In Re Keenan

195 B.R. 236, 1996 Bankr. LEXIS 484, 1996 WL 248689
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. New York
DecidedApril 23, 1996
Docket2-18-21229
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 195 B.R. 236 (In Re Keenan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Keenan, 195 B.R. 236, 1996 Bankr. LEXIS 484, 1996 WL 248689 (N.Y. 1996).

Opinion

MICHAEL J. KAPLAN, Chief Judge.

In this Chapter 11 case, the Debtors-in-Possession are about to receive about $100,-000 from an insurance claim arising out of injuries that Dr. Keenan sustained from two different pre-petition ear accidents. In re- *237 spouse to their notice to creditors that they intended to settle that claim, one unsecured creditor has asked this Court to limit the Debtors’ use of the proceeds. The creditor fears that the proceeds will be dissipated for the Debtors’ personal needs and benefit, even though some of the proceeds of that pre-petition cause of action should be viewed as “property of the estate” under 11 U.S.C. § 641(a)(1) or (7).

Specifically, the creditor asks the Court to decide how much of the recovery the Debtors should be allowed to devote to their own personal expenses, how much to their “business” (Dr. Keenan’s medical practice), and how much, if any, should be set aside toward an eventual reorganization plan. Since the most significant asset of this case is the stream of income generated by Dr. Keenan, the prospects of recovery for creditors depend on: (1) how much income (including these insurance proceeds) is applied to enhancing that stream of income by supporting and building the medical practice, as opposed to dissipation to meet personal needs; and (2) how much is eventually committed by the Debtors for actual distribution to creditors. Moreover, the possibility of conversion or dismissal between now and the time of confirmation of a plan must be considered; and if that were to occur, creditors would conceivably benefit from the current application of income to non-exempt physical assets such as office equipment, but would be out of luck to the extent that current income, including these insurance proceeds, was expended for personal needs. Of the first $25,000 of the proceeds, the Debtors and the creditors seemed to have agreed that $15,000 may be spent on office expenses and $10,000 on personal needs, and the Court approved that. The creditor asks the Court to decide how the remainder should be allocated and to limit its use accordingly.

The Court concludes that it ought not to make the computations and impose the limitations the creditor seeks. Rather, the Debtors, creditor, Creditor’s Committee, and U.S. Trustee should negotiate a resolution to this matter. If the Debtors fail to reach such accord, then they act at peril of having to defend a motion to convert the case or defend a motion for some other recognized form of relief.

For the Court to accede to this creditor’s request would be to administer the estate, perhaps to the prejudice of other creditors, as explained below. This is not to say that the Court does not want such questions to be continued to be asked — it does. But it is sometimes more beneficial for the question to be asked, and then the parties left to themselves to resolve their differences, or (in the absence of resolution) to raise the stakes.

BACKGROUND

How the Court should treat the post-petition income of Chapter 11 Debtors who are natural persons is an issue that has been addressed by several other courts, without consensus.

In a Chapter 13 case, 11 U.S.C. § 1306(a)(2) makes it clear that a debtor’s post-petition personal service income is “property of the estate,” which is to say property impressed with a trust in favor of creditors. But in a Chapter 11 case, property of the estate includes “[pjroceeds, product, offspring, rents, or profits of or from property of the estate, except such as are earnings from services performed by an individual debtor after the commencement of the case.” 11 U.S.C. § 541(a)(6) (emphasis added).

This Court has written before on the subject of a Chapter 11 debtor who earns no personal service income, but who instead must spend property of the estate generated by his income-producing properties for his own personal and family needs. 1 In the earlier decisions it was ruled that the personal living expenses of such a debtor are “ordinary course” expenses for his Chapter 11 estate, and property of the estate may be used therefor.

*238 Now before this Court is a Chapter 11 debtor, a physician, whose principal income is personal service income. (His co-debtor spouse is not employed, according to the schedules filed in this case.) For purposes of this decision, the precise issue raised is how this Court should react to an unsecured creditor’s objection to the Debtors’ proposed acceptance and use of approximately $100,000 from pre-petition personal injury claims. The Debtors want to use it for personal living expenses, as well as to rebuild Dr. Keenan’s medical practice, which had languished during his disability. The creditor (Norwest Financial New York, Inc.) wants a commitment of some of those funds to creditors or to an eventual plan of reorganization. In the Bradley case, the Court refused to impose such a commitment where there was no personal service income. Here, although some of the insurance proceeds clearly are non-exempt, pre-petition property of the estate, some of it may be viewed as post-petition “income” of the Debtors, and the issue at bar may be likened to the issue of post-petition personal service income.

Having previously held in the Bradley case that even income generated by pre-petition non-exempt assets may be used for the personal living expenses of a Chapter 11 debtor (within the limits of “cause” for conversion, dismissal, appointment of a trustee, etc.), it would seem clear that post-petition personal service income may also be so used. But other courts seem to disagree.

Summarizing existing caselaw as to post-petition personal service income, the court in In re Harp, 166 B.R. 740 (Bankr.N.D.Ala. 1993), observed that three views have arisen, each having been

applied in subtly, but critically, different fact situations:
—That all postpetition earnings by the individual Chapter 11 debtor are excluded from the estate by Section 541(a)(6).
—That the debtor’s postpetition income should be split under Section 541(a)(6), like the baby before King Solomon, based on exactly HOW the income was generated, with part being earmarked for the estate, part going directly to the debtor.
—And that all the income flowing to an individual in Chapter 11 becomes property of the estate under Section 541(a)(7) pending confirmation of a plan, just as such property does in a corporate Chapter 11 reorganization.

Id. at 749-50 (footnotes omitted). 2

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
195 B.R. 236, 1996 Bankr. LEXIS 484, 1996 WL 248689, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-keenan-nywb-1996.