OPINION
Resolving the merits of the instant Objections of the Debtor to the Proof of Claim of the Debtor’s mortgagee, the Federal National Mortgage Association (hereinafter “FNMA”), requires us to address one issue we had not considered heretofore: the right of a mortgagee to impose fees for performing inspections of the mortgaged premises upon a debtor-mortgagor. We hold that such fees are not as inherently reasonable or necessary to foreclosure as the mortgagee’s cost of obtaining a title report of the property in foreclosure, and that, if challenged, such inspection fees cannot be recovered from the mortgagor unless the mortgagee meets its burden of proving such charges are both permissible under the mortgage documents, reasonable, and allowable under state law. In the instant controversy, while we reaffirm our holding in
In re Garnett,
The Debtor, MARVIN BURWELL, a/k/a MARVIN D. BURWELL, filed the instant Chapter 13 bankruptcy case on February 2, 1989. The initial Confirmation hearing, scheduled on October 19, 1989, *64 was continued to October 26,1989, the date of the hearing on this contested matter. On the latter date, the Confirmation hearing was further continued until December 5, 1989. Herein, we postpone it slightly, in order to avoid a further continuance, until December 7, 1989.
FNMA filed a secured Proof of Claim in this case on July 18, 1989, setting forth therein the Debtor’s alleged arrearag-es of $4,747.06. 1 At the hearing of October 26, 1989, the only witness, Joseph O’Con-nor, foreclosure manager of Boulevard Mortgage Co., apparently the servicing agent in this transaction for FNMA, testified that the components of this figure were as follows:
Principal, computed for nine months at the rate of the payment due of $428, plus $10 monthly as a cushion for future tax and insurance escrow increases $3,942.00
Late charges 154.08
Attorneys’ fees 200.00
Court costs to file a foreclosure action which was pending at the time of the bankruptcy filing 127.50
Title Search performed in connection with the above foreclosure action 156.00
8 property inspections at $7.50 each 60.00
Accumulated late charges 107.48
$4,747.06
On September 7, 1989, the Debtor filed Objections to FNMA’s Proof of Claim, which, by the hearing date, were confined to the following: (1) The $10 monthly increment to the Principal; (2) The title search charge; and (3) the inspection fees. 2 At the hearing, Mr. O’Connor was unable to muster any logical basis for making the $10 monthly increment to the payments, claiming that his company was making these charges simply as a favor to the Debtor to cushion later tax increases and would agree to deduct the total of $90 of extra charges from the Claim if the Debtor renounced this alleged beneficence. 3
Although the Debtor’s counsel argued warmly that the mortgage documents did not authorize the title search charge, we note that the clauses of the instant mortgage document which allegedly permit this charge are precisely the same as those which were contained in the mortgage in issue in Garnett, supra. Accord, In re Herbert, Bankr. No. 88-10767F (Bankr.E.D.Pa. April 5, 1989) (FOX, J.). The charge of $156.00 is precisely the same as that allowed to the mortgagee in Garnett. Since we choose not to reconsider our result in Garnett, this aspect of the Debtor’s Objections must fail.
However, FNMA’s ability to pass through its inspection fee charges presents an issue we have not considered previously. Our examination of our previous decisions indicates that such charges have not typically been requested by mortgagees in the
*65
cases in which we considered the issue of permissible cost pass-throughs to debtor-mortgagors.
See Vitelli, supra,
Our respected colleague, Judge Fox, has recently addressed the issue of pass-through of inspection fees in an unpublished Memorandum in In re Davis, Bankr. No. 89-10290F, slip op. at 3-5 (Bankr.E. D.Pa. Sept. 27, 1989). There, Judge Fox allowed a mortgagee to pass through charges for 27 inspections totalling $162.00 to the mortgagor. Judge Fox relied heavily upon clauses of the mortgage according the mortgagee the right “ ‘to enter upon the Premises at any reasonable hour to inspect the order, condition and repair thereof’ ” and providing that
“If Mortgagor fails ... to keep Premises in repair ... or commits or permits waste, then Mortgagee, at its option ... may make such repairs and take such steps as it deems advisable to prevent or cure such waste.... Mortgagor will pay to Mortgagee ... all sums of money advanced ... pursuant to this paragraph ... and such sums ... shall be secured hereby.”
Slip op. at 3. Judge Fox also notes that he had disallowed inspection fees in a previous case in which the mortgage documents did not authorize same,
In re Rorie,
In
Garnett, supra,
“such fees [must be] (1) allowable under the terms of § 506(b); (2) provided for in the parties’ agreement; (3) reasonable; and (4) allowable under pertinent state law.”.
Here, the first prong,
i.e.,
establishing that the claim is oversecured, is inapplicable, because we are dealing with a demand for arrearages, not a “true” secured proof of claim.
See Vitelli, supra,
The second prong of this test requires us, as Judge Fox suggested in Davis, supra, to carefully examine the mortgage document. Here, FNMA contended, at the hearing, that the following clause of the instant mortgage authorized the pass-through of inspection fees:
6. ... the Mortgagor will pay all ground rents, taxes, assessments, water *66 rates, and other governmental or municipal charges, fines or impositions, for which provision has not been made here-inbefore and that he will promptly deliver the official receipts therefor to the Mortgagee, and in default thereof the Mortgagee shall have the right to pay same. The Mortgagee shall have the right to make any payment which the Mortgagor should have made, and the Mortgagee may also pay any other sum that is necessary to protect the security of this instrument. All such sums, as well as all costs, paid by the Mortgagee pursuant to this instrument, shall be secured hereby and shall bear interest at the rate set forth in the note secured hereby from the date when such sums are paid.
FNMA apparently reasons that the inspection fee is an investment “necessary to protect the security of the instrument.”
The difficulty with FNMA’s reasoning is that it ignores the context in which this language appears in the above clause. Paragraph 6 addresses governmental fees which may encumber the property, and, if the mortgagor fails to pay same, gives the mortgagee a right to pay them and then pass these payment obligations along to the mortgagor. It is
not
addressing any sort of fees to discover or remedy conditions extant on the property which could deflate its value as security, which presumably the inspections are performed to uncover. Therefore, we believe that the mortgage here does
not
contain a specific provision authorizing inspection fees, like the mortgage considered by Judge Fox in
Rorie, supra,
We should note, however, that satisfaction of the third and fourth prongs of the test is also absent. Moreover, in
Garnett, supra,
Unlike the title search in issue in
Gar-nett,
we can see little legal necessity for the mortgagee’s making superficial periodic inspections to a mortgaged premises. Certainly, such inspections are unlikely to garner information which, like a title report, are essential to proper prosecution of a foreclosure suit.
Compare Garnett,
In making this assessment, we are not foreclosing the possibility of a mortgagee’s convincing us that, in a given specific factual situation, inspections might be sufficiently necessary such that we would allow a mortgagee to pass them through to a debtor-mortgagor,
e.g.,
if the premises were vacant or were subject to waste because of certain specific circumstances. However, in
Orsa Associates, supra,
“We have frequently considered claims for attorney’s fees, see, e.g., In re United Nesco Container Corp.,68 B.R. 970 , 973-74 (Bankr.E.D.Pa.1987); and In re Nickleberry,76 B.R. 413 (Bankr.E.D.Pa.1987); late charges, and other penalties, see In re Jordan,91 B.R. 673 (Bankr.E.D.Pa.1988); and elements of costs, see, *67 e.g., In re Garnett,99 B.R. 293 (Bankr.E.D.Pa.1989); In re Vitelli,93 B.R. 889 , 897-901 (Bankr.E.D.Pa.1988); and In re Smith,92 B.R. 127 , 132-33 (Bankr.E.D.Pa.1988); rev ’d in part on other grounds sub nom. Smith v. Kissell Co.,98 B.R. 708 (E.D.Pa.1989), in the context of objections to proofs of claims. We set forth the relative burdens of proof of the debtor and the claimant in the context of objections to proofs of claim in In re Lewis,80 B.R. 39 , 40-41 (Bankr.E.D.Pa.1987). There, we emphasized that, if the objector presents evidence tending to disprove the objection, the otherwise-extant presumption that the claim is prima fa-cie allowable vanished. Id. at 41. See also Jordan, supra,91 B.R. at 683-84 ; and In re Celona,90 B.R. 104 , 108-09 (Bankr.E.D.Pa.1988), aff'd sub nom. Celona v. Equitable Nat’l Bank,98 B.R. 705 (E.D.Pa.1989)....”
Here, the Debtor has placed the rea-sonability of the inspection fees in issue. Therefore, consistent with the following reasoning set forth in
Jordan, supra,
Practically, the burden of proving a claimant’s right to late charges in its claim could scarcely be allocated otherwise. A debtor could hardly be expected to prove a negative, i.e., to present evidence disproving the unknown reasoning and rationale of a claimant in contending that late charges which the debtor denies are justified are in fact due. The logic of allocation of the burden of proof is that it is necessarily placed on the party who has the most knowledge and best means of proof on a given issue at his disposal. Compare In re New York City Shoes, Inc.,86 B.R. 420 , 425 (Bankr.E.D.Pa.1988) (landlord has burden of proving his own diligent efforts to replace an errant tenant); In re Crompton,73 B.R. 800 , 808-09 (Bankr.E.D.Pa.1987) (debtor has burden of proving that his own statement of income and expenses satisfies the requirement that all of this projected disposable income is being paid into a Chapter 23 plan); and In re Furlow,70 B.R. 973 , 978 (Bankr.E.D.Pa.1987) (debt- or has burden of proving the logic of his reasons for discriminating in his treatment of creditors). Clearly, the party, having the most knowledge of computation of the late charges in issue here and the party upon which the burden of proof must therefore be placed is the Claimant.
The only burden of the Debtor is to raise a particular issue in reference to a claim.
FNMA, though calling Mr. O’Connor as a witness, could not or at least did not establish, through him, any specific factual situation here which rendered the inspections of the Debtor’s property necessary. In fact, we are uncertain when the inspections were performed and at what intervals they were performed, let alone why they were performed. Therefore, we would be strongly disinclined to allow these charges irrespective of what the mortgage documents provided.
Cf. Garnett, supra,
Finally, we question whether the final prong, i.e., that the charge be allowable • under pertinent state law, is met here, either. The applicable state law, 41 P.S. § 404(b), provides as follows:
(b) To cure a default under this section, a residential mortgage debtor shall:
(1) Pay or tender in the form of cash, cashier’s check or certified check, all sums which would have been due at the time of payment or tender in the absence of default and the exercise of an acceleration clause, if any;
(2) Perform any other obligation which he would have been bound to perform in the absence of default or the exercise of an acceleration clause, if any;
*68 (3) Pay or tender any reasonable fees allowed under section 406 and the reasonable costs of proceeding to foreclosure as specified in writing by the residential mortgage lender actually incurred to the date of payment.
(4) Pay any reasonable late penalty, if provided for in the security document.
The only potentially-applicable clause of this statutory provision, which limits those costs that can be passed through to a mortgagor as a condition for curing arrearages, is 41 P.S. § 404(b)(3), which embraces “the reasonable costs of proceeding to foreclosure.” Rejecting, as we do here and as did Judge Fox in
Davis,
the conclusion in
Cervantes
that inspection fees are a “cost of foreclosure,” we must conclude that such costs cannot be passed through under the foregoing applicable state law.
Compare Garnett, supra,
Therefore, we must deny FNMA’s demand of $60 for inspection fees in its Proof of Claim. Having sustained an objection to a $90 component of the Claim, the Debtor’s Objections as to $150 of FNMA’s Proof of Claim must be sustained. An Order so providing, and requiring the Debtor to now prepare this case for Plan confirmation on December 7, 1989, will be entered.
ORDER
AND NOW, this 1st day of November, 1989, upon consideration of the Debtor’s Objections to the Proof of Claim of Federal National Mortgage Association (hereinafter “FNMA”), after a hearing of October 26, ' 1989, and the various arguments of counsel thereat, and in order to insure prompt administration of this case, it is hereby ORDERED AND DECREED as follows:
1.The Objections are SUSTAINED in part. The secured “Proof of Claim” of FNMA for arrears is reduced by $150, reflecting unauthorized charges for Principal ($90) and inspection fees ($60), and allowed in the amount of $4,597.06.
2. The Debtor shall resolve any outstanding impediments to confirmation either by filing further objections to proofs of claim, motions, and/or an amended plan or by some other means before the next listing, or this matter will be dismissed.
3. Any motions or amended plans contemplated shall be filed and served upon interested parties on or before November 7, 1989.
4. A final hearing on Confirmation and the Trustee’s motion to dismiss shall be held on
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1989, at 10:00 A.M. in Courtroom No. 2 (Room 3718), United States Court House, 601 Market Street, Philadelphia, PA 19106. The Debtor’s counsel shall affix this hearing date on any notice of hearing received from the Clerk’s office on any matters filed on or before November 7, 1989.
5. No further continuances of the Confirmation Hearing will be favored and this case may be dismissed on December 7, 1989, if a Plan cannot be confirmed on that date.
Notes
. As we pointed out in
In re Vitelli,
. We are somewhat puzzled at the distinction between "Late Charges” and “Accumulated Late Charges” on the Proof of Claim, and hence we are uncertain what distinction there is between the two and how FNMA computed same.
See In re Jordan,
.What FNMA was effectually accomplishing in charging this payment increment was increasing the escrow payable by the Debtor to it beyond what was authorized in the mortgage documents. Since there is a considerable question as to whether escrows of any sums are not unfairly beneficial to mortgagees, who can hold and possibly use such sums for certain purposes,
see Buchanan v. Brentwood Federal Savings & Loan Ass'n,
