In Re Garner

113 B.R. 352, 1990 Bankr. LEXIS 850, 1990 WL 52047
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedApril 6, 1990
Docket19-11201
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 113 B.R. 352 (In Re Garner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Garner, 113 B.R. 352, 1990 Bankr. LEXIS 850, 1990 WL 52047 (Ohio 1990).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OP DECISION

DAVID F. SNOW, Bankruptcy Judge.

This memorandum considers the propriety of permitting the Internal Revenue Service (the “IRS”) to amend its proof of claim after the expiration of the bar date to promote one of its claims from general unsecured to priority status. I sustained the Debtors’ objection to the IRS amendment at a hearing on January 23, 1990. At that hearing counsel for the IRS advised that he might appeal the Court’s ruling. I reserved the right to explain the basis for my decision in a written opinion if an appeal were taken.

The order reflecting the Court’s decision was entered on February 15, 1990 (the “Order”). The Order was approved by the attorney for the Debtors, the Chapter 13 Standing Trustee, the Assistant United States Attorney representing the IRS and the attorney for Beneficial Mortgage Company, the holder of a second mortgage on Debtors’ home (“Beneficial”), which had also objected to the IRS proposed amendment at the January 23 hearing. Paragraph l.c. of the Order provided that the IRS amended claim “is allowed in part and disallowed in part as follows: ... (c) The sum of $4,686.70 is allowed as an UNSECURED GENERAL claim.” On February 26, 1990 the IRS filed with the district court a notice appealing this portion of the Order and asserting that the $4,686.70 should have been accorded priority status.

Although I am unaware of any explicit procedure authorizing the trial judge to write an opinion after notice that his judgment has been appealed, the manner in which chapter 13 cases are administered and contested issues in those cases decided, makes this procedure particularly useful, at least where so doing will not delay or impede the appeal or impose upon any party an element of unfair surprise inconsistent with the adversary process. The parties have been advised of my intent to write this memorandum and it does not appear that this memorandum will delay or in any way impede the appeal.

The Debtors’ objection to the IRS amended claim was only one of about 124 matters heard on the Court’s January 23 chapter 13 docket. It is critical to the administration of chapter 13 cases that disputes be resolved as expeditiously and summarily as possible. The typical chapter 13 case is filed to stave off foreclosure of his home by a debtor who is at the low end of the income scale and often at the brink of poverty. The chapter 13 process usually requires the debtor and/or his lawyer to schedule his debts, to project his income and obligations, to develop a reorganization plan and to attend several hearings prior to *354 the court’s confirmation of his plan. For these efforts debtors’ counsel were at the time this plan was confirmed typically allowed less than $750 for guiding the plan to confirmation. Where, as in this case, there are serious post confirmation problems, the debtor’s ability to compensate his lawyer, at least fully, is problematic. From the creditor’s perspective, the amounts at stake in the typical chapter 13 case require that disputes be resolved quickly and efficiently.

These constraints limit the amount of time and effort which counsel can as a practical matter devote to disputed matters. The vast majority of issues are settled. Of those that are not, few involve evidentiary hearings; most, as in this ease, are submitted on a combination of the parties’ pleadings and counsels’ statements to the Court and appeals are rare. This means that the record in chapter 13 disputes is often sparse and unfocused and that the legal analysis, at least as reflected in the record, is often limited and perfunctory. Where an appeal is taken, this makes it particularly useful for the court which decided the matter to explain the basis for its decisions to the court hearing the appeal. Notwithstanding the foregoing, it should be noted that counsel for the parties did a good job of briefing this matter.

Background

The Debtors filed their case on July 8, 1988. That filing included a list of the Debtors’ creditors including the IRS, schedules of the Debtors’ income and obligations and the Debtors’ proposed plan of reorganization. As originally filed, Debtors’ plan provided that the IRS claim for 1984 federal income tax would be paid in full as a priority claim. Subsequently, Debtors’ proposed plan was modified to provide the IRS $80 monthly as a priority claim without describing the IRS taxes to which the claim related. These modifications were made at the request of the Chapter 13 Trustee and to meet the objection filed by Beneficial. Debtors amended plan came on for hearing on October 4,1988 and was confirmed without objection.

The IRS filed its original proof of claim on November 14, 1988, three days before the November 17 bar date. According to that proof of claim the Debtors owed the IRS $4,505.14 as priority claims for 1985 and 1986 taxes, interest and penalties and $4,768.99 as general unsecured claims for 1984 income taxes, interest and penalties. The order confirming the plan was entered November 29, 1988. Pursuant to the confirmed plan, the Debtors committed to pay the Chapter 13 Trustee $288.50 biweekly for 60 months, the maximum period permitted under section 1322(c) of the Bankruptcy Code. But confirmation did not end Debtors' problems.

By an order entered November 22, 1988 the Debtors had agreed with their first mortgagee, Third Federal Savings and Loan Association (“Third Federal”) that Third Federal would be granted relief from the automatic stay to foreclose its mortgage on Debtors’ home if Debtors fell two months behind in their regular mortgage payments. On September 19, 1989, the Chapter 13 Trustee filed a motion to dismiss Debtors’ case because Third Federal had filed a secured proof of claim for some $5,000 more than had been scheduled by the Debtors with the result that the Debtors’ plan would extend beyond the permissible 60-month period and would, therefore, be rendered infeasible. This filing prompted Debtors to object to the Third Federal claim and to file an amendment to their confirmed plan in order to avoid dismissal of their case. Ultimately the Court approved the amendment, which reduced the payment to unsecured creditors from sixty percent to six percent.

The IRS never formally objected to Debtors’ amendment to its confirmed plan, even though it would continue to receive under the amended plan $80 per month — less than half of the amount required if its amended claim were allowed. In any event Debtors’ motion to amend its confirmed plan apparently prompted the IRS to reexamine its original proof of claim and to conclude that it had improperly characterized its 1984 claims as general unsecured when in fact they were entitled to priority status. The IRS filed its amended proof of claim with *355 the Court on November 7, 1989, 13 months after Debtors’ plan was confirmed and about a year after the bar date and the date on which the IRS original proof of claim had been filed.

The Debtors’ dispute with the IRS on its amended claim surfaced first on the Court’s November 21, 1989 chapter 13 docket at a hearing on the Trustee’s motion to dismiss Debtors’ case. The IRS and the Debtors were instructed to advise the Court whether a factual hearing would be necessary to resolve their dispute or whether the matter could be decided on briefs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
113 B.R. 352, 1990 Bankr. LEXIS 850, 1990 WL 52047, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-garner-ohnb-1990.