AMENDED MEMORANDUM OF DECISION
This Chapter 13 case is before the court on competing requests by the trustee and the debtor. The trustee seeks to convert the case to one under Chapter 7, asserting that the debtor has acted in bad faith by failing to disclose information about one of her assets. In response, the debtor seeks to have the case dismissed, relying on § 1307(b) of the Bankruptcy Code (Title 11, U.S.C.). The dispositive issue is whether bad faith is an exception tо the right of dismissal under § 1307(b). Although the reported decisions take different positions on the question, the better view is that, excepting only cases converted from another chapter, the right of dismissal under § 1307(b) is not limited. Accordingly, the debtor’s request to dismiss will be granted.
Jurisdiction
Under 28 U.S.C. § 1334(a), the federal district courts have “original and exclusive jurisdiction” of all cases under the Bankruptcy Code, but 28 U.S.C. § 157(a) allows the district courts to refer these cases to the bаnkruptcy judges for their districts. The District Court for the Northern District of Illinois has made such a reference of its bankruptcy cases. N.D. Ill. Internal Operating Procedure 15(a). Under this reference, a bankruptcy judge has jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(1) to “hear and determine ... all core proceedings arising under title 11, or arising in a case under title 11.” Proceedings regarding the dismissal or conversion of a Chapter 13 case are core proceеdings. 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(A).
Factual Background
Jacqueline Williams filed a petition for relief under Chapter 13 of the Bankruptcy
At the trustee’s request, Williams filed an amended Schedule B on which she listed the malpractice claim- — but assessed its value at zero. (Docket No. 20.) According to the trustee, Williams has refused to provide any other information about the lawsuit, such as its status, her chances of prevailing, or the likelihood of settlement. As a result, the trustee says that she has been unable to make her own valuation of Williams’ mаlpractice claim or determine whether it might allow unsecured creditors to recover more than the ten percent distribution proposed by Williams’ Chapter 13 plan.
In May, the trustee filed a motion under § 1307(c) of the Bankruptcy Code, a provision that allows either dismissal or conversion of a Chapter 13 case. The trustee based the motion in part on Williams’ failure to produce information about the malpraсtice claim. At a hearing on the motion, the trustee stated that the case should be converted to Chapter 7 rather than dismissed, since a trustee under that chapter could investigate and prosecute the malpractice claim for the benefit of Williams’ creditors. In response, Williams’ counsel requested that the trustee’s motion be resolved by dismissal, citing § 1307(b). 1 The parties were afforded an opportunity to brief the quеstion whether a debtor may obtain dismissal of a case under § 1307(b) despite a pending § 1307(c) motion alleging that the debtor has acted in bad faith.
Conclusions of Law
The legal question raised here— the extent of a debtor’s right to dismissal of a Chapter 13 ease under § 1307(b) — has divided the courts. At its core, however, the question is a straightforward one of statutory construction, which can be resolved in three steps. First, the language of § 1307(b) gives debtors in unconverted Chaрter 13 cases an unqualified right to dismissal. Second, a court may not modify a statute simply because the court believes a different version would implement good policy; any limitation on § 1307(b) would have to come from another statutory provision. And third, no statutory provision applicable here limits the right to dismissal under § 1307(b).
1. The meaning of § 1807(b).
When courts are charged with interpreting statutory language, the starting point is the ordinary meaning of that language. “The рlain meaning of legislation should be conclusive, except in the ‘rare cases [in which] the literal application of a statute will produce a result demonstrably at odds with the intentions of its drafters.’ ”
United States v. Ron Pair Enters., Inc.,
On request of the debtor at any time, if the case has not been converted under section 706, 1112, or 1208 of this title, the court shall dismiss a case under this chapter. Any waiver of the right to dismiss under this subsection is unenforceable.
11 U.S.C. § 1307(b). Given this direction, courts generally agree that § 1307(b) itself accords no discretion to deny a debtor’s request to dismiss an unconverted Chapter 13 case.
See, e.g., Barbieri v. RAJ Acquisition Corp. (In re Barbieri),
Furthermore, if the meaning of § 1307(b) were not clear, it would be appropriate to consider the statute’s legislative history to resolve any ambiguity.
See C.I.R. v. Tufts,
Consistent with the language and legislative history of § 1307(b), most reported decisions have held that Chapter 13 debtors have an absolute right to dismissal of an unconverted case. 3
Despite § 1307(b)’s language, however, a significant number of decisions hold that the right to dismissal is lost if the dеbtor acted in bad faith.
4
Nearly all of them express the concern that applying § 1307(b) according to its terms would give Chapter 13 debtors the opportunity to engage in bad faith with impunity.
See, e.g., Molitor,
This policy concern is questionable. Applying § 1307(b) according to its terms does not grant Chapter 13 debtors immunity for misconduct — bad faith conduct is subject to a range of judicial sanctions after dismissal,
see Polly,
Taylor v. Freeland & Kronz,
The principle that courts lack the power to amend the Bankruptcy Code on their own accord reflects a reasonable caution, recognizing that Code provisions implement Congressional policies that courts must enforce. The effect of § 1307(b) is to support the longstanding voluntary nature of Chapter 13.
See Barbieri,
Of course, if Congress enacts a statutory provision with limitations, the courts must enforce them. The Supreme Court’s decision in
Marrama v. Citizens Bank of Massachusetts,
The eligibility limitation in § 706(d) was central to
Marrama’s
reasoning. The Court first noted that § 706(d) “expressly conditioned [the debtor’s] right to convert on his ability to qualify as a ‘debtor’ under Chapter 13.”
Id.
at 372,
In practical effect, a ruling that an individual’s Chapter 13 case should be dismissed or converted to Chapter 7 because of prepetition bad-faith conduct, including fraudulent acts committed in an earlier Chapter 7 proceeding, is tantamount to a ruling that the individual does not qualify as a debtor under Chapter 13.
Id.
at 373-74,
Without а separate statutory provision limiting § 1307(b) in the same way that § 706(d) limits § 706(a), the right that § 1307(b) accords debtors to obtain dismissal of unconverted cases cannot be limited.
3. The absence of statutory limits on § 1307(b).
Section 1307(b) is not subject to an eligibility limitation like the one in § 706(d). The decisions finding a bad-faith exception to § 1307(b) cite instead two other potential sources for a statutory limitation, § 1307(c) and § 105(a). 8 Neither, however, is applicable.
A.
The effect of § 1307(c).
Section 1307(c) states in part that on the request of a “party in interest,” “the court may сonvert a case under this chapter to a case under chapter 7 of this title, or may dismiss a case under this chapter, whichever is in the best interests of creditors and the estate, for cause.” The subsection goes on to provide a non-exclusive list of factors that may establish cause. Bad faith by debtors is not among these factors, but, as
Marrama
noted, courts have agreed that bad faith may serve as a cause for relief under § 1307(c).
The application of this rule to the conflict between § 1307(b) and § 1307(c) is clear. Section 1307(c) applies generally— to all motions seeking to convert or dismiss a Chapter 13 case filed by any “party in interest,” including all Chapter 13 debtors.
10
Subsection 1307(b), on the other hand, applies specifically — to requests to dismiss filed by debtors whose cases have not been converted. Thus, when a debtor requests dismissal of an unconverted Chapter 13 case, § 1307(b) is the governing provision. Indeed, courts agree almost unanimously that if a debtor requests dismissal under § 1307(b) in response to a § 1307(c) motion seeking conversion for any cause other than bad faith, § 1307(b) governs and the debtor’s request to dismiss must be granted.
See, e.g., Dulaney,
When the cause is bad faith, however, several decisions hold that § 1307(c) trumps § 1307(b). These decisions refer to the purpose of bankruptcy relief — “to afford thе honest but unfortunate debtor a fresh start, not to shield those who abuse the bankruptcy process in order to avoid paying their debts,”
Molitor,
No rule of statutory construction supports this result. Nothing in the text of § 1307(c) provides a bad faith exception to a debtor’s right to dismiss under § 1307(b) — bad faith is not even listed as a сause for § 1307(c) relief — and the language of the two provisions offers no reason to apply the general provisions of § 1307(c) over the specific right to dismissal of § 1307(b). Declining to find a bad-faith exception in § 1307(b) does not nullify § 1307(c) but merely allows § 1307(b) to govern the limited matters within the scope of its specific coverage.
B.
The effect of § 105(a).
Section 105(a), the other provision cited in support of the bad-faith exception to
Although the
Marrama
decision is sometimes cited as support for using § 105(a) to create a bad-faith exception to § 1307(b),
13
the decision actually is consistent with implementing, rather than overriding, provisions of the Code. In
Marrama,
the Supreme Court said that § 105(a) was “adequate to authorize an immediate denial of a motion to convert filed under § 706
in lieu of a conversion order that merely postpones the allowance of equivalent reliеf.”
Conclusion
Because the language of § 1307(b) accords debtors an unlimited right to dismissal of unconverted Chapter 13 cases, and because that right is not limited by judicial discretion or other provisions of the Bankruptcy Code, Williams’ request to dismiss her Chapter 13 case must be granted in response to trustee’s motion.
Notes
. Because dismissal was an allowеd result under the trustee's motion, the trustee’s motion served to bring the issue of dismissal formally before the court, and so there was no need for the debtor to file a separate written motion requesting dismissal, as would normally be required by Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure 1017(f)(2) and 9013.
. As noted in
Polly,
there are only a handful of decisions holding that courts do have discretion to deny a § 1307(b) request. The outliers contrast the requirement under § 1307(b) that a debtor “request" dismissal with the lack of any such requirement for conversion.
See Polly,
.
See Barbieri,
.
See Jacobsen v. Moser (In re Jacobsen),
. Indeed, if courts could fashion remedies for bad faith that contradict provisions of the Bankruptcy Code, there is little limit to the Congressional policies that could be undone. For example, a court that found that a debtor had understated income in bad faith might issue an order to continue the Chapter 13 case involuntarily, denying any request from the debtor for dismissal under § 1307(b). This result would require the debtor to pay the correct amount of income to creditors, but it would eviscerate the exclusively voluntary nature of Chapter 13.
. Section 706(a) provides: "The debtor may convert a case under this chapter to a case under [another chapter of the Code] at any time, if the case has not been [previously been] converted.... Any waiver of the right to convert a case under this subsection is unenforceable.”
. The Cоurt concluded its analysis by holding that the provision of § 706(a) rendering waivers of the right to convert ineffective did not contradict the holding that bad faith rendered Chapter 7 debtors ineligible for Chapter 13, since "[njothing in the text of either § 706 or § 1307(c) (or the legislative history of either provision) limits the authority of the court to take appropriate action in response to fraudulent conduct by the atypical litigant
who has demonstratеd that he is not entitled to the relief available to the typical debtor.” Id.
at 374-75,
. Another potential basis for limiting § 1307(b) is the requirement of § 1307(e) that a court "shall'' convert or dismiss any Chapter 13 case in which the debtor does not timely file required income tax information. The trustee, however, has not argued for relief under § 1307(e).
.As the Second Circuit explained in Barbieri, the conflict makes it impossible to give effect to both of the subsections:
It is true that if a court grants a debtor's motion to dismiss under § 1307(b), the court will be deprived of the option, afforded by § 1307(c), of converting the case for cause. But that is no more significant than the fact that an order granting a creditor's motion to convert under § 1307(c) would foreclose dismissal under § 1307(b). "In the event of competing motions filed under subsections (b) and (c), one subsection will inevitably prevail at the expense of [the other].” Patton,209 B.R. at 100 . Accordingly, the assertion that an absolute right under § 1307(b) would nullify § 1307(c) "carries no weight since either party could make the same argument.” Id. at 104.
. A debtor, of course, is a “party in interest.”
See Adair v. Sherman,
. Only one decision appears to hold that a § 1307(c) mоtion to convert acts as a limitation on a debtor’s right to dismiss, no matter what ground for conversion is asserted.
See Tatsis,
. The Second Circuit recently enforced the same limitation on the use of § 105(a):
fT]he equitable power conferred on a bankruptcy court by 11 U.S.C. § 105 is the power to exercise equity in carrying out the provisions of the Bankruptcy Code, rather than to further the purposes of the Code generally, or otherwise to do the right thing. This limitation suggests that an exercise of section 105 power be tied to another Bankruptcy Code section and not merely to a general bankruptcy concept or objective.
Solow v. Kalikow (In
re
Kalikow),
.
See Jacobsen,
