MEMORANDUM ORDER FOR JUDGMENT
GREGORY F. KISHEL, Bankruptcy Judge.
This adversary proceeding came on before the Court on March 2, 1989, for trial. Plaintiffs appeared personally and by their attorney, Thomas W. Van Hon. Defendant State Bank of Gibbon (“Defendant”) appeared by its attorney, Clark A. Tuttle, III. There was no appearance on behalf of De
fendant the Federal Land Bank of St. Paul.
Upon the evidence adduced at trial, the arguments and pre- and post-trial briefs of counsel, all of the other files and records in this adversary proceeding, and relevant proceedings in Plaintiffs’ Chapter 7 case, the Court makes the following memorandum order.
Plaintiffs filed a voluntary petition under Chapter 7 on January 27, 1988. They are farmers in Sibley County, Minnesota. Defendant holds a second mortgage against Plaintiffs’ homestead, under color of a March 30, 1984 mortgage deed which was duly filed for record on March 21, 1985. Plaintiffs’ homestead consists of approximately 130 acres of farm real estate, including a building site. As of the commencement of this case, the Federal Land Bank of St. Paul held the first mortgage against the homestead, under color of a November 24, 1981 mortgage filed for record on December 4, 1981. As of January 28, 1988, Plaintiffs’ debt to the Federal Land Bank totalled $127,64.07 in principal and accrued interest.
In their complaint in this adversary proceeding, Plaintiffs allege that their homestead had a fair market value of $117,-000.00 as of the date of their bankruptcy filing. This is the value which they had assigned to it in their B Schedules in their case. At trial, Plaintiffs produced two witnesses with experience in real estate evaluation, one of whom testified to a value of $138,000.00 for the homestead, as of April 26, 1988, and the other of whom assigned a value of $142,400.00, more or less, as of the date of Plaintiffs’ bankruptcy filing.
As relief, Plaintiffs have requested a determination of the value of Defendant’s secured claim pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 506(a).
In their prayer for relief, they request an order avoiding Defendant’s second mortgage against their homestead in its entirety, pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 506(d).
. In their post-trial letter brief, they amended their request to conform to the evidence; they now ask that the value of Defendant’s secured claim be determined as the difference between a collateral value of $138,000.00, and the $127,-064.07 value of their filing-date debt to Federal Land Bank, and that Defendant’s mortgage be avoided to the extent that its debt exceeded the value of this allowed secured claim.
Three of the Judges of this Court, including the undersigned, have published decisions applying 11 U.S.C. § 506(d) in the context of a Chapter 7 case. In all of them, the Court allowed Chapter 7 debtors to invoke this statute to “strip down” mortgages or liens against exempt property, to the amount of actual value in that property to which those liens had attached as of the date of the debtor’s bankruptcy filing.
See In re Kostecky,
111 B.R. 823 (Bankr.D. Minn.1990) (Kishel, J.);
In re Haugland,
83 B.R. 648 (Bankr.D.Minn.1988) (O’Brien, J.);
In re Cook,
67 B.R. 240 (Bankr.D.Minn. 1986) (O’Brien, J.);
In re Gibbs,
44 B.R. 475 (Bankr.D.Minn.1984) (Kressel, J.).
At trial, Defendant set forth two lines of defense.
As its secondary line, it produced an appraiser’s testimony that the value of the homestead was $152,000.00 as of the date of Plaintiffs’ bankruptcy filing. In conjunction with Plaintiffs’ evidence, of course, this produced an issue of fact. The Court need not assess the comparative probity and credibility of the competing valuation evidence to resolve this fact issue, however; Defendant’s primary line of defense, aired in a motion for dismissal at the close of Plaintiffs’ case,
conclusively disposes of Plaintiffs’ request for relief as a matter of law. That defense is that Plaintiffs’ request for § 506(d) relief was mooted by other events during the penden-cy of this adversary proceeding.
On May 24, 1988, the Court granted Plaintiffs a discharge under Chapter 7. As a result, the automatic stay of 11 U.S.C. § 362(a)(5), which had restrained and enjoined Defendant from enforcing its rights as a secured creditor, was terminated. 11 U.S.C. § 362(c)(2)(C). Defendant then commenced proceedings to foreclose its mortgage by advertisement pursuant to MINN. STAT. c. 580 in mid-July, 1988.
The Sibley County Sheriff held a foreclosure sale on October 28, 1988. Defendant was the successful bidder at that sale, bidding in a total of $55,288.00 for the three separate tracts subject to its mortgage.
Plaintiffs had never requested relief to postpone, strike, or enjoin the sheriff’s sale, whether in this Court or any other. As of the date of the trial in this adversary proceeding, Plaintiffs had not exercised their right to redeem the property from the sale.
Under Minnesota law, a sheriff's sale in proceedings for foreclosure by advertisement discharges the mortgage against the subject real estate, even as security for the debt.
Gardner v. W.M. Prindle & Co.,
185 Minn. 147, 150, 240 N.W. 351, 352 (1932). After the sheriff’s sale, the rights of the parties are no longer fixed by the terms of the mortgage; rather, they are governed by the terms of MINN.STAT. c. 580.
Id.
When a mortgagee is the successful bidder at the sale, under a bid equalling the full amount of its debt and the expenses allowable under statute, the parties’ prior debt- or-creditor relationship is extinguished.
Evans v. Rhode Island Hospital Trust Co.,
67 Minn. 160, 163, 69 N.W. 715, 716 (1897);
Carnel v. Travelers Ins. Co.,
402 N.W.2d 190, 192-3 (Minn.App.1987);
In re Klein,
9 F.Supp. 57, 59 (D.Minn.1934).
This follows from the fact that a sale for the full amount of the indebtedness extinguishes the mortgage debt.
Cross Cos., Inc. v. Citizens Mortgage Investment Trust,
305 Minn. 111, 119, 232 N.W.2d 114, 119 (1975);
Gardner v. W.M. Prindle & Co.,
185 Minn. at 150, 240 N.W. at 352;
Carlson v. Presbyterian Board of Relief,
67 Minn. 436, 439, 70 N.W. 3, 4 (1897).
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MEMORANDUM ORDER FOR JUDGMENT
GREGORY F. KISHEL, Bankruptcy Judge.
This adversary proceeding came on before the Court on March 2, 1989, for trial. Plaintiffs appeared personally and by their attorney, Thomas W. Van Hon. Defendant State Bank of Gibbon (“Defendant”) appeared by its attorney, Clark A. Tuttle, III. There was no appearance on behalf of De
fendant the Federal Land Bank of St. Paul.
Upon the evidence adduced at trial, the arguments and pre- and post-trial briefs of counsel, all of the other files and records in this adversary proceeding, and relevant proceedings in Plaintiffs’ Chapter 7 case, the Court makes the following memorandum order.
Plaintiffs filed a voluntary petition under Chapter 7 on January 27, 1988. They are farmers in Sibley County, Minnesota. Defendant holds a second mortgage against Plaintiffs’ homestead, under color of a March 30, 1984 mortgage deed which was duly filed for record on March 21, 1985. Plaintiffs’ homestead consists of approximately 130 acres of farm real estate, including a building site. As of the commencement of this case, the Federal Land Bank of St. Paul held the first mortgage against the homestead, under color of a November 24, 1981 mortgage filed for record on December 4, 1981. As of January 28, 1988, Plaintiffs’ debt to the Federal Land Bank totalled $127,64.07 in principal and accrued interest.
In their complaint in this adversary proceeding, Plaintiffs allege that their homestead had a fair market value of $117,-000.00 as of the date of their bankruptcy filing. This is the value which they had assigned to it in their B Schedules in their case. At trial, Plaintiffs produced two witnesses with experience in real estate evaluation, one of whom testified to a value of $138,000.00 for the homestead, as of April 26, 1988, and the other of whom assigned a value of $142,400.00, more or less, as of the date of Plaintiffs’ bankruptcy filing.
As relief, Plaintiffs have requested a determination of the value of Defendant’s secured claim pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 506(a).
In their prayer for relief, they request an order avoiding Defendant’s second mortgage against their homestead in its entirety, pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 506(d).
. In their post-trial letter brief, they amended their request to conform to the evidence; they now ask that the value of Defendant’s secured claim be determined as the difference between a collateral value of $138,000.00, and the $127,-064.07 value of their filing-date debt to Federal Land Bank, and that Defendant’s mortgage be avoided to the extent that its debt exceeded the value of this allowed secured claim.
Three of the Judges of this Court, including the undersigned, have published decisions applying 11 U.S.C. § 506(d) in the context of a Chapter 7 case. In all of them, the Court allowed Chapter 7 debtors to invoke this statute to “strip down” mortgages or liens against exempt property, to the amount of actual value in that property to which those liens had attached as of the date of the debtor’s bankruptcy filing.
See In re Kostecky,
111 B.R. 823 (Bankr.D. Minn.1990) (Kishel, J.);
In re Haugland,
83 B.R. 648 (Bankr.D.Minn.1988) (O’Brien, J.);
In re Cook,
67 B.R. 240 (Bankr.D.Minn. 1986) (O’Brien, J.);
In re Gibbs,
44 B.R. 475 (Bankr.D.Minn.1984) (Kressel, J.).
At trial, Defendant set forth two lines of defense.
As its secondary line, it produced an appraiser’s testimony that the value of the homestead was $152,000.00 as of the date of Plaintiffs’ bankruptcy filing. In conjunction with Plaintiffs’ evidence, of course, this produced an issue of fact. The Court need not assess the comparative probity and credibility of the competing valuation evidence to resolve this fact issue, however; Defendant’s primary line of defense, aired in a motion for dismissal at the close of Plaintiffs’ case,
conclusively disposes of Plaintiffs’ request for relief as a matter of law. That defense is that Plaintiffs’ request for § 506(d) relief was mooted by other events during the penden-cy of this adversary proceeding.
On May 24, 1988, the Court granted Plaintiffs a discharge under Chapter 7. As a result, the automatic stay of 11 U.S.C. § 362(a)(5), which had restrained and enjoined Defendant from enforcing its rights as a secured creditor, was terminated. 11 U.S.C. § 362(c)(2)(C). Defendant then commenced proceedings to foreclose its mortgage by advertisement pursuant to MINN. STAT. c. 580 in mid-July, 1988.
The Sibley County Sheriff held a foreclosure sale on October 28, 1988. Defendant was the successful bidder at that sale, bidding in a total of $55,288.00 for the three separate tracts subject to its mortgage.
Plaintiffs had never requested relief to postpone, strike, or enjoin the sheriff’s sale, whether in this Court or any other. As of the date of the trial in this adversary proceeding, Plaintiffs had not exercised their right to redeem the property from the sale.
Under Minnesota law, a sheriff's sale in proceedings for foreclosure by advertisement discharges the mortgage against the subject real estate, even as security for the debt.
Gardner v. W.M. Prindle & Co.,
185 Minn. 147, 150, 240 N.W. 351, 352 (1932). After the sheriff’s sale, the rights of the parties are no longer fixed by the terms of the mortgage; rather, they are governed by the terms of MINN.STAT. c. 580.
Id.
When a mortgagee is the successful bidder at the sale, under a bid equalling the full amount of its debt and the expenses allowable under statute, the parties’ prior debt- or-creditor relationship is extinguished.
Evans v. Rhode Island Hospital Trust Co.,
67 Minn. 160, 163, 69 N.W. 715, 716 (1897);
Carnel v. Travelers Ins. Co.,
402 N.W.2d 190, 192-3 (Minn.App.1987);
In re Klein,
9 F.Supp. 57, 59 (D.Minn.1934).
This follows from the fact that a sale for the full amount of the indebtedness extinguishes the mortgage debt.
Cross Cos., Inc. v. Citizens Mortgage Investment Trust,
305 Minn. 111, 119, 232 N.W.2d 114, 119 (1975);
Gardner v. W.M. Prindle & Co.,
185 Minn. at 150, 240 N.W. at 352;
Carlson v. Presbyterian Board of Relief,
67 Minn. 436, 439, 70 N.W. 3, 4 (1897). The former mortgagee is now a purchaser; though its rights in the subject property
are subject to defeasement via redemption by the mortgagor or by junior lienholders, upon the expiration of redemption periods they will ripen to perfect title.
Hokanson v. Gunderson,
54 Minn. 499, 503, 56 N.W. 172, 173 (1893);
In re Klein,
9 F.Supp. at 59. In the case of a successful bid for something less than the full amount of the pre-foreclosure debt, the parties’ debtor-creditor relationship may survive, as to the balance of the debt not satisfied by application of the sale proceeds. However, at least as to the security previously afforded by the mortgage, it is no longer a relationship between a debtor and a secured party.
Loomis v. Clambey,
69 Minn. 469, 471, 72 N.W. 707, 708 (1897).
Once this body of law is recognized, it is clear that, during the pendency of this adversary proceeding, Debtors lost the ability to invoke 11 U.S.C. § 506(d) to affect Defendant’s rights. The parties’ legal relationship was transmuted upon Defendant’s sheriff’s sale. This indelible change mooted this adversary proceeding.
See In re Van Iperen,
819 F.2d 189 (8th Cir.1987) (sale in foreclosure of security interest in personalty moots debtor’s claim of exemption in subject collateral, and defeats debt- or’s derivative right to lien avoidance under 11 U.S.C. § 522(f)(2)(B)).
Compare Justice v. Valley Nat’l Bank,
849 F.2d 1078 (8th Cir.1988) (concluding that sheriff’s sale of real estate in mortgage foreclosure pursuant to South Dakota law extinguished mortgage against real estate, and satisfied and paid underlying debt; holding that debtors’ interests thereafter were limited to their right to redeem under South Dakota statute; and barring debtors from restructuring rights of former mortgagor via Chapter 12 reorganization).
Anticipating the possibility of this holding, Debtors’ counsel has protested that adoption of such a rationale would result in a proverbial “race to the courthouse” between mortgagees seeking to foreclose after termination of the automatic stay in bankruptcy, and debtors seeking to reap the benefits of § 506(d) lien avoidance before their rights were extinguished by foreclosure. He then requested that the Court utilize its powers under 11 U.S.C. § 105(a)
to “void” the sale and redemption period here, as a preliminary to granting § 506(d) relief to his clients.
While the grant of authority under § 105(a) is broad on its face, it is not without limits. “[Ajbsent a specific grant of authority from Congress or exceptional circumstances, a bankruptcy court may not exercise its equitable powers to create substantive rights which do not exist under state law.”
Johnson v. First Nat’l Bank of Montevideo,
719 F.2d 270, 274 (8th Cir. 1983),
cert. den.,
465 U.S. 1012, 104 S.Ct. 1015, 79 L.Ed.2d 245 (1984). The equity powers of the Bankruptcy Court “must and can only be exercised within the confines of the Bankruptcy Code.”
Norwest Bank Worthington v. Ahlers,
485 U.S. 197, 206, 108 S.Ct. 963, 968, 99 L.Ed.2d 169 (1988). Where a creditor has invoked remedies and settled its property rights in good faith reliance upon the termination of the automatic stay in bankruptcy, the Court should not and may not invoke its broad equitable powers to void the results of the creditor’s action — even if doing so would enable the debtor to make full use of statutory remedies previously available to him under the Code. Plaintiffs’ request for relief from
Defendant’s foreclosure sale is denied.
On the basis of the foregoing analysis,
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED, ADJUDGED, AND DECREED:
1. That Plaintiffs’ assertion of a right under 11 U.S.C. § 506(d) to avoid the mortgage lien in favor of Defendant State Bank of Gibbon against the Sibley County, Minnesota real estate described as follows:
The South Half of the Southeast Quarter (S
k
of SE
Vi)
of Section Number Thirteen (13); and the North one-eighth (Vs) of the Northeast Quarter (NE
Vi)
of Section Number Twenty-four (24), all in Township Number One Hundred Twelve (112) North of Range No. Thirty-one (31), West of the 5th Principal Meridian, Sib-ley County, Minnesota.
AND
The North fifty (50) acres of the Northeast Quarter (NE
Vi),
excepting the North Vs of the said Northeast Quarter (NE
Vi);
and also excepting therefrom a tract of land described as follows: Beginning at a point 36V2 rods east and 20 rods south of the Northwest corner of said Northeast Quarter (NE Vi); thence due south 30 rods, thence due east 2 rods, thence due north 30 rods, thence due west 2 rods, to and terminating at the given point of beginning, all of said land being in Section Number Twenty-four (24) in Township Number One Hundred Twelve (112) North of Range Number Thirty-one (31) West, Sibley County, Minnesota.
became moot as a result of the sale by the Sibley County Sheriff of that real estate during Defendant’s foreclosure of its mortgage.
2. That, as a result, the mortgage lien which Defendant State Bank of Gibbon held as of Plaintiffs’ January 27, 1988 bankruptcy filing is not avoided, and this adversary proceeding is dismissed.
LET JUDGMENT BE ENTERED ACCORDINGLY.