In re Brown

536 B.R. 837, 2015 Bankr. LEXIS 3082, 2015 WL 5331744
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedSeptember 11, 2015
DocketBKY 14-35096
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 536 B.R. 837 (In re Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Brown, 536 B.R. 837, 2015 Bankr. LEXIS 3082, 2015 WL 5331744 (Minn. 2015).

Opinion

ORDER DENYING DEBTOR’S MOTION FOR VALUATION OF CLAIM OF HOMETOWN CREDIT UNION AND DENYING CONFIRMATION OF PLAN

GREGORY F. KISHEL, CHIEF UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY JUDGE

The Debtor in this case filed for relief under Chapter 13 on December 30, 2014. At that time, she owned a house (including the underlying real estate) in Faribault, Minnesota.. For her bankruptcy filing, she scheduled two creditors’'claims as secured by mortgage liens against the real estate: one held by Green Tree Servicing, LLC and one held by HomeTown Credit Union.1 The Debtor assigns the priority of these creditors’ mortgages in that order — i.e. HomeTown’s as second.

In her plan, the Debtor proposed to use the remedy of “lien stripping” against HomeTown’s claim — that is, to apply 11 U.S.C. §§ 1322(b)(2) and 506(a)(1) so as to

(1) have the creditor’s claim reclassified from secured to unsecured, (2) modify the terms of the mortgage for the duration of the Chapter 13 plan, and (3) avoid the creditor’s mortgage entirely upon discharge from bankruptcy.

In re Schmidt, 765 F.3d 877, 879 (8th Cir.2014). Pursuant to Loe. R. Bankr.P. (D.Minn.) 3012-1, the Debtor brought a motion to have HomeTown’s secured claim valued at zero, consistent with the theory of lien stripping.2 As the local rule requires, the motion came before the court in conjunction with the hearing on confirmation of her plan.3

HomeTown opposed the motion and objected to confirmation. It framed two major grounds for its opposition.4

The first was fact-based; it went to the value of the house and hence the status of [839]*839both secured creditors’ claims in this case. HomeTown asserted that the value of the property as of the -relevant time5 was greater than the outstanding balance of the debt secured by the first mortgage. Hence, HomeTown argued, its junior mortgage6 attached to some value in the property. Were this true as a matter of fact, it would deprive the Debtor of the fundament for the lien stripping remedy— a lien that did not attach to value in collateral at the relevant time, and hence a claim in favor of the lienor that in the context of bankruptcy had no secured “component” under' the application of § 506(a). See In re Schmidt, 765 F.3d at 881-882.7

These parties’ controversy was received at a first hearing held during a routine monthly calendar for Chapter 13 matters. Hence, this evidence-dependent issue was set aside to confront a deeper one that HomeTown presented as a matter of law.

The second issue dates to the genesis of HomeTown’s lien. On the date that HomeTown received its current lien— April 3, 2006 — the Debtor was married. She and her then-husband held title to the real estate as joint tenants.8 The Debtor and her then-husband jointly granted the mortgage to HomeTown to “secure[ their joint] indebtedness under a credit agreement which provided] for a revolving line of credit” from HomeTown.9

But at some point the Debtor and her husband got divorced.10 On November 6, 2014, he executed a quit claim deed to convey his interest in the property to the Debtor. This deed was recorded a week later.11 HomeTown now asserts that the Debtor’s ex-husband remains personally liable on the underlying debt. There is no [840]*840evidence in the record that HomeTown released him at any time — the Debtor certainly has not produced anything to support that — so this point must be taken as undisputed also.

The Debtor invokes the lien stripping remedy on its own tenet, that a “claim” associated with a pre-petition mortgage is not to be treated as a secured claim for the purposes of administration under Chapter 13, if it did not attach to some value in the underlying collateral when the bankruptcy case was commenced; and once payment under a plan is completed with the mortgagee treated entirely as an unsecured claimant, the mortgage may be avoided “entirely upon discharge from bankruptcy.” In re Schmidt, 765 F.3d at 879 (citing Harmon v. United States, 101 F.3d 574, 582 (8th Cir.1996)). But for the specific history of pledge and ownership here, that outcome would be possible on the right proof of value.

However, the history at bar put the property into a specific posture as HomeTown’s collateral, as of the Debtor’s filing under Chapter 13: it still secured her ongoing. liability to HomeTown, and her ex-husband’s continuing personal debt obligation to HomeTown. The former gave rise to a “claim” that nominally came within Schmidt’s ambit — i.e., in theory, it could be modified through the use of Chapter 13’s remedies. The latter did not. The lien stripping remedy could not extend to the whole of HomeTown’s lien as it encumbered the interest that the Debtor held in the real estate, even though she held full ownership in it when she filed under Chapter 13. The Debtor took title to her ex-husband’s undivided one-half interest in the property once he executed and delivered the quit claim deed to her; but that conveyance carried HomeTown’s lien with the ex-husband’s interest as.it had attached to that interest.

It is not necessary to get into the abstract inquiry of whether lien stripping might still lie to divest HomeTown’s lien, to the extent that it nominally secured the Debtor’s liability on the underlying debt. In the end, lien stripping simply cannot divest the lien to the extent that it continues, to secure the ongoing liability of the Debtor’s ex-husband. His liability to HomeTown is not a debt matchable to a claim that is allowable or cognizable in the bankruptcy case of a third party to that debt — i.e. the Debtor.

There are several alternate paths of support for this conclusion.12 The most accessible way starts by recognizing the posture of the real estate as collateral security for debt, as it stood on the Debtor’s Chapter 13 filing.

Tracing is the key to that. As follows:

1. When the Debtor and her then-husband granted the mortgage to HomeTown in 2006, each of them held an undivided one-half interest in the property. Hendrickson v. Minneapolis Fed. Sav. & Loan Ass’n, 281 Minn. 462, 161 N,W.2d 688, 690 (1968); In re Holman, 286 B.R. 882, 884 (Bankr.D.Minn.2002). Each of them granted the mortgage against his or her own individual interest in the property. Application of Gau, 230 Minn. 235, 41 N.W.2d 444, 447 (1950) (recognizing that statutory lien may attach to one joint tenant’s undivided fractional interest, but holding that such attachment alone does not sever joint tenancy). Collectively, they did so to [841]*841secure their joint and several liability by pledging the real estate.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
536 B.R. 837, 2015 Bankr. LEXIS 3082, 2015 WL 5331744, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-brown-mnb-2015.