In Re MacHado

378 B.R. 14, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 3759, 2007 WL 3326841
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedNovember 6, 2007
Docket14-11480
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 378 B.R. 14 (In Re MacHado) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re MacHado, 378 B.R. 14, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 3759, 2007 WL 3326841 (Mass. 2007).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

ROBERT SOMMA, Bankruptcy Judge.

The Debtor has proposed a plan that (a) discriminates in favor of nondischargeable student loan debt and against other nonp-riority unsecured debt and (b) excludes certain cure-and-maintain payments on long-term unsecured debt from the Chapter 13 trustee’s statutory compensation (“Plan”). The trustee objects to both provisions of the Plan (“Objection”). For the reasons and to the extent set forth below, the Court finds no unfair discrimination and no fault in the Debtor’s payment of maintenance payments directly to the creditors, instead of through the trustee, but the Court sustains the Objection because the plan fails to channel cure payments through the Chapter 13 trustee and to provide for payment of the trustee’s fee on such cure payments.

Plan

The Debtor’s non-priority unsecured debt amounts to $48,034 comprised of $21,084 in non-dischargeable student loan claims and $26,950 in other unsecured claims. The Debtor also has $12,000 in tax priority debt and $1,800 in administrative expense priority debt.

The Plan has a sixty-month term. 1 The Plan provides so-called “cure and maintain” treatment of the Debtor’s student loan debt, directly paying $250 per month for sixty months to the student loan lenders. 2 Under this treatment, the student loan debt would not be fully paid through or during the term of the Plan. By contrast, the Plan provides for a pro rata distribution on account of the Debtor’s oth *16 er unsecured debt, paying through the Chapter 13 trustee $276.20 per month for sixty months, resulting in a 4.14% dividend during the Plan term with the balance discharged upon Plan completion. Lastly, the Plan excludes the payments made by the Debtor directly to the student loan lenders from the percentage fee component of the trustee’s statutory compensation.

The Positions of the Parties

The trustee contends that there is no basis for the separate classification and different treatment of the student loan debt and the other unsecured debt; that the differential between the payment of the former and the 4.14% dividend for the latter constitutes unfair discrimination; and that the student loan debt should be paid through her (and not “outside the plan”), thus subjecting those payments to her statutory percentage fee.

The Debtor responds that long-term debt may be treated differently than short-term debt in a plan; that maximizing debt reduction is a legitimate bankruptcy goal, reinforcing her fresh start; that, absent the different treatment of unsecured debt, she would face many years of interest accruals and default on her student loan debt, undermining that fresh start; that she is dedicating to the Plan five years’ disposable income not three years’ as she might otherwise do, reflecting her good faith in proposing the Plan; that the Plan increases the prospect of full payment of her non-dischargeable student loan debt, thereby furthering an identified legislative goal; and that direct payments to eredi-tors are permitted under a plan and, if permitted, are properly excluded from trustee’s percentage fee compensation.

Unfair Discrimination

The resolution of the discrimination dispute implicates two provisions of the Bankruptcy Code: first, the provision that permits separate classification and treatment of unsecured claims so long as there is no unfair discrimination against any class 3 ; and second, the provision that permits cure and maintain treatment of secured and unsecured long-term debt. 4 It is clear that the Debtor may employ cure and maintain treatment under Section 1322(b)(5) for the her student loan debt given the occurrence of prepetition defaults and original loan maturity dates after the final Plan payment date. See 8 Collier on Bankruptcy ¶ 1322.09[2] (15th ed. rev.). See also In re Sautter, 133 B.R. 148 (Bankr.W.D.Mo.1991). Nonetheless, the treatment of student loan debt under Section 1322(b)(5) must not discriminate unfairly as against the Debtor’s other unsecured debt. See In re Chandler, 210 B.R. 898, 901 (Bankr.D.N.H.1997); In re Coonce, 213 B.R. 344, 347 (Bankr.S.D.Ill. 1997). In determining whether any such discrimination is fair or not, courts consider various factors, applied to the circumstances of each particular case. These factors are variously formulated but bear upon the equitable allocation of plan resources and the furtherance of underlying policy objectives. See In re Thibodeau, 248 B.R. 699 (Bankr.D.Mass.2000); In re Bentley, 266 B.R. 229 (1st Cir.BAP2001).

*17 Four considerations inform my decision in this matter. First, Congress, by its exception of student loan obligations, from discharge, has long made clear the legislative objective of student loan repayment. The Plan treatment of the Debtor’s student loan debt furthers the goal by routing Plan resources toward such repayment in accordance with the stated Code provisions.

Second, for debts whose terms extend beyond the period of a chapter 13 plan— often including, precisely because of their nondischargeability, student loan obligations — Congress has further expressly permitted a debtor to elect to cure and maintain that debt. Here, the Debtor has elected this option, which channels only so much money to the student loan creditors as is necessary to cure the prepetition arrearage and ensure that she will not emerge from bankruptcy in arrears on these obligations. If she were to forego this option and pay an equal percentage to both student loan creditors and other nonpriority unsecured creditors, she would emerge from bankruptcy more deeply in arrears than she went into bankruptcy, a result that cannot be fair to her or consistent with the evident intent behind sections 523(a)(8) and 1322(b)(5).

Third, the financial differential resulting from the proposed discrimination is modest. The Debtor’s applicable commitment period (and thus plan term) is thirty-six months. If she dedicated the combined $276.20 and $250 to the entire $43,084 pool of unsecured debt (as advocated by the trustee) for that period, the dividend on all unsecured claims would be 6.76%, or approximately $700 more than the 4.14% provided in the Plan for the non-student loan claims. I find no unfairness in this differential warranting denial of Plan confirmation.

Fourth, perhaps reflective of that modest differential, no holder of a non-student loan unsecured claim has objected to the treatment of such claims under the Plan.

Taking into account the identified policy considerations, the available resources, the foregoing allocation among the plan constituencies, and the absence of objection by any affected creditor, I find that, in the circumstances of this case, the proposed discrimination as against non-student loan claims is fair.

Trustee’s Percentage Fee

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
378 B.R. 14, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 3759, 2007 WL 3326841, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-machado-mab-2007.