MEMORANDUM OPINION
This matter is before the Court on the consolidated appeals filed in
GMAC v. Morris Dwayne Home
(No. 3:07cv515; No. 3:07cv719),
CitiFinancial Auto Corporation v. Amy Lillian Taylor
(No. 3:07cv538; No. 3:07cv732),
CitiFinancial Auto Corporation v. Robert Hyman
(No. 3:08cv123), and
GMAC v. Aaron LaVigne et al.
(No. 3:07cv755; No. 3:08cv151). The creditors, GMAC and CitiFinancial, appeal from the decisions of the Bankruptcy Courts issued in
In re Pajot,
STATEMENT OF FACTS
The appeals present issues regarding whether certain components of the respective debtors’ automobile purchases fall within the reach of the respective creditors’ purchase money security interests. The financial components at issue are: (1) so-called “negative equity” which is the amount owed by the debtor to a third-party on trade-in vehicles (a) that exceeds the value of the trade-in vehicle, and (b) that was paid off by the seller and then included in the applicable contractual documents as part of the financed purchase price of the new vehicle; (2) extended warranty or service contracts; (3) so-called “gap” and other insurance; and (3) various registration, licensing, and titling fees. The pertinent, and undisputed, facts respecting each debtor’s case are set forth below.
1. Morris Dwayne Home
On June 24, 2006, Morris Dwayne Home, purchased a 2006 Chevrolet HHR from a Chevrolet dealer in Virginia for his personal use. Home traded in a 2004 Chevrolet Colorado in connection with the purchase; he owed more on the trade-in vehicle than its value (the “negative equity”) which was $3,721.17. Home signed a Retail Installment Sales Contract, which reflects that the purchase price included the price of the new vehicle, the negative equity, an extended service contract, gap insurance, official fees paid to government agencies, and government certificate of title fees. After crediting the value of the trade-in vehicle, the total amount financed was $22,328.91. The Retail Installment Sales Contract disclosed the financing package total ($22,328.91) as the “Total Sales Price” and gave the dealer a security *195 interest in the new vehicle in the amount of the Total Sales Price. The Dealer assigned the contract to GMAC, which perfected its security interest.
Horne filed Chapter 13 bankruptcy on November 7, 2006 within five months of purchasing the new vehicle. GMAC filed a proof of secured claim in the amount of $21,332.71, the balance owed under the Retail Installment Sales Contract. Horne proposed a Chapter 13 plan seeking to bifurcate GMAC’s claim into: (1) a $15,535 secured claim equaling the retail value of the new vehicle; and (2) a $6000 unsecured claim, consisting of the amount of the negative equity, the extended warranty, the gap insurance, and the fees.
2. Any Taylor
Amy Taylor entered into a Retail Installment Sales Contract on March 31, 2006 for the purchase of a vehicle. (Statement of Facts at ¶ 2.) Within 910 days, Taylor filed for Chapter 13 bankruptcy. At the time the vehicle was purchased, Taylor traded in a vehicle with negative equity of $3,921.88. The total amount financed by the dealer in connection with the purchased vehicle was $20,146.18, including the negative equity value. Upon the filing of the Chapter 13 bankruptcy, CitiFinancial, the assignee of the Retail Installment Sales Contract, filed a proof of claim for $20,732.53. (Id. at ¶ 5.) The Chapter 13 plan proposed that the negative equity value of $3,921.88 would be treated as general unsecured debt, while the remainder of the loan would be treated as secured. (Id. at ¶ 6.) According to the Retail Installment Sales Contract signed by Taylor, the dealer financed the negative equity and official fees paid to government agencies, government certificate of title fees, and a processing fee. All these amounts were included in CitiFinaneial’s proof of claim.
3. Aaron LaVigne
Aaron LaVigne entered a Retail Installment Sales contract for the purchase of a 2006 Chevrolet HHR. The dealer financed a total of $27,232.02 and assigned the loan to GMAC. The financing included the negative equity on a trade-in vehicle valued at $20,900, on which LaVigne owed $27,603.92. In addition, the creditor financed disability insurance, as well as government license and registration fees, government certificate of title fees, an extended warranty contract, gap protection, and a processing fee. 1
The case of Robert Hyman was terminated on March 3, 2008 pursuant to the filing of an Amended Transmittal Sheet of Record on Appeal. (No. 3:08cvl23 at Docket No. 3) and, therefore, it is no longer a subject of these consolidated appeals.
BANKRUPTCY COURT OPINIONS
As explained previously, the three cases on appeal are covered by two opinions (the
Pajot
and
LaVigne
opinions) issued by different judges in the Bankruptcy Court. In
Pajot,
the Bankruptcy Court held that the negative equity on trade-in vehicles was not part of the price of the new vehicles and was not considered purchase money debt for the purposes of the hanging paragraph.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
The conclusions of law made by the Bankruptcy Court are reviewed
de novo. See Butler v. David Shaw, Inc.,
DISCUSSION
The issues presented by these consolidated appeals turn on application of a paragraph in a newly-enacted section of the Bankruptcy Code and on the meaning of the Uniform Commercial Code as applied in Virginia. Hence, the opinion first will discuss briefly the applicable statutes and then will consider the decisional law applicable to the undisputed facts. Because the focus of the appeals, and the pertinent decisional law, has been largely on the financing of negative equity, the opinion will assess the application of the statutory provisions to the negative equity issue. Thereafter, the financing of the gap and other insurance contracts, extended warranty and service contracts, and fees at issue in the cases on appeal will be addressed.
A. The Applicable Sections of the Bankruptcy Code
The status of a security interest in bankruptcy is determined under 11 U.S.C. § 506(a)(1), which provides that:
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.
See 11 U.S.C. § 506(a)(1) (2005). However, pursuant to the so-called “hanging paragraph” that follows 11 U.S.C. § 1325(a)(9) (the statutory section that generally determines the status of a secured claim), the provisions of § 506, shall not apply to a claim:
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 preceding the date of the filing of the petition, and the collateral for that debt consists of a motor vehicle ... 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.
See 11 U.S.C. § 1325 (2007) (emphasis added) (this provision has come to be known as the “hanging paragraph” and that term will be used here as well).
In these consolidated appeals, it is undisputed that: (1) each debt at issue was incurred within 910 days preceding the filing of the Chapter 13 petitions; and (2) the collateral at issue in each case is a motor vehicle that was purchased for personal use. Thus, the issue on appeal is whether the creditors have a purchase money security interest securing the debt, which includes the financing of negative *197 equity (as well as the financing of gap insurance, extended warranty or service contracts, title fees and taxes).
Because the Bankruptcy Code does not define the term “purchase money security interest,” it is necessary to interpret the term by reference to the statutory text in light of the contracts at issue and by reference to pre-existing statutes which allow an insight into the Congressional intent of 11 U.S.C. § 1325. The parties agree that state law controls what constitutes a purchase money security interest, and the de-cisional law clearly supports that position.
B. The Applicable Provisions of Virginia Law
The Virginia Commercial Code provides that: “[a] security interest in goods is a purchase money security interest: (1) to the extent that the goods are purchase-money collateral with respect to that security interest ...” See VA. CODE ANN. § 8. 9A-103(b)(l)(2007) (emphasis added). Purchase-money collateral means “goods or software that secures a purchase money obligation incurred with respect to that collateral.” Id. at § 103(a)(1) (emphasis added). A purchase money obligation is “an obligation of an obligor incurred as all or part of the price of the collateral or for value given to enable the debtor to acquire rights in or the use of the collateral if the value is in fact so used.” Id. at § 103(a)(2) (emphasis added).
There is considerable dispute respecting whether negative equity is, or can be, part of the “price of the collateral” (hereinafter sometimes referred to as “price”). Likewise, there is dispute respecting negative equity can constitute “value given to enable the debtor to acquire rights in or the use of collateral .... ” (hereinafter sometimes referred to as “value given to enable”).
C. The Two Divergent Lines of Authority in Factually Similar Cases
In
Pajot,
the Bankruptcy Court held that the negative equity was not part of the price or of the value given to enable. The Bankruptcy Court reasoned that negative equity was not part of the price of the new vehicle because Comment 3 to the Virginia Code § 8. 9A-103(a)(2) did not contemplate the inclusion of negative equity in price and because it was not possible to afford
in pari materia
reading to the UCC section on price with the Virginia Retail Installment Sales Act or with the Federal Truth in Lending Act because neither of those statutes were enacted for the purpose of defining, or clarifying, the meaning of purchase money obligations.
Pajot,
In
LaVigne,
the Bankruptcy Court held that the creditors do not have a purchase money security interest in negative equity because it is antecedent debt, and the refinancing of antecedent debt through a trade-in does not create a purchase money security interest.
LaVigne,
D. Whether Negative Equity Constitutes “Price” or “Value Given to Enable”
1. The Statutory Text
Because the application of the hanging paragraph turns on state law, the starting point for the analysis is the text of Va.Code Ann. § 8.9-103(A) which is to be given its generally accepted, plain meaning unless the statute or interpretive decisions dictate otherwise.
See Loudoun County Dept. of Social Servs. v. Etzold,
The term “price” is defined as: “The amount of money or other consideration asked for or given in exchange for something else.” Black’s Law Dictionary (8th ed.2004); see also Webster’s Third New Int’l Dictionary (2002) (“[T]he amount of money given or set as the amount of money to be given as a consideration for the sale of a specified thing.”) The term “value” in a commercial context means “the monetary worth or price of something” or “the amount of goods, services, or money that something will command in an exchange.” Black’s Law Dictionary (8th ed.2004); see also Webster’s Third New Int’l Dictionary (2002) (“the monetary worth of something”.) The term “enable” means “to give power to do something; to make able.” Black’s Law Dictionary (8th ed.2004); see also Webster’s Third New Int’l Dictionary (2002) (“[T]o give make possible, practical or easy.”)
*199 Applying the usual meaning of the word, the price of a vehicle pledged as collateral is the sum or amount of money for which the vehicle is bought. It is, in other words, what the buyer paid to get rights in, or the use of, the vehicle. Applying the accepted meaning of the term, the price that the debtors paid for the vehicles at issue includes negative equity because each debtor, as buyers, gave to each seller a trade-in vehicle which would not have, indeed could not have, been accepted for that purpose unless the balance owed on it by the buyer to the third party had been paid off. Thus, the discharge of the buyer’s remaining obligation on the trade-in vehicle was part and parcel of the buyer’s ability to use the trade-in vehicle to buy the new vehicles.
Given its generally accepted meaning, the term, “value,” in a commercial setting means the worth of something given in the retail sales transaction. The statute modifies the term by specifying that the value be given for an express purpose — to enable the buyer to acquire the collateral, or, in these cases, to make it possible or easy for the debtor to acquire rights in, or the use of, the vehicle, or to give the debtor the means or ability to acquire rights in, or the use of, the vehicle. Under the facts of these cases, the buyers gave something of value — the trade-in vehicle — as a part of what they paid for the new vehicle. However, the buyers could not have contributed the trade-in vehicle unless the seller also acted to enable the debtor to do so, and the financing of the negative equity was just part of the way that the debtor was enabled to use the trade-in vehicle to acquire a possessory right in, and the use of, the new vehicle. Thus, considering the commercial transaction in context of the plain meaning of the statutory terms, the financing of negative equity would be “value given to enable the debtor to acquire rights in, or the use of, the new vehicle, ie., the collateral.”
2. Official Comment
The official comments to the UCC are helpful guides to interpretation of the statutory text. Official Comment 3 to § 8.9A-103 provides that:
the “price” of collateral or the “value given to enable” the debtor to purchase the collateral includes: obligations for expenses incurred in connection with acquiring rights in the collateral, sales taxes, duties, finance charges, interest, freight charges, costs of storage in transit, demurrage, administrative charges, expenses of collection and enforcement, attorney’s fees, and other similar obligations.
According to the Official Comment, “obligations for expenses incurred in connection with acquiring rights in the collateral” are included within the meaning of the terms “price” and “value given to enable.” In so explaining those terms, the Official Comment underscores the statutory meaning of both “price” and “value given to enable” so as to bring negative equity within the reach of the Official Comment and the statute.
3. Decisional Law
This view is supported by a considerable number of decisions as well. The two most cited authorities in support of this view are
GMAC v. Peaslee,
When discussing Comment 3 to § 9-103, the district court in Peaslee noted that, as written, the section refers to “price” and “value given to enable” without giving an inclusive list of the items that are to considered as falling within those terms. Id. at 258-259. Rather, the comment lists several components of price, one of which is an obligation for expenses incurred in connection with acquiring the rights in, or the use of, the collateral. Id. at 258. The district court observed that: “If the buyer and seller agree to include the payoff of the outstanding balance on the trade-in as an integral part of their transaction for the sale of the new vehicle, it is in fact difficult to see how that could not be viewed as such an expense.” Id. at 259.
The district court also found support in Official Comment 3 which provides that:
[t]he concept of ‘purchase-money security interest’ requires a dose nexus between the acquisition of collateral and the secured obligation. Thus, a security interest does not qualify as a purchase-money security interest if a debtor acquires property on unsecured credit and subsequently creates the interest to secure the purchase price.
(emphasis added). In
Peaslee,
the court relied on the reasoning of
Graupner v. Nuvell Credit Corp.,
which also is factually similar to the cases on appeal, in holding that: “Where the parties to the transaction agree to a package transaction in which the negative equity is inextricably intertwined with the sales transaction and the financing of the purchase, one could certainly conclude that this close nexus between the negative equity and this package transaction supports the conclusion that the negative equity must be considered as part of the price of the collateral.”
Peaslee,
The debtors argue that a close nexus cannot exist unless the negative equity financing is a mandatory component of the transaction which creates the security interest. This argument was considered and rejected in
Peaslee,
wherein the district court concluded that: “The fact that negative equity and trade-ins do not
have
to be included in a sale, and that the buyer could, in theory at least, pay off the negative equity by other means, does not require a contrary result, if the facts surrounding the particular transaction at issue are such that the negative equity was
*201
integral to the sale.”
Peaslee,
In the cases on appeal, the record does not disclose explicitly whether the trade-in and the consequent negative equity financing were mandatory. However, the record does establish that the trade-in and the negative equity financing were an integral part of the transaction, and the Retail Installment Sales Contracts all show the role of the trade-in and the negative equity financing in the transaction. And, no party suggests that they were not an essential part of the contractual arrangements entered into between the debtors and the sellers here. Thus, on this record, the close nexus required by Official Comment 3 is rather clearly shown. 8
The emerging majority of authority on this issue follows
Grawpner
and
Peaslee
in finding that the creditors’ claims are not susceptible to bifurcation because of the inclusion of negative equity in the financing package.
9
However, there is also an opposing line of authority, the most persuasive and best-reasoned of which are the decisions of the Bankruptcy Courts in
Pa-jot
and
Lavigne
which are the subjects of these appeals. Those decisions reach the conclusion that the creditors’ claims can be bifurcated because the financing of the negative equity is not value given to enable the debtors to acquire rights in or use of the collateral, rather it is just a method of re-financing pre-existing debt.
10
Both La-Vigne and
Pajot
held that negative equity is merely antecedent debt. Both decisions
*202
also held that the re-financing of antecedent debt by rolling it into a new loan effectively eliminates the antecedent debt, but does not create a purchase money obligation.
LaVigne,
a. Negative Equity as Part of the “Price”
In rejecting the assertion that negative equity is a component of price of the collateral, the decisions in Pajot and La-vigne reasoned that resort could not be had to either the Virginia Retail Installment Sales Act (“RISA”) or the Federal Truth In Lending Act (“TILA”) to ascertain the meaning of the undefined term in § 8.9-103(A). Both decisions took the view that the statutes may not be read in pari materia because the purposes of RISA and TILA are different than the purpose of UCC § 8.9-103(A).
However, the conclusions that:® the statutes serve different purposes; and (ii) that neither RISA nor TILA use the term “purchase money security interest” do not compel the conclusion that § 8.9-103(A), RISA and TILA may not be read
in pari materia.
As explained in
Peaslee,
it is necessary to determine whether all of the statutes relate to the same subject or cognate subject matter in order to determine the application of the
in pari materia
doctrine.
Peaslee,
Under Virginia law, “statutes which are not inconsistent with one another, and which relate to the same subject matter, are
in pari materia,
and should be construed together; and effect should be given to them all, although they contain no reference to one another, and were passed at different times.”
Ipsen v. Moxley,
RISA focuses on allowable finance charges, while Article 9 of the UCC focuses on the attachment and perfection of security interests granted by the debtor under a purchase money security agreement. However, both statutes can be read to relate to the core aspects of the subject of financing of motor vehicle purchases; and therefore, they may be read in pari materia.
With respect to purchase money obligations, Article 9 of the UCC requires a close nexus between the secured debt and the purchase of the collateral. Similarly, RISA states that: “The balance on which such finance charge may be imposed may include the deferred portion of the sales price, costs and charges incidental to the transaction including any insurance premium financed in connection therewith, and the amount actually paid or to be paid by the seller to discharge a security interest or lien on the property traded in.” VA. CODE ANN. § 6.1-330.77 (2008). A reading of both the UCC and § 6.1-330.77 of RISA suggests that negative equity financing that is integral to the sales transaction may be viewed as part of the price in the sales transaction, and thus as part of creditor’s purchase money security interest.
TILA, 15 U.S.C. § 1601 et seq. (2008) was enacted to support the disclosure of credit terms offered to consumers. See 15 U.S.C. § 1601(a)(2008) (“It is the purpose *203 of this subchapter to assure a meaningful disclosure of credit terms so that the consumer will be able to compare more readily the various credit terms available to him and avoid the uninformed use of credit, and to protect the consumer against inaccurate and unfair credit billing and credit card practices.”) Under TILA, the “total sales price” is defined as “the sum of the cash price, the items described in paragraph (b)(2) [the amount financed which is calculated by determining the principal loan amount or the cash price, adding any other amounts that are financed by the creditor and are not part of the finance charge, and subtracting any prepaid finance charge], and the finance charge....” See 12 C.F.R. § 226.18® (2008). A reading of both the UCC and § 226.18®, which interprets the TILA, suggests that negative equity financing may be viewed as a component of the price of the sales transaction, and thus as part of creditor’s purchase money security interest.
Construction of all three statutes together leads to the conclusion that the term “price” includes negative equity. That conclusion is supported by the decisions in
Peaslee,
b. Negative Equity as to “Value Given to Enable”
In
Pajot,
the Bankruptcy Court concluded that negative equity did not constitute “value given to enable” because negative equity was not mandatory and was not a value enhancing add-on and thus was “different from the list of expenses included in Comment 3.”
Pajot,
As explained previously, it does not appear that either the text of § 8.9-103 or Comment 3 requires that value given to enable be a mandatory component of the purchase price so long as there is a close nexus between the secured debt and the collateral. For the reasons explained above, the contracts at issue here establish the existence of a close nexus between the secured debt and the collateral.
Both Pajot and LaVigne also express the view that negative equity is not like the other “expenses” listed in Official Comment. The text of Comment 3 explains that both “price” and “value given to enable” include “obligations for expenses incurred in connection with acquiring rights in the collateral.” The comment also includes: “sales taxes, duties, finance charges, interest, freight charges, costs of storage in transit demurrage, administrative charges, attorney’s fees, and other similar obligations.”
Contrary to the apparent interpretation given in the Bankruptcy Court decisions, the list in Comment 3, the first item of which is “obligations for expenses incurred in connection with acquiring rights in the collateral,” does not contain the words “such as” or “like,” and thus the items are
*204
best understood as additional items which can be components of “price” or “value given to enable,” not examples of such components.
Peaslee,
The Retail Installment Sales Contracts executed individually by Horne, Taylor, and LaVigne include a section regarding security interests which states:
‘You [the debtor] give us [the creditor] a security interest in: (1) The vehicle and all parts or goods put on it; (2) All money or goods received (proceeds) for the vehicle; (3) All insurance, maintenance, service, or other contracts we finance for you; and (4) All proceeds from insurance, maintenance, service, or other contracts we finance for you. This includes any refunds of premiums or charges from the contracts.”
See
Retail Installment Sale Contracts at § 2(c). The parties agreed that the creditor had a security interest in all insurance, maintenance, service, or other contracts for which financing was provided.
See
Retail Installment Sales Contract at § 2(c)(3). Thus, negative equity, which was included in financing the vehicle, can be viewed as an expense in connection with acquiring the rights to the vehicle, particularly since the parties were in agreement on that point.
See generally Orix Credit Alliance, Inc. v. Nationsbank of Virginia, N.A,
No. 93-1193,
On the records presented here, the reasoning of Peaslee and Graupner is more persuasive because the parties agreed to a package transaction, and the negative equity obligation was inextricably linked with the sales transaction. The Retail Installment Sales Contracts here at issue reflect the parties’ intent to undertake a contractual transaction as to which the negative equity is inextricably entwined.
4. The Purpose of the “Hanging Paragraph and the Policy Underlying the UCC”
The emerging majority interpretation of purchase money security interest to encompass negative equity is further supported by an examination of the purpose of the hanging paragraph. In deciding similar cases, courts have considered the Congressional intent of the hanging paragraph. In
Pajot,
which is on appeal here, the court reasoned that “In enacting the hanging paragraph, Congress [sought] to ensure that debtors could not load up on vehicle-secured debt pre-petition only to cram it down to the collateral value in bankruptcy.”
In re Pajot,
Finally, this interpretation of § 8.9-103 finds support in the fundamental policies underlying enactment of the UCC. Specifically, § 8.1-102(2) articulates that the statute seeks to promote “the continued expansion of commercial practices through custom, usage and agreement of the parties.” The practices here are common in the automobile sales industry,
Peaslee,
For the foregoing reasons, the Court finds that negative equity may be considered as a component of the “price” and of the “value given to enable,” and, consequently, that the creditors maintain purchase money security interests in the negative equity financing.
E. Gap and Other Insurance, Extended Warranties and Service Contracts and Fees as Components of “Price” or “Value Given to Enable”
In addition to negative equity, which has been addressed above, the Retail Installment Sales Contracts at issue also provided financing for one or more of the following: gap insurance, disability insurance, warranties, extended service contracts, and official fees. The Bankruptcy Court in
Pajot,
held that gap insurance coverage financed by the creditor was not part of the purchase money debt, but that the creditor did maintain a security interest in the extended warranty coverage that was financed.
Pajot
at 155. In contrast, in
LaVigne,
the Bankruptcy Court held that creditors do not have purchase money security interests in extended service contracts or in any insurance policies, including disability, single interest, and gap insurance policies.
LaVigne,
Neither gap insurance nor disability insurance can be fit within the plain, accepted meaning of the price paid for (or asked for) the collateral. Nor does Official Comment 3 support such a construction. However, both are obligations for expenses that, in a general way, were incurred in connection with acquiring rights in the collateral. And, both are part of the overall transaction by which the vehicle was purchased. However, neither is inextricably intertwined with the “value given to enable” in the same way that negative equity financing is intertwined. Indeed, nothing in the record suggests that those obligations enabled the debtor to acquire rights in, or the use of, the collateral. Instead, those obligations are attached to components of the sale price that are quite unrelated to the acquisition of the collateral. Therefore, the obligations for such expenses do not possess the requisite close nexus with the collateral and thus cannot qualify as value given to enable.
In like fashion, the extended warranties and service contracts are neither part of the price of the collateral or the value given to enable the debtor to acquire *206 rights in, or the use of, the collateral. In fact, there was a standard warranty that came along as part of the retail price. The extended warranties and service contracts are unrelated, incidental obligations, and like the insurance obligations, they do not fulfill the close nexus requirement.
Several decisions have reached contrary results, 11 but the rationale of those decisions focuses on the “package” aspect of the transaction. In so doing, those decisions depart from the plain meaning of the statutory text and the guidance of the Official Comment and use the packaged nature of the transaction to sweep in every obligation that appears in the Total Sales Price. The “package” analysis is helpful in analyzing the close nexus requirement, but it is not a substitute for examining each obligation in light of the statutory text and the Official Comment. When measured against those yardsticks, insurance, extended warranties, and service contracts do not fall within the purchase money security interest, notwithstanding that they are part of the packaged transaction.
Finally, Official Comment 3 makes clear that official licensing, titling and registration fees and the like are qualified for purchase money security interest status.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the Bankruptcy Court’s decisions respecting the security interests held by GMAC and CitiFi-nancial are affirmed in part and reversed in part, and the cases are remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
It is SO ORDERED.
Notes
. LaVigne adopted the Statements of Position and briefs filed by Debtors Home and Taylor and did not file a separate statement of facts. (Docket No. 33.)
. As to gap insurance, the Court concluded that the parties to the case did not provide any authority to support the argument that the creditor should have a security interest in gap insurance. Id. at 155. This issue is discussed in Section E, infra.
. With respect to service contracts and insurance policies, the court reasoned that credi *198 tors do not have purchase money security interests in these components of the financing because they are neither mandatory components of the loan agreement, nor are they value-enhancing add-ons. Id. at *12.
.
In re Price,
.
GMAC v. Peaslee,
. In re Munzberg,
. Other courts have reached the same conclusion for the same reasons.
See In re Cohrs,
. The debtors’ argument is further undercut by the fact that many of the items listed on part of the price or value given to enable are neither a mandatory, or even usual, component of a retail sales contract or the financing thereof (e.g., demurrage, freight charges, costs of storage in transit, administrative charges).
.
See In re Dunlap,
.See generally In re Acaya,
.
See In re Jernigan,
No. 07-04037-8-JRL,
