In Re Branch

127 B.R. 891, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 804, 1991 WL 102574
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Florida
DecidedMay 6, 1991
Docket19-30167
StatusPublished

This text of 127 B.R. 891 (In Re Branch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.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 Branch, 127 B.R. 891, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 804, 1991 WL 102574 (Fla. 1991).

Opinion

ORDER ON CONFIRMATION OF PLAN UNDER CHAPTER 12

LEWIS M. KILLIAN, Jr., Bankruptcy Judge.

After winding its way down a long and torturous path, this Chapter 12 case came on for hearing for confirmation of the debtors’ amended plan under Chapter 12 on March 12, 1991. Subsequent to the hearing, and in response to objections filed by the Farm Credit of Northwest Florida, ACA, f/k/a Farm Credit Bank (Farm Credit) the debtors filed a second amendment to debtors’ amended plan under Chapter 12. Farm Credit and the United States of America through the Farmers Home Administration (FmHA) have both objected to the terms of the plan. For the reasons set forth herein, the plan as amended cannot be confirmed.

The debtors in this case live and farm in Jackson County, Florida on several parcels of property which are subject to mortgages in favor of Farm Credit and FmHA. The amount due under the claim of Farm Credit as of March 5, 1991, was $86,417.45 and was secured by a first mortgage on 167.8 acres with a value as determined by this court of $83,900 plus 34,008 lbs. of peanut allotment valued at .50 per pound for total collateral value of $100,904. The claim of Farm Credit is therefore fully secured.

Farmers Home Administration filed its proof of claim reflecting a total indebtedness due as of the date of the petition of $111,661.91. This claim is based on various promissory notes and extensions thereof signed by the debtor between 1974 and 1986 and is secured by mortgages on three (3) parcels of real property owned by the debtors plus crops, equipment and other chattels. All three properties owned by the debtors are pledged as security for the entire claim of FmHA. Farmers Home’s mortgage position is first with respect to one acre and the homestead, valued at $50,-000 and 26 acres valued at $13,000 and it is second with respect to the 168.7 acres on which Farm Credit has the first mortgage. Farmers Home’s claim is also secured by a first lien on equipment valued at $9,900. The total value of FmHA's security being approximately $87,300, its claim is underse-cured.

Under the latest amendment to the plan, the debtors proposed to deed to Farm Credit a total of 148.14 acres of the 167.8 acres on which Farm Credit has a mortgage with a credit be given against Farm Credit’s claim in the amount of $72,746.00 representing the per acre value of the property as previously established by the court at the valuation hearing. Included in the parcel to be returned are 84.8 acres of woodlands at a value of $335.00 per acre and 63.34 acres of cultivatable farm land at a value of $700.00 per acre. The debtors propose to retain the remaining 19.6 acres and to pay the balance of Farm Credit’s claim after credit for the value of the property returned, over twenty (20) years at an interest rate of 11% per annum. Furthermore, the debtors would grant to Farm Credit as part of the surrender of property an easement across their remaining property to permit access to that property being surrendered.

*893 Farm Credit has objected to the plan as amended and has also moved for a new trial on the issue of valuation of the property securing its claim. The basis for Farm Credit’s objection and motion for new trial centers primarily on Farm Credit’s assertion that the value of the property to be returned to Farm Credit cannot be established merely by taking the value of the farm as a whole and pro-rating the per acre values to the different portions of the farm. Farm Credit asserts that due to the limited and difficult access to the parcel proposed to be surrendered, its value as a separate parcel is less than its contributory value to the farm as a whole. Farm Credit also objects to the provision of the plan which provides that the property will not be surrendered until June 1, 1991. However, it appears that this problem has been resolved between the debtors and Farm Credit with the debtors to lease from Farm Credit that portion of the property to be surrendered on which the debtors are currently growing their 1991 watermelon crop.

Farm Credit’s objection with regard to the value to be attributed to the property to be surrendered is well founded. Section 506(a) of the Bankruptcy Code provides, regarding the valuation of property securing a claim that “such value shall be determined in light of the purpose of the valuation and of the proposed disposition or use of such property, and in conjunction with any hearing on such disposition or use or on a plan affecting such creditor’s interest”. 11 U.S.C. § 506(a). Here, the farm was previously valued as an entire tract with its farm land/woodland mix and with the access present as to the whole farm. When the farm is split into two pieces and access to one part limited, the value of that portion which has been severed would necessarily be different from that of the farm as a whole. In another recent case, In re Braxton, 124 B.R. 870 (Bankr.N.D.Fla.1991), we considered another Chapter 12 plan through which the debtors proposed to surrender to the secured creditor a patchwork of parcels out of the entire farm with credit be given at the per acre value as determined for the whole farm. In that case, as in this case, we found that the secured creditor could not be forced to accept a value based on a per acre value as established for the whole farm but instead the parcels had to be valued separately in light of the proposed disposition of those parcels. The same must be done in this and in any other case in which the debtors seek to surrender to the secured creditor only a portion of the property securing its claim.

With respect to the claim of FmHA, the debtor’s plan proposes various treatments of the different notes and parcels of property. The homestead and one acre was originally pledged as security for a home loan which had a balance as of March 1, 1991 of $10,951.45 payable at 8.5% with a remaining term of seventeen (17) years. The home further secured a second note and mortgage with a balance of $39,048.00 as of March 1, 1991, payable at five (5%) percent interest and being due on March 30, 2016. The debtors’ plan proposes to pay the first note in full over the remaining 17 years at the contract rate of 8.5%. The second note would be paid in full over 20 years at the contract rate of five (5%) percent which schedule represents a five (5) year acceleration of the maturity of that note. With respect to the 26 acre parcel valued at $13,000.00, the plan provides payment of that sum over 20 years at an interest rate of 10.25% per annum. With respect to any value in the 167.8 acres plus the peanut quota in excess of the claim of Farm Credit, the debtors propose to pay that value to FmHA at a contract rate of five (5%) percent interest over a period of 20 years (a five year acceleration according to the debtors). Additionally, the debtors and FmHA have agreed on the value of equipment securing FmHA’s claim in the amount of $9,900.00 with a tractor valued at $2,500.00 to be returned to FmHA and the remaining balance of $7,400.00 to be paid by debtors over a seven (7) year period at 11% per annum.

Farmers Home Administration has objected to confirmation primarily based on the interest rates provided by the debtor in the plan. It is FmHA’s position that inasmuch as its claims are impaired, *894 then it is entitled to receive a market rate of interest rather than the contract rate as provided in the various notes.

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Related

United States v. Harlan Arnold and Dorene Arnold
878 F.2d 925 (Sixth Circuit, 1989)
In Re Braxton
124 B.R. 870 (N.D. Florida, 1991)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
127 B.R. 891, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 804, 1991 WL 102574, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-branch-flnb-1991.