MEMORANDUM OPINION
RICHARD N. DeGUNTHER, Bankruptcy Judge.
This matter comes before the Court on the Objection of Citizen’s First National Bank of Princeton (“CFN”) to Confirmation of the Chapter 11 Reorganization Plan (the “Plan”) of the Debtor, S & W Enterprise (“S & W”). Attorneys John Isaacson of Princeton, Illinois, and Gregg Grimsley of Peoria, Illinois, represent CFN. Attorney Charles Beckman of Dixon, Illinois, represents the Debtor.
CFN argues that the Debtor has failed to meet the requirements for confirmation of its Chapter 11 Reorganization Plan found in Subsections 3, 7 and 10 of Section 1129(a).
CFN’s claim is $654,940, secured by equipment, machinery, and inventory having a liquidation value of $200,000.
There exist only two other non-insider pre-filing claims. These are: (1) the unsecured debt of $450 owed to M. David Cain & Associates, Ltd., for services rendered in auditing the Debtor’s books, and (2) the $421.08 unsecured claim of Connors Farm & Home Service.
Inasmuch as CFN has not elected under Section 1111(b)(2)
to be treated as a secured creditor to the entire extent of its allowed claim, CFN is' treated under Section 506(a)
as secured only to the extent of the value of the security. That portion of CFN’s total claim which exceeds the value of the security shall be treated as an unsecured claim. Therefore, CFN has a $200,-000 secured claim and a $454,940 unsecured claim.
In its Reorganization Plan, the Debtor places CFN’s secured claim in a class by itself as the only secured claim. The Plan proposes to pay CFN upon confirmation $100,000 of its secured claim, the balance
being staggered over a number of years beyond confirmation.
From the three unsecured claims, the Debtor proposes to create two separate classes. The first of these classes is comprised of non-priority, unsecured creditors whose claims are $1000 or less. In other words, this class would consist of the $450 claim of M. David Cain & Associates, Ltd. and the $421.08 claim of Connors Farm & Home Service. The second unsecured class, meanwhile, would consist only of CFN’s unsecured claim of $454,940. The two sub-$1000 unsecured creditors would be paid in full within 30 days of confirmation, while the class made up of CFN’s unsecured claim would be paid only if and when CFN’s secured claim was fully paid and, even in that event, over an extended period of time. CFN has voted to reject the Plan. The sub-$1000 class is the only class which voted to accept the Debtor’s Reorganization Plan.
The Court notes that neither CFN nor the Debtor has mentioned in the pleadings and oral arguments the subject of “impairment” under Code Section 1124.
Likewise, CFN’s Objection to Confirmation contains no reference to Code Section 1129(a)(8).
Inasmuch as the parties have remained silent on this subject throughout these proceedings, the Court shall presume for purposes here that the impairment of CFN’s claims is not at issue in this matter.
The Court has a duty to examine all of the prerequisites found in Section 1129 prior to confirming a debtor’s Chapter 11 Reorganization Plan. Thus, despite the fact that CFN’s Objection to Confirmation is grounded only upon the requirements found in Subsections 3, 7 and 10 of Section 1129(a),
the Court will not limit its analysis to those Subsections.
ANALYSIS
“In Chapter 11 cases, classification of claims may not only determine the return to individual creditors, but also may spell the life or death of the plan itself. A carefully crafted classification may result in acceptances of the plan, facilitate confirmation and avoid application of the absolute priority rule.”
This observation, found in a recent bankruptcy law publication, serves as a warning to those involved in Chapter 11 confirmation matters of the importance of subjecting classification schemes in reorganization plans to strict scrutiny.
It was further noted that:
“Chapter 11 gives no express guidance as to which claims must or can be separately classified. The absence of a statutory framework will generate substantial litigation.”
Further, Collier on Bankruptcy states that:
“Classification of claims and interests under the Code may be the source of considerable more litigation [than occurred under the Bankruptcy Act].”
The Objection to Confirmation filed by CFN is a manifestation of these prophecies.
Here, the Court perceives the heart of CFN’s Objection to Confirmation to be the inappropriateness of the efforts of S & W to separate the three unsecured claims into two distinct classes. CFN has expressed its dissatisfaction with this classification scheme in terms of an argument under Section 1129(a)(10). Specifically, CFN argues that the Debtor, for the sole purpose of fulfilling the requirement of Section 1129(a)(10), has created a class likely to vote to accept the Plan. Section 1129(a)(10)
requires that one class of non-insider claims vote to accept the Plan in order for it to be
confirmed. CFN acknowledges that under Section 1122(b)
a
“. .
. plan may designate a separate class of claims consisting only of every unsecured claim that is less than or reduced to [some amount approved by the court].” The stated purpose of allowing the creation of a class such as S «fe W’s proposed “sub-$1000” unsecured class is to promote convenience in the administration of the reorganization.
Thus, CFN argues, the creation of such a class for the sole purpose of complying with Section 1129(a)(10) is repugnant to both the purpose of Section 1129(a)(10) and the intent of its drafters and should not be permitted.
This Court agrees with CFN that using Section 1122(b) for the sole purpose of meeting the requirement of Section 1129(a)(10) was not a use contemplated by Congress. No such limitation, however, is stated within Section 1129(a)(10).
Nevertheless, all is not lost for CFN. Having selected the proper arrow, CFN simply failed to direct it toward the proper target. In other words, a faulty use of Section 1122(b) in classifying unsecured claims gives rise most appropriately to a denial of confirmation under Section 1129(a)(1),
not Section 1129(a)(10).
The requirement set forth in Section 1129(a)(1) is simply that:
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MEMORANDUM OPINION
RICHARD N. DeGUNTHER, Bankruptcy Judge.
This matter comes before the Court on the Objection of Citizen’s First National Bank of Princeton (“CFN”) to Confirmation of the Chapter 11 Reorganization Plan (the “Plan”) of the Debtor, S & W Enterprise (“S & W”). Attorneys John Isaacson of Princeton, Illinois, and Gregg Grimsley of Peoria, Illinois, represent CFN. Attorney Charles Beckman of Dixon, Illinois, represents the Debtor.
CFN argues that the Debtor has failed to meet the requirements for confirmation of its Chapter 11 Reorganization Plan found in Subsections 3, 7 and 10 of Section 1129(a).
CFN’s claim is $654,940, secured by equipment, machinery, and inventory having a liquidation value of $200,000.
There exist only two other non-insider pre-filing claims. These are: (1) the unsecured debt of $450 owed to M. David Cain & Associates, Ltd., for services rendered in auditing the Debtor’s books, and (2) the $421.08 unsecured claim of Connors Farm & Home Service.
Inasmuch as CFN has not elected under Section 1111(b)(2)
to be treated as a secured creditor to the entire extent of its allowed claim, CFN is' treated under Section 506(a)
as secured only to the extent of the value of the security. That portion of CFN’s total claim which exceeds the value of the security shall be treated as an unsecured claim. Therefore, CFN has a $200,-000 secured claim and a $454,940 unsecured claim.
In its Reorganization Plan, the Debtor places CFN’s secured claim in a class by itself as the only secured claim. The Plan proposes to pay CFN upon confirmation $100,000 of its secured claim, the balance
being staggered over a number of years beyond confirmation.
From the three unsecured claims, the Debtor proposes to create two separate classes. The first of these classes is comprised of non-priority, unsecured creditors whose claims are $1000 or less. In other words, this class would consist of the $450 claim of M. David Cain & Associates, Ltd. and the $421.08 claim of Connors Farm & Home Service. The second unsecured class, meanwhile, would consist only of CFN’s unsecured claim of $454,940. The two sub-$1000 unsecured creditors would be paid in full within 30 days of confirmation, while the class made up of CFN’s unsecured claim would be paid only if and when CFN’s secured claim was fully paid and, even in that event, over an extended period of time. CFN has voted to reject the Plan. The sub-$1000 class is the only class which voted to accept the Debtor’s Reorganization Plan.
The Court notes that neither CFN nor the Debtor has mentioned in the pleadings and oral arguments the subject of “impairment” under Code Section 1124.
Likewise, CFN’s Objection to Confirmation contains no reference to Code Section 1129(a)(8).
Inasmuch as the parties have remained silent on this subject throughout these proceedings, the Court shall presume for purposes here that the impairment of CFN’s claims is not at issue in this matter.
The Court has a duty to examine all of the prerequisites found in Section 1129 prior to confirming a debtor’s Chapter 11 Reorganization Plan. Thus, despite the fact that CFN’s Objection to Confirmation is grounded only upon the requirements found in Subsections 3, 7 and 10 of Section 1129(a),
the Court will not limit its analysis to those Subsections.
ANALYSIS
“In Chapter 11 cases, classification of claims may not only determine the return to individual creditors, but also may spell the life or death of the plan itself. A carefully crafted classification may result in acceptances of the plan, facilitate confirmation and avoid application of the absolute priority rule.”
This observation, found in a recent bankruptcy law publication, serves as a warning to those involved in Chapter 11 confirmation matters of the importance of subjecting classification schemes in reorganization plans to strict scrutiny.
It was further noted that:
“Chapter 11 gives no express guidance as to which claims must or can be separately classified. The absence of a statutory framework will generate substantial litigation.”
Further, Collier on Bankruptcy states that:
“Classification of claims and interests under the Code may be the source of considerable more litigation [than occurred under the Bankruptcy Act].”
The Objection to Confirmation filed by CFN is a manifestation of these prophecies.
Here, the Court perceives the heart of CFN’s Objection to Confirmation to be the inappropriateness of the efforts of S & W to separate the three unsecured claims into two distinct classes. CFN has expressed its dissatisfaction with this classification scheme in terms of an argument under Section 1129(a)(10). Specifically, CFN argues that the Debtor, for the sole purpose of fulfilling the requirement of Section 1129(a)(10), has created a class likely to vote to accept the Plan. Section 1129(a)(10)
requires that one class of non-insider claims vote to accept the Plan in order for it to be
confirmed. CFN acknowledges that under Section 1122(b)
a
“. .
. plan may designate a separate class of claims consisting only of every unsecured claim that is less than or reduced to [some amount approved by the court].” The stated purpose of allowing the creation of a class such as S «fe W’s proposed “sub-$1000” unsecured class is to promote convenience in the administration of the reorganization.
Thus, CFN argues, the creation of such a class for the sole purpose of complying with Section 1129(a)(10) is repugnant to both the purpose of Section 1129(a)(10) and the intent of its drafters and should not be permitted.
This Court agrees with CFN that using Section 1122(b) for the sole purpose of meeting the requirement of Section 1129(a)(10) was not a use contemplated by Congress. No such limitation, however, is stated within Section 1129(a)(10).
Nevertheless, all is not lost for CFN. Having selected the proper arrow, CFN simply failed to direct it toward the proper target. In other words, a faulty use of Section 1122(b) in classifying unsecured claims gives rise most appropriately to a denial of confirmation under Section 1129(a)(1),
not Section 1129(a)(10).
The requirement set forth in Section 1129(a)(1) is simply that:
“(1) The plan complies with the applicable provisions of this Chapter.”
An examination of the Legislative History of this Section reveals that although its scope is certainly broad, the provisions it was most directly aimed at were Sections 1122 and 1123.
In its brief discussion of Section 1129(a)(1), Collier on Bankruptcy states that:
“The substantive provisions which are most relevant in the context of Section 1129(a)(1) are Sections Í122 and 1123.”
Norton Bankruptcy Law <& Practice comments that:
“Before the Court can confirm a plan, the requirements of Chapter 11 must be met. Probably the most important provisions of Chapter 11, outside of the requirements of the confirmation section of the Code, which must be met, are those relating to classification.”
At this point, a closer examination of Section 1122(b) is required. That provision in its entirety states that:
“A plan may designate a separate class of claims consisting only of every unsecured claim that is less than or reduced to an amount that the court approves as reasonable and necessary for administrative convenience.”
Clearly, a classification scheme of the type proposed by S «fe W cannot be a part of a confirmed Chapter 11 Reorganization Plan unless the bankruptcy court approves such a scheme as being reasonable and necessary for administrative convenience.
As described more fully herein, the Court finds that the proposal in the S & W Plan to separate the three unsecured claims into two distinct classes is not reasonable and necessary for administrative convenience, is not permitted under any other Code provision, and is thus not approved.
This finding is supported by the comments of Judge Norton in his treatise that:
“Unsecured claims will, generally speaking, comprise one class, whether trade, tort, publicly held debt or a deficiency of a secured creditor.”
And:
“. .. it should no longer be permissible to classify for vote getting purposes.”
“The Commission on the Bankruptcy Laws recommended that the power to separately classify some unsecured creditors be limited to a classification of $100 or less for administrative convenience. The dollar limit was dropped in Chapter 11 of the Code, but the intent of the Code is the
same
— to
weed out numerous claims and thereby avoid administrative cost.
It is not intended to allow gamesmanship in vote getting.” [Emphasis Added]
This Court finds additional support in the comments of Bankruptcy Judge Schwartzberg in
In re Pine Lake Village Apartment Co.
In
Pine Lake
the debtors owed $10,-400,000 in principal under a mortgage agreement. It was agreed that the apartment complex securing this debt had a value of only $6,400,000, leaving the mortgagee with a $4,000,000 unsecured claim. Besides the mortgagee, the only other claimants were trade creditors whose unsecured claims aggregated $44,952.06 and would have been fully paid had a Chapter 11 petition not been filed. The debtor’s plan of reorganization apparently proposed to treat the mortgagee’s entire claim, secured and unsecured, as one class and the unsecured claims of the trade creditors as a separate class.
Unlike the case at bar, though, the issue in
Pine Lake
was whether to grant relief from the automatic stay.
There existed only a proposed reorganization plan, and no confirmation hearing had taken place. Nonetheless, the propriety of the unsecured claim classification scheme proposed by the debtor was placed at issue as part of the debtor’s assertion that there existed a likelihood of reorganization. The mortgagee argued that its unsecured claim should properly be in the same class as the trade creditors so that its inevitable negative vote on confirmation would preclude the unsecured class from reaching the majority vote required for acceptances under Section 1129
; and that without the acceptance of the unsecured class the debtor could not achieve confirmation due to Section 1129(a)(10).
The debtor argued that the proposed unsecured creditor classification scheme was appropriate and that the' affirmative vote of the trade creditor class was expected so as to meet the requirement of Section 1129(a)(10). The debtor anticipated a cram-down of the plan on the mortgagee. In support of its classification scheme, the Debtor reasoned that pursuant to contract the trade creditors had to be paid prior to
the payment of any other unsecured creditors, and that the deficiency claim of the mortgagee should therefore be subordinated to the rights of the trade creditors.
Judge Schwartzberg observed that:
“In determining the designation of classes, reference must be made to 11 U.S.C. § 1123(a)(1) which requires that a plan shall designate, subject to Section 1122, classes of claims and classes of interest. This section is silent as to the manner in which the separate classes are to be designated nor does it reflect an authorization for designating several classes of unsecured claims as permitted in a Chapter 13 case pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 1322(b)(1). The classification of claims and interests, as distinguished from the designation of classes, is covered by 11 U.S.C. § 1122(a) which permits the placing of claims or interests in a particular class only if such claim or interest ‘is substantially similar to the other claims or interests of such class.’ Consistent with this treatment of claims in a particular class is the provision in 11 U.S.C. § 1123(a)(4) that the plan must provide the same treatment for each claim or interest in a particular class. However, there is little guidance as to the designation of separate classes, except that 11 U.S.C. § 1122(b) does allow for administrative convenience a separate class that is less than or reduced to a dollar amount approved by the court as reasonable and necessary. This is the only exception expressed in the Code for separately designating unsecured claims. Any other designation would have to comply with 11 U.S.C. § 1129(b)(1) that prescribes as a prerequisite for confirmation that ‘the plan does not discriminate unfairly.’ ”
Finding that the Debtor’s subordination argument lacked merit, the
Pine Lake
court held that:
“Therefore, there is no justifiable basis for creating two classes of unsecured creditors and classifying the unsecured trade creditors separately.”
And that:
“The creation of separate classes of unsecured and unsubordinated claims in order to allow gamesmanship in vote getting is not condoned under the Code. Indeed, a deficiency claim arising out of a secured interest in property is expressly treated as a recourse claim in 11 U.S.C. § 1111(b), even though the claim may be nonrecourse by agreement or applicable law. The recognition of the deficiency claim as entitled to the same treatment as all other unsecured claims under a debtor’s plan would be undermined if debtors were permitted to classify separately such deficiency claims. The debtor may not ignore the rejection of its plan by the holder of a large unsecured deficiency claim simply because the debtor designated a specially preferred separate class of easily created trade creditors whose acceptances may be readily obtainable by offering them more than the disfavored deficiency claim holder. Manifestly such treatment of unsecured claims is unfairly discriminatory within the meaning of 11 U.S.C. § 1129(b)(1).”
In essence, it appears that in
Pine Lake
the court found that the proposed classification scheme did not comply with Section 1122(a)
due to the improper classification of the mortgagee’s unsecured claim. It further appears that the court found it unnecessary to apply the “reasonable and necessary” test of Section 1122(b) because the debtor’s plan did not attempt to break down the unsecured claims in the manner permitted under that provision.
A significant difference thus exists between the approach taken in
Pine Lake
and that taken here. The facts here require application of the “reasonable and necessary” test as the Debtor specifically attempts to employ the Section 1122(b) exception by designating a separate class of unsecured claims that is less than or reduced to a particular amount purportedly for administrative convenience.
Regardless of this difference, this Court finds itself in basic agreement with Judge Norton and Judge Schwartzberg that the manipulation of unsecured claims, interests, or classes for the sole purpose of complying with the voting requirement of Section 1129(a)(10) shall not be tolerated. Of particular note in this case is the impropriety of engaging in such manipulation under the guise of promoting administrative convenience under Section 1122(b). As will be seen, this becomes critical when the “reasonable and necessary” standard of Section 1122(b) is applied to a debtor’s proposed unsecured creditor classification scheme.
The Court finds only one case which provides some degree of guidance in the application of the “reasonable and necessary” test of Section 1122(b). That is the opinion of Judge Abrams in
In re Mastercraft Record Plating,
Inc.
As here, the Mastercraft Reorganization Plan provided for the separate classification of general unsecured claims based on amount. Those less than $20,000 comprised one proposed class, whereas those above $20,000 comprised another proposed class. In addition, unlike S & W’s Plan, the Mas-tercraft Plan proposed a third class of general unsecured claims: those which are disputed. The first two unsecured classes were to be treated identically under the plan, with no description contained in the plan as to the treatment of the class of disputed claims.
Judge Abrams apparently found that the Mastercraft Plan, unlike the S & W Plan here, lacked clarity as to whether Master-craft was relying upon Section 1122(b) in creating the sub-$20,000 class. Nevertheless, the court conducted a Section 1122(b) analysis and found that “[i]f the under $20,-000 class was intended to take advantage of this section it fails the test.”
Judge Abrams held that:
“The purpose of 1122(b) is to allow a plan to reduce the number of creditors eligible to vote. This result is accomplished by offering creditors holding small claims of perhaps a few hundred dollars each a 100% payment and thus providing that they are not impaired. The treatment of the over and under $20,000 claims is identical in the plan in these classes and is not provision for payment in full. No administrative convenience is being served and both classes are impaired.”
This Court believes that application of the “reasonable and necessary” test was appropriate in
Mastercraft,
but has difficulty discerning the exact standards which were utilized in applying the test: Did the proposed classification scheme fail the test because it left the claims in the sub-$20,000 class impaired? If so, from what authority is this standard derived?
Is the purpose of Section 1122(b) merely to allow a plan to reduce the number of
creditors eligible to vote on a reorganization plan as the
Mastercraft
court asserts?
Although such a result might be viewed as promoting administrative convenience, what legislative or statutory language gives rise to this narrow definition of the type of administrative convenience sought to be promoted by classification under Section 1122(b)? This Court is aware that the Legislative History with respect to Section 1122(b) contains comments such as the following:
“... payments in cash of small claims in full is common practice in reorganization.”
But this Court does not read this legislative observation as requiring that, where a plan provides for the full payment of a small-claims class under Section 1122(b), such payment must occur on the effective date of the plan in order to pass the “reasonable and necessary” test. S & W’s proposed classification scheme, for instance, provides for payment in full of its sub-$1000 class, but only within 30 days of the effective date of the Plan. This leaves this class impaired under the Plan, and under the
Mastercraft
approach would seem to require a finding that no administrative convenience is served by the proposed classification under Section 1122(b). Such a reading of “reasonable and necessary for administrative convenience” strikes this Court as unduly narrow.
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Against the background of an express lack of statutory guidance, an ambiguous Legislative History, and a lack of helpful case law, this Court now proceeds to subject the Debtor’s proposed unsecured creditor classification scheme to the “reasonable and necessary” test of Section 1122(b).
First, is it “necessary” for administrative convenience to split S & W’s three unsecured claims into two classes? The Court finds that “necessary” in the context of Section 1122(b) means something more than just tending to ease the administrative burden. Treating the unsecured claims as members of the same class must be truly burdensome before a bankruptcy court should consider deviating from the general rule and classifying them separately. In this case the Court finds that a negligible administrative burden, and thus no necessity, exists. There are, after all, only three unsecured claimants, two of which comprise only $850 in claims. The complexity of dealing- with these claims is not exactly mind-boggling.
Even in a case where a bankruptcy court finds that separating unsecured claims into separate classes is to some extent necessary, the proposed classification scheme must still pass the reasonableness test in order to gain court approval. Thus the Court must determine whether the proposed classification is a “reasonable” means of achieving the goal of promoting administrative convenience. A balancing is required between the administrative benefits achievable under the proposed unsecured creditor classification scheme and the negative effects the scheme renders upon other entities and Code policies. Here, the Court finds that not only is the separation of claims unnecessary to promote administrative convenience, it falls decisively short of being “reasonable.” To hold otherwise would be to make worthless Code provisions
such as Section 1129(a)(10) and to render meaningless the placing by Congress of the terms “reasonable” and “necessary” in Section 1122(b). In short, the Debtor’s creation of separate unsecured classes is a fiction born of the necessity to satisfy Section 1129(a)(10).
In addition, this Court adopts the position that the Legislative History, the existence and language of the administrative convenience exception of Section 1122(b), and the language of Section 1122(a), lead to an implication that general unsecured claims not separable under Section 1122(b) must be placed in the same class.
In accordance with this view, no other basis can be found upon which to allow S & W’s proposed unsecured creditor classification scheme.
This Court is aware of the viewpoint expressed in Collier on Bankruptcy interpreting Section 1122 as permitting the separate classification of claims for purposes other than that described in Section 1122(b):
“The Code does not require all nonpriority prepetition unsecured claims to be placed within a single class. While the Code specifically allows a plan to provide for separate classification for administrative convenience of claims of less than a specific amount, the Code also implicitly recognizes that separate classification of unsecured claims may be appropriate.”
This perceived implication is apparently derived from pre-Code classification cases as well as from reference to portions of Section 1124.
The Collier on Bankruptcy interpretation is followed in
Ledford v.
McCormick,
which involved a Chapter 13 plan. That bankruptcy court held that:
“11 U.S.C. § 1122(a), incorporated by reference into 11 U.S.C. § 1322(b)(1), does require that claims placed in a ‘particular class’ be ‘substantially similar.’ There is, however, no requirement in 11 U.S.C. § 1122, or elsewhere in the Bankruptcy Code, that all ‘substantially similar’ claims be placed in a single class. Instead, 11 U.S.C. § 1122(a) limits the number of claims which ‘may be placed’ in a given classification, without limiting the number of types of classifications themselves.”
Section 1122(a) provides that:
“Except as provided in subsection (b) of this section, a plan may place a claim or an interest in a particular class only if such claim or interest is substantially similar to the other claims or interests of such class.”
The better view is that espoused by Judge Abrams in
Mastercraft
after holding that the plan’s proposed unsecured creditor classification scheme failed the “necessary and reasonable” test of Section 1122(b):
“Although § 1122(a) deals with the placing of dissimilar claims in the same class, it by necessary implication deals with the placing of similar claims in different classes. There is no authority for classifying similar claims differently other than § 1122(b) just discussed. General unsecured claims are all alike, whether they are disputed or not, whether over or under $20,000. Thus, unless Bekins or Keel consents to a different and/or lesser treatment than that of other general unsecured creditors they may not be separately classified. Classification cannot be used to divide like claims into multiple
classes in order to create a consenting class so as to permit confirmation.”
The Court’s analysis next turns to Section 1123,
entitled “Contents of Plan”, which provides in relevant part that:
“(a) A plan shall—
(1) designate,
subject to section 1122
of this title, classes of claims other than claims of a kind specified in Section 507(a)(1), 507(a)(2), or 507(a)(6) of this title and classes of interest.” [Emphasis added]
The designation of classes in the Debtor’s Plan is thus subject to the limitations of Section 1122, and as the Debtor’s classification scheme is not in compliance with that section, it likewise fails under Section 1123(a)(1).
Inasmuch as the Court has determined that the Debtor’s Plan is not in compliance with applicable provisions of Chapter 11— particularly Sections 1122 and 1123(a)(1)— confirmation must be denied pursuant to Section 1129(a)(1).
Finally, the Debtor’s compliance with Section 1129(a)(10) was based solely upon the affirmative vote of the sub-$1000 class of unsecured creditors. Therefore, the Court’s rejection of that classification as inappropriate negates the affirmative vote and causes the Plan to fail simultaneously under Section 1129(a)(10). (As noted earlier, failure under Section 1129(a)(10) isn’t always mandated by the rejection of a proposed classification under Section 1122(b). This will occur only where the rejected class is the lone class voting to accept the plan.)
In view of the foregoing, the Court concludes that confirmation should be denied and that it is unnecessary to analyze the issues raised by CFN under Sections 1129(a)(3) and (a)(7).
ORDER ENTERED ACCORDINGLY.