In Re Balcerowski

353 B.R. 581, 2006 Bankr. LEXIS 2877, 2006 WL 3019211
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Wisconsin
DecidedOctober 17, 2006
Docket19-20956
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 353 B.R. 581 (In Re Balcerowski) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Balcerowski, 353 B.R. 581, 2006 Bankr. LEXIS 2877, 2006 WL 3019211 (Wis. 2006).

Opinion

ORDER SUSTAINING CHAPTER 13 TRUSTEE’S OBJECTION TO CONFIRMATION OF PLAN

PAMELA PEPPER, Bankruptcy Judge.

This case involves an issue new to this Court — the appropriate way to calculate the tax expense for the purpose of determining whether a Chapter 13 debtor meets the requirement that he devote “all of [his] projected disposable income” to the plan under § 1325(b)(1)(B) of the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005 (“BAPCPA”). The Court concludes that the appropriate way to calculate the tax expense for this purpose is for the debtor to estimate, and subtract from his income, the actual tax he will incur, not the amount he has withheld from his wages. The Court further concludes that the debtor should calculate this actual tax based on his income at the time he filed his petition, and not solely upon his historical, “current monthly income” income figure.

I. Facts

The debtor filed his Chapter 13 petition on April 13, 2006; Title 11 as amended by BAPCPA is the governing law. The forms the debtor filed on April 13 show that his income — calculated as BAPCPA required that it be calculated — exceeded the applicable median family income for a family of his size in his state of residence. The debtor is, therefore, what has come to be known in the post-BAPCPA world as an “above-median income debtor.”

The debtor also filed his proposed Chapter 13 plan on April 13. The plan pro *583 posed to pay a dividend of 4% to the unsecured creditors.

A. The Trustee’s Objection 1

The Chapter 13 trustee filed an objection to the plan, arguing that it did not devote all of the debtor’s projected disposable income to paying his creditors. In particular, the trustee argued that the plan proposed to pay a dividend of only 4% to the unsecured creditors (a pro rata share of $845.15 on a total, general, unsecured debt of $21,736.29). This relatively small percentage came, in part, from the debt- or’s calculation on new Form B22C indicating that, after he subtracted his monthly expenses, he had a negative $3.58 in disposable monthly income each month to devote to paying creditors.

But the debtor had reached that negative $3.58 amount, the trustee argued, by subtracting as his average monthly tax expense (one the expenses Form B22C allows the debtor to subtract from his income) the amount of $1,013.33. The trustee argued that, contrary to the instruction on Form B22C that the debtor subtract the tax expense that he would “actual[ty] incur,” the debtor had subtracted the amount of money that had been withheld from his wages. (Emphasis added) The trustee argued that, for this debtor, the withholding amount was higher than the amount that the debtor actually would end up owing based on his income and the 2006 tax tables, deductions and exemptions, and thus that the debtor’s Form B22C calculations showed an artificially low amount of monthly disposable income. 2

In support of this contention, the trustee pointed out that § 1325(b)(2) defines disposable income as “current monthly income ... less amounts reasonably necessary to be expended ....” The words “to be expended,” the trustee argued, are future-looking. Amounts “to be expended” are amounts that a person expects to spend in the future. Thus, argued the trustee, the words of the statute itself required the trustee to subtract the actual tax amount, because that is the amount that the debtor actually would spend for tax obligations.

The trustee noted that in § 707(b)(2)(A)(ii)(I) — that section of the BAPCPA amendments that details what expenses above-median income debtors can and cannot subtract from current monthly income to determine disposable *584 income — Congress specified that above-median income debtors could subtract their “actual monthly expenses for the categories specified as Other Necessary Expenses issued by the Internal Revenue Service.... ” The trustee then referred to the Internal Revenue Manual, indicating that the IRS deemed taxes “necessary” if they are “for current federal, FICA, Medicare, state and local taxes.” Internal Revenue Manual 5.15.1, Financial Analysis Handbook at 5.15.1.10, Other expenses (05-01-2004).

The trustee also cited the recently-decided case of In re Renicker, 342 B.R. 304 (Bankr.W.D.Mo.2006). In Renicker, the debtors deducted from their historical income an expense for a house. The end result was that, while the debtors had a combined monthly income of $6,085, their Form B22C indicated that they had only $20.88 a month to contribute to the plan as disposable income. The trustee objected, noting that the house expense the debtors deducted was for a home that they no longer owned. In other words, they no longer had the expense which they had deducted. Id. at 306. Accordingly, the trustee argued, the amount that they had been devoting to paying that expense should have been available to pay creditors.

The Renicker court agreed with the trustee, and found that “the plain language of § 1325(b)(2) unambiguously indicates that prospective — not historical' — expenses are to be used to calculate disposable income.” Id. at 309. In reaching this conclusion, the Renicker court pointed to the same language relied upon by the trustee in this case — the language in § 1325(b)(2) defining disposable income as current monthly income “less amounts reasonably ‘to be expended ... for the maintenance or support of the debtor or a dependent of the debtor.” Id., quoting § 1325(b)(2) (emphasis added by court).

The trustee in this case conceded that requiring above-median income debtors to deduct their actual tax expenses from their historical income might, in some cases, yield “harsh results” for debtors like this one, whose filing date income is lower than their historical income. But the trustee noted that for above-median income debtors whose incomes increase at the filing date, the result would be generous — the debtor would “reap the benefits of being able to list a lower current monthly income on Form B22C and also list a higher tax expense based on his higher actual income.” Trustee’s brief at page 5.

The trustee also argued that a line of cases has developed since the implementation of BAPCPA which holds that, in determining how much “projected disposable income” a debtor has to commit to a plan, one must look at both the historical, “current monthly income” on Form B22C and at the actual, current income listed on Schedule I. See, e.g., In re Hardacre, 338 B.R. 718 (Bankr.N.D.Tex.2006); In re Jass, 340 B.R. 411 (Bankr.D.Utah 2006); In re Kibbe, 342 B.R. 411 (Bankr.D.N.H. 2006); In re McGuire, 342 B.R. 608 (Bankr.W.D.Mo.2006); In re Fuller, 346 B.R. 472 (Bankr.S.D.Ill.2006). If this is true, the trustee maintained, then using the actual tax expense would not unfairly prejudice or benefit debtors who have changes in their financial circumstances around the time of filing.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
353 B.R. 581, 2006 Bankr. LEXIS 2877, 2006 WL 3019211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-balcerowski-wieb-2006.