Pence’s Garden and Gift Center and Village Pottery in Montpelier, Indiana is at the center of this dispute. Until her September 1987 voluntary chapter 13 bankruptcy petition, Phyllis Pence operated this business as a sole proprietorship.
Every bankruptcy case needs a creditor, and in this case, the creditor is Pacesetter Bank. In 1976, Mrs. Pence, along with her now-deceased husband, had borrowed $45,-000 and $18,512 in separate transactions with Pacesetter Bank. To secure these debts, Pacesetter Bank had received first and second mortgages on the Pences’ business and residential properties, as well as a pledge of all of the Pences’ business inventory, equipment, accounts, and general intangibles. Another bank also has an interest in the debtor’s real property, but this interest is not relevant to our disposition of the case.
Shortly after she filed her chapter 13 petition, Mrs. Pence also filed her proposed reorganization plan. As to Pacesetter’s claim, Mrs. Pence proposed that it receive the “greenhouse property” — the real and personal property that constituted Mrs. Pence’s business. At the time, Pacesetter was owed $47,000, and an appraiser had set the value of the greenhouse property at $58,500. In exchange, the plan provided for Pacesetter to release its mortgage on the debtor’s residence. Pacesetter never objected to this treatment, and the bankruptcy court confirmed the plan. Subsequently, it became clear that the green *1109 house property was probably worth substantially less than $58,500; a prospective buyer had been willing to pay only $30,000 for the property.
Pacesetter now wants to escape the effects of the chapter 13 plan and has moved for a lifting of the automatic stay and revocation of the confirmation order. Normally, a litigant may accomplish revocation of a confirmation order only through bringing an adversary proceeding in the bankruptcy court,
see
BankR.Rule 7001, but Mrs. Pence expressly waived any objection that she might have to this procedure. There would not be much more to say about this issue were it not for
In re Perkins,
In this case, Pacesetter did not prevail either before the district or bankruptcy courts and now appeals to this court for relief. The bank’s threshold complaint is that it never received written notice of the confirmation hearing, but the bankruptcy court found this claim not supported by the evidence. We will not disturb this factual finding absent clear error,
In re Harasymiw,
Pacesetter next argues that ignoring the bankruptcy proceedings and realizing on its collateral is exactly what it is entitled to do under a long line of cases beginning with
Long v. Bullard,
*1110
Therefore, unless the bankruptcy proceeding avoided it, Pacesetter’s lien on Mrs. Pence’s residence should remain intact. In this case, the chapter 13 plan purported to avoid Pacesetter’s lien on Mrs. Pence’s residence in exchange for other property, but Pacesetter refers us to cases where courts have refused to allow a reorganization plan to alter the rights of a lienholder.
See, e.g., In re Thomas,
In effect, Pacesetter is now trying to challenge the valuation given to its collateral in Mrs. Pence’s chapter 13 plan. To cancel a $47,000 debt, the proposed plan gave Pacesetter property an appraiser had valued at $58,500, and Mrs. Pence had no obligation to make an issue out of the valuation of Pacesetter’s collateral before proposing her plan.
See In re Calvert,
As its final argument, Pacesetter urges us to revoke confirmation of the plan on the grounds it was fraudulently obtained. While this would be grounds for revocation of the plan,
see
11 U.S.C. § 1330(a), we have held that it requires a showing of fraudulent intent.
In re Longardner & Assocs., Inc.,
Asserting that Pacesetter’s appeal was frivolous, Mrs. Pence has moved for an award of attorneys' fees under Fed.R. App.P. 38. Specifically, Mrs. Pence argues that our decision in Longardner is disposi-tive of this case, and Pacesetter should have never brought this appeal. While Longardner certainly supports Mrs. Pence’s position, its facts and holding do not control the outcome of this case. We see no merit in Pacesetter’s appeal, but we also do not believe that it was frivolous. Mrs. Pence’s motion for attorneys’ fees is denied, but she is entitled to recover costs as the prevailing party in the appeal. The district court’s judgment affirming the bankruptcy court is itself
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. A. Lincoln, Speech on the Dred Scott Decision at Springfield, Illinois (June 26, 1857), reprinted in Abraham Lincoln-Speeches and Writings (1832— 1858), at 390, 393 (D. Fehrenbacher ed. 1989).
