ROBERT D. BERGER, Bankruptcy Judge.
Creditor Bank of the Prairie objects to Debtors' First Amended Chapter 13 Plan after the United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Tenth Circuit ("BAP") reversed the order confirming Debtors' original Chapter 13 plan (Doc. Nos. 126 and 128).
The Court previously confirmed Debtors' original plan over the Bank's objection. The Bank holds an in rem foreclosure judgment and a second mortgage lien against Debtors' home in the amount of $127,000. Debtors' personal obligation to the Bank was discharged in Debtors' prior Chapter 7 case. Debtors' original plan had proposed to strip down the Bank's junior mortgage lien, pay the Bank $15,716.95 as the in rem value of its lien, and leave the remaining unsecured portion of the Bank's claim discharged by the prior Chapter 7 bankruptcy. The BAP held Debtors' original plan violated § 1325(a)(5)(B)(i)(I)(aa) because Debtors proposed to pay the Bank the value of its lien rather than its debt, and the Bank can not be forced to release its lien in exchange for payments totaling less than the full amount of the Bank's debt when Debtors are ineligible for a second discharge.
Debtors' First Amended Plan proposes to surrender the residence to the Bank and make no payments toward the discharged deficiency.
While the appeal was pending, Debtors paid $15,716.95 in principal and $1,260.50 in interest to the Chapter 13 Trustee, who paid the sums to the Bank pursuant to the originally confirmed plan. The last payment from the Chapter 13 Trustee to the Bank was made November 30, 2009. However, the order confirming the original plan has been vacated due to the Bank's successful appeal. Debtors' First Amended Plan requires the Bank to return the payments to the Chapter 13 Trustee for the benefit of the estate and for distribution to Debtors' other creditors. The Bank objects on four grounds.
A judgment reversed by a higher court is without any validity or effect, and the parties are to be restored to their positions as if the erroneous judgment had not been entered.
After reversal, an order confirming a Chapter 13 plan is no longer of any force or effect. The parties are returned to precisely their same situation as though no order had been entered.
The Bank may not keep the payments received under the now-vacated Order Confirming Chapter 13 Plan. Without the force of the order, Debtors were under no personal obligation to pay the Bank out of their post-petition wages since their personal liability was previously discharged. The Bank is entitled to in rem relief only. Debtors proposed to cash out the Bank's lien value in order to stay in their home with their three children; however, the Bank opposed the proposal and ultimately prevailed on appeal. Returning the parties to their pre-order position is required. The parties must now be treated as though the order never existed. Further, Debtors' other creditors have been harmed by operation of the reversed order. But for the order, Debtors' payments in excess of $15,000 would have paid other creditors' claims. These payments must be returned to the estate for a proper distribution under the Code.
The Bank does not hold an allowed unsecured claim and therefore does not have standing to object to Debtors' First Amended Plan under § 1325(b)(3).
Debtors' plan to surrender the house is a confirmable plan under
From the $16,977.45 the Bank shall repay the estate, the Bank may setoff $98.58 previously taxed as costs.
For the foregoing reasons, Creditor Bank of Prairie's Objections to Confirmation are DENIED. An Order Confirming Debtors' First Amended Chapter 13 Plan shall issue forthwith.