Factors Funding Co. appeals the bankruptcy court’s orders disallowing its secured proof of claim based on confirmation of a Chapter 13 plan expressly providing: “The alleged secured claim of Factors Funding, Inc. is hereby discharged as there is no underlying obligation.” For the reasons set forth below, we affirm.
Background
David Fili filed for relief under Chapter 13 of the Bankruptcy Code 1 on October 25, 1999. The case notice promulgated by the court clerk established February 17, 2000, as the last date for creditors to file proofs of claim. On October 25, 1999, Fili properly served his Chapter 13 plan on Factors, providing that Factors’ claim was “discharged.” On December 10, 1999, he served an amended plan similarly providing for discharge of (and no distribution in respect to) Factors’s claim. 2 Factors did not object to the plan or the amended plan. By order dated January 24, 2000, the bankruptcy court confirmed the amended plan.
Factors filed a proof of secured claim in the amount of $35,429.33 in advance of the February 17, 2000, bar date, but after plan confirmation. Fili objected immediately, asserting that the claim was barred by the confirmed plan and that, in any event, Fili owed Factors nothing. Factors rejoined, and the court set the claims contest for
Discussion
Factors asserts that the bankruptcy court erred on both counts. It contends that the court could not permissibly determine that Fili owed it nothing without conducting an evidentiary hearing and it argues that, because the claims filing bar date had not expired, the court could not permissibly extinguish its claim through plan confirmation.
The parties have argued the former point at length, but in the end it is unnecessary to resolve it. We conclude that the plan confirmation process, resulting in confirmation of Fib’s amended Chapter 13 plan, effectively extinguished Fili’s alleged liability to Factors.
Factors’s argument on the
res judicata
point is simple: A proof of claim is
prima facie
evidence of a claim’s validity.
See
Fed.R.Bankr.P. 3001(f). “Under this rule, a claim is presumed valid until an objecting party has introduced evidence sufficient to rebut the claimant’s prima facie case.”
In re Inter-Island Vessel Co.,
We disagree, principally because Fib’s plan was confirmed only after notice and an opportunity for Factors to be heard. Under the circumstances of this case, where the notice was adequate (indeed, repeated) and the plan clearly and unequivocally disclaimed any habihty whatsoever to Factors, Factors was not free blithely to forgo its fub and fair opportunity to object to the plan’s plain terms. Even if issues relating to Fib’s liability to Factors could not be finally resolved through a plan confirmation contest, an issue we need not address, 3 Factors ignored the plan confirmation process, and its opportunity to object to confirmation, at its peril.
We note that Factors does not contend that notice of confirmation was deficient in any way. It was given adequate advance notice of the hearing and adequate notice of the bar date for confirmation objections. And it concedes it had unequivocal notice that, if confirmed, the plan would “discharge[ ]” any liability to Factors and establish there was no “underlying obligation.” In the face of such notice, Factors was obliged to object to confirmation. 4 It could not cast a bbnd eye to confirmation’s consequences.
This is not a case such as
Piedmont Trust Bank v. Linkous (In re Linkous),
Nor is it a case like
In re Grogan,
Finally, this case is unlike
In re Kressler,
Thus, we hold that in the face of notice that timely and unambiguously informs a creditor that his claim will be disallowed in total and discharged under a Chapter 13 plan pending for confirmation, the creditor may not ignore the confirmation process and fail to object simply because the bar date for filing a proof of claim has yet to expire. A creditor who disregards a procedurally proper and plain notice that its interests are in jeopardy does so at its own risk. Confirmation of such a plan, after notice and an opportunity for hearing, bars the creditor’s later-filed claim under principles of res judicata. 7
Conclusion
For the reasons set forth above, the order of the bankruptcy court disallowing Factors’ claim is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Unless otherwise indicated, all references to the “Code” or the "Bankruptcy Code” and all references to statutory sections are to the Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1978, as amended, 11 U.S.C. § 101 etseq.
. Factors does not contend that service of the plan or the amended plan failed to comply with applicable rules. See Fed.R.Bankr.P. 3015; Mass. Local Bankr.R. 3015-1; id. at App. 1, 13-2.
. The facts of this case render it unnecessary to determine the precise procedural point whether a dispute about liability could be finally resolved in a confirmation hearing or whether a timely objection to confirmation would lead to disapproval of the plan (or postponement of confirmation) pending hearings of another character.
. Its objection could have sought a full hearing on the claims dispute in the context of confirmation hearings or, just as easily, could have objected to confirmation noting that it had yet to file its proof of claim and that Fili would be obliged to join issues with it in a different procedural context. See supra note 3.
. In
In re Linkous
a secured creditor was not given adequate notice that the court would consider valuing its security and bifurcating its claim at confirmation. In reaching its decision to vacate the confirmation order insofar as it affected Piedmont's rights, the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals recognized that, with proper notice, the debtor could have accomplished what she sought through the confirmation process.
. The court declared that, ”[t]o limit the IRS to an amount determined solely by the debtor while the time to file proofs of claims had not yet expired would violate fundamental principals [sic] of bankruptcy claims practice.” Id. at 200. In the course of discussion, In re Grogan commented generally about commonly used procedures in which confirmation precedes the claims bar date:
Allowing proofs of claim to be filed after the confirmation hearing may seem contrary to the strong concern for finality in a bankruptcy confirmation order, but finality is dependent upon both the promptness of claims filed by the creditors and the completeness and accuracy of the debtor’s schedules. For example, the debtor can unilaterally increase the likelihood that his plan will be final by either adequately providing in his plan for those creditors who will have priority claims, or by filing accurate proofs of claim on behalf of any creditors whose claims are not filed in time for the confirmation hearing pursuant to section 501(c).
Id.
We would add that, where, as in the case before us, the debtor unequivocally provides fair notice of
final
and
certain
treatment that a claim (or a potential claim) will be given under the plan, he or she may expect that the claim’s holder will be bound by the confirmed plan unless that claim’s holder files an appropriate, timely objection to confirmation.
See, e.g., In re Pardee,
. We recognize that there is perceptible tension between the plan confirmation process and the claims allowance/disallowance process. That tension is particularly apparent where, as here, confirmation may precede the claims bar date’s expiration. See generally 2 Keith M. Lundin, Chapter 13 Bankruptcy § 6.10 (2d ed. Supp.1996). That tension is relaxed entirely with an appreciation that:
Claim holders are entitled to have their rights in a Chapter 13 case determined after appropriate notice and opportunity for hearing. Notice and procedural due process can be satisfied in several ways without violating any fundamental principles of bankruptcy law.
Id. § 6.10 at 6-23 (commenting that, with adequate notice and opportunity for hearing, disputes that could be resolved through other procedural vehicles, e.g. collateral valuation for secured claims, may appropriately be determined at confirmation).
