Larry Hurlburt v. Juliet Black
Larry Hurlburt v. Juliet Black
Opinion
In this bankruptcy case, we are asked to overrule a twenty-two-year-old decision of this Court holding that Chapter 13 debtors may not bifurcate a narrow subset of undersecured home mortgage loans into separate secured and unsecured claims and "cram down" the unsecured portion of such loans.
See
Witt v. United Cos. Lending Corp.
(
In re Witt
),
*157 I.
The facts material to this appeal are not in dispute. In May 2004, debtor Larry Albert Hurlburt purchased real property located at 130 South Navassa Road, Leland, North Carolina (the "Property"), from Juliet J. Black for $ 136,000. Hurlburt paid Black $ 5,000 in cash at closing. Black financed the remaining $ 131,000 of the purchase price through a promissory note executed by Hurlburt in Black's favor, which note was secured by a purchase-money deed of trust naming Black as beneficiary. Under the mortgage agreement between Hurlburt and Black, the $ 131,000 principal accrued interest at 6% per annum, payable over 119 months in installments of $ 785.41, with a balloon payment of all remaining principal and accrued interest due on May 26, 2014. In the event of default, interest on the balance would begin to accrue at a rate of 8% per annum. Hurlburt used the property as his primary residence from the purchase date until the present day.
Hurlburt failed to pay the balance owed upon maturation of the loan. On January 29, 2016, Black initiated a foreclosure action in Brunswick County, North Carolina, claiming Hurlburt owed her approximately $ 136,000 under the mortgage. On April 13, 2016, Hurlburt filed a petition for relief under Chapter 13 of the Bankruptcy Code in the Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of North Carolina, which petition stayed Black's foreclosure action. In his petition, Hurlburt valued the Property at $ 40,000. That same day, Hurlburt brought an adversary proceeding against Black seeking to quiet title in the Property. On June 13, 2016, Black filed a proof of claim totaling $ 131,000, comprising a $ 40,000 secured claim and a $ 91,000 unsecured claim. The next day, Black filed an amended proof of claim totaling $ 180,971.72 1 but declined to identify the amount of the claim that was secured or unsecured as she "[did] not know the value of the collateral." J.A. 88. Hurlburt filed an objection to Black's proof of claim.
On June 24, 2016, Hurlburt filed an amended complaint in the adversary proceeding seeking to acquire quiet title or avoid the deed of trust, while maintaining his statutory objection to Black's claim. Approximately six months later, the bankruptcy court granted partial summary judgment in favor of Black, finding the deed of trust was valid.
See
Hurlburt v. Black
(
In re Hurlburt
), No. 16-00031-5-SWH-AP,
In February 2017, following the bankruptcy court's decision, Hurlburt filed a proposed Chapter 13 repayment plan, seeking to bifurcate Black's claim into secured and unsecured components. Under the proposed plan, Black would hold a fully secured claim for $ 41,132.19, which amount Hurlburt calculated by subtracting a senior Brunswick County tax lien totaling $ 5,867.81 from the Property's recently appraised value of $ 47,000. 2 The plan proposed treating the remainder of Black's claim as unsecured, with Black receiving no payment for that portion of her claim. On February 23, 2017, Black filed an objection to the amended plan contending that Witt barred the plan's proposed modification and bifurcation of her claim and asserting that she was entitled to a secured *158 claim in the full amount due under the mortgage agreement, plus interest.
The parties filed cross motions for summary judgment. In an opinion filed June 7, 2017, the bankruptcy court first held that Hurlburt's plan would "modify" Black's rights under the note and deed of trust. In reaching that conclusion, the bankruptcy court first noted that "whereas the note itself requires repayment of $ 131,000 at 6 percent, the proposed plan would require only repayment of $ 41,132.19 at 4.5 percent."
Hurlburt v. Black
(
In re Hurlburt
),
The district court affirmed the reasoning and judgment of the bankruptcy court in an opinion and order entered December 19, 2017. Hurlburt v. Black ( In re Hurlburt ), No. 7:17-CV-169-FL (E.D.N.C. Dec. 19, 2017). Two days later, Hurlburt filed a timely Notice of Appeal. A Fourth Circuit panel affirmed the district court's order in an unpublished, per curiam opinion issued on August 8, 2018. Hurlburt v. Black ( In re Hurlburt ), 733 Fed. App'x 721 (4th Cir. 2018) (unpublished) (per curiam). On January 8, 2019, this Court granted Hurlburt's request for a rehearing en banc, thereby vacating the panel opinion. Hurlburt v. Black ( In re Hurlburt ), 747 Fed. App'x 168 (4th Cir. 2019) (mem.).
II.
Hurlburt's appeal requires that we construe several provisions in the Bankruptcy Code. When construing a statute, we "first and foremost strive to implement congressional intent by examining the plain language."
Minor v. Bostwick Labs., Inc.
,
A.
Congress enacted the 1978 Bankruptcy Reform Act with the overarching goal of providing debtors with a "fresh start." H.R. Rep. No. 95-595, at 118 (1978). Among other changes, Congress significantly revamped Chapter 13 to better "facilitate adjustments of the debts of individuals with regular income through flexible repayment plans funded primarily from future income." 8 Collier on Bankr. (MB) ¶ 1322.01 (2018). To that end, a debtor seeking relief under Chapter 13 may file with the bankruptcy court a proposed plan for repaying claims, like Black's, asserted against the debtor.
See
Assocs. Comm. Corp. v. Rash
,
*159
Section 1325 of the Bankruptcy Code sets forth the criteria a debtor's proposed repayment plan must meet for a bankruptcy court to confirm the plan. Of particular relevance, Section 1325(a)(5) provides that a court can confirm a plan's proposed treatment of a secured claim if one of three conditions is satisfied: (1) "[t]he secured creditor accepts the plan," (2) "the debtor surrenders the property securing the claim to the creditor," or, as Hurlburt seeks to do here, (3) "the debtor invokes the so-called 'cram down' power."
Rash
,
Section 506(a)(1), which governs the value of the allowed secured claim, provides, in relevant part:
An allowed claim of a creditor secured by a lien on property in which the estate has an interest ... is a secured claim to the extent of the value of such creditor's interest in the estate's interest in such property ... and is an unsecured claim to the extent that the value of such creditor's interest ... is less than the amount of such allowed claim.
In other words, Section 506(a)(1) "provides that a claim is secured only to the extent of the value of the property on which the lien is fixed," whereas "the remainder of that claim is considered unsecured."
United States v. Ron Pair Enters., Inc.
,
The Bankruptcy Code, however, does not permit bifurcation and cram down of all undersecured claims. In particular, Section 1322(b)(2) generally prohibits Chapter 13 discharge plans from "modify[ing] the rights of holders of secured claims ...
secured only by a security interest in real property that is the debtor's principal residence
."
The bankruptcy court and the district court held-and we agree-that Hurlburt's proposed Chapter 13 "modified" Black's "rights" under the promissory note and deed of trust. Among other modifications, the proposed plan reduced the principal due on the loan and reduced the interest rate at which Hurlburt must repay that principal, and thereby constrained the circumstances in which Black can exercise her right to foreclose on the property.
See
In re Hurlburt
,
Because the proposed plan modified Black's rights under the loan documents, the sole issue before this Court is whether Black's claim falls into the narrow exception to Section 1322(b)(2) set forth in Section 1322(c)(2), which provides:
Notwithstanding subsection (b)(2) and applicable nonbankruptcy law ... in a case in which the last payment on the original payment schedule for a claim secured only by a security interest in real property that is the debtor's principal residence is due before the date on which the final payment under the plan is due, the plan may provide for the payment of the claim as modified pursuant to section 1325(a)(5) of this title.
Witt
concluded that the meaning of that phrase is ambiguous because "[i]t cannot be determined, merely from the statute's text, whether the words 'as modified' should apply to 'payment' or to 'claim.' "
Emphasizing that other aspects of Section 1322(c)(2) -not highlighted in
Witt
-indicate that Congress intended for the exception to permit modification of "claims," not just "payment[s]," other courts universally have criticized
Witt
's finding of ambiguity and attendant reliance on the statute's legislative history.
See, e.g.
,
In re Paschen
,
Although we do not lightly overrule our precedent, we agree with these courts and commentators that "the specific context in which the language is used, and the broader context of the statute as a whole,"
Minor
,
*162
In reaching this conclusion, we first emphasize-as
Witt
acknowledged,
The dissenting opinion maintains that Section 1322(c)(2) is most naturally read as allowing modification of only payments, not claims, because the provision uses the term "payment" "four times," whereas it uses the term "claim" just once. Post at 170. But we do not interpret a statute's meaning simply by tallying up the number of uses of one term and then comparing that figure to the number of times Congress uses other terms. And all but one of Congress's four references to "payment" in Section 1322(c)(2) are used to define the class of homestead mortgage claims excluded from Section 1322(b)(2) 's reach-those that mature before the final payment due on a repayment plan-and do not deal with the type of modifications permissible under Section 1322(c)(2) -the question this Court must resolve.
Second, we find it significant that Section 1322(c)(2) includes the prefatory phrase "[n]otwithstanding subsection (b)(2)," which indicates Congress intended for Section 1322(c)(2) to be an exception to or limitation on Section 1322(b)(2) 's anti-modification provision. Put differently, "[t]he prefatory phrase '[n]otwithstanding subsection (b)(2)' is ... a plain statement that subsection (b)(2)'s prohibition on the modification of loans secured only by an interest in a debtor's primary residence does not have
any
application to the class of claims that fall under § 1322(c)(2)."
In re Paschen
,
Importantly, Section 1322(b)(2) -the provision to which Congress expressly made Section 1322(c)(2) an exception-deals with the "modif[ication of] the
rights
of holders of secured
claims
."
Third-and most significantly- Section 1322(c)(2) provides that a Chapter 13 plan "may provide for the payment of the claim as modified
pursuant to section 1325(a)(5) of this title
."
The dissenting opinion maintains that Section 1325(a)(5)(B) deals not with modification of secured claims through bifurcation and cram down, but instead is a "procedural" provision that deals with "payment timing and scheduling." Post at 170-71. The dissent errs in characterizing Section 1325(a)(5)(B) as a "procedural" provision.
On the contrary, Section 1325(a)(5)(B) sets forth the
substantive
criteria a debtor's proposed plan must satisfy in order to be confirmed, including that any objecting creditor holding a secured claim-like Black-receive a distribution "under the plan on account of such claim [that] is not less than the allowed amount of such claim."
Likewise, Section 1325(a)(5)(B) does indeed require that a confirmed plan set forth a payment schedule for repaying the value of the secured component of an undersecured claim. But contrary to the dissenting opinion's reasoning, the Supreme Court has recognized that the true "power" of Section 1325(a)(5)(B),
Rash
,
In sum, the plain language of Section 1322(c)(2) exempts from Section 1322(b)(2) 's anti-modification provision claims based on undersecured homestead mortgages for which "the last payment on the original payment schedule ... is due before the date on which the final payment under the plan is due," and therefore allows bifurcation of such claims into secured and unsecured components.
B.
Because the plain language of Section 1322(c)(2) authorizes modification of homestead mortgage loans subject to that provision, we do not believe that it is proper to rely on legislative history to "muddy [the] clear statutory language."
Milner v. Dep't of Navy
,
Witt points to two aspects of Section 1322(c)(2) 's legislative history as supporting its conclusion that that provision authorizes modification of payments, not claims-(1) that the legislative history nowhere states that Congress intended to overrule Nobelman , notwithstanding that construing Section 1322(c)(2) as allowing bifurcation and cram down would "overrule" Nobelman 's holding for the subset of homestead mortgages that mature before the end of a plan; and (2) that the legislative history is silent as to the modification of claims, notwithstanding that it expressly referenced a decision dealing with modification of payment schedules.
As to the first contention, it is correct that the statute's legislative history "makes no mention of the
Nobelman
decision or of any intention to overrule that decision" by enacting Section 1322(c)(2).
In re Witt
,
We believe
Witt
misplaced reliance on the absence of discussion of
Nobelman
in Section 1322(c)(2) 's legislative history. To begin, "silence in the legislative history, no matter how clanging, cannot defeat the better reading of the text and statutory context."
Encino Motorcars, LLC v. Navarro
, --- U.S. ----,
More significantly,
Witt
's interpretive reliance on the absence of any discussion of overruling
Nobelman
in Section 1322(c)(2) 's legislative history
4
rests on a faulty premise-that Section 1322(c)(2), in fact, overruled
Nobelman
's holding that " Section 1322(b)(2) [ ] prohibited a Chapter 13 debtor from bifurcating home mortgage debt."
In re Witt
,
Nobelman
construed
Section 1322(b)(2)
,
Witt
's and the dissenting opinion's reliance on the legislative history's express reference to an opinion dealing with modification of payment schedules, without mentioning modification of claims, is no more persuasive. It is true that the House Committee report stated that the enactment of Section 1322(c)(2) would "overrule the result in
*166
First National Fidelity Corp. v. Perry
,
In
Perry
, a creditor obtained a foreclosure judgment following the borrower's home-mortgage default.
According to
Witt
, the Committee Report's reference to
Perry
indicates that Section "1322(c)(2) was
only
intended to allow payments to be stretched out over time; the debtor is still required to pay the 'full amount of the allowed secured claim.' "
In re Witt
,
Again, "silence in the legislative history ... cannot defeat the better reading of the text and statutory context."
Encino Motorcars
,
*167 III.
This Court does not overturn its settled precedents lightly. Witt , however, runs contrary to the plain text of Section 1322(c)(2), which authorizes modification of covered homestead mortgage claims, not just payments, including bifurcation of undersecured homestead mortgages into secured and unsecured components. Accordingly, with great respect for the Witt panel and the dissenting opinion, we hereby overrule Witt , reverse the district court's judgment relying on Witt , and remand this case to the district court for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
REVERSED AND REMANDED
WILKINSON, Circuit Judge, with whom KEENAN and THACKER, Circuit Judges, join, dissenting:
Congress obviously has the last word on matters of statutory interpretation. It can overturn a Supreme Court decision interpreting an Act of Congress if it wants. The Supreme Court held in
Nobelman v. American Savings Bank
that
Whereas the majority reads § 1322(c)(2) as completely overriding Nobelman with respect to an entire class of mortgages, I do not. When Congress exercises its power to override a major decision of the Supreme Court, it is appropriate to expect a modicum of clarity. Because I find that clarity lacking here, I am compelled to conclude that § 1322(c)(2) effected a more limited change to Nobelman , allowing debtors to repay their mortgages over the full duration of their plan. I thus respectfully dissent.
My dissent rests on a broader point than the particular bankruptcy provisions at issue, important as those provisions are. The majority has arrogated to itself the authority to overturn a Supreme Court decision in the absence of any clear desire by Congress to do so. This is not healthy. It is not the way our judicial system is supposed to work. See
Rodriguez de Quijas v. Shearson/Am. Exp., Inc.
,
I.
Chapter 13 of the Bankruptcy Code allows debtors to reorganize their debts and repay creditors from future income. To do so, debtors propose plans normally allocating their next three-to-five years of disposable income for confirmation by the court. See
The
Nobelman
decision interpreted the breadth of the anti-modification provision. That case, like the present one, involved an underwater mortgage where the debtors owed more money than their home was worth (in lending terms, the mortgage was "undersecured"). Debtors with undersecured mortgages may wish to modify the lender's contractual rights in any number of ways. Three are relevant here. First, a debtor may wish to extend how long he has to repay his mortgage, up to the length of the plan. While not changing the amount owed, this sort of change gives the debtor more time to make payments. Second, a debtor may wish to treat the portion of the mortgage that exceeds the value of the home separate from the remainder of the mortgage, which is called "bifurcation." See 11 U.S.C. 506(a). Third, a debtor may wish to reduce the value of the mortgage to the current value of the home, which is called "stripdown." See
In re Davis
,
Nobelman
interpreted § 1322(b)(2) 's anti-modification provision as prohibiting all three forms of modification for homestead mortgages. The Court first made clear that debtors cannot modify the
timing
of payments to these creditors, noting the lender's protected "right to repayment of the principal in monthly installments over a fixed term at specified adjustable rates of interest."
One year later, Congress passed and President Clinton signed the Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1994, Pub. L. No. 103-394,
(c) Notwithstanding [ § 1322(b)(2) ] and applicable nonbankruptcy law-
...
(2) in a case in which the last payment on the original payment schedule for a claim secured only by a security interest in real property that is the debtor's principal residence is due before the date on which the final payment under the plan is due, the plan may provide for the payment of the claim as modified pursuant to section 1325(a)(5) of this title.
There can be no doubt that Congress meant for this new provision to limit the breadth of Nobelman's holding for "short-term" mortgages, where the final payment is due before the end of the plan. The majority and I agree that the new provision allows modification to the timing of payments on these mortgages. Our disagreement centers on whether § 1322(c)(2) also allows for modifications related to the amount that is secured by the home. Or, to speak more technically, the question is whether the provision allows the other two forms of modification that Nobelman prohibited: "bifurcation" and "stripdown."
*169
My friends in the majority pretend that they are not overruling
Nobelman
. See Maj. Op. at 164-65 (" Section 1322(c)(2), as we construe it, does not overrule
Nobelman
."). This is not correct. The two holdings do not, under any conceivable view, treat short-term mortgages the same way.
Nobelman
says that a debtor like Mr. Hurlburt cannot "give effect to § 506(a) 's valuation and bifurcation of secured claims through a Chapter 13 plan ...."
As the majority is willing to read § 1322(c)(2) as overturning the
Nobelman
decision for an entire class of mortgages, it is appropriate to ask what sort of clarity we might expect from Congress before reaching that dramatic a result. As the
Witt
decision recognized, Congress often responds to decisions interpreting federal statutes.
In re Witt
,
The Supreme Court has long acknowledged that this presumption has two features. First, it leads us to respect Congress's decision to override or endorse a particular holding; second, we do not lightly toss aside Supreme Court precedents that Congress has not squarely addressed. See
Smith v. City of Jackson
,
This presumption has even greater force in contexts, like bankruptcy law, where Congress actively polices judicial interpretations of substantive statutes. See
Zuber v. Allen
,
II.
Applying this simple proposition, I share with my colleagues the view that Congress intended debtors to be able to modify the timing of their mortgage payments. But I do not believe that Congress intended to eviscerate Nobelman altogether, as the majority would have it. It is instead my belief that a narrower reading of the statute, which would preserve a part of Nobelman's holding, is the superior one.
A.
It is clear that Congress meant for § 1322(c)(2) to create an exception to
Nobelman's
prohibition against modifying the
timing
of loan repayments. Section 1322(c)(2) is all about payment timing. The text of § 1322(c)(2) mentions "payments" four times, along with extended discussions of payment timing. See
The majority wishes to dismiss these references to payments as mere descriptors, arguing that many of those references to "payments" describe when a debtor will qualify for treatment under § 1322(c)(2). But these references also support the understanding advanced in this dissent. Congress limited § 1322(c)(2) 's application to debtors with short-term mortgages. Why limit the freedom to extend loan payments to debtors with short-term mortgages? Because debtors with long-term mortgages, where payment schedules already extend
beyond
the end of the plan, have no use for the right to extend payments
up to
the end of the plan. Paying a long-term mortgage over the duration of the plan would actually accelerate a long-term mortgage, which is the last thing the debtor needs in bankruptcy. Indeed, § 1322(c)(2) allows missed payments ("defaults") to be repaid over the duration of the plan just like future payments. This puts the rights of debtors with short-term mortgages in sync with those of long-term mortgage holders, who can cure pre-existing defaults under § 1322(b)(5). See
*171 The relationship between § 1322(c)(2) and § 1325(a)(5), which it references, confirms this emphasis on payment timing. Just as the text of § 1322(c)(2) focuses on payments and timing, so too does § 1325(a)(5), which is a procedural section that outlines the conditions under which a court "shall confirm a plan." Subsections (5)(A) and (5)(C) provide that the court shall approve a plan if the secured claimholder consents to it or receives the secured property. Subsection (5)(B), the relevant one, allows a court to confirm a plan where, inter alia , the plan distributes "not less than the allowed amount" of the claim "in the form of periodic payments ... in equal monthly amounts." § 1325(a)(5)(B). Where § 1322(c)(2) allows debtors to modify payment schedules, § 1325(a)(5) describes how exactly to do it. In other words, § 1322(c)(2) would allow a mortgage on which the final payment would be due in one year to be repaid over the full five years of the plan, even though such a schedule modification would formerly have run afoul of Nobelman .
Along those same lines, "the title of a statute and the heading of a section are tools available for the resolution of a doubt about the meaning of a statute."
Almendarez-Torres v. United States
,
B.
To say that § 1322(c)(2) went beyond modification of payment timing to overturn Nobelman's holdings against modifying the amount of repayment, whether by bifurcation or stripdown, is a significant further step. Here, it is much less clear that Congress intended to act. There were various easy ways for Congress to do away entirely with the anti-modification protection for short-term loans. Congress could have specifically referenced bifurcation or stripdown in the text of § 1322(c)(2) ; it could have cited to 506(a), the bifurcation provision, just as it cited to § 1325(a)(5) ; it could have directly amended the anti-modification language in § 1322(b)(2) to not apply to short-term mortgages 1 ; or Congress could have provided in § 1322(c)(2) that § 1322(b)(2) 's anti-modification language "does not apply" to short-term homestead mortgages.
But Congress did none of those things. It instead used specific language: "notwithstanding subsection (b)(2)" the debtor can do one particular thing-namely, "provide for the payment of the claim" under the modified payment scheduling described in § 1325(a)(5). There is little reason to believe *172 that Congress intended that narrow and specific language to open the door to the broad modification of mortgage loans in the manner the majority envisions.
The presumption in favor of respecting a Supreme Court decision is a strong one. Rather than honor that presumption, the majority chooses to go thrashing in the weeds. The majority advances several arguments in support of overturning
Nobelman
for short-term mortgages. None is persuasive. First, the majority argues that the phrase " 'notwithstanding subsection (b)(2)' is a plain statement that subsection (b)(2)'s prohibition on the modification of loans secured only by an interest in a debtor's primary residence does not have any application to the class of claims that fall under § 1322(c)(2)." Maj. Op. at 162 (quoting
In re Paschen
,
The second argument pressed by the majority turns on the language, "the plan may provide for the payment of the claim as modified pursuant to section 1325(a)(5)."
But that argument misapplies the rule of the last antecedent. First off, the rule ordinarily applies to lists. For example, in the phrase "cats, dogs, or gerbils that are brown," the "that are brown" limitation would only apply to gerbils. The language would thus encompass a white cat, just not a white gerbil. Without a list, § 1322(c)(2) falls outside the usual scope of the rule of the last antecedent. And under any circumstances, the rule does not require the mechanical reading of only the single word before the modifying provision. Instead, "[t]he rule [of the last antecedent] provides that a limiting clause or phrase should ordinarily be read as modifying only the noun
or phrase
that it immediately follows."
Lockhart v. United States
, --- U.S. ----,
Finally, the majority attempts to use the statutory reference to § 1325(a)(5) to bootstrap any form of modification that could conceivably be included in a Chapter 13 plan into the language of § 1322(c)(2). See Maj. Op. at 162-64. My colleagues' argument boils down to the contention that "[s]ection 1325(a)(5)(B) ... allows 'a debtor to strip a secured creditor's lien down to the value of the collateral ....' " Maj. Op. at 163-64 (quoting
In re Westfall
,
It is of course true that § 1325(a)(5), as an omnipresent procedural provision for all Chapter 13 plans, applies to plans that provide for bifurcation or stripdown. But it is equally true that § 1325(a)(5) can be applied without allowing a debtor to bifurcate or stripdown an undersecured claim. See
Tidewater Fin. Co. v. Kenney
,
C.
The majority would like to believe that its interpretation of § 1322(c)(2) is a "narrow" one. Maj. Op. at 156, 160, 165. But its interpretation applies to the huge class of short-term mortgages, and to mortgages that will inevitably become short-term *174 mortgages as they near the end of their original payment schedule. This broad interpretation not only lacks clear support in the text, but will introduce new problems into the Code. For example, under the majority's view, a debtor whose final mortgage payment will be due on the fifty-ninth month of a sixty-month plan can keep his home by paying far less than he owes on the mortgage. But a debtor whose final payment will be due on the sixty-first month will be forced to repay every penny. Why favor debtors who happen to have fifty-nine months left on their home mortgage over those with sixty-one? The majority does not even attempt to provide an answer. There is no reason to think that Congress rested a matter of great consequence on something truly arbitrary. And once again, the distinction is perfectly understandable under the superior interpretation: § 1322(c)(2) allows timing modifications for only those short-term mortgages that would actually benefit from it.
It is also easy to see how today's decision will lead to mischief in bankruptcy courts. Debtors have some measure of control over whether their mortgage will qualify as a short-term one. Debtors near the margins will have obvious incentives to delay filing for bankruptcy or stall proceedings until their final mortgage payment is less than sixty months away. That is, after all, the key to avoid paying the full amount owed on the mortgage under the majority's view.
Worse yet, these consequences will fall hardest on lower-income debtors. Plans proposed by lower-income debtors, by default, cannot last for more than three years. See 11 U.S.C. 1322(d). Wealthier debtors, on the other hand, ordinarily propose plans that last five years. See
Putting it all together, I am persuaded that Congress acted clearly in peeling back Nobelman's prohibition against modifying the timing of mortgage repayment. But I remain unconvinced that Congress also intended to totally overrule Nobelman by allowing debtors with short-term mortgages to modify the amount of those mortgages through stripdown or bifurcation. When interpreting a bankruptcy provision in light of pre-existing precedent, that clarity makes all the difference.
The majority asserts that this dissent's position rests on "legislative history." Maj. Op. at 164-67. It somehow believes that by uttering the dread words "legislative history" it can inoculate itself from its refusal to consider evidence that fails to serve its purposes. See
Hamilton
,
To be sure, I think the interpretation of the text advanced in this dissent is the better one. But I do not rest upon that *175 point; I rest instead upon the view that the majority's opposing interpretation of the statutory text has not been enunciated with anything like the clarity required to upset the Nobelman holding.
III.
There can be no doubt that this is an issue of practical importance. The better interpretation of § 1322(c)(2) allows debtors to cure defaults and extend payments over the duration of a plan. In some cases, debtors will have several extra years to repay mortgages that they are currently unable to afford. This benefit is especially meaningful for debtors who face unusually large payments in the near future. One example includes debtors with balloon-payment mortgages, which require "a lump-sum payment of the outstanding balance" at some point in time. Balloon-Payment Mortgage , Black's Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014).
Similarly, the great majority of mortgages have come to include acceleration clauses, which "require[ ] the debtor to pay off the balance sooner than the due date if some specified event occurs, such as failure to pay an installment ...."
Acceleration Clause
, Black's Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014); see
Delebreau v. Bayview Loan Servicing, LLC
,
Indeed, two years before
Nobelman
, the Third Circuit had already interpreted § 1322(b)(2) to prohibit a debtor from paying off a mortgage over the duration of his plan.
Perry
,
That said, the majority's interpretation has the salutary effect of providing even more relief to debtors, many of whom have been hurt by unforeseen circumstances outside of their control. Home ownership lies at the heart of the American Dream. No one wishes to snatch it just as people have begun to realize it. The ability to stay in your home by reducing how much you have to pay on your mortgage is a big deal for bankrupt homeowners. In this case, for example, Mr. Hurlburt may be able to use bifurcation to avoid foreclosure by giving Ms. Black payments worth only $ 41,132.19, instead of the $ 180,971.72 that under the loan documents he currently owes. That change likely represents the difference between keeping his home in bankruptcy, or not.
These undoubted benefits, however, come at a cost. Lenders are not blind to the effects of bankruptcy, and when the Code allows debtors to pay less than they
*176
owe in bankruptcy, lenders adjust accordingly. One empirical study has suggested that the
Nobelman
decision, which protected mortgage loans from modification, resulted in a three percent reduction in interest rates and a one percent increase in mortgage approval rates. See Wenli Li et al.,
Using Bankruptcy to Reduce Foreclosures: Does Strip-Down of Mortgages Affect the Supply of Mortgage Credit?
, at 14 (Nat'l Bureau of Econ. Research, Working Paper No. w19952, 2014). Our prior decision in
Witt
accordingly protected potential borrowers from more expensive and restrictive lending practices, in line with the purpose of the anti-modification clause in the first place: "to encourage the flow of capital into the home lending market."
Nobelman
,
Ultimately, these trade-offs between protecting those in bankruptcy and encouraging a free-flow of capital for potential homeowners bottom out on a policy debate. I venture into this terrain only to show that, in light of unclear language, there are valid policy considerations on both sides. It is ultimately Congress's province to strike the "delicate balance" between the various interests in bankruptcy.
Midland Funding, LLC v. Johnson
, --- U.S. ----,
We know how Congress struck that balance under the Code as interpreted by
Nobelman
. In areas with established precedent, we should respect the existing balance when Congress does not clearly wish to alter it. This does not mean that Congress must be crystal clear. Such a requirement would diminish the legislature's ability to reach compromises: Congress is a body with many members, and a little fuzziness may be necessary to come to an agreement. But that need does not obviate the presumption that Congress must speak with some modest clarity when nullifying on-point statutory Supreme Court precedents, particularly those in fields where Congress has its ear to the ground and casts an active eye. See
Hamilton
,
The statutory text here supports a straightforward conclusion. Congress crafted a compromise that allowed debtors the time and space to get back on their feet without writing down debt to an extent that will restrict the flow of capital to prospective homebuyers. The majority runs far out in front of the statutory language. It charges forward without a note of caution and without a hint of doubt. The most basic task of judging is to understand when certitude is warranted and when certitude is perilous. The majority and I answer that question very differently today.
In recognition of Congress's clarity and its undoubted supremacy in matters of statutory interpretation, I agree that Nobelman's disallowance of modification as to the timing of loan repayments can no longer stand. In recognition of the absence of that same clarity in the face of obvious Supreme Court precedent, I believe that *177 Nobelman's reading of § 1322(b)(2) to prohibit bifurcation and stripdown remains good law. Overruling a Supreme Court decision in toto on the basis of what is, at best, an ambiguous congressional expression is not a course I am prepared to take. For the above reasons, I respectfully dissent.
According to Black, her earlier accounting of Hurlburt's indebtedness was incorrect due to a miscalculation. This larger figure reflects a compounding interest rate and amortization of the loan.
Hurlburt represents that an appraiser Black hired valued the Property at $ 66,000. Appellant's Br. at 7.
That North Carolina has an anti-deficiency statute does not change this conclusion.
See
The thrust of the dissenting opinion's reasoning-that Congress failed to "enunciate[ ] with anything like the clarity required" that it "intended to totally overrule
Nobelman
by allowing debtors with short-term mortgages to modify the amount of those mortgages through stripdown and bifurcation"-also rests on the absence of any discussion of overruling
Nobelman
in Section 1322(c)(2) 's legislative history.
Post
at 174-75. Congress typically enunciates an intent to overrule a particular judicial opinion in a statute's legislative history.
See
James Buatti & Richard L. Hasen,
Conscious Congressional Overriding of the Supreme Court, Gridlock, & Partisan Politics
, 93 Texas L. Rev.
See Also
263, 276 (2014) (finding that between 1985 and 2011 "unmentioned overrides" of judicial statutory construction decisions-overrides in which a statute's legislative history did not expressly indicate an intent to override a judicial construction of a federal statute-typically constituted less than 25% of total congressional overrides, and never exceeded 35% of total congressional overrides); William N. Eskridge, Jr.,
Overriding Supreme Court Statutory Interpretation Decisions
,
The dissenting opinion also hypothesizes numerous policy reasons to support its preferred construction of Section 1322(c)(2). For example, the dissenting opinion asserts that the majority opinion's construction "favor[s] debtors who happen to have fifty-nine months left on their home mortgage over those with sixty-one"; it might "lead to mischief in bankruptcy courts" because debtors will have "obvious incentives to delay filing" if doing so will allow them to exercise the cram down power; or it might "favor wealthy debtors over poor ones" because wealthy debtors ordinarily propose plans with longer payment terms.
Post
at 173-74. Not only does the record provide no basis to assess the merit of these policy assertions, neither does the statute or the legislative history of Section 1322(c)(2) provide any indication Congress considered, much less supported, these policy rationales. The judiciary's responsibility is to interpret statutes in a manner that gives effect to Congress's intent in enacting the statute.
See
Miller v. French
,
For example, § 1322(b)(2) could have been directly amended to add the following italicized language: the plan may "modify the rights of holders of secured claims, other than a claim secured only by a security interest in real property that is the debtor's principal residence on which the last payment on the original payment schedule is due after the date on which the final payment under the plan is due ...." This amendment would unquestionably have removed any barrier against modification of short-term mortgages imposed by Nobelman or § 1322(b)(2).
The majority attempts to mash together separate procedural steps within the term "cram down." See Maj. Op. at 162-64. Obtaining relief under Chapter 13 of the bankruptcy code requires two important steps. First, "[t]he debtor shall file a plan,"
The debtor in Rash , for instance, could propose a plan involving bifurcation and stripdown of a security interest in his truck under § 506(a) and § 1322(b) because the anti-modification holding in Nobelman plainly did not apply to trucks. With that plan properly proposed, the bankruptcy court could then confirm the plan if it satisfied § 1325(a)(5)(B). But this case involves a homestead mortgage, not a truck. Nobelman's anti-modification holding prohibits debtors with homestead mortgages, quite separately from § 1325(a)(5)(B), from proposing a plan that would bifurcate or stripdown those claims in the first place.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Larry Albert HURLBURT, Plaintiff - Appellant, v. Juliet J. BLACK, Defendant - Appellee, and Joseph A. Bledsoe, III, Trustee. National Association of Consumer Bankruptcy Attorneys; National Consumer Bankruptcy Rights Center, Amici Supporting Appellant.
- Cited By
- 27 cases
- Status
- Published