In re: David Carl Willi and Holly Noel Willi

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Hawaii
DecidedJune 23, 2026
Docket26-00113
StatusUnknown

This text of In re: David Carl Willi and Holly Noel Willi (In re: David Carl Willi and Holly Noel Willi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Hawaii primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re: David Carl Willi and Holly Noel Willi, (Haw. 2026).

Opinion

Date Signed: June 23, 2026 ky ee SO ORDERED.

Wey Robert J. Faris Ser oF ge United States Bankruptcy Judge

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT

DISTRICT OF HAWAII

In re: Case No.: 26-00113 Chapter 13 DAVID CARL WILLI and HOLLY NOEL WILLI Related: ECF 30 Debtors.

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION ON MOTION TO DISMISS CHAPTER 13 CASE BASED ON INELIGIBILITY This decision addresses whether debtors David Carl Willi and Holly Noel Willi owe too much debt to be eligible for chapter 13 relief.

I. Facts and Procedural Background According to Mr. and Mrs. Willi’s schedules, they owe secured debts

totaling $1,531,908.00. ECF 1 at 20. Their most recently amended schedules

list 219 unsecured creditors with claims totaling $361,248.77. But this total

amount comprises only fifteen of the 219 scheduled claims, because the

other 204 claims are listed with zero amounts. Further, they list 150 of the 219 scheduled claims as unliquidated, contingent, or both.

The chapter 13 trustee moved to dismiss this case, arguing that Mr. and Mrs. Willi’s debts exceed the limit for chapter 13 eligibility. ECF 30. He

points out that secured creditors have filed claims totaling $1,698,854.21, which is greater than the limit of $1,580,125.00, and that filed unsecured

claims total $3,765,457.83, which far exceeds the limit of $526,700.00. Mr. and Mrs. Willi respond that eligibility is determined based on

their schedules, not the filed claims, as long as they completed their schedules in good faith.

II. Legal Standard Chapter 13 relief is only available to individuals and married couples

who owe, “on the date of the filing of the petition, noncontingent, liquidated, unsecured debts of less than $526,700 and noncontingent,

liquidated, secured debts of less than $1,580,125 . . . .” 11 U.S.C. § 109(e). A debt is “noncontingent” for purposes of this section “if all events giving rise to liability occurred prior to the filing of the bankruptcy

petition.” Loya v. Rapp (In re Loya), 123 B.R. 338, 340 (B.A.P. 9th Cir. 1991). For example, a debt based on a guarantee of another person’s debt is often

contingent on the principal obligor’s default. If the principal obligor has not defaulted or any other conditions to the guarantor’s liability have not

occurred by the petition date, the guarantor’s debt does not count against the chapter 13 debt limit.

A debt is “liquidated” within the meaning of this section if the debtor’s liability is capable of “ready determination and precision in

computation of the amount due” or “is capable of ascertainment by reference to an agreement or by simple computation.” Id. at 340. For

example, unadjudicated tort claims are typically unliquidated because the amount of damages is not based on a set formula and can often be fixed

only after a full trial on the merits. In contrast, contract claims are generally liquidated because a formula dictates the damages computation.

The bankruptcy schedules ask debtors to state, not only whether each debt is noncontingent and liquidated, but also whether the debt is disputed. Debtors sometimes seem to treat the words “liquidated” and

“undisputed” as synonyms. This is incorrect: a debt can be “liquidated” even if the debtor disputes liability or damages. Slack v. Wilshire Ins. Co, (In

re Slack), 187 F.3d 1070, 1075 (9th Cir. 1999) (“We hold that a debt is liquidated if the amount is readily ascertainable, notwithstanding the fact

that the question of liability has not been finally decided.”). Other provisions of the Bankruptcy Code make clear that a debt can

be both disputed and liquidated. While section 109(e) categorizes claims as contingent or noncontingent and liquidated versus unliquidated, the Code

elsewhere distinguishes between claims that are disputed or undisputed. For example, the Code provides that only a person who holds a claim that

is that is “not contingent as to liability or the subject of a bona fide dispute as to liability or amount” can file an involuntary petition against a debtor. 11

U.S.C. § 303(b)(1) (emphasis added). The plain language of section 109(e) makes clear that disputed debts count against the eligibility limits (unless

the disputed debt is also contingent or unliquidated). This leaves the question of how the court determines what debts count against the debt limit and in what amounts. The Ninth Circuit has

answered that question: “We now simply and explicitly state the rule for determining Chapter 13 eligibility under § 109(e) to be that eligibility

should normally be determined by the debtor's originally filed schedules, checking only to see if the schedules were made in good faith.” Scovis v.

Henrichsen (In re Scovis), 249 F.3d 975, 982 (9th Cir. 2001). The Bankruptcy Code does not define “good faith.” In standard legal

usage, the phrase means honesty in fact. U.C.C. § 1-201(b)(20). In other words, Mr. and Mrs. Willi’s schedules control the debt limit

calculation, as long as the debtors had a subjectively honest reason to schedule their debts in the way they did.1

III. Discussion Scovis destroys the original basis for the trustee’s motion. The motion

relied solely on the filed proofs of claim, not the schedules. But as Mr. and

1 The Code, the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure, and the binding case law do not state who bears the burdens of proof and persuasion on the issue of eligibility. I am inclined to follow decisions from other circuits holding that the debtors bear those burdens because they are the party that is attempting to change the status quo and because they have better access to the relevant information than any other party. See Montgomery v. Ryan (In re Montgomery), 37 F.3d 413, 415 (8th Cir. 1994) (holding that the burden of establishing eligibility in section 109(e) falls on the debtor even when the issue is raised by a creditor). Given the current record, however, I would reach the same result even if the trustee bore the burdens. Mrs. Willi pointed out in their opposition, Scovis requires the court to rely

primarily, and perhaps exclusively, on the debtors’ schedules. In his reply memo, the trustee acknowledges the correct standard

and argues that, if a party makes a good faith objection to eligibility, the court can look beyond the schedules to determine whether Mr. and Mrs.

Willi listed their debts in good faith. This is the correct approach. Thus, my task is not to determine whether the schedules are objectively correct, but

to determine whether Mr. and Mrs. Willi completed them in a subjectively honest fashion. Neither Mr. and Mrs. Willi nor the trustee have requested

an evidentiary hearing or an opportunity to present additional evidence. Mr. and Mrs. Willi have scheduled most of their debts as disputed.

As the trustee correctly argues, this is irrelevant to the eligibility calculus because disputed debts count against the eligibility limits.

Mr. and Mrs. Willi have also scheduled most of their debts as unliquidated. They seem to conflate the terms “unliquidated” and

“disputed.” It is probably true that the final amount of many of these claims is undetermined, and that Mr. and Mrs.

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