In Re Reed

454 B.R. 790
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Oregon
DecidedAugust 9, 2011
Docket14-35976
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 454 B.R. 790 (In Re Reed) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Reed, 454 B.R. 790 (Or. 2011).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

ELIZABETH PERRIS, Bankruptcy Judge.

In this chapter 13 1 case, debtors, whose family income exceeds the applicable median income for their family size, seek to confirm a plan that pays nothing to unsecured creditors and lasts only 43 months. The chapter 13 trustee objects to confirmation on two bases: that the plan is required to, but does not, last five years and that the plan does not, according to the trustee, commit all of debtors’ projected disposable income to payments under the plan. The issues are how to calculate projected disposable income, and whether recent Supreme Court opinions have effectively overruled the Ninth Circuit’s decision about the required length of a plan for an above-median-income debtor with negative projected disposable income.

Taking into account the evidence presented at the hearings on this matter, as well as the arguments of the parties, I conclude that debtors’ projected disposable income is less than zero, and that, under controlling Ninth Circuit precedent, they are not required to commit to a five-year plan period. Debtors’ plan as proposed will be confirmed.

FACTS 2

Debtors David and Rebecca Reed are both employed. Mr. Reed has been employed by the same employer for 38 years. His income fluctuates based on the number of hours worked per pay period. During the twelve-month period of March 2010 through February 2011, his average monthly income was $6,611.26. He does not anticipate any changes in income.

Mrs. Reed has worked at the same job for 13 years. She received a raise in June 2010 and does not anticipate any changes in her income. Her salary is $4,500 per month. She received a bonus of $8,500 in early 2010, and a $469.80 bonus in her February 10, 2011, paycheck. Debtors represent in their Second Amended Schedule I that Mrs. Reed’s average net bonus, received once a year, is $22.08 per month.

At the time they filed bankruptcy, debtors had been receiving monthly adoption assistance payments. Those payments were to end after June 2011. 3

*794 As required, debtors filed an Official Form B22C, the “Chapter 13 Statement of Current Monthly Income and Calculation of Commitment Period and Disposable Income.” The income amounts reported on this form, as required by statute, are derived from the average monthly income of the debtors from the six calendar months preceding bankruptcy. Those amounts are $6,720.55 for Mr. Reed, made up of $6,188.05 in wages plus $532.50 in adoption assistance, and $4,335.56 for Mrs. Reed. The couple’s total monthly income reflected on the Form B22C, based on the six months before bankruptcy, is $11,056.11. Their annualized current monthly income reflected in the form is $132,673.32, which is above the applicable median family income of $62,608.

The Form B22C includes a calculation of deductions from income, resulting in a “monthly disposable income.” Because debtors’ income exceeds the applicable median family income, they are required to use Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) standards for many of their expenses, such as food, housing, and vehicle ownership and operation costs. The expenses debtors report in their Form B22C total $11,726.63, leaving a monthly disposable income of a negative $670.52.

Debtors propose a 43-month plan with payments beginning at $1,300 per month and stepping up to $2,032 after 28 months. They are able to propose to make payments into the plan, despite the negative monthly disposable income reflected in the Form B22C, because the income projected in their Schedule I is more than the income shown in the Form B22C (based as it is on the six months before bankruptcy) and their actual expenses are less than the amounts allowed by the IRS standards.

The plan payments will result in a zero dividend to unsecured creditors. If debtors were to make the monthly payments proposed in the plan for a full 60 months, the dividend to unsecured creditors would be $36,758.63, approximately 61 percent of the filed general unsecured claims of $59,305.03. The trustee objects to confirmation of the plan, arguing that debtors should be required to continue their proposed plan payments for five years.

PARTIES’ ARGUMENTS AND BACKGROUND

1. Summary of Arguments

Debtors argue that, because the monthly disposable income shown on their Form B22C is less than zero, they are not required to extend their plan for 60 months. Instead, they argue for confirmation of a plan that will be completed after 43 months and will pay nothing to unsecured creditors.

The trustee argues that, using a forward-looking approach to calculating projected disposable income based primarily on debtors’ Schedules I and J, debtors have more than zero projected disposable income. Even if debtors’ projected disposable income is a negative number, however, he argues that debtors should nonetheless be required to make their plan payments for 60 months, resulting in a substantial dividend to unsecured creditors.

2. Legal Background

Chapter 13 allows individuals with “regular income” to make payments over time and receive a discharge at the conclusion of the plan payments. If the trustee or a creditor objects to confirmation of a plan that does not provide for payment in full to unsecured creditors, the court may not confirm the plan unless it provides “that all of the debtor’s projected disposable income to be received in the applicable commitment period ... will be applied to *795 make payments to unsecured creditors under the plan.” § 1325(b)(1)(B).

For debtors whose current monthly income exceeds the median income for the debtor’s family size, “disposable income” is calculated according to the means test set out in § 707(b)(2). § 1325(b)(2), (3). This test starts with the debtor’s historical average monthly income for the six months before bankruptcy, and deducts amounts for “reasonably necessary” expenses. § 1325(b)(2). What expenses are “reasonably necessary” are determined in large part using standards specified by the IRS. §§ 707(b)(2), 1325(b)(3).

“Disposable income” as determined under the means test is then projected over the plan’s “applicable commitment period.” The “applicable commitment period” for above-median debtors who are not paying unsecured creditors in full is “not less than 5 years[.]” § 1325(b)(4)(A)(ii).

The questions of how to project disposable income and what “applicable commitment period” is used when an above-median debtor has zero or negative projected disposable income have vexed debtors, trustees, and the courts since amendment of the statutory definition of “disposable income” in the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005 (“BAPCPA”). In 2008, the Ninth Circuit answered both of those questions for this circuit in In re Kagenveama, 541 F.3d 868 (9th Cir.2008).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
454 B.R. 790, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-reed-orb-2011.