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HOTWIRE FOR

NOTES FOR WEEK ENDING FEB 14 2010

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NOTES: THIS WEEK'S OPINIONS

Fri. Feb. 14 2010

COURT DESCRIBES SIMPLE WAY TO CALCULATE PROPER TAX DEDUCTION FOR MEANS TEST

DOWNLOAD: In re Okorowski Feb. 8 2010 (Bkrtcy.N.D. Ohio 2010)

Chapter 7 case

Trustee moved for dismissal based on presumption of abuse.

The issue boiled down to whether the debtor's deduction, for purposes of calculating the means test and disposable income, for tax deductions was proper.

Many courts have noted that simply deducting what was actually deducted from the paycheck is not accurate and is too susceptible to manipulation by the debtor, such as claiming too many exemptions.

The weight of authority is that the debtor must at least estimate what the proper deduction should be.

This court suggested two ways to estimate what the actual amount should be:

1) Subtract one-twelfth of the previous years' tax refunds from the monthly taxes withheld; or

2) Permit the debtor to list the amount withheld, even if that sum would result in a refund, as long as some or all of the refund is dedicated to the plan.

In this case using either method resulted in a presumption of abuse.

The court gave the debtor 28 days to convert or dismiss.

HELD: TRUSTEE MAY AVOID UNPERFECTED MORTGAGE AND RETAIN THE EQUITY IN THE DEBTOR'S RESIDENCE FOR THE ESTATE

DOWNLOAD: In re Neal Feb. 8 2010 (Bkrtcy.E.D. Mich. 2010)

Debtor's had arranged a $20,000 line of credit against their residence, which had a value of $25,000.

The finance company neglected to record the lien.

Trustee moved under "strong-arm" provisions for order avoiding the lien under 11 U.S.C. § 544(a) and for an order evicting the debtors.

Debtor's argued that once the unperfected lien was avoided, the $25,000 of equity in the home was protected to them under their homestead exemption of $30,000.

The court ruled in favor of the trustee, holding that under § 551 the avoidance is " ... preserved for the benefit of the estate."

The courted cited another case for the proposition that "The debtors are only entitled to an exemption to the extent there is equity in the property" and another case saying "The value that can be exempted is the unencumbered portion. "

SEE OUR NEWEST BOOK RELEASE: ALLMAND'S HANDLING & AVOIDING LIENS.

ATTORNEY DODGES BULLET - IS NOT SANCTIONED FOR ELECTRONICALLY FILING UNSIGNED PETITION

DOWNLOAD: In re Rose February 9 2010 (Bkrtcy.S.D. Ohio 2010)

When the trustee asked debtors at meeting of creditors if they had signed the petition, the debtors unexpectedly answered they had not.

It turns out the debtor's had "reviewed" the papers, but not signed originals.

The weight of authority is that it is a serious ethical error for an attorney to electronically file a petition without first getting a real signature on hard-copy originals.

In this case the court accepted the attorney's representation that it was an innocent oversight, and that he had thought his staff had obtained the signatures.

The court cited Rule 9011(a) that "An unsigned paper shall be stricken unless the omission of the signature is corrected promptly after being called to the attention of the attorney or party."

The court opined that this language anticipated an innocent failure to sign before filing might occur and did not require dismissal if promptly remedied.


Friday Feb. 4 2010

COURT GRANTS MOTION TO COMPEL ABANDONMENT OF PROPERTY

In re Newcomb, Case No. 08-43143 (Bkrtcy.D. Mass. Jan. 26 2010)

Chapter 7 case

Debtors claimed a homestead on their residence.

Debtor moved to avoid two judicial liens impairing the exemption

The property was valued at $275,000

Debtor's homestead exemption was claimed for $68,377

The court found the judicial liens impaired the exemption

The court granted the motion to avoid the judicial liens

The trustee opposed the motion to abandon the estate's interest

The court observed that there was insufficient equity to be of value to the estate and granted the motion to abandon.

The court cited 11 U.S.C. § 522(i) in ruling that the debtor could avoid the lien and exempt it for the benefit of the debtor.

This Code section provides an exception to the general rule under § 551 that avoided transfers are preserved for the benefit of the estate.

COURT LETS CASE AGAINST CHASE FOR FRAUD ON THE COURT TO PROCEED

In re Woodruff Case no. 02-81159 (Bkrtcy.M.D.Ark Jan. 27 2010)

Chapter 13

Debtors were in default on their mortgage

A plan was approved permitting debtors to

  • Continue making the monthly mortgage payment directly, and
  • Make delinquency payments through the plan

Chase moved for relief from stay to foreclose

In support, Chase filed a motion, an affidavit, and a record of payments

All three were inconsistent with each other

Debtors alleged Chase's affidavits were boilerplate and Chase knew they were false

Debtors sued for damages and injunctive relief

Chase moved for dismissal, which court denied

Court observed: "The gravamen of the complaint is that Chase has made an institutional practice of filing false affidavits."

The court denied Chase's motion to dismiss:

"The damage alleged in this case is far more widespread than damage to an individual debtor. The damage is to the system itself. If improper procedures are followed by parties or their counsel, they must be unearthed ..."

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HOTWIRE FOR WEEK ENDING JANUARY 29 2010. HOTWIRE # 2010-2

SO. DIST. CALIFORNIA RULES UNSECURED PORTION OF MORTGAGE IS NOT COUNTED FOR 109(e) DEBT LIMIT

In re Munoz Bkrtcy. S.D. Cal. January 12 2010

Debtor's filed chapter 13.

Trustee moved to dismiss on ground that unsecured debt exceeded the unsecured debt limit per 11 U.S.C. § 109(e) ($336,900) for eligibility to be in chapter 13.

Debtor's have a mortgage and a second deed of trust on their residence

Value of house is set at $412,000.

The mortgage is $707,382, of which $295,385 is unsecured

The second is $161,382, all of which is unsecured.

If the unsecured portion of the mortgage is counted, the total unsecured debt breaks the 109(e) limit.

The court ruled you don't count the unsecured portion of the mortgage.

The court held that, since § 1322(b)(2) prohibits bifurcating the mortgage into a secured and unsecured portion, it should not be deemed bifurcated for other purposes, such as eligibility for chapter 13.

The court cited § 506(a)(1) to the effect that "value shall be determined in light of the purpose of the valuation ..."

The court held that the ruling in In re Nobleman was consistent with its ruling in this case.

"The undersecured portion of a lien that cannot be modified in chapter 13 should not be included in the amount of unsecured debts for purposes of determining eligibility under 11 U.S.C. § 109(e), but as part of the secured debt."

The court distinguished those cases ruling that a wholly unsecured or undersecured judicial lien on the debtor's primary residence should be bifurcated, with the unsecured portion included under 109(e), because such a claim could be stripped off or stripped down to the extent that it impairs the homestead exemption (11 U.S.C. § 522(f)(1)(A), § 506(a)), while a voluntary lien is prohibited from bifurcation by 1322(b)(2).

 

HOTWIRE FOR WEEK OF JANUARY 15 2010 # 1

8TH CIRCUIT AFFIRMS TRUSTEE'S AVOIDANCE OF UNRECORDED MORTGAGE

Wells Fargo Home Mortgage, Inc. v. Dwight R.J. Lindquist, Chapter 7 Trustee, 8th Cir. January 11 2010

Chapter 7 case

Debtor granted Wells Fargo a mortgage on May 16, 2005.

Debtor filed bankruptcy Oct. 14 2005 (pre-BAPCPA)

Mortgage holder had not recorded the mortgage prior to chapter 7 filing

Debtor erroneously listed mortgage as secured

Trustee filed adversary action under 11 U.S.C. § 547 pleading debt was unsecured and transfer of mortgage was preferential

Bankruptcy court held for trustee and ordered Wells Fargo to pay the estate $190,808 (the value of the mortgage).

Wells Fargo Appealed, arguing that the transfer actually happened more than 90 days prior to the petition date and therefore was not preferential.

The mortgage lien was eventually recorded on March 20 2006. The court deemed the transfer to have been made (i.e., perfected) at that date.

The version of 11 U.S.C. § 547(e)(2)(C) in effect pre-BAPCPA provided that a transfer (in this case the mortgage lien) not recorded at the time the petition is filed, or within 10 days after, is deemed filed immediately prior to the petition filing date (BAPCPA merely extended the 10 days to 30 days, not applicable here).

Accordingly, trustee argued transfer should be avoided as a preference under 11 U.S.C. § 547(b), § 544(a) and § 550(a).

The Court of Appeal agreed, holding that the transfer at issue was the debtor's granting of a mortgage to Wells Fargo, and Wells Fargo's failure to record it prior to the petition filing date brought it under § 547(e)(2)(C) providing that a postpetition transfer would be deemed a transfer made within 90 days prior to the petition date, and therefore a preferential transfer.

 4TH CIRCUIT AFFIRMS REJECTION OF RIDE-THROUGH

In re Jones 4th Cir. Jan 11 2010

The chapter 7 debtor did not elect any of the options available for a purchase-money security interest in his car, to wit, redemption, reaffirmation, or surrender.

The holder of the PMSI (Daimler/Chrysler) repossesed the car.

The co-owner of the car appealed from the court's order permitting the repo.

The co-owner argued that he was entitled to keep possession of the vehicle if he remained current on the payments (i.e., a "ride-through"). But the debtor's argument was based on pre-BAPCPA case law in the district.

Daimler/Chrysler argued that BAPCPA extinguished the ride-through as a debtor's option, and that in the event the debtor fails to elect one of the options prescribed at 11 U.S.C. § 521(a)(6), the automatic stay is lifted as to the property, and the property is no longer property of the estate.

The court agreed, ruling that the creditor was entitled to act within its rights under state law.

The court then dealt with the applicability of state law.

The contract included an "ipso facto" clause providing that the debtor's filing bankruptcy was a default of the contract.

The court acknowledged that as a general rule ipso facto clauses are not enforceable in bankruptcy, but that the Code provided an exception to that rule in the event of a debtor's failure to elect one of the permitted options for a PMSI.

In other words, the creditor was free to act within its rights under state law.

The debtor then argued that under West Virginia law, in the event the consumer defaulted on a PMSI contract the creditor was required to give the consumer notice of his/her right to cure the default and continue with possession of the vehicle, and that in this case the creditor had failed to do so.

But the Appellate court held that the procedural obligation on a creditor to provide the notice was predicated on the ability of the consumer to cure the default, and that in this case the ipso facto clause was triggered by an event that could not be cured, to wit, the debtor's filing of the bankruptcy.

Accordingly, the creditor was not required to send the notice, and the repossession was valid.

© KING BANKRUPTCY PRACTICE 2010


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