In Re Estrada

322 B.R. 149
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. California
DecidedMarch 7, 2005
Docket19-20584
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 322 B.R. 149 (In Re Estrada) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Estrada, 322 B.R. 149 (Cal. 2005).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION

MICHAEL S. MCMANUS, Chief Judge.

The chapter 13 debtors, Alejandro and Lourdes Estrada, move for entry of their discharge on the ground that they have completed their plan payments. Their motion will be granted.

I

The debtors’ chapter 13 plan obligated them to pay a total of $19,950 to the trustee for the benefit of their creditors. This amount was to be paid in 42 monthly installments of $475. Their first plan payment was due in November 2000 and, assuming all subsequent payments were tendered when due, the debtors’ last plan payment should have been paid in April 2004.

The debtors made all of their plan payments. Indeed, instead of 42 monthly installments of $475, they made 43 such payments.

The overpayment was apparently prompted by the trustee’s slight miscalculation of the dividend due general unsecured creditors. Rather than receive a 10.78% dividend (a gross amount of $7,355.17) as calculated by the trustee, general unsecured creditors were entitled to only a 9.28% dividend (a gross amount of $6,333.70). To pay the $1,019.47 difference, the trustee took the position that the debtors would have to pay a 43rd and 44th monthly installment of $475 and a final installment of $69.47.

The debtors made the 43rd monthly plan payment and then realized the trustee’s error and made no further payments. This motion followed, although not before the trustee had disbursed the extra plan payment to creditors. As a result, the trustee is not now able to file his final report and account. He must first recover the $475 erroneously paid to creditors and then refund it to the debtors.

Even though the trustee is not now in a position to file and serve his final report *151 and account, the court will grant the debtors’ discharge. This motion demonstrates that all plan payments have been paid and that all dividends promised by the plan have been paid in full.

II

In In re Avery, 272 B.R. 718 (Bankr.E.D.Cal.2002), this court determined that, as a matter of routine, it would not enter a chapter 13 discharge until after the trustee’s final report and account had been approved. The court held:

If the purpose of the final report in a chapter 13 case is to insure that the trustee has fully administered the estate, and if payment of claims in accordance with the plan is an element of administering the estate, one would expect the court to issue the debtor’s discharge after it approves the final report. See e.g., Cisneros v. United States (In re Cisneros), 994 F.2d 1462, 1464 (9th Cir.1993) (where the court relied on the trustee’s final report in issuing a discharge); In re Bergolla, 232 B.R. 515, 516 (Bankr.S.D.Fla.1999) (where the debtors filed a motion to compel the trustee to issue her final report “so the Debtors could obtain their discharge”). Logic suggests that the entry of a chapter 13 discharge, like approval of the final report, hinges upon a showing that claims were paid in accordance with the plan.

In re Avery, 272 B.R. at 728-29.

The debtors in Avery argued that because section 1328(a) requires only the “completion of plan payments” as a prerequisite to a discharge, the court was required to enter a discharge even if plan payments were insufficient to permit the trustee to pay claims in accordance with the plan.

The court rejected this argument. Instead, it concluded that a chapter 13 debt- or “is entitled to a discharge only if ... [the plan] payments permitted the trustee to pay claims ‘in accordance with the plan.’ ” In re Avery, 272 B.R. at 729. After all, the debtor’s payments to the trustee and the trustee’s payments to creditors are obviously related.

If the trustee has been able to pay all dividends promised by the plan, the debtor must have made all plan payments. The final report and account may be approved and the discharge entered.

If the trustee has not paid claims in accordance with the plan, either the debtor did not make all plan payments necessary to fund the promised dividends, or the debtor made the necessary plan payments but the trustee failed to disburse them in accordance with the plan. In the former case, it is premature to enter a discharge or approve the final report and account. In the latter, the debtor is entitled to a discharge even though approval of a final report and account must await the trustee’s corrective action.

This might require, in instances where the trustee has failed to disburse funds on hand to creditors, that he distribute those funds. In a case where the trustee pays a dividend in excess of what the plan requires, the trustee must recover the overpayment and then redistribute it to the correct creditor(s) or refund it to the debtor. If the trustee cannot recover the overpayment, he may have to dig into his own pocket and make good the misdirected plan dividend. See Nash v. Kester (In re Nash), 765 F.2d 1410, 1415 (9th Cir.1985).

In the hopefully rare instance where a debtor has paid the amounts required by the plan and fully funded the promised dividends but the trustee has not paid those dividends, there is no need to delay the debtor’s discharge until the trustee has *152 taken the appropriate corrective action. One way or another, the trustee will pay the dividends required by the plan.

In this case, the error made by the trustee in administering plan payments came to light before the trustee had filed and served a proposed final report and account. Even without the final report and account, however, it is clear that all plan payments have been made by the debtors and were sufficient to fund the dividends promised by the plan. The trustee collected too much money from the debtors and the overpayment must be recovered and returned to them.

In Avery, this court acknowledged that “in appropriate circumstances,” it would enter a discharge prior to approval of a final report and account. See In re Avery, 272 B.R. at 731. This case presents an appropriate circumstance. 1

The debtors’ motion was served on the trustee and all creditors. It is supported by evidence establishing that they have completed their plan payments and that those payments were sufficient to fund the dividends promised to creditors. These facts have not been controverted. The only problem is that the trustee collected $475 more than necessary and distributed that amount to general unsecured creditors. He acknowledges that the overpayment must be recovered and refunded to the debtors. When this is done, he will file and serve his final report and account. Under the circumstances, there is no reason to delay a discharge until that final report and account is approved.

Ill

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
322 B.R. 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estrada-caeb-2005.