In re Salazar

543 B.R. 669, 2015 WL 9438543, 2015 Bankr. LEXIS 4324
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Kansas
DecidedDecember 23, 2015
DocketCASE NO. 15-21309-13
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 543 B.R. 669 (In re Salazar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Salazar, 543 B.R. 669, 2015 WL 9438543, 2015 Bankr. LEXIS 4324 (Kan. 2015).

Opinion

OPINION DENYING CONFIRMATION OF THE DEBTOR’S CHAPTER 13 PLAN BECAUSE IT UNFAIRLY DISCRIMINATES IN FAVOR OF HER STUDENT LOAN CREDITOR

Dale L. Somers, United States, Bankruptcy Judge

In this case, the Court must determine whether the Debtor’s proposed Chapter 13 plan, can be confirmed. The plan places the Debtor’s unsecured student loan creditors in a special class that will receive distributions while her other unsecured creditors will receive nothing. The Debtor appears by counsel David A. Reed. Chapter 13 Trustee William H. Griffin objects to the plan, and he appears by' counsel Karie L. Fahrenholz. The Court has reviewed the relevant materials and is now ready to rule.

This case concerns a rather strange intersection in Chapter 13 practice. Congress has been sufficiently concerned about student loan debts to make them usually not dischargeable in Chapter 13, but not concerned enough to give them payment priority over other unsecured debts. Because interest on nondischargeable debts continues to accrue while a debtor is performing under a Chapter 13 plan but cannot be paid unless the 'debtor is paying all the unsecured claims in full, a debtor with student loan debts runs a very real risk of paying into a plan for three to five years only to find that she finishes her plan owing more on those debts than she did when she filed for bankruptcy. In this case, the Debtor hopes to reduce that risk by creating one class for student loan creditor and another class for all her other unsecured creditors, and directing to the student loan class alone- all the money she pays into her plan that would otherwise be divided pro rata among all her unsecured creditors. Whether she can do that depends on whether the Court can find that her proposal does not discriminate unfairly against her non-student-loan unsecured creditors.

Facts

The Debtor filed her Chapter 13 bankruptcy petition on June 20, 2015. She reported owing no secured debts and no [671]*671unsecured priority debts. She listed a total of $31,394.78 in general unsecured debts, including two student loan debts totaling $6,119 that she owes to the same creditor. The deadline for non-governmental creditors to file proof, of their claims was October 13, 2015, but governmental creditors have until. December 21, 2015, to file theirs. By October 13, the Debtor’s student loan creditor had filed a claim for $6,136.66, and four other claims (all unsecured) were .filed, one for $3,845.07, one for $99.34, one for $881.19, and one for $22.03. The sum of the non-student-loan debts is $4,847,63, and the sum of all the filed claims is $10,984.29. The Court notes that none of the creditors the Debtor listed appear to be governmental units, except perhaps the student loan creditor. The Debtor reports that she owns no real property and the personal property she owns is worth $3,728. She claims exemptions for $3,606 worth of that personal property.

median debtor and her Applicable Commitment Period under the Bankruptcy Code is three years. She proposed that she would pay $185 per month into her plan for 36 months, providing a total of $6,660. The plan provided for distributions to pay the Debtor’s attorney fee of $3,000, the Chapter 13 filing fee of $310, and the .Chapter 13 Trustee’s fee of . 5.25%, or $349.65 (a total of $3,659.65). Since she listed no secured or unsecured priority creditors, the Debtor expected $3,000.35 to be: available for paying her unsecured creditors.. But the Debtor did not propose to have that money distributed pro rata among' all her unsecured creditors; Instead, she wanted, to place her student loan creditor in a special class and have all the $3,000.35-distributed to it. The Trustee objected to. this part of -the Debtor’s plan, contending it was not a .permissible proposal, so the plan could not be confirmed.

The Debtor reported that she is single, has no dependents, and has gross income of $2,891. per month from her work as a machine operator. As shown on the Official Form 22C-1 she filed, her average monthly income during the 6 full months before she filed bankruptcy (her “Current Monthly Income”) was also $2,891, making her annualized- Current Monthly Income for the year before she filed $34,692. At the time she filed, the applicable median family income for a household of one in her home state, Kansas, was $45,980. Since the Debtor is a below-median-income debt- or, her disposable income is not controlled by the Chapter 7 means test as incorporated by § 1325(b)(3).

Along with her bankruptcy petition, the Debtor filed a proposed Chapter 13 plan. In it, she reported that she is a below-

In their-briefs, the parties have asserted certain additional facts, mainly about the Debtor’s past and present circumstances, that they contend -should affect the Court’s analysis here. According to the Trustee, assuming the Debtor makes all her payments timely and she incurs no additional attorney fees,' her attorney’s fees will not be paid- until' 17 months into her plan, and the first distribution to her student loan creditor will therefore not be made until the month after' that. The Trustee added that the Debtor previously filed a Chapter 13 ease in February 2007 and received a discharge, so she was eligible to receive a Chapter 7 -discharge when she filed her current case.1 The Trustee also asserted that during 2015, the Debtor’s attorney had filed five Chapter 7 cases by the end of September-and had charged a fee of $1,200 in each, as'opposed to the $3,000 fee he is' charging in this case. In Chapter 7 [672]*672then, the Trustee concludes, the Debtor would have paid $1,200 in attorney fees plus a filing fee, and her case would likely have been completed in 90 to 120 days. Immediately after filing under Chapter 7, the Debtor could have devoted the same monthly amount she proposed to pay into her plan to paying the student loan creditor alone, and that creditor could therefore have begun to receive payments' álmdst immediately and could be paid in full in approximately 36 months. Under the Debtor’s Chapter 13 plan, by contrast, the creditor must wait for 18 months' to receive its first distribution and would ultimately receive only a 48% dividend, while interest would continue to accrue, and possibly fees and late charges. Finally, the Trustee pointed out' that the Debtor’s student loans totaled over $10,000 in. her prior case but had been reduced by approximately 40% by the time she filed this case.

In response, the Debtor does not dispute any of the Trustee’s. asserted facts, but contends other facts show Chapter 13 was an appropriate choice for her bankruptcy filing. She noted that fifty-nine days before she filed bankruptcy, she refinanced a loan with a creditor her attorney suspected might file a § 523 or § 727 complaint if she filed a Chapter 7 case. Her attorney suggested his effective hourly rate of compensation typically turns out to be lower for a $3,000 flat-fee Chapter 13 than it does for a $1,200 flat-fee Chapter 7 ease. The Debtor’s choice of. Chapter 13 was also influenced by the fact she experiences recurring medical expenses she is unable to pay for in full, so she is likely to need bankruptcy again in the future, probably sooner than the eight-year delay that must pass between Chapter 7 discharges. A successful Chapter 13 now, rather than a Chapter 7, will also leave Chapter 7 available to her sooner if she should suffer a catastrophic reversal of fortune in the future.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
543 B.R. 669, 2015 WL 9438543, 2015 Bankr. LEXIS 4324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-salazar-ksb-2015.