The matter before the court is the motion for relief from the automatic stay filed on behalf of Bankers Trust Company of California, N.A., the holders of an installment land contract with Debtors, Daniel and Cindy Grove. Bankers Trust is the assignee of an installment land sale contract between Debtors and First Federal Savings and Loan Association of Pittsburgh. 2 Under the installment land sale contract Debtors were required to pay $29,000 at ten percent annual interest, amortized over 30 years, but payable as follows: an initial payment of $3,000; sixty subsequent monthly payments from February 1, 1988, to January 1, 1993, of $228.17 each; and a balloon payment of the outstanding balance. Debtors failed to make some of the sixty monthly payments as well as the balloon payment. Bankers Trust commenced an ejectment action in February of 1995. See Exhibit F to Motion to Obtain Relief from Stay filed on behalf of Bankers Trust, Bankruptcy No. 97-20302 JKF, Docket Entry 11, Memorandum Opinion at Civil Division Docket No. 10289 of 1995, Court of Common Pleas of Beaver County, Pennsylvania, (hereafter “Exhibit F, Motion to Obtain Relief from Stay”). On October 31,1996, the Court of Common Pleas of Beaver County granted Bankers Trust’s motion for summary judgment on the complaint in ejectment and entered a judgment for possession in its favor. Debtors filed an appeal and their motion for stay pending appeal was granted. 3 The Superior Court of Pennsylvania dismissed the appeal by order dated February 12,1997, based on the filing of this bankruptcy ease and the automatic stay. The dismissal was without prejudice to reinstatement of the appeal once the bankruptcy proceedings conclude. See Per Curiam Order of February 12, 1997, In re Bankers Trust v. Daniel Grove, No. 2307 Pittsburgh 1996, The Superi- or Court of Pennsylvania, attached to Movant’s Brief in Support of Objections to Chapter 13 Plan and Relief from Stay Motion, Bankruptcy No. 97-20302 JKF, Docket Entry 18. Debtors have remained in possession of the premises. Bankers Trust contends that it is entitled to relief from stay because (1) all Debtors’ rights in the property terminated prepetition and (2) Debtors have no right to cure. Bankers Trust admits that the property is worth more than it is owed.
The parties have stipulated to the material facts and briefed their positions. This Memorandum Opinion and Order constitute the court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law. The issues before the court are (1) whether Debtors retain an interest in the property or whether their interest was terminated prepetition and, (2) if Debtors retain an interest, whether the default can be cured and the debt paid through a chapter 13 plan.
Discussion
In
In re Fox,
Debtors have remained in possession of the property. This fact is relevant to whether Debtors retain any interest in the property. In
In re Atlantic Business and Community Corporation,
Under Pennsylvania law, installment land sale contracts are to be treated as mortgages for purposes of foreclosure and execution.
See Anderson Contracting Co., supra.
Defaults under a mortgage can be cured and the contract reinstated.
See In re Rowe,
Moreover, we note that § 1322(b)(5) permits a debtor to cure a default and resume payments if the last payment on the obligation is due after the date the final plan payment is due. This section does not negate a debtor’s ability to cure a default on an obligation that matured prepetition, however.
In re Rowe,
Notwithstanding subsection (b)(2) and applicable nonbankruptcy law—
(1) a default with respect to, or that gave rise to, a lien on the debtor’s principal residence may be cured under paragraph (3) or (5) of subsection (b) until such residence is sold at a foreclosure sale that is conducted in accordance with applicable nonbankruptcy law____ 6
11 U.S.C. § 1322(c). Under Pennsylvania law, vendors of land through installment contracts have been held to have an equitable lien on the property for purposes of foreclosure law. In Anderson Contracting Co., supra, the court stated:
[a]n express executory written contract sufficiently indicating an intention to make some particular property or fund therein identified as security for a debt or other obligation creates an equitable lien on the property so indicated which is enforceable against the property____ (Citation omitted.) 22 P.L.E., Liens § 3 at 376-77.
Notes
. The court’s jurisdiction is not at issue.
. On August 3, 1994, the Resolution Trust Corporation, as receiver for the initial mortgagee. First Federal Savings and Loan Association, assigned the installment land sale contract and the deed to GMAC Mortgage Corporation of Iowa which is the servicing agent for Bankers Trust. Exhibit F to Motion to Obtain Relief from Stay.
. The Court of Common Pleas also ordered Debtors to make payments of $350 per month during the pendency of the appeal. Debtors made no payments; instead, they filed this chapter 13 case before the first payment was due.
. The opinion of the Court of Common Pleas makes reference to Bankers Trust’s "legal possession of the subject property”. Exhibit F, Motion to Obtain Relief from Stay at 8. This phrase is not explained but we take it to be in reference to the court's judgment for possession. This is not dispositive for purposes of the Bankruptcy Code, however, because estate property includes all interests of a debtor. 11 U.S.C. § 541.
. The amendments were made applicable to all cases filed after the effective date which was October 22, 1994.
See
Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1994, Pub.L. No. 103-394, 108 Stat. 4112, 4132, 4133, 4137, 4145 (Oct. 22, 1994); see also H.R.Rep. No. 835, 103rd Cong., 2nd Sess. (Oct. 4, 1994), reprinted in 1994 U.S.C.C.A.N. 3340 (“the amendments made by this Act shall not apply with respect to cases commenced under title 11 of the United States Code before the date of the enactment of this Act [Oct. 22, 1994], and shall not make appealable any decisions rendered in such cases”) (quoted in
In re Holloway,
. Subsection (b)(3) states that the plan may "provide for the curing or waiving of any default”.
