In Re Matthews

313 B.R. 489, 17 Fla. L. Weekly Fed. B 209, 2004 Bankr. LEXIS 1037, 2004 WL 1924975
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedJuly 6, 2004
Docket8:02-bk-2270-KRM
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 313 B.R. 489 (In Re Matthews) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Matthews, 313 B.R. 489, 17 Fla. L. Weekly Fed. B 209, 2004 Bankr. LEXIS 1037, 2004 WL 1924975 (Fla. 2004).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION ON MOTION BY AMERICREDIT FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC., FOR RECONSIDERATION OF ORDER ON SECURED CLAIM

K. RODNEY MAY, Bankruptcy Judge.

THIS CASE came on for hearings on February 4 and April 7, 2004, on the motion by AmeriCredit Financial Services, Inc. (“AmeriCredit”), filed on December 4, 2003 (Document No. 32), for reconsideration of this Court’s earlier order treating and allowing as “secured,” a proof of claim that AmeriCredit filed more than a year after plan confirmation.

AmeriCredit had already filed a “secured” claim early in this Chapter 13 case. That claim was ultimately satisfied by the debtors’ surrender of the collateral, a 1997 Plymouth Voyager. AmeriCredit asserts that its second proof of claim was for the unsecured deficiency remaining after its sale of the vehicle. AmeriCredit seeks (1) relief from this Court’s order, entered on November 12, 2003, which treated the second claim as a duplicate “secured” claim and (2) allowance of the second claim as an unsecured claim for which it should be receiving payments under the debtors’ confirmed plan.

The Court will deny the motion because AmeriCredit’s second claim was filed after the bar date and it is not allowable as an amendment of the original, timely filed secured claim. 1 This contested matter revealed, however, that the confirmed Chapter 13 plan implicitly treated AmeriCre-dit’s timely filed secured claim as being partially unsecured. To that extent, the Court will require that the plan be amended to expressly provide for a distribution on the amount recognized by the plan as being the unsecured portion of AmeriCre-dit’s secured claim.

BACKGROUND

The relevant facts are straightforward and undisputed. This Chapter 13 case *492 began on February 8, 2002. The claims bar date was June 17, 2002. AmeriCredit filed its, first proof of claim (registered as Claim No. 7) on May 13, 2002. In its initial claim, AmeriCredit asserted that it was owed a total amount of “$11,511.90” and that the collateral, a motor vehicle, had a value of exactly the same amount.

AmeriCredit later filed a motion for relief from the automatic stay (Document No. 19), to which the debtors consented (Document No. 23), based on their willingness to surrender the vehicle. On September 17, 2002, this Court entered an order granting the creditor relief from the automatic stay (Document No. 26).

Surrender of the vehicle was also provided for in the debtors’ plan, which was confirmed on September 17, 2002 (Document No. 25), the same day AmeriCredit was granted stay relief. The debtors previously had filed an objection (Document No. 18A) to AmeriCredit’s secured claim, urging the Court to “strike” the claim because they “had surrendered” the vehicle; the objection was withdrawn after the plan was confirmed.

The plan, as confirmed, provided for payment of approximately 39% of unsecured creditors’ claims over 36 months. As to AmeriCredit’s secured proof of claim, the plan (Document No. 12) provided:

B. Secured Claims

(2) AmeriCredit ... has a secured claim in Debtors’ 1997 Plymouth Voyager in the amount of ... $10,000 .... The Debtors shall surrender this property to the secured creditor, AmeriCredit in full and complete satisfaction of it [sic] claim.
3. Any claims filed after June 17, 2002, will receive no distribution .... (emphasis added)

Notice of the confirmation hearing, with a copy of the debtors’ plan, were mailed to AmeriCredit twice, on August 5, and August 26, 2002 (Document Nos. 18 and 24). AmeriCredit did not object to confirmation of the plan.

After the debtors’ plan was confirmed, AmeriCredit sold the vehicle for substantially less than the debt. On October 20, 2003, more than a year after the confirmation order was entered, AmeriCredit filed its second proof of claim in the amount of $7,794.33 (registered as Claim No. 8), which it now seeks to have allowed as an amendment of its original secured claim.

DISCUSSION

A. Preliminary Matters

There are two preliminary matters raised by the parties. First, the Court is now satisfied that the Court incorrectly treated the claim at issue (Claim No. 8) as a duplicate secured claim in the November 12, 2003, order. Although there are ambiguities in the proof of claim which led to entry of that order, 2 the line for actually asserting a secured claim is blank. The box next to the term “amends” is marked, but it then references a “previously filed claim” dated “04/25/2002” [sic]. 3

The Court now finds that Claim No. 8 is an unsecured claim for the deficiency remaining after the creditor’s disposition of the vehicle. The real issue, then, is whether AmeriCredit’s second claim, taken as an unsecured claim, can be allowed at all, since it was filed after both the claims *493 filing deadline and confirmation of the plan.

Second, the Court has considered the argument by the debtors that their Chapter 13 plan, providing for surrender of the collateral in satisfaction of the “claim,” bars AmeriCredit from any further claim in this case. The debtors cite the case of In re Basham, 167 B.R. 903 (Bankr.W.D.Mo.1994)(holding that a confirmed plan providing that certain collateral is surrendered in full satisfaction of the claim bars the creditor from later filing a deficiency claim). AmeriCredit counters with the argument that under the Eleventh Circuit’s decision of In re Bateman, 331 F.3d 821 (11th Cir.2003), the original claim cannot be wiped out by a plan’s “surrender in satisfaction” provision.

In this ease, the Court does not have to apply or interpret Bateman, 4 The plan’s “surrender in satisfaction” language is found only in the paragraph dealing with AmeriCredit’s secured, claim. The Court finds that under the plan only AmeriCredit’s secured claim, not the entire debt, was satisfied by surrender of the collateral.

B. Late-Filed Claim

Standing by itself, Claim No. 8 must be disallowed. Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure 3002(c) requires that proofs of claim in a Chapter 13 case be filed not later than 90 days after the first day set for the meeting of creditors. The applicable Bankruptcy Rules do not permit allowance of a late-filed claim in a Chapter 13 case, even where the facts would otherwise support a finding of “excusable neglect.” See In re Stewart, 247 B.R. 515, 520 (Bankr.M.D.Fla.2000); In re Jones, 154 B.R. 816, 818 (Bankr.M.D.Ga.1993); In re Euston, 120 B.R. 228, 230 (Bankr.M.D.Fla.1990).

C.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
313 B.R. 489, 17 Fla. L. Weekly Fed. B 209, 2004 Bankr. LEXIS 1037, 2004 WL 1924975, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-matthews-flmb-2004.