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In re: Welsh

Summarized by:

  • Court: 9th Circuit Court of Appeals Archives
  • Area(s) of Law: Bankruptcy Law
  • Date Filed: 03-25-2013
  • Case #: 12-60009
  • Judge(s)/Court Below: Senior Circuit Judge Ripple for the Court; Circuit Judges Trott and Paez

The 2005 Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act specifically prohibits the inclusion or evaluation of a debtor鈥檚 social security benefits when reviewing the debtor鈥檚 proposed Chapter 13 plan according to 搂1325(a)鈥檚 requirement for good faith, and bad faith is not present merely because the debtor鈥檚 properly calculated disposal income is seriously reduced by payments to secured creditors, leaving relatively little chance that unsecured creditors would be substantially repaid.

Defendant debtors鈥 proposed Chapter 13 plan, drafted in accordance with the statutory means test for the determination of discretionary income, was submitted without using one of the debtor鈥檚 monthly Social Security income since Social Security benefits are statutorily excluded from consideration. The trustee objected to the plan, arguing that the plan was not submitted in good faith because there was 鈥渆gregious behavior鈥 since a significant portion of the debtors鈥 income would be going to secured creditors for recreational vehicles, and social security income was not considered to help pay unsecured creditors. The plan would only pay off $14,700 of the debtors鈥 $180,500 total unsecured debt. The bankruptcy court and bankruptcy appeals panel affirmed the plan, but the trustee renewed his arguments before the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. The panel examined the history of the good faith requirement, observing that Congress was aware that some courts had reached unique results when they considered whether the good faith requirement had a substantial repayment requirement. Ultimately, with the 2005 Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act that revised Chapter 13, Congress replaced the court鈥檚 discretion to evaluate each debtor鈥檚 unique circumstances to determine the debtor鈥檚 鈥渁bility to pay鈥 with the statutory means test procedure to calculate the debtor鈥檚 disposable income. The panel found that Congress made the policy choice to give preference to debtors paying secured claims before unsecured claims. Congress also made a policy choice when its 2005 revision of Chapter 13 supplanted the courts鈥 discretion about what is not 鈥渞easonably necessary鈥 for the maintenance and support of the debtor, and in turn allows debtors to reduce their disposable income determination by payments made on secured debts. AFFIRMED.

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