In Re Miles

415 B.R. 108, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 2639, 2009 WL 2902443
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 7, 2009
Docket96-13629
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 415 B.R. 108 (In Re Miles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Miles, 415 B.R. 108, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 2639, 2009 WL 2902443 (Pa. 2009).

Opinion

Memorandum Opinion

DIANE WEISS SIGMUND, Bankruptcy Judge.

Before the Court are the Objections of the Chapter 13 trustee (the “Trustee”) to *110 the Chapter 13 plans proffered by debtor Vanessa Miles (“Miles”), Case. No. 07-14495 and joint debtors Brian and Ann Beal (the “Beals”), Case No. 08-10357. The Objections raise a common ground for urging the Court to deny confirmation of these plans. 1 Both plans provide that the Debtors shall make all payments under their respective plans to a secured creditor directly rather than to the Trustee for distribution to those creditors. Given the differing facts of each ease, I will exercise my discretion to approve the plan proposed by the Beals (the “Beal Plan”) but withhold it with respect to the plan proposed by Miles (the “Miles Plan”).

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

A. Vanessa Miles

This is Miles’ fifth bankruptcy case since 2002. 2 Her fourth case was dismissed with a 180-day bar against filing a further bankruptcy petition without leave of Court as a result of her three prior unsuccessful cases. 3 Miles obtained Countrywide’s consent to a fifth case by entering into a “Filing Stipulation” with Countrywide wherein she agreed to remain current on post-petition mortgage payments to it and Chapter 13 plan payments to the Trustee as well as committed to file a Chapter 13 plan that adequately provided for Countrywide’s proof of claim. 4

In this latest case, after filing three plans that provided for a cure of Countrywide’s pre-petition arrears and reinstatement of its mortgage, Debtor changed her approach and proposed a Third Amended Plan that contemplated paying Countrywide’s claim in full over the remaining life of the plan. 5 This was not an insignificant change. Debtor’s default under the mortgage had been reduced to judgment in March of 2003, between her first and second bankruptcy cases. By providing for full payment of the judgment rather than a cure and reinstatement of the mortgage, Debtor was able to utilize Pennsylvania’s merger doctrine to eliminate approximately $5,800 in post-judgment “escrow advances” for taxes and insurance premiums by prosecuting a successful objection to Countrywide’s claim (the “Objection”). 6 Id. at 443-44 (discussing In re Stendardo, 991 F.2d 1089 (3d Cir.1993)). The Objection was strenuously defended by Countrywide which had assumed an arrears plan would be pursued which would ensure that these advances would be repaid, and resulted in an allowed secured claim in the amount of $85,752.30 plus interest at 6% over the life of the 60-month plan. Id. at *111 445-46.1 ordered Miles to file an amended plan and increase the wage order to fund the allowed claim.

Until the Third Amended Plan, when Miles was contemplating reinstatement of the mortgage, her proposed payments were bifurcated, ie. she proposed payments to the Trustee toward the arrears, while making current mortgage payments to Countrywide. The wage orders in effect up to that point ordered her employer to send payments to both the Trustee and Countrywide. After changing to her total cure strategy, Miles’ Third and Fourth Amended Plans as well as subsequently amended wage orders provided for the entire plan payments to be paid to the Trustee. Consistent with her Fourth Amended Plan, there is still an order in place providing for Miles’ employer to make monthly payments to the Trustee in the amount of $1,875. Doc. No. 109 (the “Third Wage Order”).

After further amendment by Debtor to her Plan and Countrywide to its proof of claim, I now have before me Debtor’s Seventh Amended Plan. 7 The most significant change, which originated in the Fifth and has carried through to the Seventh Amended Plan, is that Miles now proposes to cease all further plan payments to the Trustee. Instead, the remaining plan payments, now calculated by Debtor as $1,924.23 per month, 8 are to be paid by Debtor directly to Countrywide by way of a proposed amended wage order. The Trustee’s sole remaining function will be to disperse $7,500 of the $11,440 paid as of the date of the filing of the Seventh Amended Plan, 9 to Countrywide, with the rest going toward Miles’ attorney’s fees and the Trustee’s commission.

The Trustee objects to Debtor making future plan payments directly to Countrywide. The Chapter 13 trustee program is wholly funded by commissions paid by debtors calculated as a percentage of the funds which the trustees receive from the debtor. 28 U.S.C. § 586(e)(2). Thus, the Trustee receives no commission on payments that debtors pay directly to creditors under a plan. The consequence of this plan amendment is to eliminate the receipt by the Trustee of the commission which otherwise would have been payable on account of these plan payments. While secured creditors generally prefer direct payment as ensuring a speedier receipt of the plan funds, Countrywide joins in this objection to confirmation, stating its wish *112 to be paid by and through the Trustee. Plan confirmation is also opposed by the Trustee on the grounds that the Seventh Amended Plan is underfunded even if Debtor is permitted to avoid the Trustee commission on the Countrywide payments. 10

Also pending is the Trustee’s Motion to Dismiss this case on the basis of plan infeasibility, ie., the total claims to be paid through the plan exceed the value of the plan (the “Dismissal Motion”). However, the Dismissal Motion is based upon the Second Amended Plan, which proposed to pay a secured claim by the City of Philadelphia. Beginning with the Third Amended Plan, Miles has expressly stated that the City’s claim will not be paid. Thus, the Dismissal Motion is clearly mooted by subsequent plan amendments.

B. Brian and Ann Beal

Like Miles, the Beals have proposed a Chapter 13 plan primarily to address mortgage debt, in their case several secondary mortgages on their primary residence. It appears that they are current on the primary mortgage, held by PNC Bank, N.A. (“PNC”). 11 The Beal Plan provides for payments to the Trustee totaling $10,518, from which they will cure approximately $900 in arrears under their second mortgage with PNC securing a home equity line of credit. Beal Plan ¶ 4-5. The Beals are making current payments under the second mortgage directly to PNC. Schedule J. In addition to arrears on the second mortgage, the Plan payments to the Trustee are allocated to a priority tax claim of $2,784, attorney’s fees, and a pro rata distribution toward unsecured claims.

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Related

Giesbrecht v. Fitzgerald (In Re Giesbrecht)
429 B.R. 682 (Ninth Circuit, 2010)
Dehart v. Stonier (In Re Stonier)
417 B.R. 702 (M.D. Pennsylvania, 2009)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
415 B.R. 108, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 2639, 2009 WL 2902443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-miles-paeb-2009.