In Re Chang

274 B.R. 295, 2002 Bankr. LEXIS 170, 2002 WL 373095
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedMarch 1, 2002
Docket19-30125
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 274 B.R. 295 (In Re Chang) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Chang, 274 B.R. 295, 2002 Bankr. LEXIS 170, 2002 WL 373095 (Mass. 2002).

Opinion

*299 MEMORANDUM OF DECISION

JOEL B. ROSENTHAL, Bankruptcy Judge.

This case presents problems of the Debtor’s making as she attempts to traverse her own course through Chapter 13 beginning with an incomplete creditor matrix and including a confirmed plan which was not served on all of the creditors, if indeed it was even served at all, and inconsistent statements of the Debtor. The Court only first became aware of these problems when the Debtor sought to amend a confirmed plan to include postpe-tition unpaid taxes. That motion, in turn, focused the parties on the issue of entitlement to interest on the taxes already included in the plan, and led to this Court’s review of all the pleadings filed in this case.

The parties have filed numerous pleadings and the Court has held extensive oral argument. 1 Most of the salient facts, however, are not in dispute. To the extent the Debtor has made contrary, and sometimes contradictory, statements at some of the hearings, including statements about notice to creditors-the source of the problem of this case, her allegations are either not supported by the record or, in fact, are directly controverted by her own pleadings, or lack thereof.

BACKGROUND

On November 6, 1997 Chandra Moy Chang, the pro se debtor (the “Debtor”), filed her Chapter 13 petition along with a creditor matrix. 2 Pinellas County is not listed on the original matrix but the Debt- or acknowledges that she owes or owed ad valorem taxes 3 on income property in Florida. Although the Debtor’s schedules are replete with inconsistencies, 4 there is *300 no dispute that Pinellas County holds an oversecured involuntary lien on the Debt- or’s property located in Pinellas County, Florida pursuant to Florida law. 5

On November 20, 1997 the Debtor filed a plan (the “Original Plan”). The Original Plan proposed to pay Pinellas County $125 per month for 60 months for a total of $7,500, the face amount of the scheduled claim. The Original Plan does not provide for the payment of interest on the taxes. There is nothing, however, that demonstrates that the Debtor served the Original Plan on Pinellas County. Indeed there is no certificate of service for the Original Plan in the file or reflected on the docket. Moreover, in late December 1997, when the Clerk’s Office of the Bankruptcy Court mailed the Notice of Commencement of the Case to the creditors on the creditor matrix, Pinellas County was not listed on the matrix. Thus the Clerk’s Office did not serve the County with the Notice.

On March 26, 1998 the Original Plan, as modified, 6 was confirmed. The County contends that it had no prior notice of the confirmation hearing but none of its pleadings or statements of counsel indicate whether it had knowledge of the bankruptcy and the plan prior to the confirmation hearing. Although the Debtor made a single statement at one of the hearings that her creditors got notice, she has not offered any evidence to support this statement. Indeed the record, lacking a certificate of service for the Original Plan and containing an incomplete creditor matrix, supports a contrary finding: the County did not get proper notice of the Original Plan and confirmation hearing.

Pinellas County filed a proof of claim for the tax year 1997 on April 15, 1998 — one day before the bar date for filing claims in this matter. In its proof of claim Pinellas County asserted a secured claim of $2,513.81 plus interest of $37.71 per month. 7 This interest figure is based on *301 the rate of 18% per annum. Following confirmation the Debtor filed several claims objections. She did not object to the claim of Pinellas County.

The County acknowledges it received the first check from the Chapter 13 Trustee, who was making distributions in accordance with the Original Plan, in April, 1998. The County did not apply said payments to its claim but held those payments in a suspense account and continued to add interest at the statutory delinquency rate to the 1997 tax obligation.

In June 2001 the pitfalls into which this pro se Debtor stumbled came to light when she filed a motion to amend her confirmed Original Plan, as modified, along with a proposed First Amended Plan. Before the time to object to the proposed First Amended Plan had expired, the Debtor filed a second motion to amend the confirmed Original Plan, as modified, along with a proposed Second Amended Plan. Both the First and Second Amended Plans were proposed in an attempt to cure post confirmation taxes owed on the Florida property. 8 Although neither plan met the requirements for confirmation, these pleadings, however, spurred the parties to action and crystallized the issues now before the Court. 9

There are several issues which the parties have raised including, the appropriate rate of interest to be applied to Pinellas County’s claim prepetition; whether Pinel-las County is entitled to postpetition interest and if so, at what rate; and whether this Debtor may amend her plan to cure postpetition tax arrearage. Because many of these issues evaporate if the Original Plan, which does not provide for interest on the County’s claim is binding on Pinel-las County, the Court first needs to address the effect of the confirmation order.

RES JUDICATA

Ordinarily principles of res judicata prevent a subsequent attack on the confirmation of a plan. 11 U.S.C. § 1327(a). 10 Indeed, the policy favoring the finality of a confirmation order is so strong that a “creditor may not ignore the confirmation process and fail to object [to the amount or classification of his claim] simply because the bar date for filing a proof of claim has yet to expire.” Factors Funding Co. v. Fili (In re Fili), 257 B.R. 370, 373 (1st Cir. BAP 2001). 11 If he does *302 so, his later-filed claim is barred by the confirmation order. Id. As the Fill court noted, however, in order for a debtor to bind his creditors to the terms of the confirmed plan, he must provide “a procedurally proper and plain notice that its interests are in jeopardy....” Id. Provisions of confirmed Chapter 13 plan are not binding on creditors to extent that the confirmation order was entered in violation of those creditors’ due process rights. Piedmont Trust Bank v. Linkous (In re Linkous),

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
274 B.R. 295, 2002 Bankr. LEXIS 170, 2002 WL 373095, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-chang-mab-2002.