In Re Blehm

33 B.R. 678
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Colorado
DecidedOctober 5, 1983
Docket19-10843
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 33 B.R. 678 (In Re Blehm) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Blehm, 33 B.R. 678 (Colo. 1983).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

ROLAND J. BRUMBAUGH, Bankruptcy Judge.

This matter came before the Court on the Motion to Confirm the Debtors’ Chapter 13 Plan and objections thereto. The objections allege that these Debtors are not eligible for a Chapter 13 proceeding in that 11 U.S.C. § 109(e) provides that an individual is eligible for Chapter 13 if they owe “non-contingent liquidated unsecured debts of less than $100,000.00.” Therefore, the only way a debt can be excluded from the computation of the Chapter 13 dollar limits is if it is “contingent” or “unliquidated”.

Shortly before hearing on this matter, several creditors filed proofs of claim wherein they alleged that the Debtors operated a corporation known as the Rocky Mountain Dairy Sales in such a manner as to constitute a sham and that, therefore, the creditors of this corporation should be allowed to “pierce the corporate veil” of the corporation and assert their claims directly against these Debtors.

This Court can find no cases dealing with the precise issue of “corporate-veil piercing” debts, but by analogy to the type of debts discussed in the existing case law, this Court concludes that these debts should not be included in the computation of the § 109(e) limits of the individual Debtors.

The Bankruptcy Code contains no definition of the terms contingent or liquidated. However, the concepts have been around a long time and the bankruptcy laws and cases under the Code have generally continued to apply the judicially created definitions from the old Bankruptcy Act cases.

*679 Generally, the courts have considered as contingent debts those claims which depend either as to their existence or their amount on some future event which may not occur at all or may not occur until some uncertain time.

Liquidation has to do with whether the amount of the claim can be easily determined. Again, generally speaking, claims are liquidated if the Court is able to make a sufficiently precise determination of the amount due for the claim.

In one analysis, claims “in substantial dispute” may be considered unliquidated. This analysis comes from the case of In re King, 9 B.R. 376 (Bkrtcy.Or.1981). The Court in King noted that the dollar limits in § 109(e) apply to “debts” and the Code defines “debt” as “liability on a claim.” 11 U.S.C. § 101(11). It then decided that “the Court must make a determination of liability and amount due in the case of a disputed claim in order to determine what amount, if any, of the disputed claim should be included in determining the total amount of non-contingent, liquidated, unsecured debt owing at the time of the filing of the petition for relief.”

The Court then discussed definitions of the term “liquidated” and keyed on the words “settled”, “adjusted”, “ascertained”, “agreed on by the parties”, and “fixed by law.” From these definitions, the Court concluded that “a debt is not liquidated if there is a substantial dispute regarding liability or amount.”

The Court then proceeded to do a quick review of the pleadings filed in adversary proceedings involving the three disputed debts in the case. Where it found no evidence in support of or against allegations in the pleadings, “the Court must assume that there is a substantial dispute between the plaintiffs and defendants as to both liability and amounts of their respective claims.” The Court excluded all the disputed debts from the § 109(e) computation.

While the King approach is attractive, I cannot follow it because a decision from the Bankruptcy Appeals Panel for the Ninth Circuit, In re Sylvester, 19 B.R. 671 (Bkrtcy.1982), expressly criticizes the decision and reasoning in King.

In Sylvester, the Court, citing § 101(4)(A) (4) “claim” means—
(A) right to payment, whether or not such right is reduced to judgment, liquidated, unliquidated, fixed, contingent, matured, unmatured, disputed, undisputed, legal, secured, or unsecured; or ...

concludes that disputed, unliquidated, and contingent have different meanings under the Code and that (because of the obvious exclusion of “disputed” in § 109(e)) disputed unsecured debt is not excluded when determining whether the $100,000.00 limit is exceeded.

Sylvester also cites a Tenth Circuit case, In re Thomas, 211 F.Supp. 187 (D.Colo.1962), aff’d, 327 F.2d 667 (10th Cir.1964), for the proposition that the “fact that the respondent may have defenses or counterclaims against the claimant would not effect the [debt’s] character as liquidated. ...”

The Court concludes that “the fact the claim was disputed was not relevant for purposes of Section 109(e), and the fact that it was subject to defenses and counterclaims was likewise not relevant.”

However, the case also states that the Bankruptcy Court should have a hearing on the merits of the claim in order to determine the liquidated amount of any disputed claim prior to making the § 109(e) computation. Another case which holds disputed debts are not excluded from § 109(e) is In re DeBrunner, 22 B.R. 36 (Bkrtcy.Neb.1982).

The classic examples of contingent debts are the guarantor/surety situations and a tort claim on which no judgment has been entered. The guarantor situation is obvious — there liability is dependent on a future uncertain event — the default of the primary obligor. Tort claims have been considered contingent because they require proof by the plaintiff creditor of the debtor’s liability and the amount of damages are, by their *680 very nature, not fixed unless and until a judgment is entered setting the debtor’s liability.

One author has contrasted contingent and non-contingent claims this way:

When a person enters into a contract under which he or she is required to make a payment to a third party, a legal duty to make that payment arises as soon as the conditions to payment under the contract have been met. If court action is necessary to recover the amount due, the court is simply forcing the breaching party to discharge an existing duty. In the case of a tort claim, however, ‘the parties at the time of the alleged negligent act would be presumed to have contemplated that the alleged tort feasor would be liable only if it were so established by a competent tribunal’.

W. Drake & J. Morris, Eligibility for Relief Under Chapter 13, 57 Am.Bankr.L.J. 195 (1983), (citing In re All Media Properties, Inc., 5 B.R. 126 (Bkrtcy.S.D.Tex.1980)).

The All Media case has an extensive discussion of contingent versus non-contingent claims.

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Bluebook (online)
33 B.R. 678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-blehm-cob-1983.