In Re Castillo

209 B.R. 59, 11 Tex.Bankr.Ct.Rep. 289, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 754, 1997 WL 298070
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Texas
DecidedApril 22, 1997
Docket19-30298
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 209 B.R. 59 (In Re Castillo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Castillo, 209 B.R. 59, 11 Tex.Bankr.Ct.Rep. 289, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 754, 1997 WL 298070 (Tex. 1997).

Opinion

DECISION ON GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES CREDIT UNION’S REQUEST TO COMPEL DEBTORS TO COMPLY WITH SECTION 521 OF THE UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY CODE

LEIF M. CLARK, Bankruptcy Judge.

CAME ON for consideration in the above styled proceeding a motion by Government Employee’s Credit Union (GECU) to compel debtors to comply with section 521 of the United States Bankruptcy Code. The issue is whether a chapter 7 debtor may retain collateral that secures a lien without either reaffirmation of the obligation under 11 U.S.C. § 521(2), or redemption of the collateral under 11 U.S.C. § 722. Upon review of the authorities, and the argument and briefs of the parties, the court concludes that a chapter 7 debtor is not limited to those express options. The following constitutes the court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law. FED.R.BANKR.P. 7052.

Background Facts

Prior to filing for bankruptcy, Mario Castillo and Lorenza Castillo (“debtors”) purchased a 1994 Volkswagen Jetta. This purchase was financed by a secured loan from Government Employees Credit Union (“GECU”). A second loan was later made by GECU. This loan also was secured by the Jetta (in the form of a second lien). At the time of the bankruptcy filing, the total indebtedness on GECU’s secured claims was $19,272.62.

Post filing, GECU has continued to receive payments on the ear loan from the Castillos. This is not enough to satisfy GECU, however. Citing to section 521(2)(A), GECU claims that the Bankruptcy Code requires debtors with consumer debts secured by property of the estate to file a statement *61 with the clerk of the debtors’ intention to claim the property as exempt, redeem the property or reaffirm the debts securing such property. 1 This, they note, the debtors have not done. Instead, the debtors have exercised what that believe to be a fourth option available to them under the language of section 521(2)(A), namely, retention of the vehicle and continued timely payments on the installment loan 2 They call their notice an “informal reaffirmation” of the debt. See Chapter 7 Individual Debtor’s Stmt, of Intention. The debtors believe this option falls under certain “if applicable” language in section 521(2)(A).

There is, of course, no express statutory provision for what the debtors are calling an “informal reaffirmation.” The debtors are simply using the terminology to describe their intention to continue to retain the collateral, to make timely payments to the secured creditor, and to abide by the original terms of the loan agreement subject, of course, to any modifications to the agreement caused by a discharge from bankruptcy. In effect, the debtors expect the car loan to “ride through” the bankruptcy, leaving the creditor with all of its nonbankruptcy rights vis-a-vis its collateral. Any deficiency claim which the creditor might suffer it would suffer in any event, just as do all other secured creditors in bankruptcy. The debtors believe that, so long as the payments are current, there is no need to either redeem the collateral or reaffirm the debt.

The dispute, then, in this case is only facially about whether section 521(2)(A) af~ fords a “fourth alternative” to debtors who are current on consumer secured debt. The push behind the battle over the interpretation of section 521(2)(A) comes not so much from the impact on the secured creditor’s secured claim but rather from the impact on its potential unsecured deficiency claim. Outside of bankruptcy, a lender has recourse to both the collateral pledged and to the personal liability of the borrower. If the borrower files bankruptcy, the resulting discharge eliminates the personal liability of the borrower for the debt, 3 converting the loan from recourse to nonrecourse. This process has often been called “lien stripping” because it in effect converts the face value of the creditor’s claim to the value of the collateral. 4

Creditors might not find lien stripping quite so objectionable were the value of the creditor’s collateral to keep pace with the monthly payments on the debt the collateral secures. In such an instance, a “strip down” of the loan to the value of the secured property would have little or no economic effect because the debtor would always owe an amount equal to or less than the value of the collateral. However, when the value of the collateral depreciates at a rate that outpaces the payments made by the debtor, as is often the ease with car loans, the strip down effect of bankruptcy on the lien that the creditor holds can be dramatic. 5

An “informal reaffirmation” has no effect on the impact of the bankruptcy discharge on the creditor’s claim. Even though the payments are current, giving the appearance of *62 a fully performing loan, the debt has nonetheless been converted into a nonrecourse claim as a result of the bankruptcy filing. The creditor knows that, if the debtor should default at some later date after the bankruptcy is over, the creditor will have to look solely to its collateral for satisfaction. If it anticipates that the collateral is not now or will not likely be sufficient to fully satisfy the debt (and it will probably not be if it is a motor vehicle), then the loan cannot be said to be “fully performing” in the normal sense, even though the payments are current. The debtor might still be motivated to completely pay off the balance of the car loan, because she needs the car, in which case the creditor will not have suffered any actual, economic harm from the debtor’s having filed bankruptcy. However, the debtor might also choose to “walk away” from the vehicle at some future point, secure in the knowledge that she will not be sued for any deficiency the creditor might suffer, leaving the creditor with only the value it can recover out of the vehicle at that future point. That value might be substantially less a percentage of the remaining balance due than it is at the time of bankruptcy, leaving the creditor to suffer a potentially larger deficiency than it otherwise might have had it simply been able to take back the vehicle when the debtor filed bankruptcy.

Thus, an “informal reaffirmation” is nothing more than a simple statement by the debtor that she does not intend to surrender the vehicle, nor does she intend to redeem it with a lump sum cash payment for its current value (as she could under section 722), and neither does she intend to reaffirm the debt to insulate the creditor from the discharge of its undersecured deficiency claim (as she could under section 524). The debtors here believe they have this alternative because they do not believe that any creditor can compel reaffirmation of any debt, nor can any creditor require the redemption of any collateral, and the so-called statement of intention

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
209 B.R. 59, 11 Tex.Bankr.Ct.Rep. 289, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 754, 1997 WL 298070, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-castillo-txwb-1997.