OPINION RE TAX REFUNDS IN CHAPTER 13 PLANS
FACTS
Thе debtors, Marcos Vasquez Diaz and Alma Lawreen Diaz (“Debtors”), filed their Chapter 13 petition on March 26, 2010, at which time Rod Danielson (“Trustee”) was appointed chapter 13 trustee. Debtors filed their 2009 tax returns on April 30, 2010 and received their refund on or about June 2, 2010. Debtors listed in schedule B their 2009 expected tax refund of $4,000. Debtors also claimed the tax refund as exempt in Schedule C under C.C.P. § 703.140(b)(5), the wild card exemption. On March 3, 2011, Debtors filed a proposed chapter 13 plan (“the Plan”) using the Central District of California mandatory plan form; the Plan was confirmed without objection. The Trustee submitted *88 the Confirmation Order, as is the common practice in the Riverside Division, and the Confirmation Order was entered on May 27, 2010.
The present dispute arises out of disparate treatment of tax refunds in the Plan and Confirmation Order. The Plan is silent regarding tax refunds while the Confirmation Order states, “in addition to regular monthly payments, all tax refunds are pledged into the plan.” As a consequence of contradictory form documents, the aforementioned difference exists in all chapter 13 plans and confirmation orders in the Riverside Division. 1
On July 7, 2011, the Trustee moved to dismiss Debtors’ ease for failure to turn over Debtors’ 2009 tax refund. Debtors filed an opposition and a hearing was held on July 28, 2011. At the initial hearing Debtors’ counsel and the Trustee presented arguments regarding the Code’s treatment of tax refunds accrued on prepetition earnings. The Court asked Debtors’ counsel and the Trustee to submit briefs on the issue. On September 8, 2011, the Court heard argument from both sides аnd took the matter under submission. 2
DISCUSSION
I. Effect of the Plan Confirmation Order.
A Plan ? Confirmation Order is a final order that is preclusive as to all issues that were justiciable at the time of plan confirmation.
United Student Aid Funds, Inc. v. Espinosa,
—— U.S. -,
A. The Order Is Not Void Because It Did Not Violate Debtor’s Due Process Rights.
A limited exception to the finality of an order arises under Rule 60(b), made applicable by Bankruptcy Rule 9024, which allows a party to seek relief from a final judgment under a limited set of circumstances.
Gonzalez v. Crosby,
The Debtors argue that the Plan Confirmation Order was so ambiguous that it deprived them of adequate notice. Debtors argue that the word “all” in the phrase “all tax refunds are pledged to the plan” is fatally ambiguous. Debtors point out that, taken literally, “all” would require Debtors to turn over every tax refund ever received by Debtors. The Trustee embraces this broad application of “all” and disagrees only with the assertion that it is fatally ambiguous. The Court agrees with the Trustee. The word “all,” while broad, is not so ambiguous as to deprive the Debtors of adequate notice. Here, Debtors received actual notice of the entry of the Confirmation Order and its contents. If Debtors believed the inclusion of the tax provision was incorrect, then a motion for reconsideration for mistake would have been proper. See Rule 60(b)(1). Not surprisingly, however, the *89 Court cannot find any case law to support a proposition that an order is void if it is overly broad. If that were the case, the court’s power to create comprehensive orders would be significantly diminished.
B. The Plan Confirmation Order Excludes PrePetition Tax Refunds.
A bankruptcy judge has the power to interpret its own orders.
In re Optical Technologies, Inc.,
II. Treatment of Prepetition Tax Refunds under the Bankruptcy Code.
As a preliminary matter, the Court’s decision is not based on Debtors’ argument that prepetition tax refunds are excluded from disposable income because they are exempted under state law. 4
The Trustee asserts that the pre-petition tax refund is captured by the Plan under sectiоns 1322(a)(1) and 1325(b)(1)(B). The Trustee’s argument hinges on the classification of the tax refund as income.
5
However, the Supreme Court has held prepetition tax refunds are property and not income.
Kokoszka v. Belford,
Because the Code does not define “income,” the Trustee asks the Court to adopt the Code’s definition for “current monthly income” and apply it to sections 1322(a). The cardinal rule of statutory interpretation is to begin with the statutory language.
Conn. Nat’l Bank v. Germain,
Section 1322(a)(1) states that the plan shall:
Provide for the submission of all or such portion of future earnings or other future income of the debtor to the supervision and control of the trustee as is necessary for the execution of the рlan, (emphasis added).
Section 1322(a)(1) uses the phrase “future income,” not current monthly income. The Court must interpret the statute with deference to each word, including the word “future.” Accordingly, the Court interprets section 1322(a)(1) to only include income earned postpetition, not tax refunds on prepetition earnings.
Even if the Court believed the tax refunds fell within the Code’s definition of current monthly income, the Trustee would not be entitled to the entire tax refund. The Code defines “current monthly income” as:
(10A)The term ‘current monthly income’'—
(A) means the average monthly income from all sources that the debt- or receives ... without regard to whether such income is taxable income, derived during the 6-month period ending on — ■
(I) the last day of the calendar month immediately preceding the date of the commencement of the сase if the debtor files the schedule of current income ...
Under this definition, the Trustee is only entitled to the portion of tax refund accrued on earnings from the six months prior to the commencement of the case, not the entire refund.
But see In re Forbish
The Trustee also asserts that the prepetition tax refund is captured by section 1325(b)(1)(B) which states:
[¶]... ] the court may not approve the plan unless, as of thе effective date of the plan—
*91 (B) the plan provides that all of the debtor’s projected disposable income to be received in the applicable commitment period beginning on the date the first payment is due under the plan will be applied to make payments to unsecured creditors under the plan.
The Trustee asserts that the prepetition tax refund is disposable income received during the commitment period and, therefore, should be applied to the plan. The Trustee is correct that the tax refund is received within the commitment period, but the Trustee has not explained why the refund is “projected disposable income.” The term “disposable income” is defined by the Code in section 1322(b)(2) as:
current monthly income received by the debtor ([...]) less amounts reasonably necessary to be expended.
As with the case with section 1322 above, the plain language of section 1325(b)(1)(B) is inconsistent with the Trustee’s interpretation. Section 1325(b)(1)(B) uses the word “projected” to modify the term disposable income. Consequently, the plain meaning of the Code mandates the Trustee only capture projectеd or future income.
See In re Heath,
III. The Rationale for Pledging PostPetition Tax Refunds Into the Chapter 13 Plan Does Not Apply to PrePetition Tax Refunds.
The rationale for including tax refunds in the plan is to prevent debtors from overstating their tax withholdings.
In re Schiffman,
The calculation of disposable income is a two part analysis. First, the debtor adds up all of their “current monthly income” or all income over the six months prior to filing bankruptcy from all sources (pre-tax wages, investments, etc.).
In re Forbish,
*92 A debtor’s overstatement of pre-petition taxes does not justify turnover of the overstated amount to the creditors because, unlike a postpetition refund, the debtor would not have been required to turn over the corollary increase in income had they not overstated their tax expense. The only relevance of a debtor’s prepetition tax withholdings to disposable income is to use it as a “projection” of their post-petition tax withholdings.
The only circuit court to address the prepetition tax refund question directly was the Sixth Circuit in
In re Freeman,
Unlike the Sixth Circuit, the Ninth Circuit has not adopted a broad interpretation of “disposable income.”
In re Anderson,
Despite the Ninth Circuit’s decision in
Anderson,
the bankruptcy court in
In re Schiffman
held that prepetition tax refunds should be contributed into the plan.
First, the Court again notes the procedural differences between the two cases. In Schiffman the tax refund provision was part of the chapter 13 plan form, whereas here, the provision was not part of the Plan, but was added by the Trustee in the Plan Confirmation Order. Second, the Court agrees with the Oregon court’s reasoning in Schiffman as it applies to postpe-tition refunds. The court noted that if postpetition refunds are not collected by the trustee then debtors will have an incentive to overwithhold, thereby keeping postpetition earnings from creditors. However, the Court disagrees with this rationale as it applies to prepetition tax refunds. The rationale would suggest that if a debtor overwithholds on prepetition taxes, then the debtor risks contribution of the prepetition tax refund simply because it was received postpetition. By contrast, if the debtor withholds nothing prepetition, then the debtor can save that tax expense in a savings account and exempt it. The Court sees no difference between money held in a savings account or by the IRS. Forbish, 414 at 403 fa. 5 (“In essence, the debtor has used the tax-withholding scheme as a kind of savings account.”).
To illustrate, suppose two identical debtors file their tax returns at the same time, one filing by mail and the other filing online. The debtor filing onlinе receives his tax refund immediately and files for bankruptcy the next day. The debtor who filed by mail does not receive his tax refund for several weeks, filing bankruptcy in the interim. Under the Freeman and Schiffman decisions, the individual who filed online would keep his tax refund while the individual who filed by mail would forfeit that refund. The Court believes that the Code disfavors such arbitrary results.
IV. Recommendation.
The Court recognizes that its decision imposes a burdеn on the Trustee with regard to capturing five years of tax refunds for five years in a plan, or three as the case may be. The Court, however, is satisfied that the Trustee has the ability to hold cases open until the final tax refund, accrued on earnings within the commitment period, is received by the Debtors.
See In re Midkiff
V. Conclusion.
Tax refunds received by debtors postpe-tition but accrued on prepetition earnings are property, not income, and are not subject to turnover to the Chapter 13 Trustee.
Notes
. The inclusion of the tax refund provision in the order predates the current chapter 13 Trustee, who merely continued the practicе of his predecessor. Prior to the present controversies, the tax refund provision had not been vetted by contested motions.
. The hearing on the motion in this case was consolidated with hearings on the same issue in several other cases. This opinion will be appended to the Court’s ruling in all similar cases.
. Although, as discussed below, the Court determines this is actually not an exеmption question at all.
.
See In re Hagel,
.The issue is whether the tax refund itself is income, not whether the prepetition wages, on which the refund accrued, are income.
. Below median debtors subtract expenses listed on debtors' Schedule J.
Forbish,
. Before Oregon’s chapter 13 plan form was approved by the bankruptcy judges it was submitted in draft form for comments to various chapter 13 constituencies, including debtors' counsel, creditors’ counsel, the chapter 13 trustees, the Internal Revenue Service and the Oregon Department of Justice. The chapter 13 plan form “was drafted to treat the interests of the various parties in chapter 13 proceedings evenhandedly. It covers issues commonly faced in chapter 13 cases, with flexibility to allow for the unique circumstances of the particular case.”
Id. See also In re Spraggins,
