 7 The revised value of these non-exempt and unencumbered items of personal property in Schedule B as of January 13, 2010 — the date debtors filed their motion to modify their confirmed plan — and taking into account these adjustments, is $1,507.04.

Finally, the Court notes that the plan as originally confirmed delayed vesting of the estate’s property in the debtors until discharge or dismissal of the case. 8 This is the norm in plans filed and confirmed in this District.

Analysis and Conclusions of Law

To confirm a chapter 13 plan, the debtor must show that, among other things, the plan is in the best interests of *408 the creditors by demonstrating that the creditors will receive no less than they would have received in a chapter 7 case “as of the effective date of the plan.” 9 Debtors, the Trustee, or a creditor may move to modify a confirmed chapter 13 plan at any time. 10 The ability to modify is limited to four specific areas: changing the amount of payments to a particular class of debt, changing the length of time for such payments, altering the amount of a creditor’s distribution to account for other payments to that creditor outside the plan, or to reduce payments to account for certain health insurance premiums. 11 Section 1329(b)(1) provides that § 1325(a) applies to any plan modification, necessarily implicating § 1325(a)(4)’s liquidation or “best interests” test. The only temporal limitation on plan modification is that a plan may not run longer than five years from the due date of the first payment under the first plan in any event. 12

These debtors seek to increase their payments to cure a post-petition arrearage on their homestead. They also seek to reduce the dividend that the unsecured creditors were to have received under the confirmed plan because, they argue, the value of their unsecured, non-exempt assets turns out to be significantly lower than they initially thought. The modification the debtors seek falls within § 1329(a)(4)(A), changing the payment to a particular class of creditor.

The courts have split on the issue of when to pinpoint the “effective date” of a plan modification for the purpose of confirming it under § 1329(b)(1).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
437 B.R. 405, 2010 Bankr. LEXIS 2913, 2010 WL 3636143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-auernheimer-ksb-2010.