In Re Carey

402 B.R. 327, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 457, 2009 WL 613581
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Missouri
DecidedMarch 9, 2009
Docket19-50062
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 402 B.R. 327 (In Re Carey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Carey, 402 B.R. 327, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 457, 2009 WL 613581 (Mo. 2009).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

ARTHUR B. FEDERMAN, Bankruptcy Judge.

The Chapter 13 Trustee moved to deny confirmation of each of these Debtors’ Chapter 13 plans because such plans provide that the Debtors make postpetition mortgage payments directly to the respective mortgage holder, and not as part of their Chapter 13 plan payments to the Trustee. Since all of these Debtors are represented by the same counsel, and since the eases raise similar issues related to the enforceability of this Court’s recent General Order creating Local Rule 3094-l, 1 1 held a joint hearing, on March 2, 2009, to hear evidence in each of the cases. By separate orders, the Court will order that the Trustee’s motions to deny confirmation be granted in each of the Debtors’ cases.

Upon filing a Chapter 13 case, a debtor is obligated to file a plan setting out the treatment to be given to all such debtor’s creditors. 2 Among other things, that plan is required to “provide for the submission of all or such portion of future earnings or other future income of the debtor to the supervision and control of the trustee as is necessary for the execution of the plan ...” 3 The Bankruptcy Code presumes that all payments to be made to pre-petition creditors will be made by the trustee out of such earnings or income: § 1326(c) provides that “[ejxcept as otherwise provided in the plan or in the order confirming the plan, the trustee shall make payments to creditors under the plan.” 4 Whether a debtor, rather than the trustee, should be permitted to make ongoing post-petition mortgage payments is “very much a matter left to the considered discretion of the bankruptcy court.” 5

With regard to the postpetition mortgage payments, debtors in this district have historically chosen to either make such payments directly to the mortgage holder, or through their Chapter 13 plan. Effective October 1, 2008, this Court adopted new procedures for the payment of mortgage debt in Chapter 13 cases. Specifically, as relevant here, Local Rule 3094-1 now provides:

1. Unmodified Payments on a note secured by real estate when the debtor is *329 current on the date of petition. When the debtor has no past due payments or charges due to the mortgagee other than the regular payment due in the month of filing or conversion, the debtor may make the post-petition payments directly to the mortgagee. If a debtor who has no past due payments or charges due to the mortgagee other than the regular payment due in the month of filing or conversion nevertheless decides to pay the post-petition payments to the claimant through the Chapter 13 trustee as part of the plan payment, Rule 3094-1.C.2 applies.
2. Unmodified Payments on a note secured by real estate when the debtor is delinquent on the date of petition.
a. For cases filed or converted on or after October 1, 2008, if a debtor is delinquent on the date of the petition on a note secured by real estate, the debtor shall make the post-petition payments to the mortgagee through the Chapter 13 trustee as part of the Chapter 13 plan payment unless the court orders otherwise. For purposes of Rule 3094-1, delinquent (or not current) means there are past due payments or charges due to the mortgagee other than the regular contractual payment due in the month of filing or conversion. 6

In other words, if a debtor is current on mortgage payments at the time of the filing of the petition, the debtor has the choice of making the ongoing mortgage payments directly or through the Chapter 13 plan, as was the practice before the enactment of the Local Rule. For debtors who are delinquent on mortgage payments when the petition is filed, as all of the Debtors in these cases were, then the ongoing mortgage payments must be made through the plan, unless the Court orders otherwise. The Local Rules then go on to direct, inter alia, how such payments are to be handled by the Chapter 13 Trustee when the payments are made through the plan.

These procedures were adopted in response to the Court’s concerns about the accuracy of the mortgage holders’ and debtors’ records when debtors were allowed to make payments on mortgages directly, rather than through the Trustee’s office. As is now well-known, the company which originates a mortgage oftentimes does not retain that mortgage through payoff, or, in some instances, until the first payment even comes due. Instead, these mortgages are routinely packaged and sold, often piecemeal, and often a number of times before they are either paid off or written down. The result is that the mortgage holder (or servicer) in a Chapter 13 case may have changed over the course of the case, 7 and may not have accurate records as to what payments were made by the debtor, and how such payments were applied, either prepetition or postpetition. 8

*330 The same record-keeping problem is true for debtors who, as was shown at the hearing in these cases, may make mortgage payments by buying money orders for cash at a convenience store and mailing them off to the last-known mortgage holder (or mortgage servicer). Such debtors may be unable, without great difficulty, to later prove that they in fact made any such payment.

Moreover, a debtor’s payment amount often changes from time to time due to adjustable interest rates, or the accumulation of late fees and other charges, or changes in escrow amounts. Because debtors are frequently unaware of such changes for whatever reason, debtors often become increasingly delinquent without even knowing it.

As a result, prior to the adoption of these procedures, the Court was regularly faced with motions for relief from the automatic stay in which neither side was in a position, until the matter had been continued several times, to prove what payments had been made, and how they had been applied. Being able to process these motions quickly is not only efficient, but is also mandated by law: unless the Court holds a hearing within thirty days after a motion for relief from stay is filed, and finds that the debtor has a reasonable likelihood of prevailing at a final hearing, which is to be held within an additional thirty days, the Court is obligated to lift the stay, and thereby allow the mortgage holder to foreclose on the home. 9 In addition, the Chapter 13 Trustee testified, and Debtors’ counsel acknowledged that, even if no motion for relief is filed during the case, debtors in Chapter 13 are, with increasing frequency, finishing their cases with a significant deficiency due to changes in payment amounts or fees and charges, which are unbeknownst to them, and end up losing the house shortly after exiting bankruptcy.

Local Rule 3094-1 was carefully tailored to deal with these concerns.

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Related

In re Thornton
572 B.R. 738 (W.D. Missouri, 2017)
In re Melander
506 B.R. 855 (D. Minnesota, 2014)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
402 B.R. 327, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 457, 2009 WL 613581, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-carey-mowb-2009.