In re Taylor, Bankruptcy No. 88-81168.
Decision Date | 24 May 1989 |
Docket Number | Bankruptcy No. 88-81168. |
Citation | 99 BR 902 |
Parties | In re Robert L. TAYLOR and Robin A. Taylor, Debtors. |
Court | U.S. Bankruptcy Court — Central District of Illinois |
Michael A. Williams, Rock Island, Ill., for debtors.
Frank J. Galvin, Rock Island, Ill., for Credithrift.
U.S. Trustee, Peoria, Ill.
In 1986 the Debtors filed a Chapter 13 proceeding which was subsequently converted to a Chapter 7 proceeding where the Debtors obtained a discharge. On June 7, 1988, the Debtors filed a Chapter 13 proceeding. Under their original Plan, Beneficial Finance (BENEFICIAL) and Credithrift of America, Inc. (CREDITHRIFT), holders of unsecured cosigned claims, were classified along with other secured creditors who were to be paid prior to any unsecured creditors, with unsecured creditors to receive 100%. On July 20, 1988, the Debtors filed a Modified Plan, which deleted both BENEFICIAL and CREDITHRIFT from the secured classification, made no mention of either creditor, and provided unsecured creditors were to be paid 0%. The estimated length of the plan was thirty-six months. On August 5, 1988, CREDITHRIFT filed a Petition to remove the automatic stay so as to permit it to proceed against the cosigners. On October 29, 1988, an order was entered finding that the Debtors had not filed any response to the Petition and that the Debtors' Plan did not propose to pay CREDITHRIFT, and ordered a removal of the automatic stay so that CREDITHRIFT could proceed against the cosigners. On November 17, 1988, a second Modified Plan was filed. Again, there was no mention of either CREDITHRIFT or BENEFICIAL, and after payments to the secured class and an unsecured creditor whose debt would be nondischargeable in a Chapter 7 case, remaining unsecured creditors were to be paid 0%. This was a sixty-month plan. On December 7, 1988, the Second Modified Plan was confirmed. Finally, on March 1, 1989, the Debtors filed yet another Modified Plan which classified both the claims of BENEFICIAL and CREDITHRIFT as part of the secured class, with their claims to be concurrently paid with the secured claims. Unsecured creditors are to be paid 100% and the estimated length of the plan is sixty months. CREDITHRIFT objected on the basis that the automatic stay has been removed and it is receiving payment from the cosigners. BENEFICIAL did not object. Although not stated in these exact terms, what the Debtors are attempting to do, is to reinstate the automatic stay and to pay the claims of CREDITHRIFT and BENEFICIAL through the Plan so the co-signers will not be required to pay. Several sections of the Bankruptcy Code must be considered. The first section is Section 1329(a) which provides in part as follows:
11 U.S.C. Section 1329.1 Section 1329 permits modification as to classes of creditors, not as to individual creditors. The Debtors' pending Modified Plan does not deal with a class of creditors, but rather with two individual creditors who were not separately classified under the terms of the confirmed plan, and thus, are members of the unsecured class of creditors.2 In short, what the Debtors are attempting to do is to reclassify the claims of BENEFICIAL and CREDITHRIFT as unsecured, cosigned debts to be paid 100%, along with the secured creditors. The Debtors' proposed modification is not within the literal wording of the Code. As one commentator has noted, "Section 1329 does not authorize the debtor to designate classes of claims different from the classifications defined by the confirmed plan." 5 Collier on Bankruptcy, par. 1329.012a. Some courts have given a restrictive interpretation to Section 1329, holding that reclassification of a claim is not permitted after confirmation of a plan. Matter of Abercrombie, 39 B.R. 178 (Bkrtcy.N.D.Ga.1984).
Other courts have attributed a broader scope to Section 1329. In In re Frost, 96 B.R. 804 (Bkrtcy.S.D.Ohio 1989), the debtors proposed to modify the fully secured claim of a creditor into secured and unsecured components. In concluding that the modification was permissible, the court stated:
In a somewhat similar fashion, the Court in In re Jock, 95 B.R. 75 (Bkrtcy.M.D.Tenn. 1989), allowed the debtor to surrender collateral to a secured creditor and pay the deficiency as an unsecured claim. Noting that each secured claim in a Chapter 13 case is separately classified, the court stated that the debtor's proposal to return the collateral in full satisfaction of the secured claim was within the meaning of Section 1329(a)(1) as it would "reduce the amount of payment on claims of a particular class provided for by the plan." The court then determined that the proposed modification was authorized by Section 1329, stating:
This Court declines to adopt such an expansive approach to Section 1329, as taken by the courts in Frost and Jock. The language of Section 1329(a)(1) is plain. A confirmed plan may be modified to "increase or reduce the amount of payments on claims of a particular class provided for by the plan." 11 U.S.C. Section 1329(a)(1). In this Court's view, it is only when a proposed modification complies with Section 1329(a)(1), that reference must be made to Section 1329(b)(1), in order to determine if the plan as modified conforms to the requirements of Sections 1322(a) and (b), which define mandatory and permissive plan contents, as well as the requirements for confirmation contained in Section 1325(a). A debtor cannot bootstrap Section 1329(b)(1) to enlarge the modifications permitted by Section 1329(a).3
Thus, a debtor cannot change the basic structure of a confirmed Chapter 13 plan mid-way through completion. The reclassification proposed by the Debtors here is not permissible. This Court is reluctant, however, to say that a reclassification of claims may never be permitted under Section 1329...
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