In Re Pizzolato

268 F. Supp. 353, 1967 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7611
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Arkansas
DecidedMay 24, 1967
Docket154
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 268 F. Supp. 353 (In Re Pizzolato) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Pizzolato, 268 F. Supp. 353, 1967 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7611 (W.D. Ark. 1967).

Opinion

*354 OPINION

JOHN E. MILLER, District Judge.

This cause is before the court on a “Petition for Review” filed by the Arkansas First National Bank of Hot Springs, Arkansas. On April 3, 1967, the bank filed before the Bankruptcy Court a “Petition for Reclamation,” wherein the bank stated that it held a promissory note and conditional sales contract executed by Betty Pizzolato and secured by one 1964 Dodge automobile; that payments on the note were in default; that the bank did desire to repossess the automobile pursuant to the terms of the conditional sales contract. The petition further stated that the bank, as a secured creditor, rejected the plan proposed, whereby Betty Pizzolato would extinguish her debts owed to various creditors.

The Referee in Bankruptcy issued an order dated April 19, 1967, denying the petition for reclamation. The bank then filed its petition for review on May 8, 1967, in which it requested the court to reverse the aforementioned order of the Referee. The Referee has filed his certificate and the bank has submitted its brief. The debtor has also submitted brief.

The facts as found by the Referee are not disputed by the petitioner bank. There is nothing, therefore, to indicate that the facts are “clearly erroneous,” and they are accepted by the court pursuant to Order 47 of General Orders in Bankruptcy.

Mrs. Betty Pizzolato (hereinafter referred to as the debtor) is a practical nurse at St. Joseph Hospital at Hot Springs, Arkansas. She resides some distance from the hospital on Route 7. She is married to a disabled veteran, who is unemployed but draws compensation from the Veterans Administration. Their combined monthly take-home income is $416.90. The Pizzolatos have . twin children living at home and both are in school. The Dodge automobile in question is used daily and frequently in providing transportation for the debtor to go to and from her employment, and for transporting her husband for medical treatment by physicians, both in Hot Springs and Little Rock. The vehicle is also otherwise used for normal domestic requirements. The vehicle is necessary for the family and for the stability of the proposed plan, and without it the plan would collapse.

On March 19, 1964, the debtor executed her promissory note in the amount of $3,364.56 in favor of Beasley Motor Co., Inc., payable in monthly installments of $93.46. The note was executed in conjunction with a conditional sales contract covering the Dodge automobile, heretofore mentioned, which Betty Pizzolato purchased from the said Beasley Motor Co., Inc. On the same date the motor company assigned its interest in the note and contract to Arkansas First National Bank of Hot Springs. On December 8, 1965, the debtor refinanced and executed her promissory note to Beasley Motor Co., Inc., in the amount of $1,555.36, payable in seventeen monthly installments, the first sixteen in the amount of $70 and the last payment (the 17th) in the amount of $435.36. The motor company again assigned all its interest in the note to the bank. The debtor made the payments required by the contract through January 1967.

On February 21, 1967, after timely notice was given, a meeting of creditors was held at Hot Springs, Arkansas, at which meeting the debtor proposed to liquidate her debts as provided for in Chapter XIII of the act. The plan proposed $50 per month for payments on the automobile, $40 additional for the general creditors, and reduced sums to certain other secured creditors. The plan was amended whereby the bank would be paid $70 per month, the amount called for in the promissory note. All of the general creditors accepted the plan but the bank did not. The debtor has now paid into the registry of the court sums sufficient to pay the $70 installments due the bank for February, March, and April 1967, and a substantial amount which could be applied on the balloon payment for May 1967.

*355 The issue which must be resolved by the court may be stated as follows: Whether the bankruptcy court can, pursuant to a Chapter XIII debtor’s plan, enjoin a non-consenting secured creditor (here, the bank) from foreclosing where the collateral sought (the automobile) is essential to the plan and the security will not be impaired, but the secured creditor will not be able to collect the payments due precisely according to the terms of its contract. Like most legal questions posed in a .vacuum, this question does not lend itself to a stock answer.

As was recognized by the Referee and pointed out in his certificate, there is a dearth of printed opinions touching the precise issues now before the court. None of the opinions which have been brought to the attention of the court deal with problems identical to those presented in the case now before the court.

It seems to be settled law that a secured creditor who does not consent to the proposed plan of the debtor cannot be adversely “dealt with” by the plan. In re O’Dell, (D.Kan. 1961) 198 F.Supp. 389. The court understands that decision to mean that if the plan calls for payment to the secured creditor which is less than he was to receive according to his contract, the creditor may not be forced to participate in the plan. In that case, the petitioner, a creditor whose debt was secured by an automobile, met with the other creditors when the proposed plan was announced. The petitioner rejected the plan but it was confirmed by the Referee. Pursuant to the plan, the debtor, whose contract payments on all secured debts were over $38 per week, was to pay the Trustee $37 per week, with secured creditors having priority over unsecured creditors but receiving monthly payments on a pro rata basis. The petitioner, as a non-consenting, secured creditor, objected to the plan, and contended that the court had no power to reduce its payments below the terms of its contract. Without discussing the facts in detail, the District Court held that the plan “‘which does not provide for assumption of executory contracts by the trustee or otherwise make provision for the payment of the claims of secured creditors according to the terms of the instrument creating the debt, does deal with such claims. A plan without such provisions should not be confirmed unless accepted by the secured creditors.” (Emphasis added.) 198 F.Supp. at p; 391. The court reversed the order of the Referee confirming the plan.

The court does not feel constrained to follow the O’Dell case for two reasons: first, because the facts on which that decision was based (and which doubtlessly justified the outcome) were not detailed in the opinion; and second, the primary issues in that case were whether the secured creditor was “dealt with” by the plan and whether a non-consenting secured creditor can be forced to collect his payments pursuant to said plan. The question of the court’s authority to enjoin foreclosure was not considered.

While “dealing with” a non-consenting secured creditor and enjoining his foreclosure are related propositions, they are by no means inseparable. It can be determined whether or not a secured creditor is “dealt with” by a wage-earner’s plan merely by considering the plan together with the security agreement in question. If the plan calls for payments to the creditor in amounts less than the contract, the plan “deals with” the secured creditor. There can be no doubt that the plan in the case at bar “deals with” the petitioner, a non-consenting, secured creditor.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
268 F. Supp. 353, 1967 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7611, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-pizzolato-arwd-1967.