ROBERT E. NUGENT, Bankruptcy Judge.
Two issues remain undecided in the Duensings' chapter 12 case. One is whether the debtors may direct that plan payments on their student loans be applied first to principal. The other is whether they can propose a final distribution of their farming assets to a trust that will pay their unsecured creditors for five years after the plan's completion.
Student loans are protected from discharge in bankruptcy law unless the debtor can demonstrate that paying would result in undue hardship. The law does not protect them from being modified. In Chapter 12, the terms of any secured or unsecured claim can be modified by the plan.
The Duensings classified student loan claims held by Educational Credit Management Corporation (ECMC) in Class 8 with general unsecured claims. They proposed to pay the student loan claims in full (principal and prepetition interest) without penalties or interest on a pro rata basis, acknowledging that they will remain personally liable for post-petition interest that accrues on their student loan debt during the repayment period and will not be discharged. The Duensings' plan expressly directs that all payments on the student loan claims shall be applied to principal. ECMC objects to this application of payments. This modification of ECMC's claims is permitted under § 1222(b)(2), as is the debtors' proposal to cure and maintain these claims after the expiration of the five-year plan term. ECMC's objection is OVERRULED.
Nothing in Chapter 12's provisions keeps debtors from proposing a creditor's trust in their plan if it does not otherwise violate the provisions of title 11 or Chapter 12. Indeed, several provisions give debtors flexibility in disposing of estate assets at confirmation, even in unorthodox ways. The Duensings proposed a plan that provided for five years of payments on secured and unsecured claims through the trustee and another five years of unsecured claim payments after the plan period. At the end of the plan period, the operating farm assets would transfer from the estate to the Duensings as trustees of the Kirk and Eve Duensing Unsecured Creditors Trust ("Plan Trustees" and "Plan Trust" as appropriate), for the benefit of the unsecured creditors. The Plan Trustees would farm by operating the assets and would pay in full the unsecured creditor claims with farm income for another five years, after which, the Plan Trust's assets would revert to the debtors. While no single creditor objected, the Chapter 12 trustee did, arguing that this proposal runs afoul of the five-year plan limitation contained in § 1222(c). Creative as it is, the debtors' plan cannot be confirmed because it does not comply with Chapter 12 and the Chapter 12 Trustee's objection must be SUSTAINED.
The Duensings classified ECMC's student loan claims with general unsecured claims in Class 8.
ECMC has filed proofs of claims for two PLUS loans (disbursed between Oct 2007-Jan 2008) denominated as a Master Promissory Note to which it succeeded as guarantor of the National Student Loan Program (NSLP) on July 6, 2015.
Both the Master Promissory Note (the PLUS loans) and the Consolidation Note contain the right to prepay the unpaid balance at any time without penalty. ECMC did not include all the pages and terms and conditions of the applications and notes in its supporting affidavit to its Memorandum.
Among the pages missing from the record are those detailing the repayment terms of these notes. The PLUS note form states that the PLUS loans are payable over a minimum five years beginning 60 days after the last disbursement.
ECMC objects to debtors' directing application of their payments to the claim instead of post-petition interest.
The Bankruptcy Code excepts student loan debt from discharge without a determination of undue hardship.
The Duensings' plan proposes to repay the allowed amount of the student loan claims in full under the plan. They concede their continuing liability for any post-petition interest. ECMC objects, relying on two regulations that address administration of student loans and application of payments by the lender and guaranty agency—34 C.F.R. § 682.404(f) and § 682.209(b). Part 682.404(f) governs a guaranty agency's application of payments on a defaulted student loan while Part 682.209(b)(1) governs application of payments by the holder of a student loan that is not in default. ECMC states that the Duensing student loans are not in default.
Part of this regulation, 682.209(b)(2)(i), permits borrowers to prepay. It states: "The borrower may prepay the whole or any part of a loan at any time without penalty." Further, Part 682.209(b)(2)(ii) permits the borrower to direct how the prepayment is to be applied:
The regulation is silent how prepayments are applied if the prepayment amount is less than the monthly payment amount under the repayment schedule.
ECMC argues that the student loan regulations control how student loan payments should be applied, even in bankruptcy cases, and that non-bankruptcy student loan law and regulations trump the Bankruptcy Code. While federal regulations may have the same preemptive effect as federal statutes,
There is no express conflict between the student loan regulations and the Bankruptcy Code or the debtors' Chapter 12 plan. First, the lender's and borrower's substantive rights arise out of the Notes which are, in turn, subject to the HEA and the regulations.
Courts are not free to enforce one congressional enactment to the exclusion of another. If two statutes can coexist, and Congress has expressed no intention to the contrary, it is the duty of the courts to regard each as effective.
As required by the Bankruptcy Code, the debtors' Chapter 12 plan deals with all of the creditors' claims in bankruptcy. Nothing in the Code elevates the HEA's or FFELP's interests in administering student loans above the rights of other creditors. Congress has enacted a comprehensive and uniform statutory scheme for the adjustment of debtors and creditors rights in bankruptcy that includes the treatment of creditors' claims.
Chapter 12 debtors may propose to modify a secured or unsecured claim under § 1222(b)(2) whether it is dischargeable or not.
Nothing about the debtors' proposed treatment will result in the "discharge" of any debt. You can't discharge a debt that hasn't yet accrued. The debtors intend to leave unaffected the interest that accrued prior to the date of the petition—that interest is part of ECMC's allowed claim by virtue of § 502. Instead, the debtors intend to pay the student loan claims pro rata with the other unsecured claims and direct that those payments be applied to principal only, at least until the unsecured creditors are paid in full. Any prospectively accruing post-petition interest is not discharged under Bruning and Eve Duensing will be liable for it upon completion of the plan.
ECMC asserts that the Duensings' plan payments must be applied first to payment of post-petition interest that accrues during the plan term. Section 1222(b)(11) regulates how and when a debtor can pay post-petition interest on a nondischargeable claim during the plan term. It is permitted but comes with conditions. Enacted as part of the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act in 2005, it states that a plan may provide for such payment only if the debtor has sufficient disposable income to pay the post-petition interest after providing for payment of "every other claim in full." In their Chapter 13 treatise, Judges Lundin and Brown describe this ability to pay a non-dischargeable creditor post-petition interest as a "limited license" at best.
Decided in 2001, before § 1222(b)(11) was enacted, the Kielisch
ECMC argued in Kielisch that it was entitled to apply plan payments to the accrued post-petition interest prior to principal. The issue on appeal was "[w]hether the application of plan payments [estate payments] to post-petition interest on non-dischargeable student loans violates § 502."
Several things make Kielisch inapplicable here. First, the debtors in Kielisch were looking backward. Not having provided in their plan for principal prepayment, they relied on § 502(a)(2) in their effort to force the creditor to reapply the payments to the principal. Unlike the Kielisches, the Duensings propose to modify the student loan claims by expressly directing application of payments to principal first, a modification that § 1222(b)(2) plainly permits. Second, the Duensings concede that the student loan claims will continue to accrue interest post-petition and that the accrued interest will be excepted from discharge. Where the Kielisches looked to modify their student loans' treatment retrospectively, the Duensings propose their modification prospectively. Finally, § 1222(b)(11) had not yet been enacted when Kielisch was decided. The Duensing plan presents a pure modification question that was not in play in Kielisch.
Though § 1222(b)(2) permits modification of ECMC's unsecured claim, § 1222(c) limits the duration of a Chapter 12 plan to five years. One exception to that limitation is § 1222(b)(5)'s permissible treatment of claims whose last payment is due after the final plan payment. So-called "long term" debts can be cured and maintained over periods longer than five years. Nothing in Chapter 12 or elsewhere in the Bankruptcy Code prohibits treating student loan claims in this manner. Indeed, Judges Lundin and Brown suggest that "[n]ondischargeable, long-term, unsecured claims for support or an educational loan are candidates for treatment under § 1322(b)(5)."
Nothing in the record tells us when the last payment on the claims was originally due or when it is due now. ECMC did not make a § 1222(c) objection to confirmation. It seems likely that under even the most rigorous available payment program, these student loans will pay out after the plan is completed. Indeed, ECMC's objection to principal payment can only mean that it supports, if not intends the debtors to pay these claims over a very long term. Therefore, I find that not only may these claims be modified as the debtors propose, but also that they may be cured and maintained under § 1222(b)(5). All of these findings are, of course, conditioned upon finding that the plan meets the other requirements of §§ 1222 and 1225, including § 1222(c). The Trustee's objection to confirmation on that basis is discussed below.
Before they filed this case in 2018, the Duensings filed a Chapter 12 petition in 2015. After disposing of encumbered assets and paying secured claims, they dismissed that case, filing this one later to take advantage of § 1232's favorable tax claim treatment that became available in 2017.
The debtors bridge the "best-interests" gap by proposing that, at completion, the unpaid unsecured creditors' claims be excepted from discharge. They will transfer their farm equipment, inventory and products to themselves as Plan Trustees of the Plan Trust. The Plan Trustees will "use the Trust assets to make the payments set forth in Class 8 following discharge."
In Chapter 12, the debtor has the burden to demonstrate that the plan meets the requirements of §§1222 and 1225 if a creditor or party in interest objects. The trustee's objection raised several legal issues but, at oral argument, narrowed his concerns to two, that the effect of the trust is to evade the § 1222(c) five-year limit and that the plan is not legally sufficient to create a trust. The debtors respond that Chapter 12 allows them to repay creditors with their property or the property of the estate and that vesting the trust assets in the trust before discharge, while unusual in Chapter 12, is routine in Chapter 11 cases, not contrary to Title 11, and not expressly prohibited in Chapter 12 cases.
Chapter 12 was enacted in 1986 in response to the 1980s farm crisis.
The Duensings rely on several § 1222(b) provisions. First, they note that § 1225(b)(7) allows a debtor to propose to pay a claim with property of the debtor or the estate. Second, § 1222(b)(8) allows the debtor to sell property and distribute the proceeds to creditors having an interest in the property or, in the alternative, to distribute property to the respective interest-holders in kind. Third, § 1222(b)(10) provides that the estate's property can vest in the debtors or "any other entity" at confirmation or "at a later time." Fourth, § 1222(b)(12) allows any other provision that is "not inconsistent" with the provisions of title 11.
The Duensings need time to meet their § 1225(a)(4) obligations while retaining control of their property. As they note, § 1227(b) allows the estate's property to vest in the debtor at confirmation or as the court otherwise orders. They assert that conveying the estate's property to the Plan Trustees has the legal effect of equitably transferring it to the creditors and that they are paying the unsecured claims by using estate property as § 1222(b)(7) plainly contemplates by having the Plan Trust make the second five-year tranche of payments.
The trustee responds that while § 1123(a)(5)(B) allows creditors' trusts in Chapter 11 plans, the lack of a parallel position in Chapter 12 bars using plan trusts there. That argument ignores Chapter 12's provisions that allow for vesting in others and permit any other plan provision that is "not inconsistent" with the provisions of title 11. Section 1123(a)(5) requires the plan proponent to provide "adequate means" for implementation of the plan "such as . . ." suggesting that the ten subsections that follow are examples, without limitation, of means of implementation. Subsection (a)(5)(B) allows the transfer of any or all the property of the estate to one or more entities. That is like § 1222(b)(10)'s provision that allows the plan to vest property in "any other entity" at confirmation or "at a later time." Section 1227(b) provides that estate property revests in the debtor, "except as provided in the plan or the order confirming the plan."
The debtors say that when the Plan Trust receives the assets, their property is vesting in "any other entity" as permitted by § 1222(b)(10) and is a "balloon payment" in kind to the unsecured creditors. But that ignores § 1222(c). That section prohibits plans that provide for payments longer than 3 years unless the court approves a longer period, but the court cannot approve a plan period longer than five years. In this case, the debtors argue that all payments under the plan will be completed in five years, consistent with § 1222(c), with the final payment being the transfer of the operating assets to the trust. The plan itself recites that the unsecured creditors' payments will extend over 10 years with the Plan Trust making the final five years of payments.
Is the Plan Trust transfer really a "balloon payment?" A balloon payment is typically defined as a final payment "that discharges the principal balance of the loan."
Whether the Plan Trust transfer is a balloon payment turns on what the unsecured creditors will receive when that transfer is made. Will they be paid in full? No. The Plan Trust provides for the unsecured creditors to receive another five years of quarterly payments after the plan's completion. Will they own or possess the Plan Trust's corpus? No. The unsecured creditors become the beneficiaries of the trust with all attendant rights, but they are plainly not entitled to possess or sell the Plan Trust assets. All they will receive is a further promise: the promise of continuing payments and a cause of action for breach of trust "in the event that debtors misuse the Trust Assets."
As the Plan Trust transfer is not the final payment, I am forced to conclude that the plan exceeds five years in duration. Section 1222(c) is similar to § 1322(d) in the Chapter 13 context. Judges Lundin and Brown note that § 1322(d), like § 1222(c), has only two statutorily-prescribed exceptions. One is in § 1322(b)(5) that allows for secured and unsecured claims to be paid over a period longer than five years (as does § 1222(b)(5)) and the other is in § 1322(b)(7) which allows the debtor to treat a lease that has been assumed under § 365 (as does § 1222(b)(6)).
One can question the policy behind Chapter 12's five-year limit, but one cannot ignore the limit. Imposing the term limit in Chapter 13 "has been described as a protection for Chapter 13 debtors."
The plan's proposed treatment of ECMC's student loan claims by directing plan payments be applied to principal is a permitted modification under § 1222(b)(2). Curing and maintaining payments on those claims beyond the five-year term is permitted by § 1222(b)(5). ECMC's objection to confirmation is overruled. But, as the plan's ten-year payment proposal violates the five-year limitation of § 1222(c), the plan cannot be confirmed over the Trustee's objection. The Trustee's confirmation objection is sustained, and confirmation is denied without prejudice to the debtors filing an amended plan within 21 days from the date of this order. Failing that, the case may be dismissed.