HARRIS v. VIEGELAHN, CHAPTER 13 TRUSTEE
No. 14-400
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
May 18, 2015
575 U.S. ___ (2015)
CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
Argued April 1, 2015
OCTOBER TERM, 2014
Syllabus
NOTE: Where it is feasible, a syllabus (headnote) will be released, as is being done in connection with this case, at the time the opinion is issued. The syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but has been prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader. See United States v. Detroit Timber & Lumber Co., 200 U. S. 321, 337.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
Syllabus
HARRIS v. VIEGELAHN, CHAPTER 13 TRUSTEE
CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
No. 14-400. Argued April 1, 2015—Decided May 18, 2015
Individual debtors may seek discharge of their financial obligations under either Chapter 7 or Chapter 13 of the Bankruptcy Code. In a Chapter 7 proceeding, the debtor‘s assets are transferred to a bankruptcy estate.
Petitioner Harris, indebted to multiple creditors and $3,700 behind on his home mortgage payments to Chase Manhattan, filed a Chapter 13 bankruptcy petition. His court-confirmed plan provided that he would resume making monthly mortgage payments to Chase, and that $530 per month would be withheld from his postpetition wages and remitted to the Chapter 13 trustee, respondent Viegelahn. Trustee Viegelahn would make monthly payments to Chase to pay down Harris’ mortgage arrears, and distribute remaining funds to Harris’ other creditors. When Harris again fell behind on his mortgage pay
Held: A debtor who converts to Chapter 7 is entitled to return of any postpetition wages not yet distributed by the Chapter 13 trustee. Pp. 5-11.
(a) Absent a bad-faith conversion,
(b) By excluding postpetition wages from the converted Chapter 7 estate (absent a bad-faith conversion),
(c) This conclusion is reinforced by
(d) Section 1327(a), which provides that a confirmed Chapter 13 plan “bind[s] the debtor and each creditor,” and
(e) Because Chapter 13 is a voluntary alternative to Chapter 7, a debtor‘s postconversion receipt of a fraction of the wages he earned and would have kept had he filed under Chapter 7 in the first place does not provide the debtor with a “windfall.” A trustee who distributes payments regularly may have little or no accumulated wages to return, while a trustee who distributes payments infrequently may have a sizable refund to make. But creditors may gain protection against the risk of excess accumulations in the hands of trustees by seeking to have a Chapter 13 plan include a schedule for regular disbursement of collected funds. Pp. 10–11.
757 F. 3d 468, reversed and remanded.
GINSBURG, J., delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court.
NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the preliminary print of the United States Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of the United States, Wash- ington, D. C. 20543, of any typographical or other formal errors, in order that corrections may be made before the preliminary print goes to press.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
No. 14-400
CHARLES E. HARRIS, III, PETITIONER v. MARY K. VIEGELAHN, CHAPTER 13 TRUSTEE
ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
[May 18, 2015]
JUSTICE GINSBURG delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case concerns the disposition of wages earned by a debtor after he petitions for bankruptcy. The treatment of postpetition wages generally depends on whether the debtor is proceeding under Chapter 13 of the Bankruptcy Code (in which the debtor retains assets, often his home, during bankruptcy subject to a court-approved plan for the payment of his debts) or Chapter 7 (in which the debtor‘s assets are immediately liquidated and the proceeds distributed to creditors). In a Chapter 13 proceeding, postpetition wages are “[p]roperty of the estate,”
When a debtor initially filing under Chapter 13 exercises his right to convert to Chapter 7, who is entitled to post-
I
A
The Bankruptcy Code provides diverse courses overburdened debtors may pursue to gain discharge of their financial obligations, and thereby a “fresh start.” Marrama v. Citizens Bank of Mass., 549 U. S. 365, 367 (2007) (quoting Grogan v. Garner, 498 U. S. 279, 286 (1991)). Two roads individual debtors may take are relevant here: Chapter 7 and Chapter 13 bankruptcy proceedings.
Chapter 7 allows a debtor to make a clean break from his financial past, but at a steep price: prompt liquidation of the debtor‘s assets. When a debtor files a Chapter 7 petition, his assets, with specified exemptions, are immediately transferred to a bankruptcy estate.
Chapter 13 works differently. A wholly voluntary alternative to Chapter 7, Chapter 13 allows a debtor to retain
Proceedings under Chapter 13 can benefit debtors and creditors alike. Debtors are allowed to retain their assets, commonly their home or car. And creditors, entitled to a Chapter 13 debtor‘s “disposable” postpetition income,
Many debtors, however, fail to complete a Chapter 13 plan successfully. See Porter, The Pretend Solution: An Empirical Study of Bankruptcy Outcomes, 90 Texas L. Rev. 103, 107–111 (2011) (only one in three cases filed under Chapter 13 ends in discharge). Recognizing that reality, Congress accorded debtors a nonwaivable right to convert a Chapter 13 case to one under Chapter 7 “at any time.”
Conversion from Chapter 13 to Chapter 7 does not commence a new bankruptcy case. The existing case continues along another track, Chapter 7 instead of Chapter 13, without “effect[ing] a change in the date of the filing of the petition.”
B
In February 2010, petitioner Charles Harris III filed a Chapter 13 bankruptcy petition. At the time of filing, Harris was indebted to multiple creditors, and had fallen $3,700 behind on payments to Chase Manhattan, his home mortgage lender.
Harris’ court-confirmed Chapter 13 plan provided that he would immediately resume making monthly mortgage payments to Chase. The plan further provided that $530 per month would be withheld from Harris’ postpetition wages and remitted to the Chapter 13 trustee, respondent Mary Viegelahn. Viegelahn, in turn, would distribute $352 per month to Chase to pay down Harris’ outstanding mortgage debt. She would also distribute $75.34 per month to Harris’ only other secured lender, a consumer-electronics store. Once those secured creditors were paid in full, Viegelahn was to begin distributing funds to Harris’ unsecured creditors.
Implementation of the plan was short lived. Harris again fell behind on his mortgage payments, and in November 2010, Chase received permission from the Bankruptcy Court to foreclose on Harris’ home. Following the foreclosure, Viegelahn continued to receive $530 per month from Harris’ wages, but stopped making the payments earmarked for Chase. As a result, funds formerly reserved for Chase accumulated in Viegelahn‘s possession.
On November 22, 2011, Harris exercised his statutory right to convert his Chapter 13 case to one under Chapter 7. By that time, Harris’ postpetition wages accumulated by Viegelahn amounted to $5,519.22. On December 1, 2011—ten days after Harris’ conversion—Viegelahn disposed of those funds by giving $1,200 to Harris’ counsel, paying herself a $267.79 fee, and distributing the remain-
Asserting that Viegelahn lacked authority to disburse funds to creditors once the case was converted to Chapter 7, Harris moved the Bankruptcy Court for an order directing refund of the accumulated wages Viegelahn had given to his creditors. The Bankruptcy Court granted Harris’ motion, and the District Court affirmed.
The Fifth Circuit reversed. In re Harris, 757 F. 3d 468 (2014). Finding “little guidance in the Bankruptcy Code,” id., at 478, the Fifth Circuit concluded that “considerations of equity and policy” rendered “the creditors’ claim to the undistributed funds . . . superior to that of the debtor,” id., at 478, 481. Notwithstanding a Chapter 13 debtor‘s conversion to Chapter 7, the Fifth Circuit held, a former Chapter 13 trustee must distribute a debtor‘s accumulated postpetition wages to his creditors.
The Fifth Circuit acknowledged that its decision conflicted with the Third Circuit‘s decision in In re Michael, 699 F. 3d 305 (2012), which held that a debtor‘s undistributed postpetition wages “are to be returned to the debtor at the time of conversion [from Chapter 13 to Chapter 7].” Id., at 307. We granted certiorari to resolve this conflict, 574 U. S. ___ (2014), and now reverse the Fifth Circuit‘s judgment.
II
A
Prior to the Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1994, courts divided three ways on the disposition of a debtor‘s undistributed postpetition wages following conversion of a proceeding from Chapter 13 to Chapter 7. Some courts concluded that undistributed postpetition wages reverted to the debtor. E.g., In re Boggs, 137 B. R. 408, 411 (Bkrtcy. Ct. WD Wash. 1992). Others ordered a debtor‘s undistributed postpetition earnings disbursed to creditors pur-
Congress addressed the matter in 1994 by adding
“[P]roperty of the [Chapter 7] estate in the converted case shall consist of property of the estate, as of the date of filing of the [initial Chapter 13] petition, that remains in the possession of or is under the control of the debtor on the date of conversion.”
In
“If the debtor converts a case [initially filed] under chapter 13 . . . in bad faith, the property of the estate in the converted case shall consist of the property of the estate as of the date of the conversion.”
Section 348(f), all agree, makes one thing clear: A debtor‘s postpetition wages, including undisbursed funds in the hands of a trustee, ordinarily do not become part of the Chapter 7 estate created by conversion. Absent a bad-faith conversion,
B
With this background, we turn to the question presented: What happens to postpetition wages held by a Chapter 13 trustee at the time the case is converted to Chapter 7? Does the Code require return of the funds to the debtor, or does it require their distribution to creditors? We conclude that postpetition wages must be returned to the debtor.
By excluding postpetition wages from the converted Chapter 7 estate,
Section 348(f)(2)‘s exception for bad-faith conversions is instructive in this regard. If a debtor converts in bad faith—for example, by concealing assets in “unfair manipulation of the bankruptcy system,” In re Siegfried, 219 B. R. 581, 586 (Bkrtcy. Ct. Colo. 1998)—the converted Chapter 7 estate “consist[s] of the property of the [Chapter 13] estate as of the date of conversion.”
Section 348(e) also informs our ruling that undistributed postpetition wages must be returned to the debtor. That section provides: “Conversion [from Chapter 13 to Chapter 7] terminates the service of [the Chapter 13] trustee.” A core service provided by a Chapter 13 trustee is the disbursement of “payments to creditors.”
Section 348(e), of course, does not require a terminated trustee to hold accumulated funds in perpetuity; she must (as we hold today) return undistributed postpetition wages to the debtor. Returning funds to a debtor, however, is not a Chapter 13 trustee service as is making “paymen[t] to creditors.”
C
Viegelahn cites two Chapter 13 provisions in support of her argument that the Bankruptcy Code requires a termi-
When a debtor exercises his statutory right to convert, the case is placed under Chapter 7‘s governance, and no Chapter 13 provision holds sway.
Nor can we credit the suggestion that a confirmed Chapter 13 plan gives creditors a vested right to funds held by a trustee. “[N]o provision in the Bankruptcy Code classifies any property, including post-petition wages, as belonging to creditors.” Michael, 699 F. 3d, at 312-313.
Viegelahn alternatively urges that a terminated Chapter 13 trustee‘s “duty” to distribute funds to creditors is a facet of the trustee‘s obligation to “wind up” the affairs of the Chapter 13 estate following conversion. Brief for Respondent 25 (internal quotation marks omitted). The Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure, however, specify what a terminated Chapter 13 trustee must do post-conversion: (1) she must turn over records and assets to the Chapter 7 trustee, Rule 1019(4); and (2) she must file a report with the United States bankruptcy trustee, Rule 1019(5)(B)(ii). Continuing to distribute funds to creditors pursuant to the defunct Chapter 13 plan is not an authorized “wind-up” task.
D
The Fifth Circuit expressed concern that debtors would receive a “windfall” if they could reclaim accumulated wages from a terminated Chapter 13 trustee. 757 F. 3d, at 478-481. As explained, however, see supra at 2–3, Chapter 13 is a voluntary proceeding in which debtors endeavor to discharge their obligations using postpetition earnings that are off-limits to creditors in a Chapter 7 proceeding. We do not regard as a “windfall” a debtor‘s receipt of a fraction of the wages he earned and would have kept had he filed under Chapter 7 in the first place.
We acknowledge the “fortuit[y],” as the Fifth Circuit called it, that a “debtor‘s chance of having funds returned” is “dependent on the trustee‘s speed in distributing the payments” to creditors. 757 F. 3d, at 479, and n. 10. A trustee who distributes payments regularly may have
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For the reasons stated, the judgment of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit is reversed, and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
