In Re Mandarino

312 B.R. 214, 2002 WL 1050388
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. New York
DecidedMay 20, 2002
Docket1-19-40810
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 312 B.R. 214 (In Re Mandarino) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.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 Mandarino, 312 B.R. 214, 2002 WL 1050388 (N.Y. 2002).

Opinion

CORRECTED MEMORANDUM OF DECISION DENYING CABLEVISION’S OBJECTION TO CONFIRMATION OF DEBTOR’S CHAPTER 13 PLAN *

STAN BERNSTEIN, Bankruptcy Judge.

I. Procedural Background.

CSC Holdings (“Cablevision”) has objected to the confirmation of the debtor’s plan on several grounds. The debtor has replied to the objection. This contested matter has now been submitted for determination by the Court on the pleadings and memoranda of law.

The debtor proposed a plan which commits four years of the debtor’s disposable income to pay allowed claims. As one of its grounds for objecting to confirmation, Cablevision alleges that the debtor has violated the fundamental normative standard of good faith by not committing his disposable income for the maximum duration allowed under 11 U.S.C. section 1322(d) of the Bankruptcy Code, namely, five years, when the debtor’s liability to Cablevision is dischargeable under 11 U.S.C. section 1328(a), but would not be dischargeable in a chapter 7 case under 11 U.S.C. section 523(a)(6). As an additional indicium of a pattern of bad faith, Cablevision alleges that the debtor negotiated a settlement of Cablevision’s claims in a pending federal court civil action which he never intended to perform, and then filed his chapter 13 petition on the eve of further proceedings in the federal district action. Cablevision also further objects to confirmation on the ground that the amount of its allowed unsecured claims exceeds the maximum statutory amount, and, therefore, the plan cannot be confirmed because he is ineligible for chapter 13 relief by virtue of 11 U.S.C. section 109(e).

II. Discussion.

Under the plain language of the Bankruptcy Code, if there is a bona fide objection to confirmation by the trustee or a creditor, the debtor must commit the debt- or’s disposable income for a full three years under section 1325(b)(1)(B). 1 It is only under section 1322(d) that the court may extend the term for five years for cause shown. If a creditor could force a *216 debtor to commit his disposable income for a full five years, then section 1322(d) 2 would have so provided. The only way for this Court to show fidelity to each of the salient provisions under chapter 13 is to hold that standing to file a motion extending the term to five years should, as a general rule, be limited to the debtor. In contrasting the differences between a chapter 13 payment plan and payments made in connection with a nondischarge-ability action in a chapter 7 case, the Court of Appeals in Graves v. Myrvang (In re Myrvang), 232 F.3d 1116, 1120 (9th Cir.2000) stated that “the bankruptcy court’s employment of a five-year repayment plan would be impermissible under chapter 13.” And in Washington Student Loan Guaranty Association v. Porter (In re Porter), 102 B.R. 773 (9th Cir. BAP 1989), aff'd, In re Porter, 1990 WL 186111, 1990 U.S.App. LEXIS 20578 (9th Cir.1990), the court stated: “Certainly, the court does not believe that assuming compliance of the confirmation criteria contained in § 1325, debtors should be required by the court, the trustee and any other party to extend their plans beyond three years .... Such a requirement would, in fact, be tantamount to involuntary servitude.” (quoting In re Pierce, 82 B.R. 874, 883 (Bankr. S.D.Ohio 1987)).

Generally, as a matter of practice, the overwhelming number of confirmed plans with five years in this district are proposed by the debtor because the debtor needs a full sixty months to cure a large prepetition arrearage on a residential mortgage loan. In fact, substantially less than one-third of the plans confirmed in this district are successfully completed when the debt- or has committed to a term of five years. Although sometimes the cases are dismissed after confirmation voluntarily because the debtor has been able to sell or refinance his or her mortgaged residence and satisfy the arrearage, a much larger number of cases are dismissed because the debtor has demonstrated an inability after confirmation to manage the combined plan payment and direct payments to the mortgage.

Chapter 13 cases are intended to be wholly voluntary. To put the point directly and simply, objections to good faith should not be used to bully debtors into a five-year term or to create a backdoor or end-around the three-year limit of section 1322(d), 3 for this imposes a type of involuntary commitment to a chapter 13 plan that defeats the incentive structure upon which chapter 13 is predicated.

This Court is very reluctant to impose its personal ethical norms in defining good faith in chapter 13 cases as a function of the percentage of payments to be distributed under a plan to unsecured creditors. Findings of bad faith are best limited to a well-defined pattern of serial filings of chapter 13 petitions to “save a home from *217 foreclosure” when there is no reasonable prospect that a plan can satisfy the criterion of feasibility under section 1325(a)(6). Outside this pattern, the case law on good faith in a chapter 13 case when the debtor seeks to take advantage of the “super-discharge” provision under section 1328(a) is a hopeless morass. 4 Since the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit has not waded into this morass, there are no compelling precedents in this circuit that require this Court to find bad faith in a super-discharge case. When the law of chapter 13 degenerates into a medieval morality play, nobody is advantaged. Indeed, objections on grounds of bad faith simply add to the costs of legal representation that chapter 13 debtors can ill afford, and defeat the low transaction costs that are the hallmarks of prudent chapter 13 case administration.

The debtor here was accused of buying 45 pirated descrambling devices. Cablevision’s goal is to deter persons from selling these devices so that other users can gain access to the programming offered by Ca-blevision without paying for it. 5 Cablevision devotes its extraordinary resources to developing a case law under the Communications Act of 1934, as amended by the Telecommunications Act of 1996, 47 U.S.C. § 605(e), against persons who purchase black-market descramblers in bulk. Under this case law, some courts have adopted a presumption that anybody who buys more units that he or she could use at home must have sold these units to other private parties for their illegitimate use. 6

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
312 B.R. 214, 2002 WL 1050388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-mandarino-nyeb-2002.