Matter of Schnakenberg

195 B.R. 435, 35 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1392, 1996 Bankr. LEXIS 479, 1996 WL 250464
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Nebraska
DecidedApril 24, 1996
Docket19-40170
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 195 B.R. 435 (Matter of Schnakenberg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Nebraska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Schnakenberg, 195 B.R. 435, 35 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1392, 1996 Bankr. LEXIS 479, 1996 WL 250464 (Neb. 1996).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

JOHN C. MINAHAN, Jr., Bankruptcy Judge.

This Chapter 12 case was closed and the debtors received a discharge in 1991. Debtors have reopened the case and filed a Motion to Modify the Confirmed Chapter 12 Plan. The Objection by the Farmers Home Administration, now known as Rural Economic and Community Development, and herein referenced as United States of America (“USA”), is sustained and the proposed modification is not approved because of the limitation provided in section 1229(c) and the principle of finality.

FACTS

The debtors’ Chapter 12 plan was confirmed June 23, 1987, almost nine years ago. The confirmed plan provided for three years of payments to unsecured creditors out of disposable income. The debtors completed the payments to unsecured creditors in 1990, and on January 10, 1991,1 entered an order discharging the debtors under Bankruptcy Code § 1228. This case was closed on April 8, 1991. The case has now been reopened and debtors are attempting to modify plan provisions dealing with the treatment of the allowed secured claim of the USA

At the time this case was filed, the debtors owned a parcel of real estate valued at $102,-515.00 (the “Real Estate”). This Real Estate was subject to an installment contract having a balance of $53,000.00, and a junior lien held by USA which secured two notes totalling $25,000.00.

When the bankruptcy case was filed, the debtors also had a number of other outstanding loans with the USA each secured by separate collateral and evidenced by separate security instruments. In an order dated December 5, 1995, I ruled that upon confirmation of the debtors’ Chapter 12 plan, the debtors’ obligations to the USA were consolidated into a single debt to be repaid over thirty years. I also concluded that this consolidated obligation was secured and cross- *437 collateralized by all the collateral which had secured debtors’ pre-bankruptcy obligations to the USA.

Debtors assert that the current unpaid balance owed to the USA under the plan is approximately $168,654.00, and the current total value of collateral securing USA’s claim exceeds $450,000.00. The debtors propose to modify the confirmed plan to provide for the sale of the Real Estate free and clear of the liens held by the USA. The proceeds of sale will be used for various purposes. After the proposed sale of the Real Estate, the USA will remain fully secured by a security interest in 320 acres of other land valued at approximately $290,000.00, and a security interest in machinery, equipment and livestock.

The proposed modification to the plan is the debtors’ fourth attempt since confirmation of the plan to modify the rights of the USA. First, on May 11, 1988, the debtors sought permission to obtain an operating line of credit for 1988 crop expenses. The debtors proposed to grant the new lender a priority lien on 1988 crops, livestock, machinery, and a subordinate mortgage on the real estate. The USA objected. This matter was not resolved during the 1988 crop year. Debtors renewed their motion on May 19, 1989, requesting authority to obtain secured financing for the 1989 crop year. On September 8,1989, this court denied the motion, stating that the proposed financing would impermissibly impair the liens retained by the USA under the confirmed plan. I held that because the USA retained its liens, under the confirmed plan, the debtors could not impair the USA’s liens under section 864 after confirmation. I further held that debtors’ proposed subordination would require amendment of the plan.

In response, the debtors moved to amend their Chapter 12 plan on October 12, 1989. This was within the three to five year period contemplated by section 1229(c). The plan amendment proposed to modify and further impair the USA’s claim by permitting debtors to grant a priority security interest in machinery, equipment, livestock and real estate, up to a maximum of $42,000.00, to secure annual operating loans. The court sustained the USA’s objections and denied the proposed modification, citing three reasons. First, the modification of a confirmed Chapter 12 plan to subordinate the lien of a secured creditor was not one of the types of post-confirmation amendments permitted under section 1229(a) of the Bankruptcy Code. The second reason was based on the principle of finality as applied to confirmation proceedings and the res judicata effect of confirmation. Third, was the notion that a post-confirmation modification should be approved only upon a showing of unanticipated circumstances affecting the debtors’ ability to implement the plan as confirmed.

On August 21, 1995, debtors filed a “Motion to Compel Release of Security” which proposed a sale of the Real Estate. Under this motion, the debtors sought to compel the USA to release its lien on the Real Estate, offering to pay the USA $18,673.29 from the sale proceeds. The USA again objected. On December 4, 1995, I denied this motion, ruling that the USA’s claim was “cross-collater-alized” under the terms of the confirmed plan, so that the entire claim of the USA was secured by the property proposed to be sold. I held the debtors did not have the absolute right to require the USA to release its lien in the Real Estate under the terms and conditions set forth in the motion.

The plan modification currently before the court thus represents the fourth attempt by the debtors to impair the liens of the USA in order to obtain funds for their operation.

DISCUSSION

Under the proposed modification the Real Estate will be sold free and clear of the lien of the USA The proceeds of sale will be used to reduce operating debt, pay outstanding taxes, make improvements to the irrigation system on the remaining real estate held by debtors, and to pay the USA $17,000.00. The USA’s outstanding debt of approximately $150,000.00, will be reamortized over the term and at the interest rate provided in the confirmed plan. The debtors assert that the USA will remain fully secured under the modified plan by virtue of its security interests in the remaining 320 acres, valued at approximately $290,000.00, and by its lien in the debtors’ livestock, machinery and equip *438 ment. Debtors also assert that their proposed use of the sale proceeds will actually enhance the value of the USA’s remaining collateral.

Bankruptcy Code § 1229 governs modifications of a confirmed Chapter 12 plan. 1 The debtors, as the party proposing post-confirmation modification of the Chapter 12 plan, bear the burden of establishing that modification is proper. In re Wruck, 183 B.R. 862, 865 (Bankr.D.N.D.1995).

1. Section 1229.

In a Chapter 12 case, debtors generally make payments to creditors for a period of thirty-six to sixty months. However, importantly, section 1222(b)(9) permits secured debts to be paid over a period of time longer than the life of the Chapter 12 plan. In this important key respect, Chapter 12 is different than Chapter 13. On the facts of this case, the debtors successfully completed payments which were due under the Chapter 12 plan, over the life of the plan, and the debtors then received a discharge under section 1228.

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In Re Harry & Larry Maronde Partnership
256 B.R. 913 (D. Nebraska, 2000)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
195 B.R. 435, 35 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1392, 1996 Bankr. LEXIS 479, 1996 WL 250464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-schnakenberg-nebraskab-1996.