Juan M. Sandoval

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Wisconsin
DecidedMarch 31, 2022
Docket21-24190
StatusUnknown

This text of Juan M. Sandoval (Juan M. Sandoval) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Juan M. Sandoval, (Wis. 2022).

Opinion

= y mm ‘ i So Ordered.

Dated: March 31, 2022 Wel J A. . Michael Halfenger Chief United States} Bankruptcy Judge

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF WISCONSIN

In re: Juan Sandoval, Case No. 21-24190-gmh Chapter 13 Debtor.

DECISION AND ORDER

Reverse Mortgage Funding LLC objects to confirmation of the chapter 13 plan, contending that the plan must pay its claim in full. As explained below, the plan need not provide for full payment of Reverse Mortgage’s claim, so the objection is overruled. The following facts are uncontested. The debtor’s mother died in December 2020. He inherited from her a duplex located at 2533-2535 West Juneau Avenue, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. He currently resides there. His sister rents the duplex’s other unit from him. A mortgage on the duplex secures repayment obligations under a home equity conversion note executed in September 2008 by the debtor’s mother, whom this decision and order will refer to as the “borrower.” See Claim No. 2, at 9, 11 & 14. The note is nonrecourse, meaning the borrower was not personally liable on it and the note

holder can only collect by foreclosing its interest in the property. Reverse Mortgage, which now holds the note and mortgage, filed a proof of claim alleging that it has a claim for $153,812.43 secured in full by the property. Claim No. 2. The debtor’s chapter 13 plan proposes treatment of Reverse Mortgage’s claim in three main parts. First, the plan provides for bifurcation of the claim into a $45,000 secured claim—based on a May 2021 appraisal of the duplex, ECF No. 1, at 10—and an unsecured claim for the remainder (nearly $109,000). ECF No. 2, at 4. Second, the plan proposes to pay the secured claim in full, with interest at 4.75%, over about 60 months, but to pay nothing on the unsecured claim (and any other allowed nonpriority unsecured claims). Id. at 4–5. Third, the plan states that “the mortgage shall be satisfied” after the debtor completes all payments under the plan, including “payment of [Reverse Mortgage’s] allowed secured claim”, and is granted a discharge. Id. at 7. Reverse Mortgage objects to confirmation of the plan, principally contending that the proposed treatment of its claim violates 11 U.S.C. §1322(b)(2)’s “anti-modification” clause, which prohibits a chapter 13 plan from modifying the rights of a holder of a claim secured only by a mortgage on the debtor’s principal residence. As a result, Reverse Mortgage argues, the plan does not comply with the provisions of chapter 13, which is a requirement for confirmation of a chapter 13 plan, 11 U.S.C. §1325(a)(1). The debtor responds that (1) the anti-modification clause does not apply because the property is not solely his principal residence, but is instead a mixed-use, income- producing duplex, and (2) even if the anti-modification clause would otherwise apply, the plan can modify Reverse Mortgage’s rights under §1322(c)(2)—a statutory exception to the anti-modification clause that applies when the last payment on a claim was originally due before the last payment under the plan is due—because the note became due and payable in full when his mother died. II Section 1322(b)(2)—subject to §1322(a) & (c), and with the anti-modification clause in bold—permits a chapter 13 plan to “modify the rights of holders of secured claims, other than a claim secured only by a security interest in real property that is the debtor’s principal residence, or of holders of unsecured claims, or leave unaffected the rights of holders of any class of claims”. There is no dispute that Reverse Mortgage holds a claim secured by a security interest in real property of the debtor.1 Nor is there any dispute that the debtor principally resides in the real property in which Reverse Mortgage has a security interest. The parties dispute only whether that real property “is the debtor’s principal residence” despite also being an income-producing rental property. §1322(b)(2) (emphasis added). A To decide whether §1322(b)(2)’s anti-modification provision applies one must begin with its text. RadLAX Gateway Hotel, LLC v. Amalgamated Bank, 566 U.S. 639, 649 (2012); Lamie v. United States Trustee, 540 U.S. 526, 534 (2004); United States v. Ron Pair Enters., Inc., 489 U.S. 235, 241 (1989). The Bankruptcy Code defines “debtor’s principal residence” in relevant part as “a residential structure if used as the principal residence

1 Reverse Mortgage has a mortgage on the debtor’s duplex, so it has a “claim”, a “lien”, and a “security interest”, as those terms are defined in the Bankruptcy Code. See Johnson v. Home State Bank, 501 U.S. 78, 84 (1991) (holding that, even without “a debtor’s personal liability”, “a mortgage interest . . . is a ‘claim’” for purposes of the Bankruptcy Code because “the mortgage holder” has “a ‘right to payment’ in the form of its right to the proceeds from the sale of the debtor’s property” (quoting 11 U.S.C. §101(5) (defining “claim”))); §101(37) & (51) (defining a “lien” as a “charge against or interest in property to secure payment of a debt or performance of an obligation” and a “security interest” as a “lien created by an agreement”); see also id. §102(2) (providing that a “‘claim against the debtor’ includes [a] claim against property of the debtor”); id. §506(a) (providing that “[a]n allowed claim . . . secured by a lien on property in which the estate has an interest . . . is a secured claim to the extent of the value of [the] creditor’s interest in the estate’s interest in [the] property”). of the debtor, including incidental property”. 11 U.S.C. §101(13A)(A).2 And the Code defines “incidental property”, “with respect to a debtor’s principal residence”, as “property commonly conveyed with a principal residence in the area where the real property is located”, including, among other things, “all easements, rights, appurtenances, [or] fixtures” and “all replacements or additions.” §101(27B)(A)–(C).3 The result is that a chapter 13 plan cannot modify the rights of the holder of a claim secured only by a security interest in “a residential structure” that the debtor uses as his “principal residence”, including “property commonly conveyed with a principal residence in the area where the real property is located”. §101(13A)(A) & (27B)(A). Reverse Mortgage’s claim is secured by a mortgage—which is a security interest, see §101(51)—in the duplex, granting it the right to collect on any debts governed by the home equity conversion note from the property, identified by its legal description, “together with all the improvements now or hereafter erected on the property, . . . all easements, rights, appurtenances, and fixtures now or hereafter a part of the property”, and “[a]ll replacements and additions”. Claim No. 2, at 14. The debtor does not contend that Reverse Mortgage’s claim is secured by any other interest in any other property. And the debtor does not dispute that he uses as his principal residence a residential structure that is an improvement erected on the property. See ECF No. 1, at 2 (stating, on his bankruptcy petition, that he lives at “2533 W. Juneau Ave.” in “Milwaukee, WI”).

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Juan M. Sandoval, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/juan-m-sandoval-wieb-2022.