Hon. David T. Thuma, Bankruptcy Judge.
Before the Court are three voluntarily converted Chapter 13 cases, two of which converted before a plan was confirmed. The question is whether, in light of the Supreme Court's recent decision in Harris v. Viegelahn, ___ U.S. ___, 135 S.Ct. 1829, 191 L.Ed.2d 783 (2015), Kelly L.
The three cases started in Chapter 13 and were converted voluntarily to Chapter 7.
¶ 8.2 of the plan.
In each case the Standing Trustee is holding funds from the debtors' post-petition wages, paid to her under the debtors' proposed or confirmed Chapter 13 plans. The Standing Trustee has asked the Court for instructions about how the funds should be disbursed following conversion in view of Harris.
In Harris the debtor had filed a Chapter 13 case, apparently because he fell behind on his home mortgage payments to Chase Home Finance, LLC ("Chase").
The plan was confirmed. About five months later Chase filed a motion for relief from the automatic stay, alleging that after filing his Chapter 13 case Harris failed to keep his mortgage payments current. The result was an agreed order modifying the automatic stay to permit prosecution of a foreclosure action. About a year later Harris filed a notice converting his case to Chapter 7. Attached to the notice was the following (the "Assignment"):
On the conversion date the Chapter 13 trustee Mary Viegelahn ("Viegelahn") was holding $5,519.22 of undistributed plan payments. Shortly after conversion she paid Debtor's counsel $1,200.00; about ten days later she paid the remaining $4,319.22 to creditors and $267.79 to herself for her commission. Nothing was returned to Harris.
Harris filed a motion to compel Viegelahn to pay the $4,319.22 to him. The bankruptcy court granted the motion, stating in open court:
The Court ordered Viegelahn to pay $4,319.22 to Harris.
Viegelahn appealed Judge Clark's decision to the District Court, which affirmed, holding that the Code sections at issue were ambiguous but that Congressional policy was clear that upon conversion to Chapter 7, Harris' post-petition wages held by Viegelahn for disbursement to creditors were to be returned to Harris. Harris, 491 B.R. at 873-74.
The Fifth Circuit reversed, rejecting both Harris' and Viegelahn's statutory arguments but concluding that considerations of policy and equity dictate that "the creditors' claim to the undistributed funds is superior to that of the debtor." Harris, 757 F.3d at 481.
A unanimous Supreme Court reversed, ruling:
Harris, 135 S.Ct. at 1838 (emphasis in original).
In other words, the Supreme Court held that none of the provisions of Chapter 13 apply in a case converted to Chapter 7. This holding is central to an understanding of the import of Harris. After conversion, a Chapter 13 trustee becomes the formerly serving Chapter 13 trustee in the case; her services qua Chapter 13 trustee are terminated, and her remaining responsibilities are not predicated on Chapter 13. Harris, 135 S.Ct. at 1838.
The Supreme Court also emphasized that § 348(f)(1)(A) clearly provides that upon conversion, absent bad faith,
Harris, 135 S.Ct. at 1837 (quoting § 348(f)(1)(A)).
Finally, the Supreme Court rejected Viegelahn's argument that her "wind up" duties on case conversion included distributing funds to creditors. Id. at 1839. Instead, distributing funds to creditors is a duty imposed by provisions of Chapter 13 that no longer hold sway after conversion. Id. at 1838-39. The Supreme Court emphasized that conversion of the case to Chapter 7 "immediately `terminates the service' of the Chapter 13 trustee ..." Id. at 1836 (quoting § 348(e)). "A core service provided by a Chapter 13 trustee is the disbursement of `payments to creditors.' § 1326(c)." Id. at 1838 (emphasis in original). But "[t]he moment a case is converted from Chapter 13 to Chapter 7... the Chapter 13 trustee is stripped of authority to provide that `service.'" Id. (citing § 348(e)).
By contrast, on conversion the wind up duties of a former Chapter 13 trustee, i.e. to turn over records and estate property to the Chapter 7 trustee and file a final report, are required by subsections (4) and (5) of Bankruptcy Rule 1019 (which survive conversion) rather than by any provision in Chapter 13. Id. at 1839 ("The Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure, however, specify what a terminated Chapter 13 trustee must do postconversion"). Similarly, the former Chapter 13 trustee's duty on conversion to return funds to the person to whom the funds belong — the debtor — is not based on § 1326(a)(2) or any other provision of Chapter 13, which hold no sway after conversion, but is necessary to avoid the former Chapter 13 trustee holding those funds in perpetuity. See 135 S.Ct. at 1838. Returning funds to the debtor is not a service of the Chapter 13 trustee; instead it is a wind up duty of the former Chapter 13 trustee.
Harris holds that a Chapter 13 trustee cannot pay creditors from funds she is holding on the conversion date. Harris's language is broad and unequivocal:
135 S.Ct. at 1835.
True, the Beauregards' confirmed plan authorized the Chapter 13 trustee to "disburse all funds held in trust as of the date
135 S.Ct. at 1838 (emphasis in original).
Even though the question presented to the Supreme Court was whether Viegelahn could distribute accumulated wage payments to pre-petition creditors, Harris's ruling is broad enough to encompass unpaid Chapter 13 administrative expenses such as debtor's unpaid attorneys' fees. Harris requires the return of "any postpetition wages not yet distributed by the Chapter 13 trustee." Id. (emphasis added). In view of Harris, we hold that funds held by the Standing Trustee in confirmed cases must be returned to the debtor upon conversion and cannot be used to pay creditors or administrative claims, notwithstanding any provision of a confirmed plan.
It was a common pre-Harris practice for Chapter 13 trustees to pay allowed administrative expense claims, such as debtor's attorney's fee, from held funds, if the case was converted before plan confirmation. See, e.g., In re Harris, 258 B.R. 8, 11 (Bankr.D.Idaho 2000) ("after compliance with the application and allowance process envisioned by Section 503(a), the attorney can be paid from undistributed funds held by the Chapter 13 Trustee before those funds are returned to the debtor"); In re Oliver, 222 B.R. 272, 274 (Bankr.E.D.Va.1998) ("the debtor's attorney's fees and expenses are ... properly payable by the Trustee prior to the return of the remaining funds to the debtor ..."). The basis for doing so was § 1326(a)(2):
We hold that Harris requires a change to this practice. According to Harris, no provision in Chapter 13, including § 1326(a)(2), "holds sway" after conversion. 135 S.Ct. at 1838 (Upon conversion "the case is placed under Chapter 7's governance, and no provision in Chapter 13 holds sway."). While Harris was focused on the second sentence of § 1362(a)(2), there is no principled basis upon which to continue to give effect to the third but not the second sentence of § 1326(a)(2) after conversion.
Further, because Harris rejected the argument that distributing funds to creditors is a "wind up" duty, it follows that former Chapter 13 trustees likewise lack authority to pay administrative expenses as a "wind up" duty before remitting funds to the debtor. Like the obligation of a Chapter 13 trustee to pay creditors, the obligation of a Chapter 13 trustee to pay
In sum, the Harris decision means that if a Chapter 13 case is converted to Chapter 7 before plan confirmation, all funds held by the standing Chapter 13 trustee on conversion that are not property of the Chapter 7 estate must be returned to the debtor, without paying administrative expenses.
We are mindful of the hardship Harris may impose on attorneys representing debtors in Chapter 13 cases, and of the deleterious effect Harris could have on the willingness of attorneys to represent debtors in Chapter 13 cases.
Payment of attorney's fees was not questioned or challenged in Harris. The attorney there obtained an assignment by the debtor of his right to the funds held by the Chapter 13 trustee, to secure payment of post-conversion attorneys' fees. Debtor's counsel attached the assignment to the notice of conversion. The solution for Chapter 13 debtor's counsel might be to include in their engagement letters an assignment of and security interest in the debtor's post-petition wages held by the standing trustee on the date of conversion, to pay allowed unpaid attorney' fees and costs incurred during the Chapter 13 case.
Harris requires a change in the way Chapter 13 trustees distribute held funds post-conversion.
Separate orders consistent with this memorandum opinion will be entered.
Hon. Robert H. Jacobvitz, Chief Bankruptcy Judge.