Petitioner-appellant AmeriCredit Financial Services, Inc. (“AmeriCredit”) appeals from a memorandum decision and order entered on August 13, 2008, in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York (Morris, /.), expunging AmeriCredit’s unsecured claim in the Chapter 13 proceeding of respondents-appellees Jesse and Sonja Tompkins (“the Tompkinses”) and overruling its objection to the confirmation of the plan. For the reasons that follow, we vacate the judgment of the bankruptcy court and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
BACKGROUND
On August 25, 2006, the Tompkinses signed a contract with Long Beach Acceptance Corporation (“Long Beach”) to finance a 2006 Chevrolet Impala, granting Long Beach a purchase-money security interest in the vehicle. Long Beach properly recorded the lien. AmeriCredit is Long Beach’s successor in interest.
The Tompkinses failed to make then-payments to AmeriCredit for the months of December 2007 and January 2008. On February 11, 2008, they filed a voluntary Chapter 13 bankruptcy petition in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York. Shortly thereafter, AmeriCredit filed a proof of claim for $21,729.92 and the Tompkinses surrendered their automobile to AmeriCredit. The Tompkinses’ first amended plan, filed February 26, 2008, provided as follows with regard to payments to be
Upon obtaining relief from the automatic stay, AmeriCredit sold the vehicle and, after receiving less than the full $21,729.92 it claimed, it filed an amended claim as a general unsecured creditor for the deficiency: $15,373.92. The debtors objected. On August 13, 2008, the bankruptcy court sustained the objection, expunged the unsecured claim, and overruled AmeriCredit’s objection to the plan confirmation, relying on its reasoning in an earlier case,
In re Pinti,
DISCUSSION
As an initial matter, we examine our subject matter jurisdiction over this appeal; if we conclude that a case is moot, we lack jurisdiction to hear it.
Dean v. Blumenthal, 577
F.3d 60, 64 (2d Cir.2009). “A case is moot ... when ‘the parties lack a legally cognizable interest in the outcome.’ ”
Fox v. Bd. of Trustees,
To the extent that AmeriCredit appeals the portion of the bankruptcy court’s order overruling its objection to the confirmation of the Chapter 13 plan, this appeal is moot, as the conversion of the case to Chapter 7 renders the plan irrelevant and this Court unable to provide effective relief in that respect. We agree with the parties, however, that in the case at hand part of the appeal of the bankruptcy court’s order is not moot, despite the conversion of the petition from Chapter 13 to Chapter 7. Whether an unsecured claim is allowed is a determination that, unlike many orders entered with respect to a Chapter 13 petition, has an impact on the distribution of assets in a Chapter 7 proceeding. We may therefore still grant AmeriCredit effective relief because, if its claim is allowed, it may take part in any future Chapter 7 distribution.
Cf. In re Howard’s Express, Inc.,
We therefore turn to the substantive merits of the case, addressing the import of a “notorious” provision of the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005 (“BAPCPA”), Pub.L. No. 109-8, 119 Stat. 23, the so-called “hanging paragraph,” which follows subparagraph (9) of 11 U.S.C. § 1325(a).
In re Peaslee,
Section 1325(a) of the Bankruptcy Code, as amended by BAPCPA, sets forth requirements that must be met before the plan of repayment for a consumer in Chapter 13 may be confirmed. The statute provides three circumstances in which a secured claim poses no obstacle to plan confirmation: (1) when the secured creditor accepts the plan; (2) when the debtor surrenders the secured property; or (3) in an option known as a cramdown, when the debtor, over the creditor’s objection, retains the secured property, “yet pay[s] only the present value of the collateral to the creditor ... over the life of the plan,” with “[t]he remaining balance of the debt [becoming] a general unsecured claim.”
Capital One Auto Finance v. Osborn,
In the context of a cramdown, the “allowed amount” of an allowed secured claim,
see
11 U.S.C. § 1325(a)(5)(B)(ii), is determined by reference to section 506 of the Bankruptcy Code, which provides generally for the treatment of allowed secured claims in bankruptcy. Section 506(a) specifies, with regard to claims arising from debts secured by liens on property, that such claims may be divided into secured and unsecured portions in those circumstances where the collateral is inadequate to satisfy the debt: “[T]he unsecured portion is the amount by which the debt exceeds the current value of the collateral.”
1
In re Wright,
The hanging paragraph, which we shall denote as 11 U.S.C. § 1325(a)(*), describes two situations in the context of Chapter 13 plans in which section 506(a)’s general prescription for dividing inadequately secured claims into their secured and unsecured parts do not apply. It reads as follows:
For purposes of [§ 1325(a)(5), which describes the three circumstances in which a secured claim poses no obstacle for confirmation of a Chapter 13 plan], section 506 shall not apply to a claim described in that paragraph if the creditor has a purchase money security interest securing the debt that is the subject of the claim, the debt was incurred within the 910-day [sic] preceding the date of the filing of the petition, and the collateral for that debt consists of a motor vehicle (as defined in section 30102 of title 49) acquired for the personal use of the debtor, or if collateral for that debt consists of any other thing of value, if the debt was incurred during the 1-year period preceding that filing.
11 U.S.C. § 1325(a)(*). By preventing recourse to section 506(a)’s provision for the bifurcation of a claim into its secured and unsecured parts, this passage has generally been interpreted to “prohibit[] cram-down of [purchase money security interests] secured by an automobile purchased within 910 days of the debtor’s bankruptcy filing.”
In re Peaslee,
The question presented here concerns the effect of the hanging paragraph not on the cramdown of vehicles purchased within 910 days of a bankruptcy filing, but on those cases in which a debtor surrenders a vehicle purchased within this period to his creditor. The hanging paragraph, by its terms, renders section 506(a) inapplicable not only to so-called “910 vehicles” that are retained by the debtor after a bankruptcy filing, but also to vehicles that are surrendered. May an undersecured creditor, in the absence of section 506(a) and its explicit provision for dividing a claim partly secured by a lien on property into its secured and unsecured components, maintain an unsecured claim for a deficiency not satisfied by the surrender and sale of the vehicle? One line of cases, originally espoused by several bankruptcy courts after the initial passage of BAPCPA, holds that without section 506(a) there simply is no deficiency claim; the loan is secured only by the vehicle, and surrender of the collateral satisfies the loan.
See, e.g., In re Pinti,
When section 506 is removed from consideration, the question of how to treat the allowed claim of a creditor that is secured by a lien on property — meaning, whether and to what extent to treat it as a secured claim and to what extent it is unsecured— is left open and unanswered by the Bankruptcy Code. In the absence of a controlling bankruptcy provision, however, the rights of the creditor under state law are not disturbed. As the Supreme Court has stated, “[property interests are created and defined by state law. Unless some federal interest requires a different result, there is no reason why such interests should be analyzed differently simply because an interested party is involved in a bankruptcy proceeding.”
Butner v. United States,
The Tompkinses argue that section 506 alone provides the definition of the type of secured claim that a party holds in a bankruptcy proceeding and that, without it, the debt is fully satisfied by surrender under the requirements of section 1325. However, “nothing in § 1325(a)(5) says that [the] ‘allowed secured claim’ is satisfied by the debtor choosing the surrender option in subparagraph (C).”
Osborn,
Because both state law and the contract of the parties give AmeriCredit the right to an unsecured deficiency judgment, on the record presented to this Court it is entitled to an unsecured claim in the amount of $15,373.92.
CONCLUSION
For all of the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the bankruptcy court is therefore VACATED and the case is REMANDED to the district court with instructions to remand to the bankruptcy court for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
Notes
. Section 506(a)(1) states:
An allowed claim of a creditor secured by a lien on property in which the estate has an interest, or that is subject to setoff under section 553 of this title, is a secured claim to the extent of the value of such creditor's interest in the estate's interest in such property, or to the extent of the amount subject to setoff, as the case may be, and is an unsecured claim to the extent that the value of such creditor’s interest or the amount so subject to setoff is less than the amount of such allowed claim. Such value shall be determined in light of the purpose of the valuation and of the proposed disposition or use of such property, and in conjunction with any hearing on such disposition or use or on a plan affecting such creditor's interest.
11 U.S.C. § 506(a)(1).
