AMENDED MEMORANDUM DECISION RE EFFECTIVE DATE OF DISMISSAL OF CASE
The court entered an earlier order granting the United States Trustee’s motion under § 521(i)(2) of the Bankruptcy Code (11 U.S.C.) to dismiss the case on the basis of 11 U.S.C. § 521(i)(l). The order, however, left open the issue of the date on which the dismissal should be. made effective.
In re Spencer,
I
Section 521(i)(l) provides:
Subject to paragraphs (2) and (4) and notwithstanding section 707(a), if an individual debtor in a voluntary case under chapter 7 or 13 fails to file all of the information required under subsection (a)(1) within 45 days after the date of the filing of the petition, the case shall be automatically dismissed effective on the 46th day after the date of the filing of the petition.
Section 521(i)(2) (to which § 521(i)(l) is expressly made subject) provides:
Subject to paragraph (4) and with respect to a case described in paragraph (1), any party in interest may request the court to enter an order dismissing the case. If requested, the court shall enter an order of dismissal not later than 5 days after such request.
Section 521(i)(3) (to which § 521(i)(l), through apparent drafting error, is not expressly made subject, but to which § 521(i)(l) plainly is subject) and § 521(i)(4) (to which § 521(i)(l) is expressly made subject) provide:
(3) Subject to paragraph (4) and upon request of the debtor made within 45 days after the date of the fifing of the petition described in paragraph (1), the court may allow the debtor an additional period of not to exceed 45 days to file the information required under subsection (a)(1) if the court finds justification for extending the period for the filing.
(4) Notwithstanding any other provision of this subsection, on the motion of the trustee filed before the expiration of the applicable period of time specified in paragraph (1), (2), or (3), and after notice and a hearing, the court may decline to dismiss the case if the court finds that the debtor attempted in good faith to file all the information required by subsection (a)(l)(B)(iv) and that the best interests of creditors would be served by administration of the case.
The debtor did not timely move under § 521(i)(3) to enlarge the 45-day deadline of § 521(i)(l). After the United States Trustee moved for dismissal of the case, the chapter 7 trustee failed to move in a timely manner under § 521(i)(4) for a determination that the grounds specified by § 521(i)(4) required that the case ought not be dismissed. Dismissal was mandatory once it was determined that not all of the documents required by § 521(a)(1) had been filed by the 45-day deadline. 1 Accordingly, I issued an order dismissing the case, but I deferred ruling on when dismissal was to be treated as having occurred, and invited the views of interested parties regarding the issue. The United States Trustee and Cynthia A. Niklas, the standing chapter 13 trustee for this district, filed responses regarding the issue.
II
Section 521(i) addresses the consequences of a failure of an individual debtor to file the papers required by 11 U.S.C. § 521(a)(1) within the 45-day period after the date of his filing of a petition commencing a case under chapter 7 or 13 of the Bankruptcy Code. Specifically, § 521(i)(l) directs that if the 45-day period
The command of § 521(i)(l) does not mean that when § 521(i)(l) is triggered, the case stands automatically dismissed as of the 46th day, for the command is expressly made subject to, and its meaning clarified by, a procedure under § 521(i)(2) which requires that not later than 5 days after a party in interest requests the entry of an order dismissing a case described in § 521(i)(l), the court shall enter “an order dismissing the case,” 2 (not an order, analogous to one under 11 U.S.C. § 362(j), confirming that the case was already dismissed). 3 Moreover, § 521(i)(4) — permitting a trustee to file a motion within the 5-day period of § 521(i)(2) to have the court “decline to dismiss the case” — would be internally inconsistent with § 521(i)(l) if under § 521(i)(l) dismissal already occurred on day 46. 4
“Statutory construction ... is a holistic endeavor.”
United Sav. Ass’n of Tex. v. Timbers of Inwood Forest Assocs., Ltd.,
Because § 521(i)(l) cannot be construed in isolation without considering § 521(i)(2) and (4), the language in § 521(i)(l) that “the case shall be automatically dismissed” is susceptible of being interpreted as meaning that the court has no discretion not to dismiss the case, and the language “effective on the 46th day” simply marks the date on which the court is deprived of such discretion. Dismissal at the point of day 46 of the case is automatically required, with an order of dismissal to be entered under § 521(i)(2) within 5 days of a request being made for dismissal based on § 521(i)(l) having been triggered. If the statute contemplated that the case is to stand automatically dismissed effective upon § 521(i)(l) being triggered on the 46th day, no order of dismissal would be necessary. A case does not stand dismissed unless and until the order of dismissal contemplated by § 521(i)(2) is entered, and the date of entry of the order of dismissal is the date on which the case is dismissed.
Ill
Even when read in isolation from the provisions in the companion paragraphs of § 521 (i) to which it is made subject, the command in § 521(i)(l) that “the case shall be automatically dismissed” can, for additional reasons, reasonably be read as meaning that dismissal is automatic in the sense that no showing of cause is required and the court no longer has discretion to deny dismissal if the debtor failed to satisfy the filing requirements of § 521(a)(1). When the language “shall be automatically dismissed” is thus understood as a directive to the court requiring that the court dismiss the case without any concomitant showing of cause, the following clause “effective on the 46th day after the date of the filing of the petition” is most naturally understood as setting the point in time at which the court becomes subject to that directive, and the debtor is deprived of any right to show cause why the case ought not be dismissed. Thus, the 46th day is not the date on which the dismissal itself is effective, but rather, the date effective as of which the court is divested of the discretion to deny a request for dismissal. Three principal reasons support that reading of the statute.
A.
Wdien a statute, rule, or court order intends that a case is to stand automatically dismissed without the necessity of a court order upon an event occurring, language is used making that clear.
See Swint v. Smith,
In comparison to such clear statutory expressions that a case stands dismissed on a specified date, § 521(i)(l) does not use language that clearly would deem the case actually dismissed on the 46th day after the filing of the petition. Had Congress intended that when § 521(i)(l) is triggered, the case is actually dismissed on the 46th day, the statute could have provided that “the case is dismissed effective on the 46th day.” In other provisions of the Bankruptcy Code, that is how Congress expressed the idea of an event occurring without the necessity of an order of the court. See 11 U.S.C. § 362(h) (“the stay ... is terminated”); 11 U.S.C. § 365(p)(1) (“If a lease of personal property is rejected or not timely assumed by the trustee ..., the leased property is no longer property of the estate and the stay under section 362(a) is automatically terminated.”); 11 U.S.C. § 365(p)(3) (providing in relevant part that “[i]f the lease is rejected, the stay under section 362 and any stay under section 1301 is automatically terminated... .”); 11 U.S.C. § 521(a)(6) (“the stay ... is terminated”); 11 U.S.C. § 551 (“Any transfer avoided under [certain sections] ... is preserved for the benefit of the estate----”). Presumably, Congress intended a different meaning when it used the words “shall be automatically dismissed” in § 521(i)(l).
B.
One other aspect of the language of § 521(i)(l) itself strongly suggests that the phrase “automatically dismissed” must be viewed in the sense of there being no discretion not to dismiss the case upon the specified event occurring, not as meaning that the case stands dismissed upon the specified event occurring. Section 521(i)(l) overrides the requirement of showing that cause for dismissal exists, and this suggests that “automatic dismissal” under § 521(i)(l) is directed to when a court is deprived of discretion not to dismiss the case, not when the court’s order dismissing the case is to be effective.
Ordinarily, dismissal of a case under chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code is governed by 11 U.S.C. § 707(a), which provides that the court “may dismiss a case under this chapter only after notice and a hearing and only for cause” (emphasis added), and § 521(i)(l) (through the clause “notwithstanding section 707(a)”) expressly dispenses with the strictures of § 707(a) and the requirement of a showing of cause. This reinforces the view that § 521(i)(l) deals with depriving the court, after day 45 of the case, of any discretion not to dismiss the case.
Similarly, dismissal of a case under chapter 13 of the Bankruptcy Code (the other type of case to which § 521(i) is applicable) is generally governed by 11 U.S.C. § 1307(c), which requires notice and a hearing, and a showing of cause. When the circumstances specified by § 521(i)(l) exist in a case, § 521(i)(l) must be viewed as a more specific statutory provision than § 1307(c) and as making dismissal mandatory notwithstanding § 1307(c) (even though § 1307(c) is not expressly mentioned in § 521(i)(l)). 6
In a chapter 13 case, “[t]he provisions of a confirmed plan bind the debtor and each creditor....” 11 U.S.C. § 1327(a). If § 521(i)(1) were triggered in the case, but no one sought an order of dismissal under § 521(i)(2) until after a plan was confirmed, the confirmed plan, by reason of § 1327(a), would bar any challenge based on § 521(i)(1) to the rights of the parties under that plan, and the case would be treated as pending despite the phrase “automatically dismissed” contained in § 521(i)(l). In other words, the case would not have stood dismissed on day 46 by virtue of § 521(i)(l), and it would have been necessary for someone to have obtained an order of dismissal under § 521(i)(2) if confirmation of the plan was to be defeated by reason of § 521(i)(l) having been triggered.
D.
Thus, when dismissal is sought pursuant to § 521(i)(2) on the ground that § 521(i)(l) has been triggered, the phrase “automatically dismissed” in § 521(i)(l) only means that the debtor is not permitted to defeat the motion by arguing that the failure timely to file the documents required by § 521(a)(1) constitutes insufficient cause for dismissal. It is in the sense of there being no requirement for a showing of cause, that, as stated by § 521(i)(l) the case “shall be automatically dismissed” when documents required by § 521(a)(1) have not been filed by day 45, and the 46th day is not the date on which the dismissal itself is effective, but rather, the date effective as of which the court is divested of the discretion to deny a request for dismissal.
TV
A court ought not give a Bankruptcy Code provision an interpretation that would produce a result inconsistent with important principles embodied in other provisions of the Bankruptcy Code, or with significant state or federal interests.
See United States v. Ron Pair Enters., Inc.,
A.
Creditors need certainty regarding whether a case has been dismissed, and that certainty cannot be achieved if a case dismissed by reason of § 521(i)(l) stands dismissed as of day 46 of the case instead of as of the date of entry of the order of dismissal. Section 521(i)(2) contemplates that the court must first determine that the debtor failed to comply with § 521(a)(1) before it can treat dismissal as automatically required. Pending the court’s determination whether § 521(i)(l) has been triggered, there can be doubt beforehand whether the case has actually been automatically dismissed. As already noted, the court may decline to dismiss the case when a trustee successfully invokes § 521(i)(4), and there can also be uncertainty whether the debtor failed to comply with § 521(a)(1):
• If dismissal is sought because the mov-ant contends that payment advices were not filed as required by § 521(a)(l)(B)(iv), the debtor might respond that he received no payments from an employer within the 60 days before the date of the filing of the petition, thereby giving rise to a factual dispute.
• Factual and legal issues may exist with respect to whether the debtor’s debts were principally consumer debts such that he was required to file a Form 22. See In re Reavis,2007 WL 2219519 (Bankr.N.D.Okla. Jul.30, 2007); In re Adibi,2007 WL 1556838 (Bankr.S.D.Tex. May 24, 2007). 7
Creditors ought not be viewed as clairvoyant regarding how a court might rule on such questions. It would be absurd if the case would stand as already dismissed pri- or to the court’s determining such issues.
B.
Adding to the absurdity of subjecting creditors to such uncertainty, there can be substantial delay before the court adjudicates that § 521(i)(l) was triggered and that the case must be dismissed. A request under § 521(i)(2) for dismissal of the case may be filed months after the 46-day mark of § 521(i)(l).
See, e.g., In re Calhoun,
c.
The commencement of a bankruptcy case places a temporary halt (through the automatic stay of 11 U.S.C. § 362(a)) on collection activity and stays the race of diligence in which creditors often engage in order to prevail in collection efforts visa-vis other creditors, thereby assuring equality of treatment of creditors.
See Checkers Drive-In Rests., Inc. v. Comm’r of Patents and Trademarks,
D.
Furthermore, making the dismissal effective on day 46 of the case would be inconsistent with longstanding bankruptcy practice that even when it is plain that dismissal of a case is required, the automatic stay is not lifted under 11 U.S.C. § 362(c)(2)(B) unless and until the court enters an order dismissing the case.
See Fish Mkt. Nominee Corp. v. Pelofsky,
E.
By reason of the delay that can arise before a case is dismissed pursuant to § 521(i)(2), a holding that such a dismissal is retroactive to day 46 will in some instances frustrate the protections that Congress intended to accord creditors via 11 U.S.C. §§ 362(c)(3) and 362(c)(4), provisions enacted by the same statute as enacted § 521 (i). Those provisions limit the availability of the automatic stay of 11 U.S.C. § 362(a) in any case of an individual debtor under chapter 7, 11, or 13, if a case of the debtor was “pending within the preceding 1-year period but was dismissed” (§ 362(c)(3)) or two or more cases of the debtor were “pending within the previous year but were dismissed” (§ 362(c)(4)). If an order of dismissal of a case is entered under § 521(i)(2) a year after the specified day 46, but the dismissal were treated as effective retroactively to that 46th day, that would result in the case not counting for purposes of §§ 362(c)(3) and 362(c)(4) as a case that was pending within the prior one-year period. In other words, making the dismissal retroactive to day 46 after the petition filing date would rob creditors of part (or, in our example, all) of the one-year period within which a new case would trigger the protections of §§ 362(c)(3) or 362(c)(4), as the case may be. Section 521(i)(l) ought not be interpreted in a manner that eviscerates the protections intended to be accorded creditors by §§ 362(c)(3) and 362(c)(4).
F.
During the period between the 46-day mark of § 521(i)(l) and the date on which an order is entered under § 521(i)(2) dismissing the case, uncertainty will exist regarding the trustee’s authority to retain
G.
Various orders may have been entered in the case after day 45 of the case and before the entry of an order of dismissal under § 521(i)(2). If the case is treated as having been dismissed effective as of the 46-day mark of § 521(i)(l), those actions may be rendered improper. As explained in
In re Adibi,
the statute [would] present[ ] dangerous ambiguities and substantial peril for debtors, for creditors, for bankruptcy trustees, and for entities who dealt with the trustees (such as purchasers of es-fate assets). If ... the Court [does] not determine (early on) whether [§ 521(i)(l) was triggered], then all proceedings in the case after the 45th day [would be] subject to challenge. If ... no one raised the question until several years into the administration of the case, and if the Court determined years later [that § 521(i)(l) was triggered] and therefore the case had been dismissed automatically by the statute several years earlier [effective on day 46], the jurisdiction of the court and all acts of administration of the estate after the 45th day would be in question.
Accordingly, if a chapter 7 trustee sold property of the estate after the 45th day, in the mistaken belief that the debtor had fully complied in a timely manner with § 521(a)(1), the sale order, entered after the case stood dismissed, would be void if dismissal under § 521(i)(2) is retroactive to day 46, and the void character of the sale might not be discovered until months later. In the meantime, the purchaser may have incurred substantial expenses relating to the property, and, in any event, would incur substantial expenses addressing the effect on his purchase of the case having stood dismissed effective on day 46 after the filing of the petition. 10 Such uncertainty and added expense regarding the effectiveness of a trustee’s sale of property would only lead to a decrease in the prices parties are willing to pay trustees for estate property. 11 Congress did not likely intend to wreak such havoc.
Treating the case as dismissed as of the 46-day mark of § 521(i)(l), notwithstanding that the order of dismissal under § 521(i)(2) was only entered many weeks later, would in some circumstances frustrate the intended legislative purpose of 26 U.S.C. § 6503(h), a provision that Congress plainly intended to work in a coordinated fashion with the Bankruptcy Code. Under that provision, Congress intended that the Secretary of the Treasury have at least 60 days after the automatic stay of 11 U.S.C. § 362(a) terminates under 11 U.S.C. § 362(c)(2)(B) within which to make an assessment of taxes that was not time-barred on the date of the commencement of the case. If a case described in § 521(i)(l) is treated as standing dismissed at the 46-day mark even though the order of dismissal is not entered until more than 60 days after the passage of the 46-day mark, in such cases, the Secretary would be without notice of dismissal until after the window for pursuing the assessment had closed. This is contrary to the Congressional intent to permit the Secretary 60 days within which to assess the tax, and demonstrates how an interpretation of the statute that would render all § 521(i)(2) orders effective as of day 46 is not only in tension with the Bankruptcy Code, but is at direct odds with Congressional intent as expressed in statutes intended to work in harmony with the Bankruptcy Code.
V
In re Fawson,
Automatic means “acting or operating in a manner essentially independent of external influence or control.” Section 521(i)(l) does not contemplate any independent action by the Court or any other party — the case is merely dismissed by operation of the statute itself. There is no ambiguity.
Id. at 510 (footnote omitted). However, as already demonstrated, the phrase “shall be automatically dismissed” is ambiguous because susceptible to the different meaning ascribed to it by this court. Moreover, Fawson fails to address the points upon which this court relies in favor of treating the case as not standing dismissed on day 46 whenever § 521(i)(l) is triggered, but only once an order of dismissal is entered. 12
Decisions of some other courts appear to have made holdings in agreement with the
Fawson
view of the statute,
13
or to have
VI
In determining when a dismissal under § 521(i)(l) should be made effective, it is unnecessary to resolve an issue upon which the courts are split regarding whether, when a debtor invokes § 521(i)(l) in bad faith in an attempt to escape unfavorable consequences of the bankruptcy case, the automatic dismissal requirement of § 521(i)(l) can be avoided by retroactively ordering that the documents required by § 521(a)(1)(B) need not be filed. Section 521(a)(1)(B) imposes its filing requirements “unless the court orders otherwise.” Some courts have held that if the case does not already stand dismissed after § 521(i)(l) was triggered, and is, instead, not dismissed until an order is entered dismissing the case, a court has authority to invoke § 521(a)(1)(B) .to prevent § 521(i)(1) from being successfully invoked by a debtor to escape adverse developments in her case.
See In re Parker,
But if, under the other possible interpretation of § 521(i)(l), the case has already been dismissed on day 46 by virtue of § 521(i)(l) having been triggered, there would be no question that the court is precluded from retroactively excusing the non-filing, and the debtor would succeed in escaping the throes of the bankruptcy case.
See Warren v. Wirum,
But all of the foregoing discussion of the In re Parker and Warren v. Wirum competing line of cases is academic. Even if § 521(i)(1), once triggered, deprives the court of discretion to prevent dismissal (by retroactively excusing non-filing of documents) in a case in which the debtor in bad faith invokes § 521(i)(1) to attempt to avoid adverse developments in the case, that still would not answer the question regarding when a dismissal on § 521(i)(1) grounds should be treated as occurring.
VII
The responses filed regarding the issue either support my conclusion or fail to persuade me to a contrary conclusion. In her response, Cynthia A. Niklas, the standing chapter 13 trustee for this district, urges that dismissal under § 521(i) should not be made retroactive to the 46th day, stating:
A retroactive dismissal would ... potentially create absurd results and have far ranging un[in]tended consequences. Retroactive Court Orders would bring into question the validity and the enforceability of Court orders and with it, the credibility of the Court. Retroactive Court Orders might also shorten or eliminate the requisite 180-day dismissal period with prejudice to the benefit of the debtor and to the detriment of creditors. Retroactive Court Orders would also create havoc in Chapter 13 plan distributions to creditors made pursuant to a confirmed plan, to the prejudice of creditors and with a financial windfall for debtors.
Response of Cynthia A. Niklas at ¶ 5.
17
This mirrors the observation in
In re Parker,
The statute ... was primarily designed to prevent abuse of the bankruptcy system so that parties were not allowed to receive the benefits of bankruptcy without performing the requisite duties. However, interpreting “automatic dismissal” to mean that a case ceases to be pending by the mere passage of time without a court order of dismissal does not further the purposes of the statute and may cause chaos and confusion since there is no readily ascertainable way to determine whether or not a case has been dismissed.
The United States Trustee “submits that making the 521(i) dismissal effective as of the 46th day is the appropriate remedy in this case and that to the extent anomalies may arise in other or future cases, the court retains sufficient authority to address those situations on a case-by-case basis.” Response of U.S. Trustee at 3. The United States Trustee elaborates that:
dismissal should be made effective as of day 46, unless there is some overriding issue which the court can address at that time. As identified in Parker, there are tools and judicial doctrines available for the courts to prevent abuse and protect the integrity of the judicial system. In this particular case, the United States Trustee is unaware of any circumstance which should prevent a straightforward application of the statute.
Response of U.S. Trustee at 4. However, if, as the United States Trustee concedes by citing
Parker,
a court retains the power under § 521(a)(1)(B) to prevent § 521(i) from being effective even once it appears to have been triggered on the specified day 46 by reason of the debtor’s failing to file one of the required documents, then parties in interest cannot know whether the case has been dismissed under § 521(i) until the court issues an order of dismissal. Congress could not have intended such uncertainty. Moreover, as demonstrated by the discussion in part IV of this decision, the untoward consequences of making the dismissal retroactive to day 46 after the petition filing date will not always be immediately known. The untoward consequences of a retroactive dismissal (what the United States Trustee calls anomalies arising from such a dismissal) are not reflected solely in the bankruptcy case docket. It is far preferable to adopt an interpretation of the statute which acts prophylactically to prevent any such anom
VIII
An order follows deeming the dismissal to have occurred as of the date on which the court entered its order of dismissal.
Notes
. I need not address whether the court, on its own initiative under 11 U.S.C. § 105(a), may direct the parties to show cause why the case ought not be dismissed by reason of § 521(i)(l).
Compare Finney v. Smith (In re Finney),
. As stated in
In re Parker,
. Both § 362(j) and § 521(i) were added to the Bankruptcy Code by the same statute, thus reinforcing the conclusion that Congress did not intend that the § 521 (i)(2) order of dismissal would merely confirm that the case was already dismissed.
. A party's right under § 521(i)(2) to obtain an order dismissing the case is expressly made subject to § 521(i)(4). In turn, § 521(i)(4) provides that notwithstanding § 521 (i)(l), in certain circumstances the court may decline to dismiss the case "on the motion of the trustee filed before the expiration of the applicable period of time specified in paragraph (1), (2), or (3)____” (Emphasis added.) The 5-day time period specified in § 521(i)(2) for the court to enter an order dismissing the case is thus a window of opportunity for a trustee to file a timely motion under § 521 (i)(4). If the case already stood dismissed as of the 46th day, and a request for entry of an order of dismissal under § 521(i)(2) is then filed, the trustee’s purported right under § 521 (i)(4) to file a motion requesting that the court decline to dismiss the case during the period set forth in § 521(i)(2) would be rendered meaningless.
See CFCU Community Credit Union v. Swimelar,
.To illustrate its point, the Court in
King,
Words are not pebbles in alien juxtaposition; they have only a communal existence; and not only does the meaning of each interpenetrate the other, but all in their aggregate take their purport from the setting in which they are used....
A court "should adopt that sense of words which best harmonizes with context and promotes [the] policy and objectives of [the] legislature.”
King,
. Although 11 U.S.C. § 1307(c)(9) provides that only the United States Trustee may re
. There will be other cases in which it will be a close call whether § 521(i)(1) applies, and in which the applicability of § 521(i)(1) might escape early detection. For example, a debt- or with no priority debts might neglect to check the "None” box on Schedule E ("Creditors Holding Unsecured Priority Claims”), and thus have arguably failed to comply with the requirement of filing by day 45 a schedule of such liabilities. Section 521(i)(2) has not abrogated the requirement of the filing of a motion under Fed. R. Bankr.P. 9013 and service of the motion on the trustee and the debtor under this court’s Local Bankr.R. 9013-1 when an order of dismissal is sought under § 521(i)(2).
See In re Wojda,
. The facts of the instant case similarly illustrate the delay that may occur before an order is entered under § 521(i)(2) dismissing a case based on § 521(i)(l). The 46th day after the filing of the debtor's petition fell on October 24, 2006. The United States Trustee's motion to dismiss based on § 521(i)(l) was filed on November 28, 2006, thirty-five days later. The United States Trustee did not file a separate request to the clerk to present the motion to dismiss to the court for adjudication within five days after the filing of the motion as contemplated by § 521(i)(2). As a result, the motion was not given expedited treatment, and the court's order of dismissal was entered on December 26, 2006, sixty-three days after the 46th day after the filing of the debtor's petition.
. Even with close monitoring, there would be many cases in which the issue of whether § 521(i)(l) was triggered would not be spotted until late in the case. In any event, Congress did not direct the courts to devote resources to monitoring whether a debtor has complied with § 521(i)(1), and § 521 (i)(2) implies that the issue is generally to be addressed via an interested party filing a motion for entry of an order dismissing the case. This court's interpretation of the statute avoids the necessity to adopt an elaborate procedure such as the one adopted in
In re Beacher,
. There is great doubt that the purchaser could obtain an order under § 349(b)(3) directing, retroactively, that the dismissal at the specified day 46 did not re-vest the property in the debtor, and that the purchaser could obtain an order upholding the validity of the sale order (even though issued in an already dismissed case). Even if such orders could be obtained, the pursuit of entry of such orders would entail attorney fees and other expenses.
. This would also be contrary to the policy of assuring the security of titles to real property.
See BFP v. Resolution Trust Corp.,
. The same court that decided
Fawson
later supported its interpretation of § 521(i)(l) by reasoning in
In re Wilkinson,
.
See Warren v. Wirum,
.
See In re Brickey,
. A court has no such express power to direct that the debtor is not required to file the list of creditors required by § 521(a)(1)(A), but as a practical matter a case in which the debtor does not file a list of creditors is dismissed well before day 46 after the petition filing date. The clerk cannot give notice of the commencement of the case and of the meeting of creditors without the list of creditors. Notice of the meeting of creditors generally must be mailed out no later than the 20-day mark of the case in chapter 7 and the 30-day mark of the case in chapter 13. See Fed. R. Bankr.P.2002(a)(l) (minimum number of days of notice required); see also Fed. R. Bankr.P.2003(a) (latest date for holding meeting of creditors). Accordingly, the court addresses a debtor's failure to file a list of creditors well prior to the 46-day mark of the case.
. Even assuming that In re Parker and similar decisions were properly decided, the holding of those decisions should be limited to cases of abuse. When a dismissal would not result in an abuse of the system, a denial of dismissal, once § 521(i)(l) has been triggered, properly should be confined to § 521(i)(4) which is limited to a case in which the debtor in good faith attempted to file required payment advices. In other words, it does not appear that Congress intended that a court would excuse non-filing, once § 521(i)(l) is triggered on day 46, when the debtor is the party requesting after day 45 to be excused from filing documents required by § 521(a)(1). Granting a debtor’s request to be relieved of filing requirements under § 521(a)(1) after § 521(i)(l) has been triggered would be inconsistent with this court's interpretation of § 521 (i)(l), once that provision is triggered, as requiring no showing of cause to warrant dismissal of the case.
. In her response, the chapter 13 trustee urges that the court direct that payment advices be submitted to the case trustee and not filed with the court (because the existence vel non of payment advices prevents certainty in administering the requirements of § 521(i)), and that the court itself dismiss a case on the 46th day when schedules and the statement of financial affairs have not all been filed by the 45th day. Even if the court were to attempt to monitor cases for § 521(i) compliance, there would be the occasional non-compliant case that would escape detection at the 46th day.
