In re Colley

570 B.R. 346, 2017 Bankr. LEXIS 910
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 31, 2017
DocketCase No. 16-80023-TRC
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 570 B.R. 346 (In re Colley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Colley, 570 B.R. 346, 2017 Bankr. LEXIS 910 (Okla. 2017).

Opinion

OPINION DISALLOWING PROOF OF CLAIM AND CONTINUING CONFIRMATION OF AMENDED PLAN

TOM R. CORNISH, UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY JUDGE

The issues before the Court are 1) whether to sustain Debtor’s objection to home mortgage creditor JP Morgan Chase Bank, NA’s late-filed proof of claim, and 2) whether the Court may confirm Debtor’s Amended Plan which proposes no payment on the mortgage creditor’s $80,000 pre-petition arrearage claim. For reasons set forth below and in accordance with the Court’s Opinion entered in a similar case, No. 16-80071 Nicholas Eugene Thompson, the Court finds that it must disallow Chase’s late-filed claim, and will continue the confirmation hearing on Debtor’s Amended Plan.

I. Jurisdiction

This Court has jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1334 and 157(a). This matter [348]*348is a core proceeding pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(B) and (L).

II. Background

Debtor filed this case along with her Chapter 13 Plan and Summary of Plan on January 16, 2016.1 The Notice of Chapter 13 Bankruptcy was entered and mailed to creditors, including Creditor JPMorgan Chase Bank (“Chase”), that same day. The Notice provided that the Meeting of Creditors would be held February 11, 2016, a confirmation hearing would be held March 10, 2016 with objections to the Plan due the Friday before, and that creditors desiring to receive a distribution under the chapter 13 plan must file a proof of claim by May 11, 2016. Debtor’s Plan listed Chase’s secured claim on her homestead at $ 90,000, payable in 60 monthly payments of $ 556.00 with no interest. It also included payments beginning in month 10 for: pre-petition arrearage of $ 50,203.00 payable at $ 984.37 a month, and post-petition arrearage of $ 556.00 payable at $ 10.90 a month. The only other payments to be made under the plan were on a car loan and for her attorney’s fees. She listed unsecured debts of $2,384.00 in her Petition, but her summary of plan proposed no payments to her unsecured creditors.

The Plan contains numerous notices to creditors that they must ñle a proof of claim and participate in the confirmation process if they expect to receive distributions under the plan. The Plan begins with this warning:

NOTICE TO CREDITORS: YOU SHOULD READ THIS PLAN. EACH PARAGRAPH CONTAINS INFORMATION AND TERMS WHICH MAY AFFECT YOUR RIGHTS, INCLUDING YOUR RIGHT TO PAYMENT OF YOUR CLAIM AND RETENTION OF YOUR LIEN RIGHTS OR SECURITY INTEREST. FAILURE TO OBJECT TO CONFIRMATION OF THIS PLAN OR FAILURE TO TIMELY FILE A PROOF OF CLAIM MAY RESULT IN THE LOSS OF YOUR SECURITY INTEREST OR RIGHT TO PAYMENT. YOU SHOULD CONSULT AN ATTORNEY FOR LEGAL ADVICE.

Following this opening, Section 1 of the Plan includes the definitions of terms used in the plan.

X. Allowed Claims. The following definitions shall apply where no Objection to Claim or Motion to Disallow is filed. Where an Objection to Claim or Motion to Disallow are filed the Allowed Claim Amount shall be the amount allowed pursuant to order of the Court. The Court may completely disallow any secured or unsecured claim that is tardily filed.
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b. The Allowed Class II.A. Continuing Payment Amount shall be amount claimed by the creditor in its timely filed claim. If the creditor fails to file a claim timely then the Allowed Class II.A. Continuing Payment Amount shall be the lesser of the amount provided for by the Summary of Plan or the amount requested in the Proof of Claim from the Beginning Month until the first payment due in the month following the month the claim is filed at which time the Allowed Class II.A. Continuing Payment Amount shall be the amount claimed by the creditor. The Allowed Class II.A. Continu[349]*349ing Payment Amount may only change prospectively based upon a Notice of Mortgage Payment Change or Amended Claim,
c. The Allowed Class II.B. Pre-Petition Arrearage Claim shall be the amount claimed by the creditor in a timely filed claim.

The plan also states that where default is cured and payments maintained on long term debts, liens are retained and the debt shall be declared fully reinstated:

SECTION 5. Classification and Treatment of Claims (11 U.S.C. §§ 1822 and 1325).
CLASS II: Claims provided for under 11 U.S.C. § 1322(b)(5).
Class II Claims are long term debts for which the default will be cured under Class II.B and/or the payments will be maintained until the filing of the Notice of Completion of Plan Payments. Class II claims are not discharged upon entry of a discharge and creditors holding Class II claims shall retain their liens under applicable non-bankruptcy law except that waiver, estoppel, laches and/or issue preclusion shall apply to the creditor and the debt so that the debt shall be fully reinstated on the filing of the Notice of Completion of Plan Payments ....

Trustee filed an objection to this plan on March 1, 2016, on the grounds that the plan was not feasible and that Debtor owed taxes for 2015, The Oklahoma Tax Commission also objected to this plan, but its objection was later withdrawn. Chase’s counsel, Michael J. George III, entered an appearance on March 4, 2016, and filed an Objection to Confirmation. The Objection stated that Chase held a secured claim of $ 58,414.99 plus interest, costs and attorney’s fees on real property in McAlester, Oklahoma. It also stated that the pre-petition arrearage was approximately $ 85,637.97 plus interest, which was $ 35,-434.97 more than Debtor’s plan proposed to pay Chase as a Class II.B Pre-Petition Arrearage Claim. Chase requested that the Court either modify the plan to pay the arrearage claim in full with interest or deny confirmation of the Plan. Chase did not file a proof of claim by the deadline of May 11, 2016. Neither Trustee nor Debtor filed a proof of claim on Chase’s behalf.

The confirmation hearing was continued several times, and Trustee moved to dismiss the case.2 Eventually, an evidentiary hearing on confirmation and Trustee’s dismissal motion was set for August 4, 2016. The day before this hearing, John Richer and Dustin Perry entered their appearances as counsel for Chase. Shortly before the confirmation hearing on August 4, 2016, Debtor filed a First Amended Plan and Summary(Doe. 60) proposing to make direct payments to Chase beginning October 1, 2016, and proposing an eight month plan including a 100% distribution to unsecured creditors. The Court set the confirmation issues on a discovery schedule, and set a pretrial on confirmation for December, 2016. On August 19, 2016, Mr. George filed a proof of claim on behalf of Chase, identifying the amount of the secured claim as $ 136,589.66, and a pre-petition arrearage amount of $ 85,637.97 with interest at 10.375%.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
570 B.R. 346, 2017 Bankr. LEXIS 910, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-colley-okeb-2017.