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Timestamp: 2016-10-26 09:29:09
Document Index: 376107388

Matched Legal Cases: ['§ 1322', '§ 1322', '§ 1322', '§ 1322', '§ 1325', '§ 1325', '§ 1325', '§ 1325', '§ 1322', '§ 1325', '§ 1322', '§ 1325', '§ 1325', '§ 1322', '§ 1322', '§ 1322', '§ 1325', '§ 1325', '§ 1322', '§ 1325', '§ 1325', '§ 1322', '§ 1322', '§ 1325', '§ 1322', '§ 1325', '§ 1322']

| In re Capps
IN RE: LYNWOOD G. CAPPS, BARBARA J. CAPPS, COMMONWEALTH EASTERN MORTGAGE CORPORATION APPELLANT
On Appeal from the United States District Court For the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, Civil Action No. 87-0056.
Weis and Stapleton, Circuit Judges, and Diamond, District Judge.*fn*
Lynwood and Barbara Capps filed a Chapter 13 bankruptcy petition in the Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. Appellant Commonwealth Eastern Mortgage Corp. (Commonwealth), whose claim arose from a note secured by a mortgage on the debtors' principal residence, was the Capps' largest single creditor.
The final installment on Commonwealth's mortgage was not due for nearly 29 years. The Capps' reorganization plan proposed that the mortgage be cured and reinstated pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 1322(b)(5),*fn1 which governs cures of long term mortgages.
The bankruptcy court held a hearing to determine whether interest would be required. Commonwealth acknowledged at that time, as it has throughout, that its interest claim has no contractual basis. As recorded in "Statement of Evidence and Proceedings" agreed to by both parties, Commonwealth "[conceded at the hearing] that the mortgage and note contained no provision with reference to the claims for interest on arrearages, but offered the argument that such was required to be included to make the present value of the future plan payments equal to the mortgage arrearages due on the bankruptcy." App. at 3. The bankruptcy court declined to require the payment of interest.
In reviewing the bankruptcy court's order, the district court focused on 11 U.S.C. § 1322(b). Section 1322(b) reflects Chapter 13's permissive approach to reorganization by individual debtors. In particular, § 1322(b)(2)*fn2 enables a Chapter 13 debtor to modify any creditor's claim, except that of a mortgagee whose claim is secured only by a security interest in the debtor's principal residence. Section 1322(b)(5) makes clear that the prohibition against modification of residential mortgages does not preclude their cure:
The district court concluded that the Capps' proposed cure satisfied § 1322(b)(5).*fn3 Because the contract did not provide for interest on arrearages, the district court, like the bankruptcy court, declined to require such payments.
Commonwealth's argument for a contrary result on appeal is based on § 1325(a)(5)(B)(ii). Section 1325 provides:
(a) . . . [T]he court shall confirm a plan if--
Commonwealth argues that, despite the absence of a provision in its mortgage providing for interest on arrearages, payment to home mortgagees of the present value of their claims is required by § 1325(a)(5)(B)(ii) if they do not accept the debtor's reorganization plan and have not been given their collateral. Commonwealth maintains that because both preconditions are satisfied here*fn4 § 1325(a)(5)(B)(ii) necessitates interest payments.
Two Courts of Appeal have addressed the issue whether § 1325(a)(5)(B)(ii), read in connection with § 1322(b)(5), requires interest on arrearages.*fn5 In In re Colegrove, 771 F.2d 119 (6th Cir. 1985), a divided panel of the 6th Circuit concluded that § 1325(a)(5)(B)(ii) mandates interests on arrearages. In In re Terry, 780 F.2d 894 (11th Cir. 1985), the 11th Circuit reached the opposite result, holding that § 1322(b) creates an exception to § 1325(a)(5)(B)(ii) for home mortgages, and thus that § 1325(a)(5)(B)(ii) was inapplicable. For reasons discussed at length hereafter, we agree with In re Terry and the dissent in In re Colegrove that a mortgagee whose sole security interest is in a debtor's primary residence can not demand interest on arrearages, absent such a provision in the mortgage contract.*fn6
Our rejection of Commonwealth's interest claim is dictated in part by this court's recent decision in Matter of Roach, 824 F.2d 1370 (3d Cir. 1987). In Roach, we considered a Chapter 13 debtor's contention that his right to redemption survived both a foreclosure judgment and a foreclosure sale. Necessary to our ultimate conclusion that his right of redemption terminated with the foreclosure judgment was a determination as to whether a debtor who cures a default on a debt instrument can be said to have modified his or her creditor's rights.*fn7 Based both on the legislative history of § 1322(b) and on analogous provisions elsewhere in the Code, we concluded that Congress did not see cure as effecting a modification of creditors' interests. We pointed out, for example, that the Commission on the Bankruptcy Laws of the United States, which drafted a model act largely adopted by the 1978 Code, "distinguished the authorization to cure defaults on a home mortgage from the power to modify claimants' rights." 824 F.2d at 1375. We also described distinctions between cure and modification made by the House and Senate in their debates with respect to the final form of § 1322(b). In addition, our survey of the history of analogous provisions in Chapter 11, the counterpart for businesses to Chapter 13, revealed that sections 1123 and 1124, which relate to cure in Chapter 11, also distinguish between cure and modification. We noted that "[s]ection 1123 of Chapter 11 and § 1322 of Chapter 13 are parallel provisions," and that it is "very likely that Congress' understanding of the authorization to cure defaults in each was identical." 824 F.2d at 1376.
Section 1325(a), the source of Commonwealth's interest claim, is a cramdown cramdown provision that prescribes the conditions under which a Chapter 13 plan may be confirmed over creditors' objections. § 1325(a)(5)(B)(ii) insures present value so as to limit the effects of cramdown. As a leading treatise points out, this is necessary because cramdown enables a debtor to "modify the rights of secured creditors by reducing their payments or in other ways." 5 Collier on Bankruptcy para. 1322.09[4] (15th ed. 1986) ("Collier"). For this reason, we think the better view is that a necessary precondition to the application of § 1325(a)(5)(B)(ii) is that the debtor's plan must have effected a modification in the mortgage contract. See In re Terry, 780 F.2d 894, 897 (11th Cir. 1985); In re Simpkins, 16 B.R. 956, 963-966 (Bankr. E.D. Tenn. 1982). See also Cheetham v. U.C.I.T., 390 F.2d 234, 238 (1st Cir. 1968)(pre-Code decision concluding that "[i]f Chapter XIII is to serve any real purpose where there are secured creditors, Section 652 must be read as written, to require assent only of those whose claims are dealt with, meaning expressly adversely dealt with."); 5 Collier para. 1325.06[2][b].
The fallacy in Commonwealth's argument inheres in its failure to acknowledge that, because cure under § 1322(b)(5) does not modify creditors' rights, as pointed out by Roach, § 1325(a)(5)(B)(ii) is inapplicable in the context of cure and reinstatement. As Collier explains,
neither the present value test of section 1325(a)(5) nor the best interests of creditors test of section 1325(a)(4) is applicable where a default is cured pursuant to section 1322(b)(5). The present value tests compensate creditors whose rights have been modified by reductions in payments, interest charges or the total amount due; where a default is cured, however, the creditor's rights are not modified. Since the contract terms remain in force (except for the injunction against foreclosure) the time value of money is irrelevant. The creditor receives the interest, charges and costs to which it is entitled under the contract and applicable nonbankruptcy law.
5 Collier para. 1322.09[4].
As Collier acknowledges, this is not to say that a creditor in Commonwealth's position is not adversely affected to some degree by a bankruptcy and a plan of the kind here proposed. In the absence of the bankruptcy and plan, Commonwealth's rights would be subject to the Capps' right of cure only for the cure period stipulated in the contract and Commonwealth could collect its arrearages by foreclosure at the end of that period. With the Capps' bankruptcy and plan, the arrearages will not be fully paid for a period of five years and, as a consequence, the absence of an interest on arrearages provision in the mortgage contract takes on added and more onerous significance for Commonwealth. While we are mindful of this adverse impact produced by the injunction against foreclosure, our responsibility is to fit Sections 1322(b)(5) and 1325(a) together in a way that will effectuate the Congressional intent. We are persuaded, as we indicated in Roach,*fn8 that the incidental adverse effects inherent in cures effected under Section 1322(b)(5) were regarded by Congress as insignificant when compared with the adverse effects of modifications and other aspects of the bankruptcy laws. As the Senate Report concerning the cure provision under Chapter 11 indicates, Congress felt that "[t]he holder of a claim . . . who under the plan is restored to his original position, when others receive less or get nothing at all, is fortunate indeed and has no cause to complain." S.Rep. No. 989, 95th Cong., 2d Sess. 120 (1978), p. 5906, reprinted in Collier App. 3. Accordingly, we agree with Collier that the present value provision of § 1325(a) does not apply when a default is cured under § 1322(b)(5).
To hold otherwise would be to disrupt the scheme for cure embodied in § 1322(b). Cure by its very nature assumes a regime where debtors reinstate defaulted debt contracts in accordance with the conditions of their contracts. Usually the terms for cure are provided in the contracts themselves; Section 1322(b)(5) preserves such arrangements with respect to long-term mortgages by ensuring that debtors will not be prevented from curing their defaults due to the intervention of bankruptcy. Section 1325(a)(5)(B)(ii) is inconsistent with this scheme because, were § 1325(a)(5)(B)(ii) applicable in the § 1322(b)(5) cure context, it would require debtors to pay interest on their arrearages, even where such payments were not provided for contractually.*fn9
Because we conclude that home mortgagees were not the intended beneficiaries of § 1325(a)(5)(B)(ii) and because their treatment, insofar as cures of defaults are concerned, is dictated by the specific provisions of § 1322(b), we will affirm the bankruptcy court's and the district court's conclusion that Commonwealth is not entitled to interest on arrearages owned it.*fn10