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In re: Stephen William Berkley, NC-19-1197-FBTa (2020)

Court: United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit Number: NC-19-1197-FBTa Visitors: 3
Filed: Apr. 17, 2020
Latest Update: Apr. 17, 2020
Summary: FILED APR 17 2020 SUSAN M. SPRAUL, CLERK U.S. BKCY. APP. PANEL OF THE NINTH CIRCUIT ORDERED PUBLISHED UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY APPELLATE PANEL OF THE NINTH CIRCUIT In re: BAP No. NC-19-1197-FBTa STEPHEN WILLIAM BERKLEY, Bk. No. 14-30941 Debtor. STEPHEN WILLIAM BERKLEY, Appellant, v. OPINION DAVID BURCHARD, Chapter 13 Trustee, Appellee. Argued and Submitted on March 26, 2020 Filed – April 17, 2020 Appeal from the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of California Honorable Den
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                                                                   FILED
                                                                   APR 17 2020
                                                             SUSAN M. SPRAUL, CLERK
                                                               U.S. BKCY. APP. PANEL
                                                               OF THE NINTH CIRCUIT

                      ORDERED PUBLISHED

         UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY APPELLATE PANEL
                   OF THE NINTH CIRCUIT

In re:                                        BAP No. NC-19-1197-FBTa

STEPHEN WILLIAM BERKLEY,                      Bk. No.   14-30941

                Debtor.

STEPHEN WILLIAM BERKLEY,

                Appellant,

v.                                            OPINION

DAVID BURCHARD, Chapter 13 Trustee,

                Appellee.

                Argued and Submitted on March 26, 2020

                            Filed – April 17, 2020

            Appeal from the United States Bankruptcy Court
                for the Northern District of California

         Honorable Dennis Montali, Bankruptcy Judge, Presiding



Appearances:    Thomas P. Kelly III argued on behalf of appellant;
                    Brisa C. Ramirez on the brief for appellee.



Before: FARIS, BRAND, and TAYLOR, Bankruptcy Judges.

FARIS, Bankruptcy Judge:

                                 INTRODUCTION

      As chapter 131 debtor Stephen William Berkley neared the successful

completion of his chapter 13 plan, he received an unexpected windfall:

stock options he had earned for postconfirmation services became worth

about $3.8 million. His chapter 13 trustee, appellee David Burchard

(“Trustee”), thought that Mr. Berkley should use about $202,000 of his

windfall to pay his creditors in full. The bankruptcy court agreed and

modified the plan accordingly.

      On appeal, Mr. Berkley argues that the court could not force him to

commit any of the stock proceeds to the plan because the estate terminated

at confirmation and the proceeds were not property of the estate.

      The bankruptcy court was correct, so we AFFIRM. We publish to

clarify that a revesting provision in a confirmed chapter 13 plan does not

prevent modification of the plan to capture increases in the debtor’s

postconfirmation compensation.



      1
      Unless specified otherwise, all chapter and section references are to the
Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. §§ 101-1532.

                                           2
                        FACTUAL BACKGROUND

A.    Mr. Berkley’s chapter 13 petition and plan

      Mr. Berkley commenced his chapter 13 case in June 2014. His

proposed second amended plan (“the Plan”) provided that he would pay

$1,233.02 per month for sixty months. The nonpriority unsecured creditors

would receive one percent of their allowed claims. The Plan provided that

“[p]roperty of the estate will revest in Debtor upon confirmation.”

      The bankruptcy court confirmed the Plan in April 2015. Mr. Berkley

faithfully made his monthly payments for over four years.

B.    The Trustee’s motion to modify the Plan

      When Mr. Berkley filed his petition, he was a self-employed software

developer earning $5,000 per month. In 2016, after the court confirmed the

Plan, Mr. Berkley was hired as CEO of Antares Audio Technologies

(“Antares”). In 2018, he began receiving stock options from Antares as part

of his compensation package. In late 2018 or early 2019, Antares received a

buyout offer, under which Mr. Berkley would receive about $3.8 million for

his stock.

      In March 2019, the fifty-seventh month of the Plan, Mr. Berkley

disclosed to the Trustee the pending sale and the potential receipt of $3.8

million. However, he asserted that the money was not property of the

bankruptcy estate, so the Trustee could not force him to devote it to his

creditors.


                                      3
      The Trustee disagreed. He asserted that, under § 1329(a),

“Mr. Berkley’s post-petition acquired stock and increased income are

changed circumstances” warranting modification of the Plan.

      The Trustee filed a motion to modify the Plan (“Motion to Modify”).

He argued that Mr. Berkley’s receipt of $3.8 million from the stock sale

necessitated an increase in payments to general unsecured creditors. He

proposed that Mr. Berkley make a lump-sum payment of $202,603.80

before the end of the plan term so that unsecured creditors would receive

100% payment on their allowed claims.

      Mr. Berkley opposed the Motion to Modify and argued that, because

all estate property revested in him upon confirmation, the Trustee could

not require him to increase his Plan payments due to his receipt of the stock

proceeds.

      In a supplemental brief, Mr. Berkley added the argument that the

Motion to Modify was untimely because it sought past income (that he

began accumulating between 2017 and 2018, when the stock options were

issued), not “future income” under § 1322(a).

      The bankruptcy court agreed with the Trustee. The court observed

that Mr. Berkley’s argument would effectively nullify §§ 1306 and 1329:

“You’re trying to say we can ignore 1306 and . . . if a Plan gets confirmed

with revesting, you can’t file a modification – ever – and 1329 is

meaningless, and that’s just not the law.” The court further noted that, if


                                      4
Mr. Berkley did not want to contribute the extra $202,000 to the Plan, then

he was free to dismiss his case.

      The bankruptcy court issued an order granting the Motion to Modify.

Mr. Berkley timely appealed.

                                JURISDICTION

      The bankruptcy court had jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1334

and 157(b)(2)(A), (L). We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 158.

                                     ISSUE

      Whether the bankruptcy court abused its discretion in granting the

Motion to Modify.

                         STANDARDS OF REVIEW

      “The confirmation of a modified plan is reviewed for an abuse of

discretion.” Profit v. Savage (In re Profit), 
283 B.R. 567
, 572 (9th Cir. BAP

2002) (citing Max Recovery, Inc. v. Than (In re Than), 
215 B.R. 430
, 433 (9th

Cir. BAP 1997)). To determine whether the bankruptcy court has abused its

discretion, we conduct a two-step inquiry: (1) we review de novo whether

the bankruptcy court “identified the correct legal rule to apply to the relief

requested” and (2) if it did, we consider whether the bankruptcy court’s

application of the legal standard was illogical, implausible, or without

support in inferences that may be drawn from the facts in the record.

United States v. Hinkson, 
585 F.3d 1247
, 1261-62 & n.21 (9th Cir. 2009) (en

banc).


                                         5
      We review de novo the bankruptcy court’s interpretation of the

applicable Code provisions. Dernham-Burk v. Mrdutt (In re Mrdutt), 
600 B.R. 72
, 76 (9th Cir. BAP 2019) (citing Mattson v. Howe (In re Mattson), 
468 B.R. 361
, 367 (9th Cir. BAP 2012)). “De novo review requires that we consider a

matter anew, as if no decision had been made previously.” Francis v.

Wallace (In re Francis), 
505 B.R. 914
, 917 (9th Cir. BAP 2014) (citations

omitted).

                                DISCUSSION

A.    The bankruptcy court did not abuse its discretion in modifying the
      Plan to increase Mr. Berkley’s plan payments.

      The bankruptcy court granted the Motion to Modify to take into

account Mr. Berkley’s unexpected receipt of $3.8 million from the sale of

stock that he obtained as part of his postconfirmation compensation

package. It correctly held that § 1329 allows the Trustee to modify a

confirmed plan to increase payments to unsecured creditors in these

circumstances.

      Section 1329(a) provides that, “[a]t any time after confirmation of the

plan but before the completion of payments under such plan, the plan may

be modified” to “increase or reduce the amount of payments on claims of a

particular class provided for by the plan[.]” § 1329(a).

      Section 1329 specifies the ways in which confirmed chapter 13 plans

may be modified, but it does not state the circumstances in which a


                                        6
modification is proper. We have repeatedly held that “the bankruptcy

court may consider a change in circumstances in the exercise of its

discretion.” In re 
Mattson, 468 B.R. at 369
(citing Powers v. Savage (In re

Powers), 
202 B.R. 618
, 623 (9th Cir. BAP 1996)). An unexpected increase in

income is one such change that could warrant a plan modification to

increase payments. See Fridley v. Forsythe (In re Fridley), 
380 B.R. 538
, 543

(9th Cir. BAP 2007) (“Subsequent increases in actual income can be

captured for creditors by way of a § 1329 plan modification, which motion

the debtors are entitled to oppose.” (citing Anderson v. Satterlee (In re

Anderson), 
21 F.3d 355
, 358 (9th Cir. 1994))); In re 
Powers, 202 B.R. at 623
(affirming the bankruptcy court’s modification of plan to take into account

the debtor’s nearly fifty percent salary increase).

      The Ninth Circuit has held that creditors can seek increased

payments from debtors whose income increases during the term of the

plan. In Danielson v. Flores (In re Flores), 
735 F.3d 855
(9th Cir. 2013) (en

banc), the Ninth Circuit considered whether above-median income debtors

with no projected disposable income could confirm a plan for only thirty-

six months. In holding that the debtors must commit to a plan for the full

sixty months in the event their income increases, the court expressed

concern for creditors’ ability to modify the plan to receive greater recovery

in the event of a change in the debtor’s circumstances:




                                         7
      A minimum duration for Chapter 13 plans is crucial to an
      important purpose of § 1329’s modification process: to ensure
      that unsecured creditors have a mechanism for seeking
      increased (that is, non-zero) payments if a debtor’s financial
      circumstances improve unexpectedly. . . . [U]nsecured creditors
      may request a later modification of the plan to increase the
      debtor’s payments if the debtor acquires disposable income
      during the pendency of the applicable commitment 
period. 735 F.3d at 860
(emphasis added). The Court of Appeals further explained

the policy rationale behind its ruling:

      The policy justification for looking to future earnings is that a
      failure to do so “would deny creditors payments that the debtor
      could easily make.” In other words, the statute is meant to
      allow creditors to receive increased payments from debtors
      whose earnings happen to increase. . . . Congress intended
      § 1325(b)(1)(B) to ensure a plan duration that gives meaning to
      § 1329’s modification procedure as a mechanism for
      post-confirmation adjustments for unforeseen increases in a
      debtor’s income.
Id. at 861-62
(citations omitted) (bolded emphasis added).

      Similarly, the bankruptcy court’s decision comports with In re

Escarcega, 
573 B.R. 219
(9th Cir. BAP 2017). In that case, we rejected a

chapter 13 plan with an indefinite duration, which would have allowed the

debtor to “complete” his plan whenever he paid off all priority and secured

claims. We stated that “payments under a plan have to continue for the

duration provided for in the initial plan, absent modification, before being


                                          8
considered ‘complete’ for purposes of modification and 
discharge.” 573 B.R. at 239
(citing In re 
Fridley, 380 B.R. at 543-44
). Our reasoning is

instructive: unless the debtor successfully modifies the plan to shorten its

duration, the debtor is exposed to the possibility of continuing to commit

his income and property to plan payments, even in excess of the original

amount provided for under the plan. See
id. at 240
(“The possibility of

capturing increases in income necessitates that the chapter 13 trustee or

unsecured creditors are apprised of the term of the plan so that they can

seek modification if the Debtor’s income increases.”); In re 
Fridley, 380 B.R. at 544
(“In exchange for a § 1328(a) discharge of more debts than can be

discharged in chapter 7, the debtor’s increases in income are exposed to the

risk of being captured by way of § 1329 modifications proposed by the

trustee or an unsecured creditor.” (footnote omitted)).

      Further, the bankruptcy court’s decision is consistent with the

Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention & Consumer Protection Act of 2005’s

primary goal of helping “ensure that debtors who can pay creditors do pay

them.” Ransom v. FIA Card Servs., N.A., 
562 U.S. 61
, 64 (2011).

      In other words, confirmation does not shield increases in the debtor’s

postconfirmation income from the reach of the chapter 13 trustee or

creditors. It is well accepted that § 1329 permits the trustee and creditors to

modify the plan to capture postconfirmation increases in the debtor’s

income. As such, the bankruptcy court did not abuse its discretion in

granting the Motion to Modify.


                                        9
B.    Mr. Berkley’s arguments concerning revesting and the termination
      of the estate are unavailing.

      Mr. Berkley argues that his creditors were not entitled to any portion

of his $3.8 million windfall because that money was not property of his

estate after plan confirmation. His conclusion does not follow from his

premise.

      Mr. Berkley’s premise is that the $3.8 million was not property of the

estate. He argues that, under binding Ninth Circuit precedent, “the

bankruptcy estate in this case ceased to exist upon plan confirmation with

the exception of any property the plan or confirmation order clearly

reserved for the bankruptcy estate.” Because the estate terminated, the

Trustee could only exercise control over his income “as is necessary for the

execution of the Plan.” In other words, after confirmation, the Trustee had

no right to any income above the $1,233.02 monthly payments specified by

the Plan.

      Mr. Berkley is correct that we have adopted the so-called “estate

termination approach,” which recognizes “the vesting of all estate property

in the debtor at confirmation (unless the plan or confirmation order

provides otherwise) and the concomitant termination of estate

property . . . .” Cal. Franchise Tax Bd. v. Jones (In re Jones), 
420 B.R. 506
, 515

(9th Cir. BAP 2009), aff’d on other grounds, 
657 F.3d 921
(9th Cir. 2011). The

Ninth Circuit affirmed our decision, declining to adopt a particular


                                         10
approach but holding that, under § 1327(b), “property of the estate revests

in the debtor upon plan confirmation, unless the debtor elects otherwise in

the plan. Because [the debtor] did not elect otherwise, she once again

became the owner of her property at confirmation, except as to those sums

specifically dedicated to fulfillment of the 
plan.” 657 F.3d at 928
.

      Most recently, in Black v. Leavitt (In re Black), 
609 B.R. 518
(9th Cir.

BAP 2019), we reaffirmed our view that the estate terminates at

confirmation. We stated that “the revesting provision of the confirmed plan

means that the debtor owns the property outright and that the debtor is

entitled to any postpetition 
appreciation.” 609 B.R. at 529
(citing In re 
Jones, 420 B.R. at 515
).

      We acknowledge that the bankruptcy court in this case, and some

other bankruptcy courts within our circuit, take the view that

postconfirmation windfalls become property of the estate upon receipt,

even if the plan provides for revesting. See, e.g., In re Shay, 
553 B.R. 412
, 418

(Bankr. W.D. Wash. 2016) (holding that “[a] plan provision that

automatically vests post-petition property with the debtor without ever

becoming property of the estate, as proposed by the debtors in their

amended plan, is inconsistent with the Code”); In re Jackson, 
403 B.R. 95
, 100

(Bankr. D. Idaho 2009) (rejecting the estate termination approach and

holding that an inheritance received postconfirmation was property of the

estate).


                                        11
      In our view, these decisions reach the right result for an incorrect

reason. Mr. Berkley’s arguments, and the cases cited above, all rest on the

unstated assumption that, unless the postconfirmation income is property

of the estate, the debtor cannot be compelled to devote it to his plan. This

assumption is incorrect. Nothing in the Code provides that plan payments

may only be funded by estate property. In fact, debtors are often compelled

(in order to formulate a confirmable plan) to fund the plan from non-estate

sources (family contributions, loans or withdrawals from pension plans,

sale of exempt assets, etc.). See, e.g., In re Deutsch, 
529 B.R. 308
, 312 (Bankr.

C.D. Cal. 2015) (“Reliance on contributions from family is disfavored, but

not prohibited.” (citation omitted)); In re Feiling, Case No. 11-71474 MEH,

2013 WL 2451333
, at *5 (Bankr. N.D. Cal. June 6, 2013) (confirming plan

funded by gifts and non-estate property). Under § 1329, the bankruptcy

court can approve a plan modification that increases the debtor’s plan

payments due to a postconfirmation increase in the debtor’s income,

whether or not the additional income is property of the estate.

      This result is consistent with our precedent. Jones was concerned with

whether a creditor could maintain a postconfirmation tax claim if the

prepetition property of the estate revested in the debtor at confirmation. In

Black, we held that, where the confirmed plan provided that the debtor

would pay a specified amount when the debtor sold or refinanced a

particular piece of prepetition property, the debtor could not be forced to


                                        12
pay more when he sold the property for a greater amount.2 The revesting

provision was the key to those cases because they both dealt with property

that the debtor owned on the petition date. This case, however, is solely

concerned with postconfirmation wages.3 Because the stock options were

postconfirmation income that Mr. Berkley earned as part of his

compensation package, the bankruptcy court properly committed their

proceeds to the Plan. See In re 
Fridley, 380 B.R. at 543
.

      Also, as the bankruptcy court correctly observed, Mr. Berkley’s

argument would effectively nullify § 1329. Under Mr. Berkley’s theory,

once the property revests in the debtor at confirmation, the trustee would

never be able to modify the plan to increase plan payments due to a

postconfirmation increase in the debtor’s income. As discussed above, the

Ninth Circuit recognizes that the trustee and creditors may modify a plan

to increase plan payments based on a debtor’s unexpected

postconfirmation increase in income.

      Mr. Berkley also argues that the $3.8 million represents past earnings

      2
       Additionally, in Black, the debtor agreed to commit to the plan a specific dollar
amount from the sale of prepetition 
property. 609 B.R. at 521
. Here, the Plan contained
no such limitation.
      3
        Mr. Berkley takes the position on appeal that the stock options were not wages
or compensation. This is the exact opposite of the position he took in the bankruptcy
court: Mr. Berkley repeatedly represented to the Trustee and the bankruptcy court that
the stock options were “income” and that “[a]s part of his compensation package, in
2018 he began receiving stock options in the company . . . .” We reject his attempt to
reverse ground on appeal.

                                           13
and future appreciation. He contends that he had already earned the stock

before the Trustee’s Motion to Modify, so it could not be “future income”

under § 1322(a).4 We disagree. Under Mr. Berkley’s logic, the Trustee

would never be entitled to capture stock, a cash or non-cash bonus, or other

lump-sum postconfirmation payment unless the trustee somehow learned

about the money in time to file a plan modification before the debtor

received it. As a practical matter, chapter 13 trustees are highly unlikely to

learn of such developments unless the debtor discloses them. Thus, if Mr.

Berkley were correct, the rights of the trustee and creditors would depend

entirely on the debtor’s promptness in notifying them prospectively of a

change in circumstances. We reject this unsound policy.

      Similarly, Mr. Berkley’s argument implies that the Trustee should

have acted sooner to take control of the stock options as Mr. Berkley earned

them, and, by not acting until the options had ascertainable value, the

Trustee waited too long. Neither the Code nor sound policy compels

trustees to expend resources on assets that may or may not ever have any

value.

      Therefore, we reject Mr. Berkley’s argument that the revesting

provision bars the plan modification.


      4
         Section 1322(a)(1) provides that the chapter 13 plan “shall provide for the
submission of all or such portion of future earnings or other future income of the debtor
to the supervision and control of the trustee as is necessary for the execution of the
plan[.]” § 1322(a)(1).

                                           14
                             CONCLUSION

     The bankruptcy court did not abuse its discretion in granting the

Motion to Modify. We AFFIRM.




                                    15

Source:  CourtListener

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