ROBERT E. NUGENT, Bankruptcy Judge.
Ronald Krier's chapter 12 plan treats his domestic court obligation to his former wife, Constance Schaffer, as an allowed secured claim rather than as a "domestic support obligation" that must be repaid before his plan can be confirmed. He offers to repay the debt over 20 years, extending what was originally a fifteen year obligation in 2005 to one that might not be paid in full until 2036. In a May 2014 settlement agreement, Schaffer agreed to reduce her debt from $106,000 to $88,000 that was payable in full on November 1, 2014. That agreement was a novation that replaced the parties' original 2005 property settlement. The 2014 agreement didn't delineate between property settlement and maintenance like the 2005 agreement did, stripping the debt of its domestic support obligation character and excusing Krier from having to pay it in full as a prerequisite to confirmation.
Krier's obligation to Schaffer under the 2014 agreement is instead a fully secured claim that may be paid by a stream of payments equal in value to the allowed amount of the claim. But Schaffer is not a bank. She is a former spouse who has already waited 11 years to receive payment for her share of the marital estate—an estate that Krier has continued to use while not paying his obligations to her. Converting Schaffer's claim from a single payment obligation due in a few weeks to a 20 year loan lacks good faith under § 1225(a)(3) and falls short of the secured claim requirements of § 1225(a)(5). Since the plan doesn't comply with § 1225, confirmation must be DENIED. The debtor is granted 21 days from the date of this order to file an amended plan or to convert to chapter 7. Otherwise, the case will be dismissed.
Constance Schaffer and Ronald Krier separated in 2004 after a 15 year marriage and were divorced in 2005. In their Property Settlement Agreement (the "2005 Agreement"), Krier agreed to pay Schaffer $63,750 in property settlement and the same amount in "spousal maintenance."
Krier missed many payments. In 2013, Schaffer requested and received an order from the state court determining that Krier was $24,013 behind on maintenance and $24,013 behind on the property settlement. The parties stipulate that, before they signed the 2014 Settlement Agreement, Krier owed Schaffer over $106,000.
In 2010 and 2012, Krier granted his lender, Guaranty State Bank & Trust Co. mortgages on his farmland. Those mortgages are subordinate in priority to Schaffer's judgment lien. When Krier defaulted in 2013, the Bank foreclosed, including Schaffer and other judgment lien creditors as party defendants.
In the Settlement Agreement, the parties "agree and acknowledge" that the Krier-Schaffer divorce decree "created certain obligations between [them] concerning payment of spousal support (sometimes referred to as alimony or spousal maintenance, and payment of monies to equalize a property division."
The Settlement Agreement then recites that Schaffer will be paid $88,000 and elaborates:
The parties acknowledged that Schaffer's judgment lien was senior in priority to the mortgage and judgment liens of the other creditors. Krier agreed that by November 1, 2014, he would either refinance all of his obligations to Schaffer and the other lienholders or sell his land and pay all of them in full. The Settlement Agreement would become part of a journal entry of judgment and if Krier failed to perform, all of the property he listed as collateral for his various debts would be sold at sheriff's sale on November 1, 2014 and the parties paid in priority order.
The Settlement Agreement contained an integration clause:
The Settlement Agreement was submitted to the state court for approval along with a Journal Entry of Judgment that all of the parties approved and that the court entered on July 18, 2014.
The Journal Entry barred the plaintiff and the judgment creditors from executing on those judgments until November 1, 2014 and provided for the plaintiff to arrange for a sheriff's sale at execution to be held on November 1, 2014 pursuant to an order of sale. The recitation in the Settlement Agreement concerning the nature of Krier's original obligation to Schaffer is the only reference to any part of the debt having been for spousal support.
Krier filed this chapter 12 case on October 27, 2014. Schaffer filed a proof of claim for $88,000 plus interest accruing at 4.75% per annum, describing the debt as a secured claim for "domestic support obligation/property settlement."
Schaffer objected to the plan on several grounds. She argues first that one-half of the $88,000 is domestic support that came due on November 1, 2014, post-petition, and must be paid in full to satisfy § 1225(a)(7). She also argues that the proposed 20 year term, at an interest rate lower than that being paid a subordinate secured creditor, Guaranty Bank, was not proposed in good faith, barring confirmation under § 1225(a)(3). Nor is the proposed repayment sufficient under § 1225(a)(5).
Krier argues that the Settlement Agreement replaced the twin support and property claims with one debt and that the new debt is no longer a domestic support obligation that must be paid at confirmation. He argues that he is proceeding in good faith, that the Till rate is appropriate, and nothing in the Code prevents him from extending the repayment period for debt secured by a judgment lien for 20 years.
This case has been pending since October 27, 2014. Krier filed his plan on January 22, 2015. Schaffer's is the only objection remaining in controversy. At their request, Krier's and Schaffer's counsel submitted stipulations and briefs concerning Ms. Schaffer's objections to the plan. Those objections centered on the nature and treatment of her claim. On August 18, Krier appeared in court and testified in support of his plan, including its feasibility, but there have been no further proceedings in this case beyond Krier's and Schaffer's briefing of the issues surrounding her claim.
The Settlement Agreement as adopted in the Journal Entry of Judgment acknowledges that Krier's original obligations to Schaffer were for spousal maintenance and property settlement, but goes on to state that the Agreement is intended to "establish certain amounts" for his debts and to "resolve all issues pending before the parties in all cases set forth above, together with any other issues not heretofore stated or alleged. . . ."
These terms are different from those set out in the 2005 Agreement.
The Settlement Agreement is a novation that replaced and extinguished the 2005 Agreement. A novation is "a new contractual relation" that is substituted for an old one, extinguishing the former agreement.
An executory accord allows the unmodified terms of the prior agreement to be revived. A novation doesn't. Whether the agreement is a novation or an executory accord is a matter of intent.
Bankruptcy Code §101(14A) defines a "domestic support obligation" ("DSO") as a debt that is owed to a former spouse that is "in the nature of alimony, maintenance, or support," and has been established by a matrimonial agreement or a court order. After the recitals, nothing in the Settlement Agreement or Journal Entry suggests that Mr. Krier's restated debt to Ms. Schaffer is a DSO. In In re Sampson, the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals announced a two-step analysis for bankruptcy courts to use in determining whether a matrimonial debt is in the nature of support and excepted from discharge.
But winning the DSO battle doesn't win Krier the war because he has not demonstrated that he proposed Schaffer's plan treatment in good faith under § 1225(a)(3) or that the treatment complies with the cram-down requirements of § 1225(a)(5). "Good faith" in this context is determined by considering the familiar "Flygare" factors.
Ms. Schaffer is not a bank and shouldn't be treated like one. She is the debtor's former wife whose ex-husband kept this land by agreeing to pay her for her share of it — and hasn't. Not only does Krier's pre-petition conduct reflect poorly on his motivation and sincerity, but the timing of his filing, the proposed duration of his payments to Schaffer, and his previous efforts to repay reinforce my concluding that his treatment of her claim is not proposed in good faith.
Even if Krier has proceeded in good faith, his treatment of Schaffer's claim doesn't comport with § 1225(a)(5). That section requires that Ms. Schaffer have accepted the plan or that she retain her lien and receive value in an amount not less than the value of her secured claim. While the plan proposes that Schaffer retain her lien, it also proposes that she will receive a lower rate of interest than Guaranty Bank despite her first lien status, and be repaid over the same 20-year term as all of the other creditors, all commercial entities in the business of extending credit. The debtor offers no justification for the differential in rates, though I am persuaded that the so-called Till rate, the prime rate adjusted for risk, is appropriate.
Even though Schaffer's collateral is real estate that might support extending a creditor's repayment term over a period of years, Krier's underlying obligation to her was to have been satisfied within a few months, not an additional 20 years. Extending payment of what was established as a 15 year debt in 2005 out to 2036 is an inequitable and unsuitable treatment of Schaffer's claim that I cannot confirm.
Because the plan's treatment of Ms. Schaffer's allowed secured claim was not proposed in good faith, and because that treatment does not satisfy the cram-down requirements of § 1225(a)(5) due to the excessively lengthy repayment period, confirmation is DENIED. If the debtor does not file an amended plan or convert this case to chapter 7 within 21 days of this order, the case will be DISMISSED without further notice.
SO ORDERED.