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In Re: ANGELIQUE LORRAINE GRANDIZIO Debtor
The chapter 13 trustee, Thomas P. Gorman, has objected on disposable income grounds to confirmation of the plan filed by the debtor on April 22, 2010. The debtor, whose household income of $21,783 per month greatly exceeds the state-wide median for a family of the same size, has taken a "means test" deduction not only of $2,418 per month for on-going mortgage payments on her former residence which she is surrendering, but an additional $236 per month as the amount necessary to cure the pre-petition arrears on the two mortgages against the property. Based on the resulting computation of disposable income, she proposes to pay the trustee $164.63 per month, for an estimated dividend to unsecured creditors of 5 cents on the dollar.
A hearing was held on June 23, 2010, at which the debtor appeared with her attorney of record and testified in support of confirmation. The legal issue addressed at the hearing was whether, in light of the Supreme Court's recent decision in Hamilton v. Lanning, 560 U.S. (2010), the determination of the debtor's projected disposable income should take into account that she and her husband will not be making the mortgage payments on the property being surrendered. The court, however, need not reach that particular issue to resolve the present objection, since whatever a debtor's right to claim a means test deduction for payments contractually due on her secured debt during the 60 month period after the filing of the petition the additional deduction for payments necessary to cure prepetition defaults cannot be claimed if the debtor is not retaining the property.
Angelique Lorraine Grandizio ("the debtor") is an art director earning $107,276 per year. She filed a voluntary petition in this court on April 8, 2010, for adjustment of her debts under chapter 13 of the Bankruptcy Code. Her husband is a program manager with a government agency and earns $168,626 a year. They have two children, one an infant. On her schedules, the debtor listed $157,823 in unsecured debt; combined monthly income, after payroll deductions, of $12,060; and monthly living expenses of $11,895.79, leaving $165 with which to fund a repayment plan. On her Chapter 13 Statement of Current Monthly Income and Calculation of Commitment Period and Disposable Income (Form 22C or "means test form") she reported Current Monthly Income ("CMI") of $21,783 and annualized CMI of $230,201, which exceeds the median income ($85,633) for a household size 4 in Virginia. From CMI, the debtor claimed deductions of $19,019 to arrive at a calculated "disposable income" under the means test of $165. Relevant to the present objections, she claimed deductions of $2,418 on Line 47 as the average monthly payment scheduled as contractually due to secured creditors with respect to two mortgages against her "Former residence... 4270 Wheeled Caisson Square, Fairfax, Virginia" (emphasis added). Additionally, on Line 48, she claimed deductions of $235.87 as 1/60th of the amount, in addition to the amount listed on Line 47, "to maintain possession of the property."
The debtor's plan, filed on April 22, 2010, proposes to pay the chapter 13 trustee $164.63 per month for 60 months, for total plan funding of $9,878. The Wheeled Caisson Square townhouse would be surrendered, as would a motorcycle. The projected dividend on unsecured debts is 5 cents on the dollar. The debtor testified at the hearing that she had pared her budget as much as possible and would be unable to make plan payments in an amount greater than proposed in the plan.
Chapter 13 allows an individual debtor with regular income whose debts do not exceed specified limits to restructure and repay debts under court supervision and court protection. Although priority debts must be paid in full, as must secured debts (with interest) if the debtor proposes to keep the collateral, general unsecured debts may be paid at less than 100 cents on the dollar provided the plan (1) is proposed in good faith, (2) the case has been filed in good faith, (3) the creditors receive payments having a present value at least equal to what they would have received in a chapter 7 case, and (4) the debtor applies his or her "projected disposable income" for the "applicable commitment period" to the payment of unsecured debts. § 1325(a)(3), (a)(4), (a)(7), (b)(1), Bankruptcy Code.
Although there is a split of authority across the country, this court has allowed a deduction under the means test of the payments "contractually due... in each month of the 60 months following the date of the petition" on debt secured by collateral that the debtor intends to surrender. In re Degrosseilliers, No. 08-10942-SSM, 2008 WL 2725808 *3 & n.6 (Bankr. E.D. Va., July 11, 2008) (). In Degrosseilliers, however, the courtspecifically left open the issue of whether the additional deduction for payment to cure arrears could be claimed in the surrender contest, noting that a "strong argument" could be made that it would not. Id.
Whether the opinions allowing the deduction of the payments "contractually due" even when the debtor proposes to surrender the collateral remain good law following the Supreme Court's recent opinion in Hamilton v. Lanning, 560 U.S. (2010) is an interesting question. Lanning addressed the issue of how disposable income is "projected" for the purpose of § 1325(b)(1). Although the Bankruptcy Code defines "disposable income" both for above-median and below-median income debtors, it contains no definition for "projected disposable income," and the issue in Lanning was whether disposable income is "projected" simply by...
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