In Re Gray

269 B.R. 881, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 1565, 2001 WL 1524450
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Alabama
DecidedSeptember 14, 2001
Docket17-81193
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 269 B.R. 881 (In Re Gray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Gray, 269 B.R. 881, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 1565, 2001 WL 1524450 (Ala. 2001).

Opinion

Order on Trustee’s Objections to Claims Nos. 7 and 10

BENJAMIN COHEN, Bankruptcy Judge.

I. Background Facts

The debtor Yolanda Gray is the mother of four minor children for whom she has been ordered to make monthly child support payments. Three of those children are the subject of an order of the Juvenile Court of Greene County, Alabama, entered February 27, 1998. That order, (attached to claim number 7 filed on February 26, 2001), requires the debtor to make monthly payments to Barbara L. Gray, the grandmother and custodial party of those three children. The fourth child is the subject of an order entered by the same court on August 12, 1999. That order, (attached to claim number 10 filed on June 18, 2001), requires the debtor to make similar payments to Essie M. Byrd. 1

Yolanda Gray filed the pending Chapter 13 case on September 18, 1998. On February 26, 2001, the Department of Human Resources for Greene County, Alabama filed claim number 7 on behalf of the State of Alabama and Barbara Gray, for $1,735.98. The Chapter 13 trustee objected to the status of that claim on March 2, 2001; however, the parties do agree: (1) that claim number 7 represents the debt- or’s pre-petition, child support arrears; (2) that $154.45 of the $1,735.98 represents the amount of assistance the State of Alabama paid Barbara Gray in Aid For De-pendant Children benefits; and (3) that the remaining $1,581.53 of claim number 7 is owed directly to Barbara Gray as child support arrears.

On June 18, 2001, the County filed claim number 10 on behalf of the State and Essie Byrd for $1,595.03. The trustee objected to that claim on June 27, 2001. The parties did not provide the Court with the breakdown of that claim; however, for purposes of this order, the Court assumes it is similar to claim number 7.

The specific matters before the Court are the Trustee’s Objection to Claim 7 and *883 the Tmstee’s Objection to Claim 10. In both objections the Chapter 13 trustee contends that both claims, although filed as priority claims, should be paid as general unsecured claims. The State contends that both should be paid as priority claims.

Because neither dischargeability nor liability is at issue, neither the debtor nor the support payment recipients are parties before the Court. 2 The Chapter 13 trustee alone opposes the status of the claims.

A hearing on the trustee’s objection to claim number 7 was held on April 9, 2001. Bill Ramsey for Ed Fawwal, the attorney for the debtor, and Charles King, the Assistant Chapter 13 Trustee, appeared. The hearing was continued to May 7, 2001, and then to June 4, 2001.

At the hearing on June 4, 2001, Mr. Ramsey; Sims Crawford, the attorney for the Chapter 13 Trustee; and Melanie Hin-son, the attorney for Greene County DHR, appeared. The parties agreed that the facts were not disputed and agreed to file a stipulation of facts by July 9, 2001, after which the matter would be taken under advisement by the Court.

In the interim on June 27, 2001, the trustee filed his objection to claim number 10. A hearing on that objection was held on July 30, 2001. Mr. Fawwal and Mr. Crawford appeared. At the hearing, the Court asked Mr. Crawford to contact Ms. Hinson to determine whether claims 7 and 10 were separate debts. On July 31, 2001, Mr. Crawford contacted the Court and represented that he had spoken with Ms. Hinson and that the claims are indeed separate debts.

II. Contentions

The state contends that both claims should be paid entirely as priority claims. The Chapter 13 trustee contends that both should be paid entirely as general unsecured claims.

III. Additional Facts

The parties’ Stipulation of Facts in regard to claim number 7 reads:

COMES NOW David P. Rogers, Jr., Standing Chapter 13 Trustee, and State of Alabama, ex rel, Barbara Gray, by and through its attorney, Melanie G. Hinson, Assistant District Attorney, 17th Judicial Circuit, and respectfully stipulate to the following facts:
1. Barbara Gray is the Grandmother and custodial party for three children of the Debtor, Yolanda Gray, namely:
ALG DOB 5/03/87, age 14
DKG DOB 7/04/90, age 11
MSG DOB 1/27/92, age 9
2. The children have resided with Barbara Gray, their Grandmother, continuously since at least April, 1995.
3. In April, 1995, Barbara Gray applied for and was awarded Aid to Families with Dependent children (AFDC) through the Greene County Department of Human Resources. A copy of an Affirmation and Agreement signed by Barbara Gray and Wanda Hawkins, DHR Case Worker, is attached hereto.
4. In February, 1998, an Order of Support was entered by the Juvenile Court of Greene County, Alabama, against Yolanda Gray ordering Yolanda Gray to pay child support in the amount of $114.00 per month beginning April 1, 1998. (Copy of Order of Support attached.)
5. On September 1, 1999, Barbara Gray’s AFDC case was closed and she stopped receiving AFDC benefits.
*884 6. Even though" Barbara Gray no longer received AFDC benefits through Greene County DHR, Greene County DHR continued child support collection efforts on behalf of Barbara Gray as provided under title IV-D of the Social Security Act.
7. As of January 30, 2001, date Proof of Claim was filed in this case by Greene County DHR, past-due child support owed by Yolanda Gray in this case totaled $1,735.98; $154.45 was owed to the State of Alabama as interest and reimbursement of AFDC benefits paid to Barbara Gray and $1,581.53 was owed to Barbara Gray in child support and interest due from Yolanda Gray.
8. Greene County DHR filed the Proof of Claim on behalf of Barbara Gray in the amount of $1,735.98 as an “Unsecured Priority Claim” to receive priority payments through the Chapter 13 Trustee’s Office.
9. The Chapter 13 Trustee objected to the claim and such objection stated: “this claim is not a priority claim and should be allowed as a general unsecured claim.”

Dated this 6th day of July, 2001.

Stipulation of Facts, filed July 9, 2001, Proceeding number 43.

IV. Issue

The issue is: Should claims 7 and 10 be paid as priority claims or general unsecured claims?

V. Conclusions of Law

The Court finds, pursuant to section 507(a)(7)(A) of the Bankruptcy Code and section 38-10^4 of the Code of Alabama, that a part of each claim should be paid as a priority claim and that a part of each should be paid as a general unsecured claim.

A. Bankruptcy Law

1.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
269 B.R. 881, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 1565, 2001 WL 1524450, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-gray-alnb-2001.