WILLIAM F. STONE, JR., Bankruptcy Judge.
The matter before the Court is a motion to approve a reaffirmation agreement
The Agreement presently under consideration by the Court is one of two reaffirmation agreements which were originally scheduled to be heard on September 7. The other one was rendered moot prior to the hearing by one or both of the Debtors cashing out an IRA account and paying off the unpaid balance in the amount of approximately $7,913.92 owing to First Citizens Bank & Trust upon a 2006 model Cadillac STS sedan valued at $21,825. The proceeds of the account were not sufficient to pay off both contracts, but Mr. Harvey testified that he had placed the remaining proceeds in an account from which he was making monthly payments on the Chrysler Financial contract. The Debtors' income, currently from Social Security, is $2,363 per month, and their indicated monthly expenses, after eliminating the $636.89 payment on the Cadillac but counting in the $280.70 payment on the PT Cruiser, total $2,549.99, leaving a deficit of $186.99 per month. According to Mr. Harvey's certification in the Agreement, he projects that the Debtors will be able to make the remaining payments on the Cruiser through a possible loan from a family member. At the hearing he testified that he expected to make up any shortfall by obtaining part-time employment, which he was confident he could manage. The balance owed as of the date
This Court has jurisdiction of this proceeding by virtue of the provisions of 28 U.S.C. §§ 1334(a) and 157(a) and the delegation made to this Court by Order from the District Court on July 24, 1984. The Court concludes that motions seeking its approval of reaffirmation agreements pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 524 are "core" bankruptcy proceedings pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(O) as involving "the adjustment of the debtor-creditor . . . relationship."
In order for a reaffirmation agreement to be enforceable, the agreement must comply with the requirements of § 524(c). One requirement listed in that section is filing the agreement along with, if the debtor was represented by counsel "during the course of negotiating" the reaffirmation agreement, a certification by such attorney that the agreement is a fully informed and voluntary agreement by the debtor, the agreement does not impose an undue hardship on the debtor or the debtor's dependents, and the attorney advised the debtor of the consequences of the agreement and any default under the agreement. 11 U.S.C. § 524(c)(3). In addition, in cases where the debtor's income less expenses is less than the payment on the reaffirmed debt and the presumption of undue hardship therefore arises under § 524(m)(1), the attorney certification must also state "that in the opinion of the attorney, the debtor is able to make the payment." 11 U.S.C. § 524(k)(5)(B).
In addressing the issue of reaffirmation agreements which do not involve any of what is traditionally thought of as "negotiation" of the terms under which the petition date balances of specific debts will be reaffirmed, the Court concedes that there is some textual basis for the position taken by Debtors' counsel in this and other cases. Indeed it has itself noted in a published opinion that "it is not clear what actual `negotiation' there might be in [the situation where the reaffirmation is simply re-assumption of legal liability for the existing contract]." In re Hoffman, 358 B.R. 839, 842 n.6 (Bankr.W.D.Va.2006). Similarly, in an article appearing in an issue of Bankruptcy Law News published by the Bankruptcy Section of the Virginia State Bar, titled Reaffirmation Agreements Under BAPCPA, it was noted that the language of § 524 of the Code seemed to contemplate the possibility that counsel representing a debtor in the bankruptcy case might not necessarily represent the debtor with respect to the negotiation of a reaffirmation agreement filed in that case.
In In re Minardi, 399 B.R. 841 (Bankr. N.D.Okla.2009), the court provided guidance as to when an attorney must sign the certification required by § 524(c)(3). In Minardi, the attorney for the debtor excluded negotiation and review of reaffirmation agreements from the scope of services he provided to debtors. Id. at 844-45. The debtor, wishing to reaffirm a debt on an automobile, filed a reaffirmation agreement with the court, asserting that he was not represented by an attorney in connection with the agreement. Id. at 844. At the court hearing, the attorney for the debtor informed the court that he had explained the legal effect and consequences of entering into the reaffirmation agreement to the debtor, but he asserted that he had not represented the debtor in negotiating the agreement. Id. The court ruled that the attorney's attempt at limiting his services to exclude representation of the debtor in negotiating reaffirmation agreements was impermissible and, therefore, the attorney's failure to file the certification required by § 524(c)(3) rendered the reaffirmation agreement unenforceable. Id. at 856.
The first basis of the opinion was that, under the Oklahoma Rules of Professional Conduct, negotiation of reaffirmation agreements is among a set of core services that must be provided to a consumer debtor in a chapter 7 case in order to provide competent representation. Id. at 849-51. It went on to hold that any attempt to limit the representation to exclude such service would be unreasonable and therefore forbidden under the same legal ethics rules. Id. at 852. More importantly for present purposes, the court's second basis for its ruling was that the Bankruptcy Code itself required debtor's counsel to advise the debtor about the reaffirmation process and the effect of any agreement. Id. at 848. Tracing the history of the amendments to the Code that shifted primary responsibility for reviewing and approving reaffirmation agreements from the courts to debtor's counsel, the court stated that debtor's counsel had an "obligation under the Code to advise clients regarding what debt, if any, to reaffirm, and then to evaluate whether the agreements reached
This position has been adopted by the Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Virginia in a series of cases. In perhaps the clearest statement of the rule, Judge Mayer stated that "where the debtor has counsel of record, counsel must make the required certifications in order for a reaffirmation agreement to be enforceable. This is true regardless of whether counsel actually participated in the process of negotiating the reaffirmation agreement." In re Rodriguez, No. 08-12039, 2008 Bankr.LEXIS 1877, at *1, 2008 WL 2509373, at *1 (Bankr.E.D.Va. June 23, 2008). In addressing the same argument in another case, the court stated that Congress, unwilling to leave the decision on whether to reaffirm a debt with the debtor alone, sought to insert "counsel's considered reluctance to approve onerous and ill-advised reaffirmation agreements" into the decision-making process. In re Isom, No. 07-31469, 2007 Bankr.LEXIS 2437, at *11-12, 2007 WL 2110318, at *3 (Bankr. E.D.Va. July 17, 2007) (Huennekens, J.). The attorney cannot avoid performing this function by refusing to aid the debtor in the reaffirmation process, as such agreements "are an integral part of chapter 7 representation of debtors. By accepting a chapter 7 case, counsel is accepting all aspects of the case including counseling with respect to reaffirmation agreements, negotiations with creditors with respect to reaffirmation agreements, and representing debtors in court with respect to reaffirmation agreements." Id. at *12, 2007 WL 2110318, at *3 (quoting In re Carvajal, 365 B.R. 631, 632 (Bankr.E.D.Va.2007) (Mayer, J.)).
In In re Perez, No. 7-10-11417, 2010 Bankr.LEXIS 2229, 2010 WL 2737187 (Bankr.D.N.M. July 12, 2010), the court reached a similar conclusion. The debtor entered into a reaffirmation agreement, apparently on the same terms as the original contract. Id. at *4, *39-40, 2010 WL 2737187, at *2, *9. The attorney representing the debtor signed the attorney certification, but crossed out the statement that "the agreement does not impose an undue hardship on the debtor or a dependent of the debtor" and did not check the box that stated that although the presumption of undue hardship had been established, the attorney was of the opinion that the debtor could make the payment. Id. at * 5, 2010 WL 2737187, at *2.
Because the attorney made some of the required certifications, the court presumed that the debtor was represented by counsel during the course of negotiating the agreement. Id. at * 9, 2010 WL 2737187, at *3. Going further, the court ruled that exclusion of such representation in a chapter 7 case involving a consumer debtor would be an impermissible limitation on representation. Id. at *10, 2010 WL 2737187, at *3. In so ruling, the court gave some guidance on its expectations of what such representation would entail:
Id. at *9 n.4, 2010 WL 2737187, at *3 n.4. Because the debtor's counsel did not make all of the required certifications in connection with filing the agreement, it was unenforceable. Id. at *20-21, 2010 WL 2737187, at *5.
Finally, and most recently, the Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Texas provided a lengthy discussion of the proper process for entering into a reaffirmation agreement in In re Grisham, 436 B.R. 896 (Bankr.N.D.Tex.2010), which has graciously been provided to the Court by Debtors' counsel. In its discussion, the court noted that among the situations requiring a bankruptcy court to conduct a hearing upon a proposed reaffirmation agreement is one in which the debtor is not represented by counsel during the course of negotiating such agreement. Id. at *8-9. As part of this discussion, the court stated that it was "dismayed" that some agreements were being filed by debtors who were represented in the bankruptcy case itself without their attorneys' certifications. Id. at *9. It went on to state that this situation required the court to hold a hearing so that the court could make the findings required by § 524(c)(6) in cases where the debtor was not represented by counsel during the course of negotiating the agreements, id., thereby seeming to allow for the possibility that the agreements would be enforceable in such cases without the attorney's certification. Ultimately, however, the court found this behavior by attorneys to be "unacceptable," stating that "[i]t should be considered a basic part of chapter 7 debtor-representation that an attorney advise his client as to something as fundamental and significant as a reaffirmation agreement and assist him in negotiation of the same." Id. at 902. Addressing the assertion by some attorneys that they do not feel comfortable signing reaffirmation agreements when they do not feel them to be in their client's best interests, the court stated that, first, as a trusted advisor, the attorney should try harder to dissuade the client from entering into an agreement the attorney feels is not in the client's best interest. Id. at *10-11. In addition, since the form certification does not require the attorney to certify that the agreement is in the debtor's best interest, it would be "the more ethical and honorable course of action" for the attorney to sign the required certification and, if a hearing is required because the presumption of undue hardship has been triggered, to explain the situation, and perhaps even that the attorney did not believe the agreement to be in the debtor's best interest, to the court. Id.
This Court, in its Raymond decision earlier this year, held that under the facts presented there, where debtors' counsel told the debtors that she would not represent them with respect to reaffirmation agreements and did not sign the certification form because the collateral was not worth as much as the amount of the debt being reaffirmed, counsel did represent them during the course of negotiation of the reaffirmation agreement and the attorney's unwillingness to certify all that was required by the provisions of the statute was fatal to the reaffirmation agreement's viability.
First, the Court agrees with decisions of its sister courts that the subject of reaffirmation of debts which otherwise will be discharged in bankruptcy is of such importance to the relief being sought by the client that it is unreasonable to condone any attempted exclusion of any legal services related to such a matter from those legal services deemed essential to the full and requisite representation of a consumer bankruptcy debtor. In short, this is not a responsibility which the Court should permit a bankruptcy debtor to waive, as it is one of those essential services the attorney is to provide the client in arriving at a resolution of his or her obligations to creditors. The issue of whether a consumer debtor will reaffirm particular debts, while not presented in every case to be sure, is one which generally will be considered even before filing the petition because an individual debtor, by virtue of 11 U.S.C. § 521(a)(2)(A), is required within thirty days of filing a petition to execute and file a statement of intention with regard to the surrender or retention of estate property subject to liens. The attorney for a bankruptcy debtor is obliged to be more than just an order taker from the client, rather the role of counselor and adviser is a part of the total professional obligation undertaken. Counsel for the Debtors in this case does not dispute the validity of this general principle, but bases her argument on the interpretation of the meaning of "representation during the course of negotiation."
Second, while the Court acknowledges the reasonableness of counsel's argument that there has been no "negotiation" where no bargaining has occurred about the terms upon which the obligation will be reaffirmed, it is not clear that Congress
Third, it is clear that the general intent of Congress in the enactment of "BAPCPA,"
For the reasons noted the Court will enter a contemporaneous order denying the motion to approve the Agreement.
Id. at 4.