The issue before us is whether the New York Department of Labor may withhold benefits on a January 1996 unemployment insurance claim by Stanley Malinowski, who filed for bankruptcy in January 1995, to recover an overpayment made to Malinowski on a January 1994 unemployment claim. The bankruptcy court held that the Department could withhold the benefits under the doctrine of recoupment, and the district court affirmed. Malinowski and his wife Diane appeal, arguing that the pre-petition and post-petition claims for unemployment insurance benefits are entirely separate claims, and that they are statutory in nature, not contractual; therefore, they contend that the Department’s claim is a set-off, subject to the stay provisions of 11 U.S.C. § 362 (1994), rather than a permissible recoupment. We reverse the judgment of the district court and bankruptcy court, and remand with directions to order the Department to pay to the Malinowskis the unemployment insurance benefits withheld.
Stanley Malinowski collected unemployment insurance benefits in early 1994, pursuant to an initial determination of eligibility by the New York Department of Labor. On March 9, 1994, the Department determined Malinowski was ineligible for benefits on that claim because he had left his employment voluntarily and without good cause. The Department charged Malinowski with overpayment in the amount of $2,072. On January 31, 1995, Malinowski and his wife filed a petition in bankruptcy under Chapter 13. On January 11, 1996, Malinowski filed a new claim for unemployment insurance benefits. The Department determined him to be eligible, and established his new benefit rate at $300 per week. Under its regulations, the Department then withheld fifty percent of the 1996 weekly benefits until the 1994 payment was recovered. The Department did not file a claim in the Chapter 13 case, but withheld the $2,072 from Malinowski’s post-petition benefits without seeking relief or modification of the automatic stay imposed by 11 U.S.C. § 362 (1994).
The Malinowskis moved for an order requiring the Department to turn over the monies withheld. The bankruptcy court held that the Department was entitled to withhold the benefits notwithstanding the automatic
The crux of this case is whether the Department’s withholding of Stanley Malinowski’s benefits is a set-off or a recoupment. “The right of setoff ... allows entities that owe each other money to apply their mutual debts against each other, thereby avoiding ‘the absurdity of making A pay B when B owes A.’”
Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors v. Manufacturers and Traders Trust Co. (In re The Bennett Funding Group, Inc.),
The distinction between set-off and recoupment is crucial because set-off claims are subject to the automatic stay of 11 U.S.C. § 362 and are substantively limited by the Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. § 553 (1994). Recoupment, in contrast, comes into bankruptcy law through the common law, rather than by statute,
see University Medical Center v. Sullivan (In re University Medical Ctr.),
The definition of “transaction” has been developed in the context of determining whether counterclaims are compulsory or permissive under the rules of civil procedure.
See Coplay Cement Co. v. Willis & Paul Group,
There are two theories under which governmental entities have sought to consolidate claims arising out of independent sets of facts giving rise to statutory rights, but neither theory gives us a good reason for broadening recoupment in contravention of the federal bankruptcy policies of debtor protection and equal distribution to creditors.
The first theory is that the government granting past and present benefits may decide whether they are one transaction or two. A governmental entity may attempt to consolidate the claims by defining the claimant’s present substantive rights by reference to past events. For instance, in
United States v. Consumer Health Services, Inc.,
the District of Columbia Circuit held that the government was entitled to recoup overpayments under a statute setting the amount of money to which a Medicare provider was entitled at the amount earned within each settlement period “less adjustments for prior overpayments.”
The second theory under which states have sought to consolidate unrelated entitlement claims is by analogizing the governmeni/claimant relationship to a contractual relation. Under New York law the Department of Labor has the right to recover overpaid unemployment insurance benefits by withholding current benefits.
See Schwartfigure v. Hartnett,
We reject the contract analogy in this case. Here, the overpayment and the current payment result from different claims for unemployment insurance, each with eligibility based upon different periods of unemployment. Significantly, the two periods of employment were separated by the filing of the petition for bankruptcy. The Department’s analysis offers no reason to treat two such unrelated claims as one executory contract, rather than two contracts, in one of which the State has already performed its-duties.
See In re Hagan,
Furthermore, not all cases in which claim and counterclaim arise from the same contract are appropriate for recoupment. Where the contract itself contemplates the business to be transacted as discrete and independent units, even claims predicated on a single contract will be ineligible for recoupment.
See Conoco, Inc. v. Styler (In re Peterson Distributing, Inc.),
Moreover, in light of the equitable nature of the recoupment remedy, the facts in the particular case are important. The Department asks us to take away the unemployment insurance safety net from a debtor in bankruptcy, who has not been accused of willful wrongdoing in connection with the overpayment. The Department withheld benefits on Malinowski’s later claim at the rate of fifty percent, which is the rate appropriate when the overpayment did not result from willful conduct of the claimant. 12 N.Y.C.R.R. § 470.5(c). The lack of fraud distinguishes Malinowski’s case from
Maine
and others in which the government was permitted to recoup overpayments resulting from fraud.
Cf. In re Maine,
Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the district court and remand with directions to order the Department to pay to the Mali-nowskis the unemployment insurance benefits withheld.
Notes
. The Department relies on an unpublished opinion, Gencarelli v. New York State Department of Labor, No. 894-81350-478 (Bankr.E.D.N.Y. Nov. 23, 1994), which is irrelevant because it involves only one claim.
. There are several cases in which state laws reducing a claimant's rights by reference to past overpayments were held to compel recoupment.
See Oregon v. Harmon (In re Harmon),
. Even in
Ross,
in which the court held that unemployment insurance overpayments were subject to recoupment, the court called for a "compromise” to avoid "the hardship that could occur when an unemployed bankrupt would have to forego this sole subsistence as a penalty for receiving excess payments for earlier claims, especially when the overpayments might have occurred a long time before.”
