In Re Dionne

402 B.R. 883, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 815, 2009 WL 1024094
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Wisconsin
DecidedApril 15, 2009
Docket08-34135
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 402 B.R. 883 (In Re Dionne) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Dionne, 402 B.R. 883, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 815, 2009 WL 1024094 (Wis. 2009).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION ON OBJECTION TO CONFIRMATION

SUSAN V. KELLEY, Bankruptcy Judge.

Facts and Procedural Background

In In re Nockerts, this Court held that debtors who intended to surrender then-home to their mortgage lender could nevertheless deduct the mortgage payments as “scheduled as contractually due” on their Chapter 7 means test. 357 B.R. 497 (Bankr.E.D.Wis.2006). The Nockerts opinion contains a lengthy quote from In re Crittendon, concluding that the issue may be “materially different” in the Chapter 13 context. 2006 WL 2547102, 2006 Bankr.LEXIS 2172 (Bankr.M.D.N.C. Sept. 1, 2006). This is a Chapter 13 case in which Douglas and Virginia Dionne (the “Debtors”) propose to surrender a vehicle to their secured creditor, but have deducted the $226 monthly car payment in computing their projected disposable income. The Trustee has objected to confirmation of their plan, and the Debtors have responded that the Court should reexamine the dicta in Nockerts and allow the deduction.

Analysis

The Trustee contends that the Debtors are not dedicating all of their projected disposable income to unsecured creditors, as required by § 1325(b)(1)(B) of the Bankruptcy Code, which states:

(b)(1) If the trustee or the holder of an allowed unsecured claim objects to the confirmation of the plan, then the court may not approve the plan unless, as of the effective date of the plan ...
(B) the plan provides that all of the debtor’s projected disposable income to be received in the applicable commitment period beginning on the date that the first payment is due under the plan will be applied to make payments to unsecured creditors under the plan.

11 U.S.C. § 1325(b)(1)(B).

The Bankruptcy Code defines “disposable income” as the debtor’s current monthly income less the amounts reasonably necessary to be expended for the debtor’s support. 11 U.S.C. § 1325(b)(2). Current monthly income is another defined term, and generally is the debtor’s average monthly income from the six months prior to the petition. 11 U.S.C. § 101(10A).

Significantly, for debtors with income above the state median, § 1325(b)(3) states that deductions for “amounts reasonably necessary to be expended under paragraph (2) ... shall be” calculated in accordance with § 707(b)(2)(A) and (B). Section 707(b)(2) is the Chapter 7 “means test” provision. This Court recognized the mandatory nature and often anomalous results of § 1325(b)(3) in In re Guzman: “Although contrary to the stated purpose of BAPCPA and seemingly discriminatory against chapter 13 debtors with incomes below the median, the unambiguous language of the new statute compels but one answer: the above-median debtor’s expense deductions are governed by Form B22C, not by Schedule J.” 345 B.R. 640, *885 643 (Bankr.E.D.Wis.2006); see also In re Quigley, 391 B.R. 294, 314 (Bankr.N.D.W.Va.2008) (“The expense deductions allowed by § 707(b)(2)(A)(iii), as imported into Chapter 13 by § 1325(b)(3), are a set of rules to be rigidly applied — they are not standards subject to judicial discretion and interpretation.”) In computing the minimum amount that they must pay to unsecured creditors under their plan, does the mandatory application of § 707(b)(2)(A)(iii) (permitting deduction of secured payments that are scheduled as contractually due) allow the above-median Debtors in this case to deduct payments to their secured creditor, even though the Debtors propose to make no payments to that creditor, and in fact intend to surrender the secured creditor’s collateral?

In one of the first cases to confront this issue, In re Burmeister, Judge Goldgar carefully analyzed whether the phrase “scheduled as contractually due” in § 707(b)(2)(A)(iii)(I) should be construed differently in Chapter 13 than Chapter 7, and the relevance of the Chapter 13 debt- or’s intention to surrender the collateral. 378 B.R. 227 (Bankr.N.D.Ill.2007). He concluded that amounts scheduled as contractually due are determined at the petition date whether in Chapter 7 or Chapter 13, and should be deducted regardless of whether the debtor intends to surrender the collateral after the petition. See also Hildebrand, v. Thomas (In re Thomas), 395 B.R. 914 (6th Cir. BAP 2008) (discerning no logical reason why disposable income should be calculated differently in Chapter 13 than it is in Chapter 7); In re Turner, 384 B.R. 537 (Bankr.S.D.Ind.2008) (debtor’s $1,521 mortgage payment was not included in disposable income even though debtor intended to surrender the home). In other words, the determination is the same in Chapter 13 and Chapter 7, because the Code requires application of § 707(b)(2)(A)(iii) in both Chapters, and that provision directs the court to examine whether a debtor has scheduled payments as of the date of the petition. Although the debtors in Burmeister intended to surrender the collateral, the payments “were nonetheless ‘contractually due’ and so had to be deducted under section 707(b)(2)(A)(iii)(I).” Burmeister, 378 B.R. at 231 (quoting Keith M. Lundin, Chapter IS Bankruptcy, § 485.1 (3d ed. 2000 & Supp.2006), and noting that amounts “contractually due” under this provision will “include amounts that will never be paid through any Chapter 13 plan because ... the collateral will be surrendered”).

Although numerous courts have adopted Judge Goldgar’s reasoning in Burmeister, see, e.g., In re Willette, 395 B.R. 308 (Bankr.D.Vt.2008), the viewpoint is not unanimous. For example, the Crittendon court, cited in Nockerts, and my colleague in In re Van Bodegom Smith, differentiate between Chapter 13 and Chapter 7 cases in allowing the deduction of payments when the collateral is being surrendered. 383 B.R. 441 (Bankr.E.D.Wis.2008). The analysis in Crittendon, followed by Van Bodegom Smith, hinges on the language in § 1325(b)(1) that “as of the effective date of the plan,” the projected disposable income must be dedicated to payment of unsecured creditors. Since the debtor will have surrendered the collateral at or before plan confirmation, these cases conclude that no payments are contractually due as of that date. However, the petition date, not the effective date of the plan, controls the timing of the calculation of a debtor’s projected disposable income, because § 1325(b)(3) mandates that expenses “shall be” those specified in § 707(b)(2)(A) and (B), and § 707(b)(2)(A)(iii) expressly refers to the “60 months following the petition date,” in delineating the payments to be deducted. This specific definitional language would be rendered meaningless if the confirmation date were the operative date. See In re Smith, 401 B.R. 469 (Bankr.W.D.Wash.2008); Willette, supra, *886 395 B.R.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
402 B.R. 883, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 815, 2009 WL 1024094, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-dionne-wieb-2009.