OPINION
Is a security interest in a debtor’s property a “noncontingent, liquidated, secured debt[ ]” under § 109(e) of the Bankruptcy Code, which at the time of this filing contained a $922,975 debt limit for filing a Chapter 13 petition? It is, we conclude, and accordingly we affirm the dismissal of Patrick Glance’s bankruptcy petition.
I.
On April 14, 2005, Patrick Glance filed a petition for relief under Chapter 13 of the Bankruptcy Code. Among his assets, Glance listed two houses — one in Plymouth, Michigan, one in Pinckney, Michigan — that he owned jointly with his wife. The Plymouth house, worth $1,200,000, was subject to a mortgage of $980,000; the Pinckney house, worth $302,000, was subject to a mortgage of $133,000. Because Glance’s wife alone signed the promissory notes in connection with each loan, Glance was “not personally obligated to pay the sums secured” by either mortgage. JA 125. Glance co-signed the mortgage papers, however, giving each lender a mortgage lien on the jointly owned property.
On October 7, Krispen Carroll (the chapter 13 trustee) moved to dismiss Glance’s bankruptcy petition, claiming Glance’s secured debts exceeded the $922,975 cap for filing a Chapter 13 petition. See 11 U.S.G. § 109(e). After a hearing on the motion, the bankruptcy court dismissed Glance’s petition. The district court affirmed the bankruptcy court’s order.
II.
The “principal purpose of the Bankruptcy Code is to grant a fresh start to the honest but unfortunate debtor.”
Marrama v. Citizens Bank of Mass.,
— U.S. -,
Only an individual with regular income that owes, on the date of the filing of the petition, ... noncontingent, liquidated, secured debts of less than $922,975 ... may be a debtor under chapter 13 of this title.
11 U.S.C. § 109(e). Even though Glance had no personal obligations on the promissory notes that his wife signed, the question here is whether the mortgages on the two properties (worth a total of $1,113,000) amount to (1) debts attributable to Glance that are (2) liquidated, (3) secured and (4) noncontingent. In our view, they are, and accordingly the limitation applies.
First, the mortgages are “debts” within the meaning of the Bankruptcy Code. The Code defines “debt” as “liability on a claim.” Id. § 101(12). And the Code defines “claim” to mean a
(A) right to payment, whether or not such right is reduced to judgment, liquidated, unliquidated, fixed, contingent, matured, unmatured, disputed, undisputed, legal, equitable, secured, or unsecured; or
(B) right to an equitable remedy for breach of performance if such breach gives rise to a right to payment, whether or not such right to an equitable remedy is reduced to judgment, fixed, contingent, matured, unmatured, disputed, undisputed, secured, or unsecured.
Id. § 101(5) (emphases added).
By defining “debt” in terms of “claim,” Congress has made “the meanings of ‘debt’ and ‘claim’ ... coextensive.”
Penn. Dep’t of Pub. Welfare v. Davenport,
In
Johnson v. Home State Bank,
In agreeing with the bankruptcy court’s construction of the definition of “claim,” the Supreme Court reasoned that, “[e]ven after the debtor’s personal obligations have been extinguished, the mortgage holder still retains a ‘right to payment’ in
Johnson
controls us here. If, as
Johnson
concludes, a lien is a “claim against the debtor,” then it follows, under the Code’s equivalent treatment of the terms, that a lien is a “debt” owed by the debtor.
Johnson,
Glance responds that we should not treat “debts” and “claims” the same in this setting. Equating the two, he says, will “enable a creditor to have a debtor’s case dismissed by merely filing a claim for an amount that exceeds the limits ... regardless of whether the creditor’s claim has any legal basis.” Br. at 16-17. An initial obstacle to this argument, as we have noted, is that Congress (and the Supreme Court) have already spoken on the matter: The National Legislature intended “the meanings of ‘debt’ and ‘claim’ [to] be coextensive.”
Davenport,
Second,
the mortgage liens are “liquidated” debts, which is to say debts whose “amount is readily ascertainable.”
In re Pearson,
Third, the mortgage liens are “secured.” Glance nowhere disputes that the creditors secured the liens against the Plymouth and Pinckney houses.
Fourth,
these liens are “non-contingent.” “[A debt] is noncontingent when all of the events giving rise to liability for the debt occurred prior to the debt- or’s filing for bankruptcy.”
In re Mazzeo,
Once Glance signed the mortgage papers, the creditors immediately obtained a host of present rights in the two properties. For example, the creditor on the Plymouth house has “legal title to the interests granted” in the mortgage, JA 119; the creditor may “make reasonable entries upon and inspections of the Property,” JA 122; and the creditor may require Glance to “defend generally the title to the Property against all claims and demands,” JA 119, to “pay all taxes, assessments, charges, fines, and impositions attributable to the Property [that] can attain priority over” the mortgage, JA 121, to insure the house against fire, earthquakes, floods and other disasters,
id.,
to “maintain the Property in order to prevent the Property from deteriorating or decreasing in value,” JA 122, and to “promptly repair the Property if damaged to avoid further deterioration or damage,”
id.
That is not all. The creditor also has the “right to foreclose and sell the Property” if the Glances default on the mortgage, JA 119,
see, e.g., Guardian Depositors Corp. v. Powers,
Glance responds that the mortgage liens remain contingent debts because the lenders cannot repossess and sell the properties immediately. Analogizing his debt to a guarantee on an unsecured loan, he points out, “Without a default on the notes, there is no claim.” Br. at 20. Yes, a guarantee represents a contingent debt until the principal obligor defaults.
See In re Fischel,
No doubt, a similarity remains between the two instruments: In either situation, the creditor may not require payment in full absent default. But the same could be said for any loan. Neither the banker nor the merchant nor the mortgage lender may demand full repayment from a debtor on a whim; each creditor may demand only those funds immediately owed. And yet that reality does not convert every run-of-the-mine mortgage into a contingent debt. Otherwise, the outstanding balance on all thirty-year mortgages would represent “contingent” debts even though the debtor has kept pace on his payments and even though full payment generally may not be required under the mortgage instrument until a default. The courts long ago rejected such an interpretation.
See, e.g., See. Mortgage Co. v. Powers,
The question in the end is not whether the creditor may extract full repayment from the debtor (or his property) immediately; the question is whether the creditor has a “right to payment” or a “right to an equitable remedy,” see 11 U.S.C. § 101(5), from the debtor (or his property) at the time the debtor filed his petition. The creditors here possessed such a right — as proved by the difficulty Glance would have faced if he had tried to sell the two properties without first satisfying the banks’ security interests. Because the sum of the debts on the Plymouth and Pinckney houses at the time Glance filed this Chapter 13 petition was $1,113,000 — or about $190,000 more than the limit of $922,975 found in § 109(e) — the bankruptcy court correctly dismissed the petition.
III.
For these reasons, we affirm.
