Matter of Wiggles

7 B.R. 373, 1980 Bankr. LEXIS 4057, 6 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 1326
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Georgia
DecidedNovember 22, 1980
Docket19-40227
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 7 B.R. 373 (Matter of Wiggles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Wiggles, 7 B.R. 373, 1980 Bankr. LEXIS 4057, 6 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 1326 (Ga. 1980).

Opinion

*374 OPINION

WILLIAM L. NORTON, Jr., Bankruptcy Judge.

This opinion is for each and all of the above styled Chapter 13 cases under the Bankruptcy Code where the plan in each case in sequence provides payments (1) 10% of allowed claims to unsecured creditors, (2) 70% of allowed claims to unsecured creditors, (3) 10% of allowed claims to unsecured creditors, (4) and (6) zero % of allowed claims to unsecured creditors, and (5) 1% of allowed claims to unsecured creditors. Each plan proposes payment to the secured creditors which provides adequate protection to the extent of the value of each allowed secured claim as required under 11 U.S.C. § 1325(a)(5)(B).

A creditor in each of (1), (2), (3), (4), (5) cases has filed an objection to the confirmation of the Chapter 13 plan, arguing that the debtor has present employment with earnings which should enable debtor to make payments to the unsecured creditors more substantial than the plan proposes, and/or that if a five year plan were required instead of a three year plan, the debtor could make greater payments. In case number (4), a motion to dismiss was also filed. In case number (6) a creditor merely filed an objection to the plan; no motion to dismiss was filed.

No objecting creditor appeared at the confirmation hearing to offer evidence in support of the bare contention that the debtor’s current post-petition earnings allow and require a greater payment, and to what extent, to unsecured creditors.

Good Faith Argument

Neither has an objecting creditor pointed to any provision of Section 1325(a), or any other section, in the Bankruptcy Code which is not satisfied by the proposed plan, except to argue that the plan is not in “good faith” as required under subsection (3) of Section 1325(a). No decisional authority has been cited in any written objection to the confirmation of the plan. But the court is cognizant of several recent pub *375 lished decisions of Bankruptcy Judges which hold that no plan may be confirmed which fails to propose payments to unsecured creditors rising to the status of “meaningful payments” or “meaningful effort” or the “best effort” of the debtor. 1 Some such decisions have suggested that the overall thrust and legislative intent of Chapter 13 of Title 11, U.S.C., as reflected by congressional hearings and House and Senate Reports, require payments of seventy percent 2 as a condition to confirmation of the plan.

The court will deal with the contention that the “good faith” requirement of subsection (3) of Section 1325(a) means “best effort” or “meaningful effort” or “meaningful payments” of the debtor to make provision in the Chapter 13 plan for payments to unsecured creditors. The term “good faith,” as used in Sections 1325(a)(3) and § 1129(a)(3) as a confirmation standard, is left undefined in the Code and legislative reports. While recent decisions as to a definition have varied, 3 with some suggesting that “best efforts” or “substantial payments” are elements of good faith, 4 no decision has offered satisfactory analysis or discussion of the meaning of the term good faith under the Bankruptcy Code. 5 Yet, this term “good faith” should be interpreted in the statutory sense rather than a lay conception of good faith which may vary from judge to judge. As the following analysis will demonstrate, the term good faith, as used by Congress in Sections 1325(a)(3) and 1129(a)(3), does not include as a part of its meaning a requirement to make a quantitative payment of any amount to unsecured creditors.

The court will first show that the good faith of Section 1325(a)(3) and Section 1129(a)(3) should not be construed to mean feasibility of the plan or accrue a meaning of quantitative payment under the plan. Then the court will apply its own reasoning to the meaning of this statutory term.

(1) The Term Good Faith Has No Connotation Of Feasibility:

The concept of “good faith” in the context of bankruptcy cases seems to have originated in the decision of Shapiro v. Wilgus, 287 U.S. 348, 357, 53 S.Ct. 142, 145, 77 L.Ed. 355 (1932), in an equity receivership case. This decision involved a question of the proper jurisdiction of the District Court where the petitioning debtor had been guilty of fraud which was “part and parcel of a scheme whereby the form of a judicial remedy . . . [the petition for federal receiv *376 ership] . .. was to supply a protective cover for a fraudulent design.” (p. 355, 53 S.Ct. p. 144) The act of transferring title to the business to a corporation which was “not legitimately conceived for a normal business purpose ... or designed to function according to normal business methods,” but which possessed a consequent “capacity for obstruction ... [i. e. of creditors] . .. greater than his own,” was not “fair and lawful,” ánd was absent the “exemplary motives and scrupulous good faith ” which is necessary to the exercise of equitable jurisdiction, (p. 356-57, 53 S.Ct. p. 144-45) [Emphasis supplied]

The Court ruled that it was “a misconception of the privileges and liberties vouchsafed to an embarrassed debtor” to make a conveyance to “defraud the creditors of the grantor,” and “equally it is illegal if made with an intent to hinder and delay them.” (p. 354, 53 S.Ct. p. 144)

Thus, a debtor is cloaked with no privilege under the laws of equity, which guide all bankruptcy proceedings, to unwarrant-edly “build up obstructions that will hold his creditors at bay” (p. 354, 53 S.Ct. p. 144) and to gain the interposition of a restraining order of the court between the debtor “and the creditors pursuing him” (p. 355, 53 5.Ct. p. 144) for no legitimate, normal and reasonable bankruptcy reorganization purpose. In this manner the concept of “good faith” of the purpose of the filing of the debtor’s petition was introduced into federal insolvency proceedings.

Subsequently, the term “good faith” was used in the Corporation Reorganization Act of 1934, also in reference to the filing of the petition. See Section 77B Corporate Reorganization (a) of the Bankruptcy Act. 48 Stat. 911. See also H.Rep.1679, 74 Cong., 1st Sess., July 30, 1935, p. 2, (re H.R.8940). Previously, H.Rep.5884, 73d Cong., 2d Sess., March 15, 1934, 194, Senate Calendar No. 510, Rep.No.482, p. 4 (re H.R.5884) had recommended that “good faith” be required to be found by the judge upon the filing of the petition for reorganization of a corporation under proposed Section 79 of the Bankruptcy Act. The cited congressional reports gave no indication as to the intended meaning of good faith of the debtor in the filing of the petition in the court of bankruptcy.

Chapter X, enacted by the Chandler Act into the Bankruptcy Act of 1898, required in §§ 141, 144 and § 146, a finding by the judge that the petition was filed by the debtor in good faith.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 B.R. 373, 1980 Bankr. LEXIS 4057, 6 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 1326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-wiggles-ganb-1980.