In Re Gibson

415 B.R. 735, 62 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1359, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 3070, 2009 WL 3193164
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Arizona
DecidedOctober 6, 2009
Docket0:05-bk-01810-RJH
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 415 B.R. 735 (In Re Gibson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Gibson, 415 B.R. 735, 62 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1359, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 3070, 2009 WL 3193164 (Ark. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

RANDOLPH J. HAINES, Bankruptcy Judge.

After failing to satisfy their payment obligations of a confirmed Chapter 13 plan, Debtors now seek to modify the Plan and have their non-exempt property revalued for the purpose of satisfying § 1325(a)(4), 1 colloquially known as the “Chapter 7 reconciliation” or the “best interests test,” which Code § 1329(b) requires to be satisfied by any modified plan. The Court must decide 1) whether the “effective date of the plan” as referenced in the best *737 interest test of § 1325(a)(4) refers to the date of petition or of confirmation, and 2) when a plan is modified under § 1329, whether there is a new “effective date of the plan,” requiring new valuations under § 1325(a)(4), or whether the effective date remains that of the original plan. The Court concludes that 1) the “effective date of the plan” is not the petition date and cannot be earlier than the original confirmation date, and 2) when a plan is modified under § 1329, the “effective date of the plan” remains unchanged.

Factual and Procedural Background

Debtors’ Plan was confirmed in July, 2005. The Plan required Debtors to sell several non-exempt parcels of property and to turn over at least $60,000.00 in proceeds to the Trustee within a 24-month period between November 2005 and October 2007. If the property was not sold within those 24 months, the Debtors were to file a modified plan to provide for an alternative method of funding sufficient to pay 100% of the allowed claims which totaled approximately $168,136.00. Debtors failed to sell the property within the stated time frame and failed to timely file a modified plan. In 2009, the Debtors filed a modified plan after the Trustee filed a motion to dismiss the case for failure to comply with the terms of the confirmed plan.

Debtors’ modified plan does not pay all allowed claims in full but requires the Debtors to turn over proceeds from the sale of one non-exempt property ($8,000.00), surrender another to the Trustee, and abandon a third. Debtors aver that properties not already sold no longer retain any value, so the Debtors cannot meet their obligation to remit the full $60,000.00 to the Trustee as required under the original Plan. Their contention is that a new “best interest” test under § 1325(a)(4) must be performed to determine the value of their non-exempt property as of the new “effective date” of the modified plan. This would cause the Trustee to collect less than the $60,000.00 due under the original Plan and effectively absolve Debtors of any further payments after confirmation of the Modified Plan.

Analysis

“Effective Date of Plan”

The “best interest” test of § 1325(a)(4) requires that:

the value, as of the effective date of the plan, of property to be distributed under the plan on account of each allowed unsecured claim is not less than the amount that would be paid on such claim if the estate of the debtor were liquidated under chapter 7 of this title on such date, (emphasis added)

Nearly identical language is found under the “best interest” tests in Chapter 11 and Chapter 12, § 1129(a)(7)(h) and § 1225(a)(4). And although the term “effective date of the plan” is also used in Chapter 11 and elsewhere in Chapter 13, e.g„ § 1129(b)(2)(A)(ii), § 1325(a)(5)(B)(ii), and § 1328(b)(2), it is not defined in the Code.

Analysis under § 1325(a)(4) requires a court to make two determinations: 1) what is the present value of the property to be distributed to unsecured creditors (the value of the stream of plan payments) as of the “effective date of the plan,” and 2) what would be available to unsecured creditors if a Chapter 7 liquidation were held on the “effective date of the plan.” 2 The “best interest” test has been met if the present value of the distributions to unsecured creditors as of the “effective date of the plan” is equal to or greater *738 than the value of a hypothetical Chapter 7 liquidation held on such date. The first issue is what is the date on which that hypothetical liquidation should be valued.

According to the leading treatise on Chapter 13, most reported cases have performed a hypothetical Chapter 7 liquidation as of the petition date. 3 There does not seem to be any language or structure of the Code that would equate the “effective date” with the petition date except perhaps that Rule 3015(b) requires the Chapter 13 debtor to file a plan with the petition, or shortly thereafter, and begin making payments pursuant to that plan even prior to its confirmation. Some courts that have chosen the petition date as the “effective date of the plan” have done so because exemptions are determined as of the petition date. 4 The reasoning is that because exemptions affect the “best interest” test and confirmation scheduling is unpredictable, valuations should also be determined as of the petition date. 5

The Court concludes that a plan must be confirmed before it can have an effective date. The plan is not “effective” until it is confirmed, as § 1327 “Effect of Confirmation” clearly implies. While confirmation and the “effective date of the plan” may not always be the same date, confirmation must happen first. To choose the petition date as the “effective date” would be to give effect to the plan before it has been confirmed. 6 One logical conclusion is that the “effective date of the plan” should be as of confirmation, or some time thereafter, as explicitly stated in the plan itself.

Although not explicitly for purposes of § 1325(a)(4), the Ninth Circuit now seems to have conclusively decided that the “effective date” of any plan “is the date the plan becomes binding on the parties.” 7 In Hoopai, the Ninth Circuit held that an oversecured creditor is entitled to interest under § 506(b) only until the “effective date of the plan,” which “may be a date specifically provided for in a Chapter 13 plan, but when no such date is selected, the effective date is the date on which the plan becomes final and binding due to a court order confirming the plan.” 8

For the foregoing reasons, this Court concludes that “effective date of the plan,” as it applies to § 1325(a)(4), means the date of the order confirming the plan unless the plan itself defines another date.

“Effective date of the plan” when a plan is modified

Here, the Debtors ask the Court to assign a new “effective date” based on the date of the order approving their modified plan. Such a new effective date would mean that the Debtors’ nonexempt proper *739 ty would be valued on the basis of 2009 property values, after the significant declines in value from 2007 to 2009, rather than at the much higher values as of 2005 when their plan was confirmed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
415 B.R. 735, 62 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1359, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 3070, 2009 WL 3193164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-gibson-arb-2009.