ERIC F. MELGREN, UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE.
This matter comes before the Court on the Trustee Carl B. Davis's appeal of the bankruptcy court's denial of the Trustee's motion to dismiss. The Trustee argues that the bankruptcy court erred when it found that language in 11 U.S.C. § 1328(a) required it to discharge Debtors' bankruptcy even though cause existed to dismiss the case pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 1307(c). In addition, the Trustee contends that the bankruptcy court erred in finding that the court must revoke a confirmation order under 11 U.S.C. § 1330(a) before the court
Shala and Nathan Holman (Debtors/Appellees) filed their bankruptcy case on November 3, 2011. Nathan is a self-employed chiropractor. Shala was a physician's assistant (until February 2013) and a Rodan + Fields associate or consultant. They proposed a Chapter 13 plan requiring them to make 60 monthly payments of $707. In 2012, the bankruptcy court entered an agreed order confirming a modified plan of monthly payments of $1,517 for 57 months.
The standard confirmation order set out duties on the Debtors. Some of these duties included: (1) Debtors notifying the Trustee of any change in employment; (2) Debtors timely filing all tax returns coming due during the case and providing copies to the Trustee; (3) prohibiting Debtors from incurring any new debt without the Trustee's or court's approval; and (4) prohibiting Debtors from selling, encumbering, or otherwise disposing of their assets without a court order.
Between June 2012 and March 2015, Debtors sought three modifications of their plan. In April 2015, Debtors filed their fourth motion to modify. They requested reduction of their plan payment and stated that they had experienced a reduction of income since the filing of their case. In support of this motion, Debtors included revised schedules I and J which disclosed that Shala was involved in "direct sales," had been for six years, and was receiving $4,558 a month in commissions. The Trustee objected to this motion arguing that it was not proposed in good faith and that Debtors could afford to pay more to their creditors than alleged. The bankruptcy court set trial for October 13, 2015.
On October 12, 2015 (the day before the scheduled trial), Debtors filed a fifth motion to modify. In this motion, although they again stated that they had a drop in income, they proposed increasing their plan payment by approximately $2,000 a month for the remainder of the plan. The Trustee also objected to this request stating that it was not proposed in good faith.
The fourth modification motion went to trial on October 13, 2015. Before the bankruptcy court issued a ruling, however, the Trustee and Debtors entered into an agreed order on December 2, 2015, resolving the Trustee's objections to the fourth and fifth modifications. The resolution provided for Debtors to pay $3,522 a month for three months and $4,725 a month for the remaining nine months of the plan.
On July 26, 2016, the Trustee filed a second motion to dismiss after Debtors defaulted on their plan payments and for failure to pay post-petition taxes. The United States also filed its own dismissal motion on August 23, 2016. On October 24, 2016, the Trustee amended the motion to dismiss to include dismissal for lack of good faith.
On December 15, 2016, Debtors completed their plan payments. As to the Trustee's motion to dismiss, discovery was required to be completed by March 3, 2017, and trial was set for March 22, 2017. In January 2017, the Trustee further amended the motion to dismiss. Trial was held on March 22, 2017.
On May 9, 2017, the bankruptcy court issued its order on the Trustee's motion to dismiss. In this order, the bankruptcy court found that the evidence demonstrated that Debtors had flouted their duties throughout the case. The court found that
Specifically, the bankruptcy court found that Shala misrepresented her employment status for several years, claiming that she was unemployed although actually working for Rodan + Fields. Shala first revealed her employment in 2015, although she had been working for Rodan + Fields for six years at that time. She made between $30,000 and $40,000 a year in 2012 and 2013. In 2014, Shala's earning records showed income of $58,729, and in 2015, they showed gross income of $126,729.
Debtors incurred post-petition debts without the Trustee's or court's approval, and the bankruptcy court stated that some of those debts appeared to have been actively concealed. Debtors owed the Internal Revenue Service approximately $75,000 for the years 2014, 2015, and 2016. Although Debtors had an adjusted gross income in each of those years of approximately $100,000, they only paid taxing authorities $3,400. Debtors also purchased two cars and titled those cars in Shala's parents' names "due to the bankruptcy." In addition, Nathan drove a Denali that he apparently acquired from Shala's mother during the bankruptcy, but he did not disclose that or how the vehicle is titled. As further evidence of Debtors' violation of the confirmation order, the bankruptcy court noted Shala's incorporation of her business and a residential apartment lease in Kansas City.
The bankruptcy court also noted Debtors' bad faith. Evidence included repeated inaccurate statements concerning their debts, income and expenses (as noted above). Debtors also failed to disclose ten bank accounts. The court noted that Debtors' actions demonstrated disregard for the bankruptcy process and the court's orders, and that they abused the provisions, purpose, and spirit of Chapter 13. Although the court found ample cause to dismiss the case, it found that two reasons prevented it from doing so.
First, the court found that the Trustee had challenged most of Debtors' bad faith conduct at the October 2015 trial. After the evidence was presented, the parties agreed to an order on December 2, 2015, that stated in part: "To resolve the Trustee's lack of good faith objection to confirmation of their modified Plan, Debtors herein agree to...." The bankruptcy court determined that allowing the Trustee to reopen the bad faith issues that had occurred prior to the agreed order would be the equivalent of revoking the agreed order. 11 U.S.C. § 1330(a) only allows the revocation of a confirmation order (1) if it was "procured by fraud" and (2) only after a party in interest files an adversary proceeding within 180 days of the order's entry. The bankruptcy court found that even if the agreed order had been procured by fraud,
Second, and most importantly, the bankruptcy court found that Debtor's completion of plan payments was a barrier to dismissal. The court noted that dismissal was discretionary under § 1307(c) because of the word "may," but that discharge was mandatory under § 1328(a) because of the word "shall." Because Debtors had completed
The Trustee appealed the bankruptcy court's order to this Court. The Trustee then moved, in bankruptcy court, for a stay of judgment pending appeal. The bankruptcy court denied the Trustee's motion finding that the Trustee's likelihood of success on appeal was small and that the other three factors weighed against the Trustee.
In this Court, the Trustee again moved for a stay pending appeal.
Debtors filed a Motion for Reconsideration and requested that they be allowed to file a response to the Trustee's Motion to Stay out of time. This Court allowed the response and held a hearing on Debtors' Motion for Reconsideration. Finding that Debtors failed to identify any factual circumstances or law that would entitle them to reconsideration of the Court's previous order, the Court denied Debtors' motion.
The matter currently before the Court is the Trustee's appeal of the bankruptcy's court's order denying the Trustee's motion to dismiss.
The district court sits as an appellate court on an appeal from the bankruptcy court. The standard of review governing the bankruptcy court's factual findings is whether they are clearly erroneous.
Here, the bankruptcy court denied the Trustee's motion to dismiss, which would appear to make the standard of review an abuse of discretion. Indeed, 11 U.S.C. § 1307(c) provides that the bankruptcy court may dismiss a case. However, the bankruptcy court, in denying the Trustee's motion to dismiss specifically stated that if it had "the discretion to deny a discharge and dismiss this case, [it] would.
The Trustee argues that the bankruptcy court erred when making two legal determinations. First, the Trustee contends that the court erred by determining that the language in § 1328(a) required the court to discharge the bankruptcy even though cause existed to dismiss the case and a dismissal request pursuant to § 1307(c) was pending before the court. The Trustee asserts that the bankruptcy court's reasoning adds a nonexistent deadline into § 1307(c). In addition, the Trustee argues that the bankruptcy court erred when it found that Debtors' plan for reorganization had to be revoked under § 1330(a) before a party in interest could request dismissal of the bankruptcy under § 1307(c) for events occurring prior to that confirmation order.
Debtors do not add any meaningful response or argument to the Trustee's motion. They do not discuss the cases nor the law that the Trustee cites. Instead, they simply paraphrase or repeat verbatim the bankruptcy court's order and state that it is correct.
The first question the Court must answer is whether § 1328(a) trumps § 1307(c). Several courts have discussed the meaning of the word "shall" in § 1328(a) and have concluded that a bankruptcy court must grant the debtor a discharge as soon as practicable after completion of all payments under the plan. These courts reason that the word "shall" requires discharge.
A case with similar facts to this case is one from the Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Texas, In re Parffrey.
Although the court found that there was cause to dismiss the case, it determined that it did not have discretion in the matter.
Two other cases have also noted the mandatory nature of § 1328(a). In In re Fridley,
In In re Klaas, the Third Circuit considered the discretionary nature of § 1307(a) and the mandatory nature of § 1328(a). The debtors had made all their required payments at the end of their sixty-month plan.
The Third Circuit reviewed whether the bankruptcy court could exercise its discretion and deny the motion to dismiss and instead grant a completion discharge under § 1328(a) despite the debtors not paying the full amount during the 60-month plan.
The Trustee directs the Court's attention to two cases in which bankruptcy courts have granted motions to dismiss despite the completion of all plan payments. In In re Wheeler,
In In re Teeter,
In sum, there are cases that allow dismissal at the plan's end and cases that do not allow it and instead find that discharge is mandatory under § 1328(a) if the debtor has completed plan payments. The few cases that allow for dismissal, however, are not that persuasive because neither court discussed § 1328(a) at all. Thus, it is unclear whether these courts considered the statute and whether it would have changed those decisions. The fact that these courts did not discuss § 1328(a) diminishes any value those cases have in determining the conflict between §§ 1328(a) and 1307(c).
With regard to the cases finding that § 1328(a) mandates discharge, the only conflict between courts appears to be what constitutes "completion by the debtor of all payments under the plan." Courts disagree as to whether certain payments are made "under the plan" and whether there are
Although it appears that some courts have different interpretations about the meaning of "payments under the plan" and whether there are temporal limitations as to whether those payments may be considered completed "under the plan," there are no such issues here. In this case, Debtors did not pay off the plan early. In addition, Debtors' payments did not extend past the 60-month plan. Instead, Debtors completed their plan payments right on time. It just happened while the Trustee's motion to dismiss was pending before the bankruptcy court.
The Tenth Circuit has stated that "`[s]hall' means shall. The Supreme Court and this circuit have made clear that when a statute uses the word `shall,' Congress has imposed a mandatory duty upon the subject of the command."
The Court will address one other argument that the Trustee makes. The Trustee argues that the issue in this case is analogous to a line of cases discussing whether a bankruptcy court can grant a trustee's competing request for conversion or dismissal under § 1307(c) over a debtor's request for dismissal under § 1307(b). Section 1307(b) provides that "on request of the debtor at any time, if the case has not been converted ..., the court shall dismiss a case under this chapter." And as noted above, § 1307(c) provides that "on request of a party in interest or the United States trustee, ... the court may convert a case... or may dismiss a case ... whichever is in the best interests of the creditors and the estate...." Some courts find that § 1307(b) requires dismissal, while some courts find that a bankruptcy court can convert the case under § 1307(c) despite the debtor's request for dismissal.
In In re Mills, the bankruptcy court concluded that the use of the word "shall" in § 1307(b) mandated an absolute right to a debtor's voluntary dismissal while the use of the word "may" in § 1307(c) was discretionary.
Here, it is an unsatisfying result as it appears that Debtors gamed the system to their advantage. They did not disclose material information relevant to their circumstances. As the bankruptcy court noted, there were many troubling circumstances and Debtors' income dramatically increased raising the question of whether they could have or should have paid more. The bankruptcy court also noted that Debtors demonstrated disregard for the bankruptcy process and the court's orders and abused the provisions, purpose, and spirit of Chapter 13. Nevertheless, the bankruptcy court found that § 1328(c) mandated discharge because Debtors had completed all payments under the plan. This Court joins in the bankruptcy court's determination.