In Re Erwin

376 B.R. 897, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 3331, 2007 WL 2907998
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, C.D. Illinois
DecidedOctober 1, 2007
Docket07-80143
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 376 B.R. 897 (In Re Erwin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, C.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Erwin, 376 B.R. 897, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 3331, 2007 WL 2907998 (Ill. 2007).

Opinion

*899 OPINION

THOMAS L. PERKINS, Chief Judge.

This matter is before the Court for confirmation of the Amended Chapter 13 Plan filed by the Debtors, Kenneth E. Erwin and Melissa A. Erwin (DEBTORS). A secured creditor, Americredit Financial Services, Inc. (AFS), objects on the basis that the Amended Plan fails to provide for its secured claim to be paid in equal monthly payments. This Court determines that the equal payment provision, directed at debtors and not Chapter 13 trustees, does not require a trustee’s monthly payments to secured creditors to be perfectly equal in amount. Trustees may continue to pay debtors’ attorney fees on an accelerated basis despite the resulting increase in secured creditor payments once the attorney is fully paid. For the reasons set forth herein, the Objection will be denied and the Amended Plan will be confirmed.

The DEBTORS filed their Chapter 13 petition on January 26, 2007. Under the Amended Plan, the DEBTORS are to pay the Chapter 13 Trustee (TRUSTEE) $875.00 per month for sixty months for total payments of $52,500.00. Importantly, the DEBTORS proposed payments to the TRUSTEE are level for the entire term of the Amended Plan.

The Amended Plan calls for the TRUSTEE to pay two secured claims, one to National City Mortgage (NCM) in the amount of $18,999.93 to cure a prepetition arrearage on the DEBTORS’ home mortgage, and the second to AFS secured by a 2005 Chevrolet Venture in the amount of $19,382.00 to be paid, with interest at 10.25%, “in prorata payments set forth by the Trustee.” Subsequent to the filing of the Amended Plan, the DEBTORS and AFS stipulated that the correct amount of AFS’s secured claim is $19,316.26 and that the rate of interest to be paid on the claim is 11.25%. The Amended Plan also provides that the TRUSTEE’S fee and the DEBTORS’ attorney fees of $2,484.00 are to be paid by the TRUSTEE. After those claims are paid, the remaining plan payments are to be disbursed to the holders of allowed unsecured claims on a prorata basis, with an estimated dividend of 1%.

AES objects to confirmation of the Amended Plan claiming that it cannot be confirmed because it violates Section 1325(a)(5)(B)(iii) (referred to as the “equal payment provision”), a recently enacted change to the Bankruptcy Code. Added by BAPCPA, 1 and effective October 17, 2005, the provision in question is as follows:

(a) Except as provided in subsection (b), the court shall confirm a plan if—
(5) with respect to each allowed secured claim provided for by the plan—
(B) (iii) if—
(I) property to be distributed pursuant to this subsection is in the form of periodic payments, such *900 payments shall be in equal monthly amounts; and
(II) the holder of the claim is secured by personal property, the amount of such payments shall not be less than an amount sufficient to provide to the holder of such claim adequate protection during the period of the plan.

11 U.S.C. § 1325(a)(5)(B)(iii). 2 The new provision, argues AFS, requires the Amended Plan to state an exact monthly payment amount to be paid to AFS and requires all payments that the TRUSTEE makes to AFS to be in that amount. The effect of this provision, contends AFS, is to render obsolete the prevailing practice in this District of prorata payments to secured and priority creditors.

Initially, AFS also objected on the basis that it was entitled to be paid interest on its secured claim at its contract rate of 21.95% and that the Amended Plan was not proposed in good faith. These objections have since been resolved by the stipulation between the DEBTORS and AFS. It should also be noted that AFS is receiving preconfirmation monthly adequate protection payments from the TRUSTEE as required by Section 1326(a)(1)(C). AFS does not contend that the amount of the payments it is now receiving or the amount that it is scheduled to receive under the Amended Plan is less than required to adequately protect its interest as required by Section 1325(a)(5)(B)(iii)(II) and Section 1326(a)(1)(C). The DEBTORS take no position regarding the objection, viewing it as primarily impacting the TRUSTEE’S administration of the Amended Plan.

The TRUSTEE contends that the equal payment provision has no effect on the prorata payment practice. Drawing a distinction between what a plan provides as drafted by a debtor and the practical reality of how payments are actually made by the trustee, the TRUSTEE argues that Section 1325(a)(5)(B)(iii)(I) does not require that each payment made to a secured creditor by a trustee under a confirmed Chapter 13 plan be exactly equal in amount. The TRUSTEE is troubled by the effect such a rule, if binding on him, would have on the payment of attorney fees and on the administration of cases generally.

Bankruptcy courts have addressed the equal payment provision with some consternation. A creative response to the equal payment conundrum was developed in In re DeSardi, 340 B.R. 790, 809-10 (Bankr.S.D.Tex.2006), an opinion addressing the same issue in three different cases. Each debtor filed a plan proposing to retain a secured vehicle and began making preconfirmation adequate protection payments to the lienholder at the rate of 1.5% of the scheduled value of the vehicle, pursuant to a procedure established by local rule. Recognizing that payment in full of the debtor’s attorney fees, ordered by local rule to be paid on an accelerated basis, would occur a few months into the plan and result in an increase in the monthly payment amount being paid to the secured creditor, causing the payments to become unequal, each debtor proposed a plan that deferred the commencement of the payments to the secured creditor until the attorney fees were fully paid. The credi *901 tors’ plan payments were thus scheduled to begin in the sixth, fifth and seventh month of the plan, respectively, remaining equal in amount until the secured claim was paid in full. The debtors asserted that Section 1325(a)(5)(B)(iii)(I) only requires that the payments be level once they begin and that commencement could be deferred to a month of the debtor’s choosing so long as the creditor’s interest remained adequately protected. The court agreed with the debtors and confirmed the plans. Accord, In re Hill, 2007 WL 499622 (Bankr.M.D.N.C.2007). Contra, In re Denton, 370 B.R. 441 (Bankr.S.D.Ga. 2007).

Three other bankruptcy courts have addressed the equal payment provision in the context of a plan calling for a secured creditor to receive a large balloon payment at the end of the plan, determining with no difficulty that the proposed balloon payment violates the equal payment provision. In re Schultz, 363 B.R. 902 (Bankr. E.D.Wis.2007); In re Lemieux, 347 B.R. 460 (Bankr.D.Mass.2006); In re Wagner, 342 B.R. 766 (Bankr.E.D.Tenn.2006).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
376 B.R. 897, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 3331, 2007 WL 2907998, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-erwin-ilcb-2007.