In Re Brown

399 B.R. 30, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 3823, 2007 WL 3348416
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, C.D. Illinois
DecidedNovember 9, 2007
Docket07-80138
StatusPublished

This text of 399 B.R. 30 (In Re Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, C.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Brown, 399 B.R. 30, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 3823, 2007 WL 3348416 (Ill. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

THOMAS L. PERKINS, Chief Judge.

Before the Court is the objection to. confirmation of the proposed Chapter 13 plan of the Debtor, Latarshe Brown (DEBTOR), filed by AmeriCredit Financial Services, Inc. (AMERICREDIT), as well as AMERICREDIT’S motion for relief from the automatic stay.

BACKGROUND

The DEBTOR filed her Chapter 13 petition in this case on January 25, 2007. AMERICREDIT is the holder of a perfected purchase money security interest in a 2001 Ford Taurus purchased on August 14, 2004, within 910 days of the date the petition was filed. According to the retail installment contract, the DEBTOR was to make forty-eight payments beginning on September 28, 2004, each in the amount of $214.48, payable at an interest rate of 21%. The last payment would therefore be due on September 28, 2008. AMERICREDIT filed its proof of claim asserting a petition date balance of $8,498.46 fully secured by the Taurus, including a prepetition arrearage of $4,424.26. The large arrearage resulted from the DEBTOR’S failure to make plan payments in a prior Chapter 13 proceeding.

The DEBTOR filed her prior Chapter 13 petition on April 11, 2005. 1 Her plan, confirmed without objection, provided for payments of $232 per month for thirty-six months and estimated that unsecured creditors would receive approximately 1%. AMERICREDIT was to be paid $5,500, secured by the Ford Taurus, at 7.75%. On January 11, 2006, the DEBTOR’S request for a 90-day moratorium due to a job loss, was granted. On May 16, 2006, the DEBTOR, not yet having found a job, was granted a second 90-day moratorium. The DEBTOR sought a third moratorium, alleging that she had found a new job but would not be paid until the end of July. An order was entered granting the DEBTOR’S third moratorium, with payments to resume on September 1, 2006. On October 17, 2006, the TRUSTEE filed a motion to dismiss for nonpayment. The DEBTOR did not respond to the motion and the ease was dismissed on November 7, 2006. According to the TRUSTEE’S Final Report and Account, the DEBTOR’S payments totaled $1,624. AMERICREDIT received a principal payment of $402.67 and an interest payment of $287.39.

The Amended Plan filed by the DEBTOR in the present case proposes monthly payments of $240 for forty-seven months, resulting in a projected distribution of 1 % to unsecured creditors. The Amended Plan splits AMERICREDIT’S secured claim into two components, proposing to pay the prepetition arrearage without in *32 terest and to pay the balance of the secured claim of $4,074.20 at the rate of $111.70 per month with interest at 10.25%. AMERICREDIT objected to confirmation, contending that it was entitled to equal fixed monthly payments in the amount of $320.18. AMERICREDIT also filed a motion for relief from the automatic stay and for preconfirmation adequate protection payments, alleging, in addition to that same argument, that the DEBTOR had failed to provide proof of insurance and that it was not receiving adequate protection payments. At the hearing on the motion on April 9, 2007, the DEBTOR represented that proof of insurance had been provided to AMERICREDIT and the Trustee reported that the DEBTOR had begun making plan payments and that he had commenced making adequate protection payments to AMERICREDIT, in accordance with this Court’s standing order. The Court held a hearing on confirmation of the Amended Plan on May 14, 2007, and took the matters under advisement. 2

AMERICREDIT’S objection to the treatment of its secured claim in the Amended Plan is three-fold: (1) that no interest is being paid on its arrearage claim; (2) that interest is being paid on the balance of its claim at the Till rate of 10.25 % instead of the contract rate of 21 %; and (3) that the plan fails to provide for fixed, equal monthly payments as required by Section 1325(a)(5)(B)(iii)(I). Based on the first two concerns, AMERICREDIT concludes that the DEBTOR improperly bifurcates its secured claim in contravention of the newly enacted “hanging paragraph.” The Amended Plan, however, is flawed for a more fundamental reason and confirmation must be denied.

ANALYSIS

A Chapter 13 debtor is vested with several powers to modify, in a plan, the rights that creditors could assert outside of bankruptcy, including a general power to modify the rights of holders of secured claims. 11 U.S.C. § 1322(b)(2). A debtor may propose to cure any prepetition default in a plan or, alternatively, to compel a waiver of any default. 11 U.S.C. § 1322(b)(3). With respect to secured or unsecured claims on which, according to the contract evidencing the debt, the last payment is due after the plan is scheduled to end, the debtor’s plan may propose to cure any prepetition default while the regular contract payments are paid as they come due postpetition. 11 U.S.C. § 1322(b)(5). These provisions of Section 1322(b) were not amended by the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005 (“BAPCPA”), which went into general effect on October 17, 2005.

Prior to the enactment of BAPCPA, a debtor in a Chapter 13 case had four options in dealing with secured claims. Under the first three options, contained in Section 1325(a)(5), a debtor may (1) obtain the creditor’s acceptance of the plan; (2) cram down the secured creditor and pay the present value of the allowed secured claim through the plan; or (3) surrender the collateral. A fourth option, pursuant to either Section 1322(b)(3) or (b)(5), permits a debtor to cure a default. Section 1322(b)(5) authorizes a debtor to provide for the curing of a default and the mainte *33 nance of payments on a claim on which the last payment is due after the date of the final payment to be made under the plan. 3 11 U.S.C. § 1322(b)(5)- This provision is inapplicable to AMERICREDIT’S claim.

The second option was curtailed by the so-called hanging paragraph appended to Section 1325(a)(5) by BAPCPA, which prohibits bifurcation of a secured debt incurred within the 910-day period preceding the filing of the petition if the debt is secured by a purchase money security interest in a motor vehicle acquired for the debtor’s personal use. 4 For cases filed after BAPCPA’s effective date, stripdown of the claims of “910 creditors” is thus prohibited.

Contrary to AMERICREDIT’S characterization, the DEBTOR is not bifurcating its undersecured claim pursuant to Section 506(a), into a “secured” component and an “unsecured” component, in violation of the “hanging paragraph.” Rather, the Amended Plan bifurcates the claim into a prepetiton part and a postpetition part, both fully secured by the Taurus.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
399 B.R. 30, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 3823, 2007 WL 3348416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-brown-ilcb-2007.