In Re Perez

20 B.R. 879, 1982 Bankr. LEXIS 3959
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. New York
DecidedJune 9, 1982
Docket1-19-40671
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 20 B.R. 879 (In Re Perez) 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 Perez, 20 B.R. 879, 1982 Bankr. LEXIS 3959 (N.Y. 1982).

Opinion

ROBERT JOHN HALL, Bankruptcy Judge.

This matter is before the Court on the objection of the New York State Higher Education Services Corporation (“NYSH-ESC”) to confirmation of the chapter 13 plan proposed by Segundo and Juana Perez (“the debtors”) which plan would pay back 25% of the amount due on three educational loans. These educational loans were excepted, under section 523(a)(8), 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(8) (Supp. IV 1980), from the debtors’ previous chapter 7 discharge. The NYSHESC objects to confirmation of the proposed chapter 13 on the basis that the plan does not comply with 11 U.S.C. § 1325(a)(3) which requires the plan to be “proposed in good faith”.

Facts

The debtors filed a chapter 7 petition in April 1980 and received a discharge in September 1980. Under the chapter 7 discharge, the debtors were relieved of all but $8,626 of their unsecured debt. This amount was owed on three educational loans and was excepted from the chapter 7 discharge. 1 Four months after the discharge the debtors commenced an adversary proceeding claiming that repayment of the student loan would cause undue hardship. While the “hardship” proceeding was pending, the debtors’ gross income rose from $15,400 to $22,750. This precipitated the withdrawal of the adversary proceeding, and the filing of the chapter 13 plan here under consideration.

The debtors’ plan proposes to repay the three educational loan creditors, who are the only creditors, 25% over a three year period. Upon completion of the plan, the debtors will receive a discharge of these debts even though they are nondischargeable under chapter 7. 2

NYSHESC asserts that it is an impermissible violation of the good faith requirement to propose a chapter 13 plan that affects debts excepted from discharge in a previous chapter 7. The debtors contend that the 25% repayment plan is based on their budget and thus is a good faith attempt to repay such debts.

Good Faith

To resolve the good faith issue, three questions will have to be addressed. First, it must be determined whether the good faith of this proposed plan can be considered when the plan satisfies the other section 1325 criteria. Then the question becomes what Congress meant when it required that a plan be “proposed in good faith”. Finally, once the meaning of good faith is identified the court must determine whether this proposed plan is within that meaning.

The debtors’ proposed plan meets the other more objective criteria for confirmation. 3 In light of this fact, the Court takes notice of the strong judicial opposition to the use of the good faith provision to deny confirmation of chapter 13 plans that otherwise meet such criteria. See, e.g., In re McBride, 4 B.R. 389 (Bkrtcy.M.D.Ala.1980), wherein the court said, “where the *882 specific requirements of section 1325 are met it is not the prerogative of the bankruptcy court to apply additional tests under the guise of interpreting and defining the good faith requirement.” Id. at 392.

Typically, such criticism is aimed at those decisions which, based on a lack of good faith, refuse confirmation to plans which otherwise satisfy the section 1325 criteria but which propose a diminimis repayment percentage. 4 Such situations often arise because varying proposals within a broad range of circumstances, can qualify under the objective criteria of section 1325. For example, the best interest of creditors test will only require a diminimis repayment percentage when the debtor’s chapter 7 proceeding would be a no asset case. Thus to deny confirmation for lack of good faith and base the denial exclusively on the proposed repayment percentage would be in fact to implicitly repeal the best interests of creditors test. Similarly, to allow the nondischargeability of a debt in chapter 7 to bar confirmation of a chapter 13 plan for lack of good faith in effect reads the liberal discharge provisions of section 1328(a) out of chapter 13.

Moreover, a similar result obtains from the view that a proposed plan may not be denied confirmation for lack of good faith where the plan meets all of the other requirements of chapter 13. That approach writes the good faith provision out of chapter 13 thereby ignoring the rule of construction that calls for a statute to be read so as to give meaning to each provision. Clearly, the good faith provision should not be read in derogation of other provisions of the Code, but neither should other provisions be read so as to remove from consideration factors properly within the good faith inquiry.

This approach, in fact, was approved recently by the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals in a decision interpreting section 1325(a)(3). In re Rimgale, 669 F.2d 426 (7th Cir. 1982). There the court stated that it could not endorse “the bankruptcy judge’s cursory inquiry into the debtor’s good faith in proposing the plan”. Id. at 427. Moreover, the court warned against both using the good faith provision to add requirements to the statute and against the opposite extreme saying that to argue “that the good faith requirement adds nothing to the other criteria for confirmation, is equally unsupportable.” Id. at 432. Additionally, it should be noted that even before Rimgale it was established in this district (and in others) that the good faith test would have to be satisfied independently of the other criteria for confirmation. 5 Accordingly, both case law and the rules of statutory construction support the view that this proposed plan must meet the good faith requirement of section 1325(a)(3) exclusive of other chapter 13 requirements for confirmation.

The second inquiry is what Congress envisioned when it required that a plan be proposed in good faith. “Good faith” is not defined in the Code or in its legislative history. However, as the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals recognized in the only other circuit level opinion interpreting section 1325(a)(3), the term good faith is not new to bankruptcy law. In re Terry, 630 F.2d 634 (8th Cir. 1980). In Terry the court described the traditional meaning of good faith as an inquiry into “whether or not under the circumstances of the case there has been an abuse of the provisions, purpose, or spirit” of the rehabilitative chapter. Id. at 635 (quoting 9 Collier on Bankruptcy ¶ 9.20 at 319 (14th ed. 1978)). Since Terry other courts have recognized that the good *883 faith question turns on whether the proposed plan is within the “purpose and spirit” of chapter 13. In re Rimgale, 669 F.2d 426 (7th Cir. 1982); In re Yee, 7 B.R.

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20 B.R. 879, 1982 Bankr. LEXIS 3959, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-perez-nyeb-1982.