In re Haggerty

596 B.R. 864
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Michigan
DecidedJanuary 10, 2019
DocketCase No. 17-00033
StatusPublished

This text of 596 B.R. 864 (In re Haggerty) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Haggerty, 596 B.R. 864 (Mich. 2019).

Opinion

This Memorandum of Decision and Order resolves two related contested matters, namely (i) the Debtor's Objection to Claim of Bosco Credit II Trust Series 2010-1 (ECF No. 48, the "Objection") and (ii) the Debtor's Motion for Reconsideration of Claim 5 Filed by Bosco Credit II Trust Series 2010-1 (ECF No. 52, the "Motion"). The relief requested in both contested matters is closely related, and during a hearing held on January 3, 2019, the parties agreed that a decision on one necessarily resolves the other. For the following reasons, the court will overrule the Objection, and deny the Motion.1

In a prior (and long-closed) chapter 7 proceeding, Case No. 08-06291-JRH, the court entered an order discharging Mr. Haggerty's debts, including a second mortgage debt now serviced by Franklin Credit Management Corporation for the ultimate creditor, Bosco Credit II Trust Series 2010-1 ("Bosco Credit"). The parties agree that although the entry of the chapter 7 discharge enjoined the collection of Bosco Credit's claim as a personal obligation of Mr. Haggerty, it did not affect the creditor's in rem rights against its collateral, the real estate commonly known as 11195 W. Herbison Road, Eagle, Michigan (the "Property"). See Johnson v. Home State Bank , 501 U.S. 78, 84, 111 S.Ct. 2150, 115 L.Ed.2d 66 (1991) ; Motion at ¶ 11.

After Bosco Credit took steps to exercise its foreclosure rights against the Property, Mr. Haggerty filed a chapter 13 bankruptcy petition. He promptly proposed his chapter 13 plan (the "Plan") through which he offered "direct payment of his first mortgage loan to Chase Home Finance, payment of priority tax debt, [while] seeking to strip both the second and third liens from his real property and providing a 100% dividend to his remaining general unsecured creditors..." Motion at ¶ 9. Although the Plan proposed to pay the Chase Home Finance claim, that claim, like Bosco Credit's claim, was also discharged in the earlier case.

Bosco Credit filed a secured claim in the amount of $ 154,619.57, and opposed confirmation of the Plan, initially challenging Mr. Haggerty's valuation of the Property and the terms for post-confirmation lien preservation. The parties commendably worked to resolve their differences, which they seemingly did by entering into a settlement. The court adopted their settlement terms by entering the Order Determining the Extent of the Second Lien on Property Commonly Known as 11195 W. Herbison on April 13, 2017 (ECF No. 29, the "April 2017 Order"). Unfortunately, the settlement lacked the nuance required *868to address the somewhat complicated situation involving the discharged, underwater, junior mortgage claim of Bosco Credit.

For example, with respect to Bosco Credit's claim, the April 2017 Order provided that the "Creditor's claim shall be allowed as a non-priority general unsecured claim and shall be paid as such in accordance with the Debtor's Chapter 13 Plan." April 2017 Order at ¶ 2. This provision, evidently entered without negotiation based on form language included in orders that approve lien strips in our District, contemplates not only allowance of the claim, but also payment, even though the claim was admittedly discharged in the 2008 case. During the January 3, 2019 hearing, counsel for Bosco Credit contended that his firm, with respect to any client subject to "strip off" of a junior lien, always insists on treatment as an unsecured creditor, as the firm evidently did here by including the proposed language in the stipulation. Indeed, the Plan as confirmed (without objection) provides for full payment of creditors with allowed unsecured claims. The Motion also recites that chapter 13 trustee Barbara P. Foley (the "Trustee") recommended confirmation of Mr. Haggerty's 100% dividend Plan.

Mathematically, with plan payments of $ 350.00 per month, even for the entire sixty-month applicable commitment period the Plan would yield only $ 21,000.00 -- far short of the $ 154,619.57 due to Bosco Credit, let alone other claimants including Debtor's counsel (with a "no look" fee of at least $ 3,200.00), tax creditors and other unsecured creditors (with claims estimated at $ 9,551.00).2

So, under the confirmed Plan and the April 2017 Order, the Trustee must pay a 100% dividend to all creditors with allowed claims, including Bosco Credit's $ 154,619.57 claim, within the sixty-month applicable commitment period. See 11 U.S.C. § 1326(c). The Trustee evidently now reads the operative documents in this way because, starting on July 2, 2018, she made three monthly payments to Bosco Credit, in the aggregate amount of $ 1,279.46, on account of its unsecured claim as of November 23, 2018. She also filed a motion to dismiss, now contending that the Plan is "no longer feasible" based on the total amount of allowed claims, i.e. , taking Bosco Credit's claim into account. See Trustee's Motion to Dismiss Chapter 13 case (ECF No. 46). To reiterate, however, the Plan was never feasible as a full-payment plan if Bosco Credit is permitted to participate in the distribution, as the April 2017 Order requires.

During the November 8, 2018 hearing to consider the Claim Objection, the court suggested that § 502(j) might bear on the parties' dispute.3 This provision permits the court to reconsider the allowance or disallowance of claims for cause and based on the equities of the case. See 11 U.S.C. § 502(j). After briefing the issue, the parties agree that courts generally analyze arguments under § 502(j) using the rubric of Rule 60(b), made applicable by Rule 9024, at least where the court allows (or disallows) the *869claim in a final order. See Motion at ¶¶ 47-48 (citing In re Bennett , 590 B.R. 156 (Bankr. E.D. Mich. 2018) and In re Packer , 558 B.R. 842, 845 (Bankr. W.D. Mich. 2016) ). As Judge Shefferly noted in Bennett , the express cross-reference to § 502(j) in Rule 9024 relaxing the deadlines under Rule 60(c) for reconsidering uncontested claims allowance decisions makes this a natural inference. And, consistent with a court's discretion under Rule 60, bankruptcy courts retain "wide discretion to determine what constitutes cause for reconsideration of claims under § 502(j)." Bennett , 590 B.R. at 160 (quoting Ruskin v. DaimlerChrysler Servs. N. Am., L.L.C.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Johnson v. Home State Bank
501 U.S. 78 (Supreme Court, 1991)
Harris v. Viegelahn
575 U.S. 510 (Supreme Court, 2015)
In re Sweitzer
476 B.R. 468 (D. Maryland, 2012)
In re Rosa
521 B.R. 337 (N.D. California, 2014)
In re Packer
558 B.R. 842 (W.D. Michigan, 2016)
In re Gonzales
578 B.R. 627 (W.D. Michigan, 2017)
In re Bennett
590 B.R. 156 (E.D. Michigan, 2018)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
596 B.R. 864, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-haggerty-miwb-2019.