In Re Mathenia

220 B.R. 427, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 498, 1998 WL 199705
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Oklahoma
DecidedApril 24, 1998
Docket19-10342
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 220 B.R. 427 (In Re Mathenia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Mathenia, 220 B.R. 427, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 498, 1998 WL 199705 (Okla. 1998).

Opinion

ORDER ON CHAPTER 13 TRUSTEE’S OBJECTION TO CONFIRMATION OF DEBTOR’S CHAPTER 13 PLAN

PAUL B. LINDSEY, Bankruptcy Judge.

BACKGROUND

Debtor commenced this case on October 17, 1996, by filing his voluntary petition under Chapter 13 of the Bankruptcy Code. 1 In the Chapter 13 plan which accompanied his petition, debtor proposes 36 monthly plan payments of $160.50. The plan would pay $78.61 monthly to Oklahoma Gas & Electric Company (“O.G. & E.”) as ongoing payments on a debt secured by a heat pump, and $8.98 per month to cure an arrearage of $314.44 on that debt. Debtor’s counsel would be paid $1,400.00 through the plan. It is contemplated that after these payments and the payment of Trustee fees, the holders of unsecured claims, if timely proofs of claim are filed by all, would receive a distribution of $656.12, or 7% of their claims. 2

Debtor’s schedules disclose that debtor’s household consists of himself, his spouse, who is not a debtor herein, and two minor children. Debtor’s monthly net income is $1,089.79, and that of his spouse is $1,052.83, a total of $2,142.62. The monthly living expenses for the family are scheduled at $1,982.12, including a $439.12 payment on the 1984 Isuzu Rodeo vehicle (the “Rodeo”) driven by debtor’s spouse.

The Rodeo was not included in debtor’s schedules. At the § 341 meeting of creditors, held November 26, 1997, debtor testified that he was surrendering his interest in the vehicle and that it would be paid for in full by his spouse, and not through the Chapter 13 Trustee (hereafter, “the Trustee”).

On December 11, the Trustee filed her objection to confirmation of debtor’s Chapter 13 plan. In her objection, the Trustee asserts that the plan fails to provide that all of debtor’s projected disposable income will be applied to make payments under the plan. 3 She also contends that the plan unfairly discriminates against a class of creditors, i.e., the holders of non-priority unsecured claims, in violation of § 1322(b)(1). 4

After a hearing on confirmation, held January 20, 1998, the parties were directed to files briefs by March 2, 1998, with replies, if desired, to be filed by March 12, 1998. The issues were taken under advisement, to be determined on the record and the briefs of the parties. Debtor and the Trustee each filed a brief on March 2,1998, and the Trustee filed her reply on March 12, 1998. The issues are therefore ripe to be determined.

THE BRIEFS

Debtor:

Debtor’s submission is entitled “Brief Supporting Payment Of Non-Debtor Spouse’ *429 Vehicle Outside Chapter 13 Plan,” and addresses that issue only. Three hypothetical examples are given, each assuming monthly family income of $1,000, expenses of $900, including a $200 per month car payment on the $3,000 secured debt against the non-filing spouse’s vehicle, and a 10% Trustee fee: (1) A 36-month plan with payments of $100, the non-filing spouse’s car payment being made through the budget and not through the plan; (2) a 36-month plan with payments of $300, the car payment being made through the plan; and (3) a 43-month plan with payments of $300, the car payment being made through the plan.

In the first example, debtor contends that the plan is feasible and it is anticipated that the holders of allowed unsecured claims would receive a distribution of approximately 8%. In the second, it is contended that the plan is infeasible due to the increased Trustee fees, and that extension of the term of the plan is the only solution. In the third example, the plan is extended to 43 months, as-sertedly in order to make it feasible, and it is anticipated that the holders of allowed unsecured claims would receive a minimal distribution.

Debtor next purports to apply the examples to this case, and asserts that if the $439.12 Rodeo payment were removed from the family budget and added to the payments to the Trustee, the plan would have to extend to 79 months in order to provide even a minimal distribution to holders of unsecured claims, and that this result is necessitated by the increased Trustee fees. It is further asserted that the plan, if limited to 60 months in length, the statutory maximum under § 1322(d), would be feasible only if the plan payment was increased by an additional $8.00 per month, and that it would then provide for only a minimal distribution to holders of unsecured claims. In both the 79-month and the 60-month scenarios, debtor’s calculations assume that the cure of the ar-rearage to O.G. & E., and the attorney fees, would be spread over the life of the plan.

Debtor’s brief consists primarily of arguments in favor of permitting the Rodeo payment to be made outside his plan. It also contains comments on the asserted universal adverse effect of Trustee’s fees in Chapter 13 cases on distributions to unsecured creditors, while giving brief lip service to the dependence of the Chapter 13 system upon those fees. 5 It also contains a condemnation of the “impossible situation” in which a debtor is placed when seeking automobile financing immediately after a Chapter 7 filing. 6

Debtor relies upon Matter of Harris, 107 B.R. 204 (Bankr.D.Neb.1989), in which the court announced eight factors to be considered, in addition to the avoidance of Trustee fees, in determining whether payment of a debt outside a Chapter 13 plan should be permitted. Debtor concludes that his proposed plan “is consistent with the law and, simply put, is a better way of doing it for all concerned.” 7

The Trustee — Initial Brief:

Trustee points out that debtor and his non-filing spouse provide 51% and 49%, respectively, of the monthly net income of the family, and asserts that debtor is subsidizing his spouse at the expense of his unsecured creditors by paying more than his pro rata share, based upon those percentages, of family living expenses, in order for her to be able to make the Rodeo payments out of her income. 8

Trustee also argues that the purchase of the Rodeo was not necessary and, apparently, that permitting it to be paid for by the non-filing spouse would constitute unfair discrimination against debtor’s unsecured creditors. Finally, she contends that permitting payments to be made outside Chapter 13 plans threatens to jeopardize the integrity of the Trustee system. As an example, she asserts that when control of payments made to creditors is not within the hands of the *430 Trustee, certification of payment in full upon closing of cases will be rendered impossible.

The Trustee — Reply Brief:

Trustee argues, in effect, that the purchase of the Rodeo, in the circumstances under which the purchase took place, calls into question the debtor’s good faith in proposing his plan.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
220 B.R. 427, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 498, 1998 WL 199705, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-mathenia-okwb-1998.