JEFFREY P. NORMAN, UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY JUDGE.
This matter is before the Court concerning the confirmation of the amended Chapter 13 plan (ECF No. 27) in the above-captioned case. A confirmation hearing was held on January 11, 2017. After considering the pleadings, evidence, testimony, and arguments, the Court makes the following findings of fact and conclusions of law pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52, as incorporated by Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure 7052 and 9014.2. To the extent any finding of fact is construed to be a conclusion of law, it is adopted as such. To the extent that any conclusion of law is construed to be a finding of fact, it is adopted as such. The Court reserves the right to make any additional findings and conclusions as may be necessary or as requested by any party. The Court also reserves the right to supplement the findings of fact and conclusions of law.
The debtor, Tracy Denise White, filed this Chapter 13 bankruptcy case on May 17, 2016. She and her counsel have diligently prosecuted her case, and the Court held a confirmation hearing on January 11, 2017. The debtor has amended her Chapter 13 plan and schedules numerous times. The most recent amended plan (ECF No. 27) was filed on December 30, 2016, to which the Chapter 13 Trustee has filed an objection (ECF No. 30). In addition to the Trustee's objection, the Court had its own independent concerns regarding confirmation of the debtor's plan. The proposed plan requires a plan payment of $575.00 per month for 59 months, which is permissible as the debtor is below median income and her applicable commitment period is only 36 months.
Pursuant to her schedules, the debtor has been employed for over five years as a certified nurse assistant employed at a nursing home/rehabilitation center in Shreveport. However, the debtor's income is limited.
The debtor's budget reflects she maintains a household of two, which consists of her and her eight-month-old grandson. Pursuant to Schedule J (ECF No. 29), her disposable monthly income is $575.00, which matches her monthly plan payment (not including the annual payment from the tax refund). The total amount the debtor proposes to pay over the life of the plan is $41,425.00. After deducting the Chapter 13 Trustee fee, the total available to creditors under the plan will be $38,525.25.
The creditor with the largest claim is Nissan Motor Acceptance ("Nissan"). The debtor has a purchase money security interest in a 2015 Nissan Altima. The Chapter 13 plan proposes to pay Nissan $26,994.55 with 5.5% interest. This corresponds to Nissan's proof of claim (Claim No. 1), which indicates a total debt owed of $26,994.55 and a payment arrears of $555.84 as of the petition filing date. The proof of claim also indicates the vehicle was purchased on June 13, 2015, for $25,950.88; however, due to negative equity in her trade-in vehicle and other factors, the total amount the debtor financed was $29,149.00.
The Chapter 13 Trustee's objection (ECF No. 30) only tangentially relates to the Court's concerns. That objection states the following:
Given the Supreme Court's ruling in United Student Aid Funds, Inc. v. Espinosa, 559 U.S. 260, 130 S.Ct. 1367, 176 L.Ed.2d 158 (2010), this Court has an independent duty to review all Chapter 13 plans, irrespective of the Chapter 13 Trustee's objection. An important holding in that case was "whether or not an objection is presently lodged in this case, the Court retains the authority to review [the Chapter 13] plan and deny confirmation if it fails to comply with the confirmation standards of the Code." Id. This Court reviews each Chapter 13 case pursuant to its duty as expressed in Espinosa.
Some have noted that the requirements contained in 11 U.S.C. § 1325(a)(5) will cause unique problems in certain Chapter 13 cases. See, e.g., Keith M. Lundin & William H. Brown, Chapter 13 Bankruptcy, 4th Edition, § 448.1, at ¶ 1, Sec. Rev. July 12, 2007, www.Ch13online.com. There are several cases currently pending in this Court with proposed annual payments such as in the instant case. The cases typically involve debtors with limited monthly income who are attempting to retain a vehicle. Often, it involves a "910 car claim."
Bankruptcy Code section 1325(a)(5)(B)(iii) states the following: "if — (I) property to be distributed pursuant to this subsection is in the form of periodic payments, such payments shall be in equal
If the debtor had proposed a level monthly plan payment over a 59 month term without annual payments, then there would be no issue concerning "equal monthly payments." However, given the claims in this case, including the attorney fees and the Nissan claim, the plan is insufficiently funded without the debtor's annual payments of $1,500.00, which total $6,000.00 over the life of the plan.
The plan only provides adequate protection payments to Nissan for the first ten months of the plan as debtor's attorney fees are paid. Thereafter, an amortization of Nissan's debt over the remaining 49 months of the plan requires an equal monthly payment of $584.06 in months 11-59. This amount is greater, in most months, than the monthly amount available for the Trustee to distribute to creditors. Also, the payments to Nissan in months 11-59 are not equal. The monthly payments are reflected in the chart at the end of this opinion.
The issue is whether the payments proposed to be made to Nissan are sufficient to meet the requirements of 11 U.S.C. § 1325(a)(5)(B)(iii). That Code section provides the following:
Nissan holds an allowed secured claim which is provided for by the plan. Specifically, the plan provides for periodic monthly payments to Nissan. Therefore, 11 U.S.C. § 1325(a)(5)(B)(iii) applies to Nissan's claim in this case.
The requirement that periodic payments be in "equal monthly amounts" means that the amount paid each month on such claims must be the same. The House Report supports this interpretation, stating that § 1325(a)(5)(B) was amended "to require that periodic payments pursuant to a chapter 13 plan with respect to a secured claim be made in equal monthly installments." Keith M. Lundin & William H. Brown, Chapter 13 Bankruptcy, 4th Edition, § 448.1, at ¶ 10, Sec. Rev. July 12, 2007, www.Ch13online.com.
This Court adopts the well-reasoned holding in In re DeSardi, 340 B.R. 790 (Bankr. S.D. Tex. 2006), which involved similar issues as this case. The DeSardi opinion was one of the first to analyze the new Code provisions that affected the rights of creditors whose claims are secured by purchase money security interests in vehicles in Chapter 13 cases.
DeSardi is consistent with this division's mandatory form Chapter 13 plan.
Applying DeSardi to this case means the "equal monthly payments" to Nissan must begin immediately after the full payment of debtor's monthly attorney fees. This occurs in month 11 of the 13 plan. Applying both 11 U.S.C. § 1325(a)(5)(B)(iii) and DeSardi to the debtor's proposed plan, the Court concludes that the plan does not meet the confirmation requirements in 11 U.S.C. § 1325.
As previously stated, the Court's financial analysis is contained in the chart at the end of this opinion. For the first ten months of the plan, the Trustee will have $534.75 per month to distribute to creditors after deduction of the Chapter 13 Trustee fee. After payment of attorney fees of $302.40 per month for the first nine months of the plan, and of $78.40 in month ten, the outstanding principle balance to Nissan will be $25,280.21. Amortized over the remaining 49 months of the plan, this amount would require an equal monthly payment of $584.06 per month. As the debtor's proposed monthly plan payment is only $575.00, and only $534.75 after the deduction of the Chapter 13 Trustee's fee, the debtor's monthly plan payment cannot provide "equal monthly payments" to Nissan. The proposed plan does not propose equal monthly payments to Nissan from months 11 to 59. Therefore, the plan cannot be confirmed as the monthly payments to Nissan fluctuate and are not equal.
The Court notes that parts of the DeSardi holding have not been adopted by all courts. In fact, a minority of courts explicitly criticize certain holdings in that opinion. However, this Court believes the legal rationale in DeSardi is sound. In addition, this opinion is consistent other opinions prohibiting the use of balloon payments or the use of plans that pay less into the plan during the early months after confirmation and then fund increases during subsequent years in order to fund full payment of secured claims. The rationale in all of these case is that the plan was not proposing the required equal monthly payments to secured creditors. See, e.g., In re Soppick,
The following is the chart showing this Court's financial analysis in this case:
While, 16-10819 proposed Chapter 13 distributions Payment Payment Payment Trustee Available After Attorney Available after Interest Principle Principle Date Amount Fee(7%) Trustee Fee Fee Attorney Fee to Nissan to Nissan Balance and Trustee Fee 1 6/17/2016 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $ 302.40 $232.35 $123.73 $108.62 $26,886.93 2 7/17/2016 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $ 302.40 $232.35 $121.41 $110.94 $26,775.98 3 8/17/2016 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $ 302.40 $232.35 $119.08 $113.27 $26,662.72 4 9/17/2016 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $ 302.40 $232.35 $116.75 $115.60 $26,547.12 5 10/17/2016 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $ 302.40 $232.35 $114.42 $117.93 $26,429.19 6 11/17/2016 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $ 302.40 $232.35 $112.09 $120.26 $26,308.93 7 12/17/2016 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $ 302.40 $232.35 $109.75 $122.60 $26,186.33 8 1/17/2017 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $ 302.40 $232.35 $107.41 $124.94 $26,061.40 9 2/17/2017 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $ 302.40 $232.35 $105.08 $127.27 $25,934.12 10 3/17/2017 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $ 302.40 $232.35 $102.74 $353.61 $25,580.51 11 4/17/2017 $2,075 $145.25 $1,929.75 $1,929.75 $99.53 $1,830.22 $23,750.29 12 5/17/2017 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $90.72 $444.03 $23,306.27 13 6/17/2017 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $87.36 $447.39 $22,858.88 14 7/17/2017 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $84.05 $450.70 $22,408.18 15 8/17/2017 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $80.78 $453.97 $21,954.21 16 9/17/2017 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $77.56 $457.19 $21,497.01 17 10/17/2017 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $74.38 $460.37 $21,036.64 18 11/17/2017 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $71.25 $463.50 $20,573.14 19 12/17/2017 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $68.17 $446.58 $20,106.57 20 1/17/2018 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $65.15 $469.60 $19,636.96 21 2/17/2018 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $62.17 $472.58 $19,164.38 22 3/17/2018 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $83.46 $451.29 $18,713.09 23 4/17/2018 $2,075 $145.25 $1,929.75 $1,929.75 $56.46 $1,873.29 $16,839.80 24 5/17/2018 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $49.54 $485.21 $16,354.59 25 6/17/2018 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $46.88 $487.87 $15,866.72
26 7/17/2018 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $44.28 $490.74 $15,376.26 27 8/17/2018 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $41.75 $493.00 $14,883.25 28 9/17/2018 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $39.27 $495.48 $14,387.77 28 10/17/2018 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $36.86 $497.89 $13,889.88 30 11/17/2018 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $34.51 $500.24 $13,389.64 31 12/17/2018 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $32.33 $502.52 $12,887.12 32 1/17/2019 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $30.02 $504.73 $12,382.39 33 2/17/2019 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $27.88 $506.87 $11,875.52 34 3/17/2019 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $25.80 $508.95 $11,366.57 35 4/17/2019 $2,075 $145.25 $1,929.75 $1,929.75 $23.80 $1,905.95 $9,460.62 36 5/17/2019 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $19.06 $515.69 $8,944.93 37 6/17/2019 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $17.31 $517.44 $8,427.49 38 7/17/2019 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $15.63 $519.12 $7,908.38 39 8/17/2019 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $14.04 $520.71 $7,387.66 40 9/17/2019 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $12.51 $522.24 $6,865.43 41 10/17/2019 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $11.07 $523.68 $6,341.75 42 11/17/2019 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $9.71 $525.04 $5,816.71 43 12/17/2019 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $8.43 $526.62 $5,290.39 44 1/17/2020 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $7.23 $527.52 $4,762.88 45 2/17/2020 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $6.12 $528.63 $4,234.25 46 3/17/2020 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $5.09 $529.66 $3,704.59 47 4/17/2020 $2,075 $145.25 $1,929.75 $1,929.75 $4.14 $1,925.61 $1,778.98 48 5/17/2020 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $1.84 $532.91 $1,246.07 49 6/17/2020 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $1.18 $533.57 $712.51 50 7/17/2020 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $0.62 $534.13 $178.38 51 8/17/2020 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $0.14 $534.61 ($356.24) 52 9/17/2020 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $534.75 53 10/17/2020 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $534.75 54 11/17/2020 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $534.75 55 12/17/2020 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $534.75 56 1/17/2021 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $534.75 57 2/17/2021 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $534.75 58 3/17/2021 $575 $40.25 $534.75 $534.75 $534.75 59 4/17/2021 $2,075 $40.25 $1,929.75 $534.75 $534.75 Nissan is fully paid at the end of month 51, the distribution shown as a negative numbers is to be distributed to the debtor's other creditors. $41,425 $2,899.75 $38,525.25 $2,800.00 $2,700.46 $26.995.55 Total Total Total After Total Interest Principle Balance paid Trustee Trustee Attorney Total to Total to Fee Fee Fee Nissan Nissan