RICHARD E. FEHLING, Bankruptcy Judge.
On or about March 18, 2010, slightly less than one year after confirmation of his Chapter 13 Plan, Debtor entered into a postnuptial
Because the postnuptial agreement distributes cash (presumably from Debtor's current earnings) and other possibly post-confirmation property of the estate to Debtor's spouse, it violated the automatic stay and such distribution provisions are void. To the extent, on the other hand, that the agreement distributes pre-confirmation assets, it did not violate the automatic stay and such provisions could remain in full force and effect. I will therefore grant Debtor's motion, concluding that some of the provisions violate the automatic stay and some do not. Because the agreement is not severable, however, I will declare that the entire agreement is void and not susceptible of enforcement. I will deny the motion for relief of Debtor's spouse insofar as it seeks to enforce the postnuptial agreement, but I will grant the motion for relief in part to permit the parties to determine their pending domestic relations issues in state court.
This Statement constitutes my findings of fact, conclusions of law, and discussion leading to my decisions on the two motions before me.
Debtor, David R. Clouse ("Debtor") filed this pending Chapter 13 bankruptcy case on August 29, 2008. After going back and forth on confirmation issues with the Chapter 13 Trustee, Debtor filed his Third Amended Chapter 13 Plan (the "Plan") on March 26, 2009. The Plan was confirmed on that same day.
Debtor's Chapter 13 Plan was not extraordinary. One provision, in particular, pertains to my review of this case. Paragraph 7 of the Plan provides as follows:
Plan, ¶ 7, Document 25 on the Docket of this case.
On July 22, 2010, Debtor's counsel filed Debtor's Motion To Determine Postnuptial Agreement Void and Entered in Violation of the Automatic Stay (the "Stay Violation Motion"), asking me to declare that the postnuptial agreement, dated March 18, 2010 (the "Agreement"), is void. Debtor's spouse, Corrine R. Clouse ("Spouse"), filed (1) her Answer of Respondent, Corrine R. Clouse, to Debtor's Motion To Determine Postnuptial Agreement Void and Entered in Violation of the Automatic Stay on August 2, 2010, and (2) her Motion To Lift Automatic Stay Pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 362 To Proceed with Divorce and Enforce Post Nuptial [sic] Agreement on August 3, 2010 (the "Stay Relief Motion"). Debtor filed his Reply to the Stay Relief Motion on August 11, 2010 (the "Stay Relief Reply").
I continued the initial hearing, scheduled on August 19, 2010, for the Stay Violation Motion, so that I could hear it together with the Stay Relief Motion on August 31, 2010.
Upon my initial review of the parties' briefs, I entered my Order on November 18, 2010, requiring Debtor and Spouse to file supplemental briefs
Slightly less than one year after confirmation of Debtor's Plan, he signed the Agreement without the benefit of counsel. Debtor and Spouse intended the Agreement to make a final settlement of their respective family property rights and personal affairs.
Summaries of the distributive paragraphs of the Agreement follow:
Paragraph 2—Debtor shall pay $3,000 per month to Spouse;
Paragraph 3—Debtor shall maintain life and disability insurance;
Paragraph 4—Debtor shall distribute one-half of his Vanguard retirement account to Spouse;
Paragraph 5—Debtor shall award sole and exclusive possession of the former marital residence at 801 East Main Street, Birdsboro, Berks County, Pennsylvania to Spouse, and after September 2016 (after Debtor's Plan should have been totally consummated and closed) the marital residence
Paragraph 6A—Debtor shall transfer an Oldsmobile Intrepid [sic]
Paragraph 6D—Debtor and Spouse shall maintain a Mercury SUV for the use of their son Jesse;
Paragraph 8—Debtor may dispose of his property through his will;
Paragraph 9—Debtor shall pay Spouse's attorneys' fees that might arise if he breaches the Agreement;
Paragraph 10—Debtor shall indemnify and hold Spouse harmless from demands made against her by reason of any effort of a third party to collect Debtor's debt from her;
Paragraph 11B—Debtor shall release Spouse of all actions or claims he has or might have against her;
and Paragraph 14—Debtor shall pay Spouse's counsel $300 for preparation of the Agreement.
The parties signed the Agreement in anticipation of the pending filing of a divorce between Debtor and Spouse.
Resolution of this matter requires review, interpretation, and reconciliation of a number of sections of the Bankruptcy Code. The interplay and interconnectedness of Sections 362(a), 541(a), 1306(a), and 1327(b) are at the heart of my consideration of this case. But I must also interpret and construe the Agreement and Debtor's Chapter 13 Plan and some subordinate legal issues that arise out of them also.
Paragraph 7 of the Plan states:
I conclude that this paragraph means precisely what it says: Confirmation of Debtor's Plan did not and does not affect, alter, modify, or terminate application of the automatic stay of Section 362. That is, if and to the extent that the automatic stay might be applicable to either post-confirmation Debtor, Debtor's property after confirmation, or post-confirmation property of the bankruptcy estate, the stay is not affected by confirmation of his Plan.
Spouse argues, in support of her request that I enforce the Agreement, that Debtor waived the automatic stay by participating in the post-confirmation process of negotiating and executing the Agreement.
Second, in a Chapter 13 case, the Chapter 13 Trustee has much to say about waiving or otherwise limiting the automatic stay and waiver of the stay without at least notice to the Trustee is problematic.
Third, nothing in Section 362 authorizes a debtor to waive the automatic stay unilaterally. The sub-section generally utilized to obtain termination, annulment, modification, or conditional relief from the stay, Section 362(d), speaks solely to relief being granted by the court.
Nothing in the record reflects any notice of Debtor's attempted waiver to, or consent by, Debtor's bankruptcy counsel, the Chapter 13 Trustee, or any creditor or other party in interest of the estate.
Bankruptcy Judge Mary France has recently analyzed the application of Section 362 to post-confirmation Chapter 13 debtors and estates in In re Chang, 438 B.R. 77 (Bankr.M.D.Pa.2010). I will draw heavily from her Chang opinion for much of my discussion in the next two sections of this Statement. I quote Judge France's analysis of the workings of Section 362 in situations relating to property of the estate issues such as I now face:
Section 362(a)(3) provides that the filing of a petition operates as a stay of: "any act to obtain possession of property of the estate or of property from the estate or to exercise control over the estate." Section 362(a)(4) stays "any act to create, perfect, or enforce any lien against property of the estate." Implicit in these provisions is the principle that when post-petition claims are asserted, the stay applies only to actions against property of the estate and does not bar the commencement of an action against the debtor or property of the debtor.
Chang, 438 B.R. at 79-80. Judge France followed her discussion of Section 362(a) with her analysis of what assets in a post-confirmation, pre-closing Chapter 13 case were assets of the estate subject to the automatic stay of Sections 362(a)(3) and (a)(4).
Section 362(c)(1) provides that the automatic stay of an act against property of the estate continues until such property is no longer property of the estate. 11 U.S.C. § 362(c)(1). The controlling, primary legal issue before me therefore is what constitutes property of the estate at the time of the Agreement (March 2010), which was one year after confirmation of the Plan and thereafter during the administration of Debtor's payments to the Chapter 13 Trustee pursuant to the Plan. Does property of the estate include the assets that are the objects of the Agreement's clear manifestation of possessing or controlling? What is property of the estate in Debtor's post-confirmation Chapter 13 bankruptcy?
Whether specific property is or is not property of Debtor's Chapter 13 estate depends upon the application and balancing of Sections 541(a), 1306(a), and 1327(b) of the Bankruptcy Code. The difficulty of rationalizing these sections, insofar as they relate to application of Section 362, has long perplexed and continues to challenge both bankruptcy courts and the parties to this dispute.
Judge France began her review of the law relating to property of the Chapter 13 estate with the basics in Chang. She started with what constitutes property of the estate pursuant to Section 541(a) of the Bankruptcy Code. Under all chapters of the Bankruptcy Code, Section 541(a) defines what is property of the bankruptcy estate. Chang, 438 B.R. at 80.
11 U.S.C. § 1306(a). Section 1306(a) expands the scope of property of the estate in Chapter 13 cases by including property acquired by the debtor after the filing of the bankruptcy petition.
The Chapter 13 estate, however, is not immutable. Chang at 80. Plan confirmation significantly alters the composition of the estate. Section 1327(b) provides: "Except as otherwise provided in the plan or the order confirming the plan, the confirmation of a plan vests all of the property of the estate in the debtor." 11 U.S.C. § 1327(b). "Estate" and "debtor" describe very separate and distinct "holders" of property. Section 1306(b) provides: "Except as provided in a confirmed plan or order confirming a plan, the debtor shall remain in possession of all property of the estate." When property of the estate vests back in the debtor under Section 1327(b), the debtor acquires something more than the mere possession of the property that he
When property vests in a debtor, he obtains absolute ownership and control of the property. Id.
Standing alone, the language of both Sections 1306(a) and 1327(b) is simple and unambiguous, but reconciling the interplay of the two sections is difficult. Three early, distinct approaches to reconciling Sections 1306(a) and 1327(b), were termed "estate termination," "estate preservation," and "estate transformation." Chang, 438 B.R. at 81.
Second, estate termination is the other extreme and is based on Section 1327(b) vesting all property in the debtor at confirmation and the estate simply ceasing to exist. Chang, 438 B.R. at 81-82.
Between the two extremes of absolute estate preservation (ignoring most of Section 1327(b)) and absolute estate termination (ignoring much of Section 1306(a)) lie several approaches that attempt to reconcile the vesting provision of Section 1327(b) with the broad definition of estate property found in Section 1306(a). Chang, 438 B.R. at 82. Although subtle variations exist among each of the "in-between" approaches, Judge France divided them into two general categories. In the first approach, some property of the estate vests in the debtor at confirmation under Section 1327(b), but property essential to the performance of the plan remains in the estate, regardless whether the property was obtained before or after confirmation. Id.
In jurisdictions recognizing partial vesting, property not needed to fund the plan vests in the debtor. Partial vesting attempts to honor, in part, the vesting provision of Section 1327(b), while acknowledging the inclusive language of Section 1306(a). Chang, 438 B.R. at 82. Property that is essential to the performance of the Chapter 13 plan remains property of the estate; all other property vests in the debtor.
Not only is the partial vesting approach impractical, Judge France found, it runs directly contrary to the explicit provisions of Section 1306(a). Id. at 82-83. Section 1306(a) provides no basis to distinguish (1) earnings from (2) other property of an estate. Section 1306(a) also provides no support for differentiating between two "types" of earnings—some of which is property of the estate and some not. Partial vesting also fails to give full effect to Section 1327(b), which provides that all property of the estate, not merely some of it, vests in the debtor upon confirmation. Chang, 438 B.R. at 83.
The plain, clear language of Section 1327(b) does not differentiate between property as necessary for a plan or not necessary for a plan. Judge France recognized the absence of statutory underpinnings for separately categorizing post-confirmation property based solely upon whether it is essential to the plan and rejected the partial vesting approach. I agree. Id.
At the conclusion of her analysis, Judge France adopts the reconciliation approach
Chang, 438 B.R. at 83.
Post-confirmation property is obviously not subject to Section 1327(b) because it did not exist at confirmation. Section 1306(a) places this property in the estate. Chang, 438 B.R. at 83.
Harmonizing the reconciliation approach with other provisions in the Bankruptcy Code that exclude some post-confirmation assets from property of the estate can be difficult. When a debtor converts a case from Chapter 13 to Chapter 7 in good faith, Section 348(f)(1) provides that property of the estate consists of property of the estate on the petition date that remains in the possession or control of the debtor. 11 U.S.C. § 348(f)(1). Chang, 438 B.R. at 83. Specifically, this often includes debtor's home.
But if a debtor converts a Chapter 13 case to Chapter 7 in bad faith, property of the estate consists of property of the estate as of the conversion date. 11 U.S.C. § 348(f)(2). Section 348(f)(2) assumes that estate property exists after confirmation. Chang, 438 B.R. at 84. Property of the estate in a post-confirmation conversion generally would not include Debtor's home because it would vest back in debtor under Section 1327(b). Unjust, inappropriate favoring of the bad faith debtor could result in certain circumstances: A good faith debtor could lose his home while a bad faith debtor might not. Judge France examined a number of other possibly anomalous (and possibly unfair) consequences arising from reliance on the reconciliation approach, but ultimately concluded that the reconciliation approach is the best possible
As an aside, Judge France concurred in another court's observation in In re Ziegler, 136 B.R. 497, 502 (Bankr.N.D.Ill. 1992):
Chang, 438 B.R. at 84. Absent appropriate and necessary corrective legislative action and despite the flaws of the reconciliation approach, I agree with Judge France that it best harmonizes Sections 1306(a) and 1327(b).
I therefore conclude that, from the date a Chapter 13 petition is filed, all pre-petition and post-petition property and all post-petition earnings received from services performed by a debtor are property of the estate under Sections 541(a) and 1306(a). Upon confirmation, unless the plan provides otherwise, all property of the estate (whether pre-petition or post-petition) vests back in the debtor under Section 1327(b). After plan confirmation, all property, including earnings, received by a debtor is property of the estate under Section 1306(a).
Considering the above analysis of what is and is not stayed by Section 362(a) and of what property is and is not part of the post-confirmation estate, applying the law to the Agreement is straightforward. Certain of the assets identified in the Agreement for distribution are property of the estate, and others are not. If a provision of the Agreement allows Spouse to obtain possession or exercise control over property of the estate, that provision violates the automatic stay of Section 362(a)(3).
1. Paragraph 2—Debtor shall pay $3,000/month to Spouse. Paragraph 2 violates the stay because Debtor's payments to Spouse, coming as they must from post-confirmation earnings, constitute an attempt by Spouse to take possession, ownership, and control of property of the estate.
2. Paragraph 3—Debtor shall maintain both life and disability insurance policies. I cannot definitively decide whether Paragraph 3 violates the stay because I do not know when the insurance policies were created or how they were or are funded.
3. Paragraph 4—Debtor shall distribute one-half of his Vanguard retirement account to Spouse. I cannot definitively decide whether Paragraph 4 violates the stay because I do not know when the Vanguard retirement account was created or how it was or is funded.
4. Paragraph 5—Debtor shall award possession of the marital residence (801 East Main Street, Birdsboro, Berks County, Pennsylvania) to Spouse, and after September 2016, the marital residence shall be sold, dividing the net proceeds between Debtor and Spouse. Because the marital residence is no longer property of the estate,
6. Paragraph 6D—Debtor (and Spouse) shall maintain a Mercury SUV for the use of their son Jesse. Because the Mercury Mountaineer SUV is no longer property of the estate,
7. Paragraph 8—Debtor may dispose of his property through his will. Paragraph 8, in itself, does not violate the stay because it merely authorizes Debtor to do something in the future. If and when he attempts to do that which the Agreement authorizes, I would need to know when Debtor acquired or paid for any property being disposed of through his will.
8. Paragraph 9—Debtor shall pay Spouse's attorneys' fees that might arise if he breaches the Agreement. Paragraph 9 violates the stay because Debtor's payments to Spouse's attorneys, coming as they must from post-confirmation earnings, constitute an attempt by Spouse and her counsel to take possession, ownership, and control of property of the estate.
9. Paragraph 10—Debtor shall indemnify and hold Spouse harmless from demands made against her by reason of any effort of a third party to collect Debtor's debt from her. Paragraph 10 violates the stay because Debtor's indemnification payments to Spouse, coming as they must from post-confirmation earnings, constitute an attempt by Spouse to take possession, ownership, and control of property of the estate.
10. Paragraph 11B—Debtor shall release Spouse of all actions or claims he has or might have against her. I cannot definitively decide whether Paragraph 11B violates the stay because I do not know when any actions or claims Debtor might have against Spouse arose and therefore I cannot determine if any such claims are property of the estate.
11. Paragraph 13—Debtor shall waive any rights or claims that he has against Spouse that might arise out of their marital relationship. I cannot definitively decide whether Paragraph 13 violates the stay because I do not know when any "marital" actions or claims Debtor might have against Spouse arose and therefore I cannot determine if any such "marital" claims are property of the estate.
12. Paragraph 14—Debtor shall pay Spouse's counsel $300 for preparation of the Agreement. Paragraph 14 violates the stay because Debtor's payment to Spouse's attorneys, coming as it must from post-confirmation earnings, constitutes an attempt by Spouse and her counsel to take possession, ownership, and control of property of the estate.
In the Third Circuit, actions taken in violation of the automatic stay are void ab initio. See In re Siciliano, 13 F.3d 748, 750 (3d Cir.1994); Raymark Indus., Inc. v. Lai, 973 F.2d 1125, 1131 (3d Cir.1992); Maritime Elec. Co. v. United Jersey Bank, 959 F.2d 1194, 1206 (3d Cir. 1991). But the Third Circuit Court has also held that actions undertaken in violation of the stay, although void (as opposed to voidable), may be revitalized in appropriate circumstances by retroactive annulment
The term "voidable" implies that actions taken in violation of the stay are valid unless cancelled by some affirmative action, rather than invalid or dormant unless subsequently ratified. In re Myers, 491 F.3d 120, 127 (3d Cir.2007). On the other hand, the term "void" implies an absolute bar amenable to no exception. Id. The Third Circuit has held that actions violating the stay, although unquestionably void, may nevertheless be made effective through retroactive annulment of the stay. Id. But the concept of actions taken in violation of the stay being "voidable" was rejected out of hand by the Third Circuit as imprecise. Id.
The various provisions of the Agreement that distribute property of the estate violate the automatic stay and are therefore void, although I could elect to annul the automatic stay and allow those provisions of the Agreement to become valid. I will not do so in this contested matter and Paragraphs 2, 9, 10, and 12 of the Agreement are therefore void and invalid as violating the automatic stay of Section 362(a)(3). The issue remains, however, whether the entire Agreement is void or if merely the violating paragraphs listed above are void. This issue depends upon the severability of the various provisions of the Agreement from the entire Agreement.
Generally under Pennsylvania law, if (1) less than an entire agreement is invalid for whatever reason and (2) the invalid provision is not an essential part or integral to the primary purpose of the agreement, then the balance of the agreement might be enforceable. See Freedman v. Tozzoli, 2005 WL 1798081, 71 Pa. D. & C. 4th 353, 368 (Lehigh Ct. Comm. Pl.2005).
Spouse refers me to Paragraph 17 of the Agreement as providing a severability clause for me to consider. Paragraph 17 follows:
Agreement, p. 9, ¶ 17. The text of Paragraph 17 has nothing to do with severability
Agreement, p. 9, ¶ 19. Nothing in the Agreement, therefore, preserves non-void provisions if other provisions of the Agreement are void. Moreover, the absence of severability appears to be intentional because the parties say in the Agreement that they deem and desire that all of the distributions made in the Agreement constitute equitable distribution of their marital property.
Certain of the Agreement's essential distributive elements are void because they violate the automatic stay of Section 362(a)(3). The Agreement has no effective severability provision and any such provision would be belied by the language in the Agreement clearly rendering the Agreement an entire, comprehensive document. To avoid doing harm to the comprehensive scope and reach of the Agreement, I can only declare the entire Agreement void because some of its major distributive provisions are void.
Spouse asks me to grant relief from the automatic stay for two reasons. First, she asks for relief from the stay so she can proceed with the Divorce Proceeding; second, she asks for relief from the stay to enforce the Agreement. Debtor does not oppose the request for relief to allow the Divorce Proceeding to move forward, but opposes it insofar as it seeks to enforce the Agreement. Because the Agreement is void, the request for relief from the stay to enforce the Agreement is moot. Because the parties have agreed that I should grant relief from the stay to allow the Divorce Proceeding to move forward, I will do so.
Beyond the parties' agreement, however, my grant of relief from the stay is certainly appropriate in this case. As my colleague, Judge Magdalene D. Coleman, has explained in an analogous matter very recently:
In re Chandler, 441 B.R. 452, 464 (Bankr. E.D.Pa.2010) (citations omitted).
11 U.S.C. § 101(14A).
Additionally, as noted above, Debtor and Spouse may agree or stipulate between themselves to anything relating to distribution, possession, custody, or control of any of Debtor's assets (such as the home) that are not property of the Chapter 13 estate. This latter statement does not arise from any grant of relief from the stay, but rather because the stay does not apply to such assets.
On the other hand, I recognize that a state court's determination of the parties' rights to equitable distribution and domestic support obligations and the parties' enforcement
I therefore will not grant relief from the stay at this time to permit Spouse to seize, control, or possess property of the estate. I will consider, when approached at a later time, what property remains available to fund Debtor's Plan. Alternatively, I may determine that Debtor's Plan must go bust in the face of an immutable state court domestic relations decision and that his Chapter 13 case should be dismissed. See Chandler, at pp. 465-66 (Judge Coleman noted that she would review the state court domestic relations decision in light of the debtor's efforts to develop a Chapter 11 plan of reorganization).
Debtor and Spouse may attempt to settle their disputes without proceeding to the state court (other than to obtain the court's approval of their settlement agreement).
In any event, therefore, Spouse must return to this Court to move for relief from the stay to implement or enforce any state court determination or adoption of a settlement agreement pertaining to domestic support obligations or equitable distribution.
Based upon the preceding findings of fact, conclusions of law, and discussion, execution of the Agreement violated the automatic stay of Section 362(a)(3). Because the violating provisions of the Agreement are not severable from the balance of the Agreement, the entire Agreement is void. I will not annul the stay to retroactively approve the Agreement. I will therefore grant Debtor's Stay Violation Motion.
I will also grant, in part, but deny, in part, the Stay Relief Motion. Spouse may proceed in state court to determine the couple's family law issues. The parties must return to me, however, with a request for relief from the stay to proceed before implementing or enforcing the state court decision. I advise both Spouse and Debtor to keep the Chapter 13 Trustee aware of their discussions and negotiations and of any decisions or rulings by the state court. The Stay Relief Motion is denied insofar as it seeks leave to enforce the Agreement.
I will issue an Order of even date herewith as set forth above.
AND NOW, this 28 day of December, 2010, upon my consideration of (1) Debtor's
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that the Stay Violation Motion is GRANTED.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the entire postnuptial agreement between Debtor and Mrs. Clouse is hereby declared to be void because (1) a number of its distributive provisions violate the automatic stay of Section 362(a)(3) insofar as they deal with post-confirmation property of the Chapter 13 estate and (2) the violating provisions are not severable from the balance of the postnuptial agreement.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the Stay Relief Motion is GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART and Mrs. Clouse may proceed with the pending state court divorce proceeding against Debtor on the limited basis described in the Statement.
I believe, but have only my general knowledge of property values over the past couple years to support my belief, that the value of the marital residence did not appreciate following confirmation of his Plan during this time of real estate devaluation. At oral argument on December 21, 2010, the parties discussed the effect of appreciation of property that vests back in a debtor pursuant to Section 1327(b), but they implicitly agreed that no appreciation had occurred in this instance. Courts have viewed post-confirmation appreciation differently—some deeming the appreciation in value as new property of the estate and others viewing property of the debtor as remaining debtor's, even if it appreciated post-confirmation. See, e.g., Salas v. Trustee (In re Salas), No. 2:05-cv-1107-GEB, 2006 WL 2788313 (E.D.Cal. Sept.26, 2006). The appreciation of debtor's property is not now before me, so I will not further address this issue in dicta.