Taylor v. First Union Mortgage Co. (In Re Taylor)

208 B.R. 828, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 684, 1997 WL 281950
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 22, 1997
Docket19-11558
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 208 B.R. 828 (Taylor v. First Union Mortgage Co. (In Re Taylor)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. First Union Mortgage Co. (In Re Taylor), 208 B.R. 828, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 684, 1997 WL 281950 (Pa. 1997).

Opinion

OPINION

DAVID A. SCHOLL, Chief Judge.

A. INTRODUCTION

Before this court is, principally, the Motion (“the Motion”) of the Wife Debtor seeking to modify the Debtors’ Chapter 13 plan. The current plan changed a previous payoff plan into a cure plan. The Motion seeks to transform the current plan once again into a payoff plan. Also before us is an adversary proceeding (“the Proceeding”) seeking to establish the secured portion of the claim of the Debtors’ Mortgagee at a greatly reduced figure. The Debtors also endeavor to convert them mortgage arrearages payments into a complete or nearly-complete liquidation of the Mortgagee’s claim.

While we acknowledge the wisdom of decisions which have observed that confirmation of Chapter 13 plans, being readily modifiable, are not bound by strict principles of res judicata, we consider the instant belated efforts of the Debtors to drastically alter their plan and redesignate their arrearage payments inequitable. Therefore, we will deny the Motion and dismiss the Proceeding.

B. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

THYSSEN TAYLOR (“the Wife”) filed a voluntary joint Chapter 13 bankruptcy case with CELESS TAYLOR (“the Husband,” with the Wife, “the Debtors”) on April 19, 1993, in order to save their home, located at 4943 Hoopers Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19139 (“the Home”), from foreclosure. The Debtors were initially represented by Thomas J. Turner, III. Consistent with the terms of a Stipulation of June 16, 1993 (“the Stipulation”), with First Union Mortgage Corp. (“the Mortgagee”), negotiated by Turner, the Debtors, on October 26, 1993, confirmed an Amended Chapter 13 Plan (“the 1st Plan”), which contemplated a payoff of the claim of the Mortgagee in the amount of $36,733.80, by making payments of $753 monthly for 55 months after five payments of $245/month. Turner was suspended from the practice of law on November 14, 1993. See In re Gunn, 171 B.R. 517, 519-20 (Bankr.E.D.Pa.1994).

The Debtors were unable to keep up with the payments to the Mortgagee as provided in the Stipulation and the 1st Plan. On October 25, 1994, the Mortgagee certified this default to the court and sought to proceed with foreclosure. The law office of Michael A. Cibik, Esquire, which at that time took over representation of many of Turner’s former clients, negotiated a new settlement with *830 the Mortgagee. This settlement, approved November 17, 1994, included an agreement to continue the Stipulation in effect, but the 1st Plan was superseded by a new plan (“the 2nd Plan”) which contemplated payments of $14,119.19 to the Mortgagee to cure mortgage arrears. In this way, the Debtors changed a payoff plan which they appeared unable to afford into a cure plan which eliminated the long-range benefits of a payoff plan.

Although the Debtors testified that they had separated even prior to confirmation of the 1st Plan, they agreed, among themselves, consistently with the terms of the 2nd Plan, that the Husband would maintain responsibility for making plan payments to the Chapter 13 trustee (“the Trustee”), then reduced to $379.92 per month, while the Wife would continue to make payments outside the Plan to the Mortgagee in the amount of $219.24 per month. Subsequent to approval of the 2nd Plan, the Wife became disabled and was no longer able to work outside the home and her sole source of income became disability benefits.

Despite these circumstances, the Wife has continued to make monthly payments to the Mortgagee without default. However, in late 1996, the Plan payments to be made by the Husband to the Trustee fell into arrears, and the Trustee, on November 4, 1996, filed a motion to dismiss the Debtors’ bankruptcy case (“the TMTD”). Fearful of losing her home, the Wife sought and obtained her own counsel through the Consumer Bankruptcy Assistance Project (“CBAP”), a volunteer bar-sponsored pro bono program, to defend against the TMTD. In addition, on September 9, 1996, the Wife filed a successful Application for Entry of Wage Order, which required the Husband’s employer to pay a portion of the Husband’s salary directly to the Trustee to satisfy Plan obligations. After the Wage Order was fully implemented, the Husband paid additional funds to the Trustee to cure Plan arrearages. Although the TMTD has not been withdrawn formally, the testimony supported the conclusion that the Plan payments are now current and therefore the TMTD will be denied.

As of March 10, 1997, the Trustee had remitted $12,920.51 to the Mortgagee. In addition, the Wife has made payments outside the Plan totaling approximately $6,300 to the Mortgagee.

Reassessing the Debtors’ entire situation, CBAP counsel investigated and ascertained that the value of the Home was less than was provided for arrears under the 2nd Plan, not to mention the $36,733.50 figure which the Debtors would have been obliged to pay pursuant to the terms of the 1st Plan. The Wife, on January 24, 1997, therefore instituted the Proceeding under 11 U.S.C. § 506(a), seeking to bifurcate the Mortgagee’s claim into secured and unsecured portions.

At the initial trial date of the Proceeding on March 11, 1997, we observed that the Proceeding could succeed only if the Debtors filed a motion to further amend the Plan and convert it into a payoff plan which would liquidate the secured portion of the Mortgagee’s claim. Thus, we directed that such a motion be filed by March 14, 1997, and we listed a hearing on any such motion with a continued trial of the Proceeding on April 22, 1997. The Debtors then filed the Motion requesting permission to file, as a modification of the 2nd Plan, their Second Modified Plan (“the 3rd Plan”). The 3rd Plan contemplated payment of $10,000, the alleged value of the Home, plus six (6%) percent deferral interest to the Mortgagee. Believing that the Debtors had already paid in excess of this amount on account of arrears, the Debtors requested that their arrears be credited to the loan balance and that they receive a refund from the Mortgagee if these payments exceeded the balance.

On April 22, 1997, this court conducted a hearing to consider the Motion, as well as the trial of the Proceeding. Thereafter, we issued an Order on April 23, 1997, providing that both parties had until May 9, 1997, by which to simultaneously file briefs in support of their respective positions with regard to the Motion and the Proceeding, which were timely submitted.

It was established at the hearing/trial that the mortgage to purchase the Home was *831 originally entered into between the Debtors and the Cameron-Brown Company (“CB”) on July 19, 1985. It provided that CB would lend the Debtors $12,800 at an interest rate of 12.5% per year. The payments were to commence on September 1, 1995, and cease on August 1, 2000. In addition to being secured by the Home, the Debtors’ mortgage obligation was also secured by all “appliances, machinery, furniture and equipment” contained in the Home. This mortgage was apparently subsequently assigned to the Mortgagee by CB or its assignees. Presently, a $22,000 principal balance is owed on the mortgage.

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Bluebook (online)
208 B.R. 828, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 684, 1997 WL 281950, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-first-union-mortgage-co-in-re-taylor-paeb-1997.