Plaintiff-Appellant Highlands Insurance Company (“Highlands”) appeals the district court’s affirmance of a bankruptcy court’s decision to disallow Highlands’s amendment to its proof of claim. Finding no reversible error, we аffirm.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On December 19, 1989, the Defendant-Appellee Alliance Operating Corporation
10. This claim is a general unsecured claim, except to the extent that the security interest, if any, described in paragraph 9 is sufficient to satisfy the claim. [If priority is claimed, state the amount and basis thereof.]
Highlands did not respond to this request.
On October 17, 1990, the Bankruptcy Court set the deadline for filing proof of claims as December 3, 1990. On April 6, 1992, Highlands executed a creditor ballot for accepting or rejecting Alliance’s plan of reorganization and stated on its ballot accepting the plan that it was the holder of an unsecured claim of $157,008. On June 25, 1992, the Bankruptcy Court signed the order confirming Alliance’s plan of reorganization. On August 18, 1992, thе Bankruptcy Court issued an order extending the bar date for filing administrative expenses claims to September 9, 1992.
On April 21,1993, Highlands filed an application for recognition and payment of its priority claim for workmen’s сompensation premiums (“amendment to proof of claim”). On September 3, 1993, Highlands filed an addendum to its proof of claim, setting forth an administrative expense claim of $28,678 for post-petition insurance coverage afforded Alliance, a priority claim of $97,505, and a general unsecured claim of $71,595. On May 10,1994, the Bankruptcy Court denied Highlands’s application. On September 6, 1994, the United States District Court affirmed the decisiоn.
LAW AND ARGUMENT
Highlands contends that the district court erred in disallowing the amendment to the proof of claim after concluding that the amendment was a new claim and not an amendment to the original timely filed claim. Amendments to proofs of claim are freely allowed where the purpose is “to cure a defect in the claim as originally filed, to describe the claim with greater particularity or to plead a new theory of recovery on the facts set forth in the original claim.”
In re Kolstad,
Highlands first argues that the Bankruptcy Court and the District Court in the instant case contravened the liberal rules of the Fifth Circuit in allowing amendments to timely filed claims. Pоinting to the general principle enunciated in
Pepper v. Litton,
Bar dates, however, are not to be vitiated by amendments, and the courts must ensure that the amendments do not introduce wholly new grounds of liability.
In re Kolstad,
[T]he nature of a priority claim is much different from that of a general unsecured claim. Reclassifying the claim as a priority claim impacts the Debtor’s Plan and the distributions to be paid to the other creditors under the Plan. This situation is therefore different from those in which amendments have been permitted to increase the amount of a claim when post-bar date events have resulted in a larger, but otherwise unchanged debt.
The Fund does not suggest that any post-bar-date еvent occurred which necessitated the reclassification of the Claim, as opposed to the amount of the Claim. If the Claim deserved priority, it deserved it at the time that the Fund filed its first proof of claim. Thе Fund should not therefore be permitted, at this late date, to assert what is essentially a new claim seeking priority treatment.
A priority claim is a claim completely different from that asserted by the Fund in its timely proоfs of claim. The Fund’s desire to reclassify its Claim is therefore an attempt to assert an untimely new claim.
In re Metro Transportation Co.,
The cases that Highlands cites, on the other hand, do not involve instances in which the amendment attempts to change the nature of the claim from an unsecured status to a priority status; hence, a new claim was not attempted.
In re Kolstad,
Highlands attacks the reasoning of
In re Metro Transportation Co.
and argues that the purpose of the bar dates is to fix the creditors who are аllowed to participate in the claims adjudication process, which inevitably produces changes in the distribution of the assets as claims are properly assessed and determined. Highlands then argues thаt increasing the amount of the claim after the bar date, which was allowed by
In re Kolstad,
Highlands next contends that one of the principles behind the court’s decision
In re Kolstad
is foreseeability, and that the court in that case allowed the amendment, which increased the amount of the сlaim, because such an amendment was foreseeable.
In re Kolstad,
Highlands then argues that amended claims have been allowed when they arise out of the same conduct, occurrence, or transaction as the original сlaim.
In re International Horizons, Inc.,
Finally, Highlands argues that the debtor’s plan provided for flexibility. But Highlands
In this instance, Highlands both presented its claim for workmen’s compensation insurance premiums as an unsecured claim and voted for the reorganization plan on a ballot which treated its claim as unsecured. Highlands sought to amend its claim after expiration of the deadline for filing proof of claims and the deadline of the bar date for fifing administrative expenses. Under such circumstances, Highlands wifi not be heard to complain that the Bankruptcy Court Judge erred in disallowing it to treat its claim as a secured claim through the use of the late filed, purported amеndment.
CONCLUSION
Accordingly, the district court’s affirmance of the bankruptcy court’s decision to not allow an amendment is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Highlands also argues that the Code requires priority claims that do not accept the plan tо be paid in full. However, the provision that Highlands points to for this proposition, 11 U.S.C. § 1129, governs the treatment of priority claims, not the classification of claims for priority payment. Highlands also cites
United States v. Cardinal Mine Supply, Inc.,
The district court also held that the confirmation of the plan operated as res judicata on the claims. But because we have held that Highlands cannot file its amendment in this case because it is presenting a new claim, we need not address this issue on appeal.
