Dale L. Somers, United States Bankruptcy Judge.
In this case, the Court must determine whether the Debtor's proposed Chapter 13 plan can be confirmed. The plan places the Debtor's unsecured student loan creditors in a special class that will receive distributions while her other unsecured creditors will receive nothing. The Debtor appears by counsel David A. Reed. Chapter 13 Trustee William H. Griffin objects to the plan, and he appears by counsel Karie L. Fahrenholz. The Court has reviewed the relevant materials and is now ready to rule.
This case concerns a rather strange intersection in Chapter 13 practice. Congress has been sufficiently concerned about student loan debts to make them usually not dischargeable in Chapter 13, but not concerned enough to give them payment priority over other unsecured debts. Because interest on nondischargeable debts continues to accrue while a debtor is performing under a Chapter 13 plan but cannot be paid unless the debtor is paying all the unsecured claims in full, a debtor with student loan debts runs a very real risk of paying into a plan for three to five years only to find that she finishes her plan owing more on those debts than she did when she filed for bankruptcy. In this case, the Debtor hopes to reduce that risk by creating one class for student loan creditor and another class for all her other unsecured creditors, and directing to the student loan class alone all the money she pays into her plan that would otherwise be divided pro rata among all her unsecured creditors. Whether she can do that depends on whether the Court can find that her proposal does not discriminate unfairly against her non-student-loan unsecured creditors.
The Debtor filed her Chapter 13 bankruptcy petition on June 20, 2015. She reported owing no secured debts and no
The Debtor reported that she is single, has no dependents, and has gross income of $2,891 per month from her work as a machine operator. As shown on the Official Form 22C-1 she filed, her average monthly income during the 6 full months before she filed bankruptcy (her "Current Monthly Income") was also $2,891, making her annualized Current Monthly Income for the year before she filed $34,692. At the time she filed, the applicable median family income for a household of one in her home state, Kansas, was $45,980. Since the Debtor is a below-median-income debtor, her disposable income is not controlled by the Chapter 7 means test as incorporated by § 1325(b)(3).
Along with her bankruptcy petition, the Debtor filed a proposed Chapter 13 plan. In it, she reported that she is a below-median debtor and her Applicable Commitment Period under the Bankruptcy Code is three years. She proposed that she would pay $185 per month into her plan for 36 months, providing a total of $6,660. The plan provided for distributions to pay the Debtor's attorney fee of $3,000, the Chapter 13 filing fee of $310, and the Chapter 13 Trustee's fee of 5.25%, or $349.65 (a total of $3,659.65). Since she listed no secured or unsecured priority creditors, the Debtor expected $3,000.35 to be available for paying her unsecured creditors. But the Debtor did not propose to have that money distributed pro rata among all her unsecured creditors. Instead, she wanted to place her student loan creditor in a special class and have all the $3,000.35 distributed to it. The Trustee objected to this part of the Debtor's plan, contending it was not a permissible proposal, so the plan could not be confirmed.
In their briefs, the parties have asserted certain additional facts, mainly about the Debtor's past and present circumstances, that they contend should affect the Court's analysis here. According to the Trustee, assuming the Debtor makes all her payments timely and she incurs no additional attorney fees, her attorney's fees will not be paid until 17 months into her plan, and the first distribution to her student loan creditor will therefore not be made until the month after that. The Trustee added that the Debtor previously filed a Chapter 13 case in February 2007 and received a discharge, so she was eligible to receive a Chapter 7 discharge when she filed her current case.
In response, the Debtor does not dispute any of the Trustee's asserted facts, but contends other facts show Chapter 13 was an appropriate choice for her bankruptcy filing. She noted that fifty-nine days before she filed bankruptcy, she refinanced a loan with a creditor her attorney suspected might file a § 523 or § 727 complaint if she filed a Chapter 7 case. Her attorney suggested his effective hourly rate of compensation typically turns out to be lower for a $3,000 flat-fee Chapter 13 than it does for a $1,200 flat-fee Chapter 7 case. The Debtor's choice of Chapter 13 was also influenced by the fact she experiences recurring medical expenses she is unable to pay for in full, so she is likely to need bankruptcy again in the future, probably sooner than the eight-year delay that must pass between Chapter 7 discharges. A successful Chapter 13 now, rather than a Chapter 7, will also leave Chapter 7 available to her sooner if she should suffer a catastrophic reversal of fortune in the future. The Debtor said the reduction in her student loan debts since her prior case occurred because her son (who had been the primary beneficiary of at least one of the loans) made some payments on them, and she acted as the caretaker for her son's son during 2014 and became entitled to large tax refunds that were taken by government intercepts and applied to the debts. Now, though, her grandson has resumed living with her son, and her son has stopped making payments on her student loans, so the principal is not likely to be further reduced anytime soon. The Chapter 13 automatic stay will protect her from the student loan creditor's collection efforts for the duration of her case. The Debtor added that being in Chapter 13 will provide a structure that improves her chances of sticking to her tight budget. The Debtor pointed out how difficult it would have been for her to come up with the money to pay a Chapter 7 attorney fee because she has no savings, no anticipated tax refunds, and no help from her family, and Lamie v. United States Trustee, 540 U.S. 526, 124 S.Ct. 1023, 157 L.Ed.2d 1024 (2004), requires the fee to be paid in full before filing bankruptcy.
As the proponent of her plan, the Debtor has the burden to prove the plan may be confirmed. Because the Trustee objected, the plan may not be confirmed unless "the plan provides that all of the debtor's projected disposable income to be received in the applicable commitment period beginning on the date that the first payment is due under the plan will be applied to make payments to unsecured creditors under the plan."
Section 1322 of the Bankruptcy Code specifies various provisions that a Chapter 13 plan may contain. Subsection (b)(1) allows a plan to designate one or more classes of unsecured claims, but says the plan "may not discriminate unfairly against any class so designated." The Code contains no express guidance about what makes discrimination "unfair," and bankruptcy courts have broad discretion to determine whether proposed discrimination is permissible.
Courts have adopted two main tests for determining whether proposed discrimination in a Chapter 13 plan is unfair. One test, adopted by the Eighth Circuit in Leser and by the Ninth Circuit Bankruptcy Appellate Panel in Wolff, asks:
This test was roundly criticized by the First Circuit Bankruptcy Appellate Panel in Bentley, where the court said (among other things), "[I]nsofar as the test relies upon abstract, undefined notions of `reasonableness,' `legitimacy,' and `good faith,' it fails to direct a court's analysis and instead creates a vacuum that the court itself must fill."
In a case that dealt specifically with a debtor-couples' effort to pay more through their Chapter 13 plan to their student loan creditors than to their other unsecured creditors, the Bentley court adopted the second main test for determining whether a plan discriminates unfairly. This test is not quite as simple to summarize as the Leser-Wolff test is.
In 2003, in Mason, Chief Judge Nugent considered these tests and concluded the Bentley test was the better one.
In Knowles, Judge Karlin similarly concluded the Bentley test, rather than the Leser-Wolff test, more accurately reflected the statutory scheme established by Chapter 13 and the spirit of the Bankruptcy Code.
Under the circumstances of this case, the Court concludes the Debtor's plan unfairly discriminates against her non-student-loan creditors and therefore cannot be confirmed. Unlike the debtors in Stull and Knowles, the Debtor has no discretionary income but only the projected disposable income that § 1325(b)(1)(B) requires her to pay into her plan. The Debtor's plan fails each step of the Bentley test. It does not honor the Code's requirement of equality of distribution among her unsecured creditors. She does not suggest her student loans are entitled to priority under § 507(a), or that equitable subordination should be applied to her other unsecured claims under § 510(c). Her student loans are most likely excepted from discharge, but that fact does not mean they have priority over her other unsecured claims and nothing else in the Bankruptcy Code justifies treating them more favorably than those other claims. The Debtor proposes to pay her student loans out of her projected disposable income, the money that § 1325(b)(1)(B) fixes as the minimum she must devote to a plan before the plan can be confirmed, and she has not suggested she has any additional income beyond her projected disposable income that she can voluntarily pay on her student loans. Although the Debtor's potential fresh start would be improved if she were allowed to direct all the unsecured creditors' share of her projected disposable income to her student loan creditor alone, a Chapter 13 fresh start does not guarantee that a debtor will emerge from Chapter 13 free from all debts, but only from those that are not entitled to priority and are not excepted from discharge.
The Debtor concedes her plan does not satisfy the Code's principle of equality of distribution among unsecured creditors of equal priority, but suggests this is okay because her student loans comprise the majority of the claims, almost 56% by the Court's calculation. She cites In re Jackson,
For these reasons, the Court concludes that the discrimination proposed by the Debtor's plan is unfair, and that her plan therefore cannot be confirmed. The Court appreciates the effort the Debtor's attorney made here to cleanly present and forcefully argue the question whether a debtor in this Debtor's predicament can deal with the nondischargeable student loan problem in the manner proposed. Unfortunately, the Court is convinced that Congress has barred the relief the Debtor seeks. The Debtor is hereby given twenty-eight days to file an amended plan that removes the unfair discrimination, or to ask to have her case dismissed or converted to Chapter 7.