In re: David C. Welsh and Sharon N. Welsh

465 B.R. 843
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 17, 2012
DocketBAP MT-10-1465-PePaH; Bankruptcy 10-61285
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 465 B.R. 843 (In re: David C. Welsh and Sharon N. Welsh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re: David C. Welsh and Sharon N. Welsh, 465 B.R. 843 (bap9 2012).

Opinions

OPINION

PERRIS, Bankruptcy Judge.

In this chapter 132 case, the bankruptcy court confirmed a chapter 13 plan under which debtors David and Sharon Welsh (“debtors”) proposed to retain and continue to make payments on six vehicle loans and that did not take into account monthly Social Security income. The chapter 13 trustee appeals the order confirming the plan, arguing that the bankruptcy court should have considered both the payments on what he characterizes as unnecessary vehicles and the Social Security income in determining whether the plan was proposed in good faith.

Because we conclude that the bankruptcy court applied the correct legal standard in determining good faith, we AFFIRM.

FACTS

Debtors filed a chapter 13 petition in May 2010. Debtors had moved to Montana from North Carolina in 2006. After living in rented housing for a time, debtors purchased an unfinished house and obtained a construction loan to complete it. "When the construction loan was insufficient to pay for completion of the work on the house, debtors used credit cards to finance the rest of the construction.

After making payments on the credit card debt for 18 months, debtors consolidated that debt at an interest rate of 15 percent. Thereafter, they encountered financial difficulties and filed a chapter 13 bankruptcy petition.

Sharon Welsh (“Sharon”) works as a nurse at a hospital, earning $6,975 per month. She also receives $1,100 per month in pension income from an earlier employer. David Welsh (“David”) is unable to work because of a medical condition, and his condition will not improve. He is retired and unemployed, but reported that he receives $358 from wages, salary and commission each month. He also receives $1,165 per month in Social Security retirement income.

Debtors valued their house at $400,000, on which they owe $330,593. Their monthly mortgage payment is $2,177. They reported unsecured nonpriority claims of $180,504.15, of which $60,000 is a guaranty of their daughter’s student loan debt. The bulk of the remainder is credit card debt.

They own and make payments on six motor vehicles. According to debtors’ schedules and the proofs of claim filed by secured creditors, many of those vehicles are over-encumbered. According to the schedules, debtors owe $3,065 on one Honda ATV and $4,500 on a second Honda ATV; each is valued at $2,700.3 Debtors have a debt of $37,936 secured by an Airstream trailer valued at $23,000. They own a 2006 Subaru Outback valued at $9,500 on which debtors owe $10,680; a 2005 Toyota Matrix worth $2,200 on which they owe $1,380; and a 2005 Ford F-250 [846]*846valued at $10,000 on which they owe $10,838.

Although David owns the Toyota,4 it is used by debtors’ daughter, who is a medical resident. According to Sharon’s testimony, their daughter is unable to make the payments on the Toyota because she pays approximately $1,000 per month on student loans of $150,000.

Debtors use one of the ATVs to plow their driveway in the winter. Debtors’ house is at the top of a ridge, at the end of a mile-long driveway with hairpin curves. Plowing is necessary because the cars cannot make it up the driveway in the winter unless the driveway is plowed. They also use the ATVs to drive on nearby Nature Conservancy land. They use the Airstream trailer as lodging when they have guests staying with them.

Debtors completed Form B22C, which contains calculations necessary to determine both the required length of a chapter 13 plan and the amount that must be paid to unsecured creditors through the plan. The form requires a calculation of income along with deductions of expenses, to determine what disposable income a debtor has available.

Debtors’ Form B22C lists current monthly income of $8,116.31, which does not include David’s Social Security income. This income is above the median for a household of the size of debtors’ household.

In calculating their deductions from income, debtors deducted, in addition to other unchallenged deductions, monthly payments on the six debts secured by motor vehicles, which total $1,350.22 per month. Deducting all of the expenses from the current monthly income resulted in monthly disposable income listed on Line 59 of Form B22C of $218.12.

Debtors’ Schedules I and J, which set out anticipated income and actual expenses, show monthly income of $7,692.68 (which includes the Social Security payments) and expenses of $7,298.00, for a monthly net income of $394.68. Schedule J shows that the monthly payments on the vehicles total $1,879, including $113 and $158 for the two ATVs, $419 for the Airstream trailer, and $150 for the Toyota that is used by debtors’ daughter.

Debtors’ plan proposes to pay $125 per month for 30 months, then $500 per month for 30 months, for a total of $18,750 in plan payments. The increase is a result of paying off the Subaru, Ford F-250, and Toyota during the life of the plan. Sharon testified that, although the payments on those three vehicles will end during the plan period of sixty months, they will have to replace the Subaru, because it has high mileage and she drives it 75 miles every day.

The trustee objected to confirmation of debtors’ plan, arguing that it was not proposed in good faith. He objected to what he characterizes as “minuscule” payments to unsecured creditors while debtors live in a $400,000 home and make payments on several secured claims, and that debtors failed to commit all of their disposable income to payments but instead are deducting payments for unnecessary secured claims.

The court held a confirmation hearing at which it heard testimony. The bankruptcy court wrote an opinion explaining the decision to confirm the chapter 13 plan over the trustee’s objection. The court concluded that David’s Social Security income was properly excluded from the calculation of [847]*847projected disposable income. It also considered whether the plan was proposed in good faith, as required by § 1325(a)(3). The court took into account the totality of the circumstances and, in particular, addressed the factors set out in Leavitt v. Soto (In re Leavitt), 171 F.3d 1219, 1224-25 (9th Cir.1999). The court rejected the trustee’s argument that the facts that debtor’s plan will pay only 8.5 percent of unsecured claims while debtors retain and continue to make payments on a trailer, two ATVs, and three vehicles, shows egregious conduct that indicates a lack of good faith.

The court also pointed out that the payments on the secured debts are authorized in the means test under § 707(b)(2)(A). Debtors were current on all of those debts, so the court refrained from determining whether the payments were reasonable.

The court rejected the trustee’s argument that debtors’ exclusion of David’s Social Security income from the disposable income calculation shows a lack of good faith. The court concluded that debtors had satisfied their burden of proving that their plan was proposed in good faith, and overruled the trustee’s objections to confirmation.

The trustee appeals. He says that his argument is limited to the bankruptcy court’s determination of good faith, which he argues was based on an incorrect view of the law.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
465 B.R. 843, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-david-c-welsh-and-sharon-n-welsh-bap9-2012.