In Re Merritt

366 B.R. 637, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 1201, 2007 WL 1068140
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Texas
DecidedApril 9, 2007
Docket19-50446
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 366 B.R. 637 (In Re Merritt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Merritt, 366 B.R. 637, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 1201, 2007 WL 1068140 (Tex. 2007).

Opinion

Decision and Order Regarding Reaffirmation Agreement

LEIF M. CLARK, United States Bankruptcy Judge.

CAME ON for consideration the foregoing matter. The debtor filed for bankruptcy on October 14, 2005, prior to the effective date of the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005. On November 18, 2005, the debt- or executed a reaffirmation agreement on a motor vehicle financed with General Motors Acceptance Corporation. 1 If this agreement had been subject to BAPCPA, the agreement would facially represent an undue hardship, because the debtor’s expenses outstrip the debtor’s income by an amount well in excess of this car payment. However, as this is a pre-BAPCPA case, all that was needed for the reaffirmation agreement to be effective was the countersignature of the debtor’s attorney confirming that the debtor had been advised of her rights and had chosen to enter into the agreement anyway. That countersignature was present on this agreement.

The court writes regarding this agreement for only one reason. It was filed on April 4, 2007. The clerk’s docket shows that the agreement was electronically filed by GMAC. The agreement itself shows that GMAC’s representative did not even sign the agreement until the day that it was filed with the court. What’s more, the agreement signed by GMAC was a fax copy, sent to them by the debtor on April 3, 2007. 2 The debtor received her discharge January 26, 2006.

Reaffirmation agreements run counter to a statutory policy that favors discharge. For this reason, such agreements are accompanied by a raft of statutory protections designed to assure that such agreements are not entered into either lightly or improvidently. While the precise range of protections has been altered by BAPCPA, the basic policy has not.

One of those statutory protections requires such agreements to be made prior to the entry of the debtor’s discharge. See *639 11 U.S.C. § 524(c)(1). The statute also requires such agreements to be filed with the court, 3 but is nonspecific regarding whether the date of discharge (or any date, for that matter) is the deadline for such filing. The bankruptcy rules also set no deadline for filing these agreements, merely stating (with regard to pre-BAPCPA cases) that the court may hold a discharge hearing no more than BO days after entry of the discharge, and on not less than ten days’ notice, and that “a motion by the debtor for approval of a reaffirmation agreement shall be filed before or at the hearing.” See Fed.R.BaNKR.P. 4008. A motion of this sort would only have been needed under pre-BAPCPA law when the debtor’s lawyer did not sign the reaffirmation agreement (or the debtor did not have a lawyer).

Prudence would indicate that such agreements be filed prior to discharge, given that the debtor has rescission rights that extend for 60 days after the date the agreement is filed with the court or the date of discharge, whichever is later. What is more, great mischief could be invited were such agreements routinely filed well after discharge. A creditor (or debtor) might be tempted to make such agreements long after discharge, in clear violation of the statute’s requirements, but to backdate the agreements. We know that not filing agreements can lead to all kinds of trouble. See In re Latanowich, 207 B.R. 326, 337-38 (Bankr.D.Mass.1997) (Kenner, J.) (condemning Sears’ practice of not filing reaffirmation agreements).

Nonetheless, there is no formal rule requiring such agreements to be filed prior to discharge. In this particular case, then, the fact that the agreement was only filed at this late date is not, of itself, reason for ruling the reaffirmation agreement ineffective (though a different result would obtain had the agreement not borne the signature of debtor’s counsel affirming the requisite disclosures had been made to the debtor). To the contrary, so long as it can be shown that the reaffirmation agreement was made prior to discharge, there is no statutory requirement that the agreement also be filed prior to discharge in order to be effective. See In re Graham, 297 B.R. 695, 699 (Bankr.E.D.Tenn.2003) (“ § 524(c) does not contain any provision requiring that a reaffirmation agreement be filed with the court prior to entry of discharge in order for it to be valid”); see also In re Davis, 273 B.R. 152, 153 (Bankr. S.D.Ohio 2001); In re Whisenant, 265 B.R. 164, 167 (Bankr.E.D.Ark.2001) (“Section 524 does not provide that the filing of the reaffirmation agreement must occur before the discharge is granted”); Rigal v. Fleet Mortgage Corp. (In re Rigal), 254 B.R. 145, 146 n. 3 (Bankr.S.D.Tex.2000); but see In re Pettet, 271 B.R. 855, 857 (Bankr. S.D.Ind.2002) (construing § 524(c)(1) to require both execution and filing of reaffirmation agreement prior to the debtor’s discharge); In re Jones, 261 B.R. 479, 484 (Bankr.N.D.Ala.2001); In re Brinkman, *640 123 B.R. 611, 612 (Bankr.N.D.Ind.1991); In re Gruber, 22 B.R. 768, 770 (Bankr. N.D.Ohio 1982) (“Once the court has entered the order of discharge the § 524(c)(1) deadline for making such an agreement has passed”). 4 The agreement here under consideration, then, is not rendered invalid by its extraordinarily tardy filing. 5

There remains the question whether the agreement was made prior to discharge, however. The debtor seems to have executed the form of the agreement in a timely manner. A reaffirmation agreement is, however, a contract, made between at least two parties, only one of which is the debtor. The face of this agreement shows that the creditor, GMAC, did not execute this agreement until April 4, 2007, long after the entry of discharge. The question presented by these facts is thus straightforward: when was the agreement between the debtor and GMAC actually made? Put another way, was there an agreement between the parties prior to discharge, when only the debtor’s signature appeared on the reaffirmation agreement form?

This court, in an unpublished decision, recently ruled that a reaffirmation agreement was not made until both the debtor and the creditor had signed the agreement. See In re Garay, Slip Op.2006 WL 3469579 (Bankr. W.D.Tex.2006). There, the court treated the debtor’s signature on the document as the offer, and the creditor’s signature as the acceptance. Failing acceptance, said the court, there could be no contract. Id., citing CoRbin, Contracts (One Vol. Ed.) §§ 55-56 (West 1952).

While Garay may have been correct on its facts, it states too broad a conclusion of law.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
366 B.R. 637, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 1201, 2007 WL 1068140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-merritt-txwb-2007.