OPINION
I
The bankruptcy court held that a guaranty executed postpetition was invalid under Section 524 of the Bankruptcy Code because it was based on a discharged debt. The creditor appeals from the summary judgment entered against it.
We AFFIRM.
II
FACTS
On November 20, 1991, Getzoff Accountancy Corporation (“GAC”) signed a promissory note and obtained a loan from SafraBank California, now known as Republic Bank of California (“Bank”). The note called for monthly payments of interest only, with the entire principal balance of $250,000 due and payable on May 20, 1992.
The word “indebtedness” is used herein in its most comprehensive sense and includes any and all advances, debts, obligations and liabilities of Borrowers or any one or more of them, heretofore, now, or hereafter made, incurred or created, whether voluntary or involuntary and however arising, whether direct or acquired by Bank, by assignment or succession, whether due or not due, absolute or contingent, liquidated or unliquidated, determined or undetermined ....
The First Guaranty made Getzoff hable for up to $250,000 in principal, plus interest and other charges without limitation.
Getzoff and his wife filed a Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition on April 13, 1992.
On May 20, 1992, the Bank and GAC entered into an agreement under which the principal was reduced to $213,075.93 (the amount which had not been paid) and the loan was extended. The agreement was evidenced by a new note and provided for payment of the principal and interest in 24 monthly installments of not less than $10,000, commencing on June 20,1992. No additional funds were advanced. The interest rate was the same for both the first and second notes.
On the date the new note was executed, Getzoff signed another guaranty (“Second Guaranty”), guaranteeing the new obligation of GAC. The Second Guaranty was executed on a form identical to that used for the First Guaranty.
In December 1992, the Bank asked Getzoff to execute a reaffirmation agreement in support of the Second Guaranty. Getzoff did not comply with this request.
GAC made payments on the new note until July 1993. In January 1994, the Bank and GAC agreed to stipulate to a judgment allowing GAC to extend the date for repayment of the note until April 1998. After the doeu-ments were prepared, Getzoff claimed for the first time that his obligation on the Second Guaranty had been discharged in bankruptcy-
On June 28, 1994, the Bank filed a complaint for declaratory relief, seeking a declaration from the bankruptcy court that the Second Guaranty was a postpetition obligation of the Debtor which had not been discharged in bankruptcy. Getzoff answered the complaint and both parties filed motions for summary judgment.
After briefing and argument, on October 24, 1994 the bankruptcy court entered an order granting summary judgment in Get-zoffs favor. The court found that the Bank had given additional consideration in exchange for the Second Guaranty. Nonetheless, the court held that Getzoff s First Guaranty was a dischargeable debt, and that execution of the Second Guaranty postpetition was an improper attempt to reaffirm the discharged debt without complying with Section 524(c) and (d) of the Bankruptcy Code. The Bank appeals from the summary judgment order.
III
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Summary judgments are reviewed
de novo. In re Florida,
IV
DISCUSSION
Subject to certain exceptions enumerated in Section 523, Section 727 discharges a debt- or from all debts that have arisen before the date of the order for relief.
In re Price,
The reaffirmation rules are intended to protect debtors from compromising their fresh start by making unwise agreements to repay dischargeable debts.
In re Martin,
The Bank concedes that the provisions of Section 524(e) and (d) were not complied with. The Bank contends, however, that the Second Guaranty was not a promise to repay a discharged debt, but rather a new promise in consideration for the Bank’s promise to extend the terms of the loan to GAC. Since Section 727(b) discharges only those debts that “arose before the date of the order for relief,” the Bank argues that the Second Guaranty is not dischargeable because it arose after the order for relief was entered.
We disagree. The term “debt” is defined in Section 101(12) as “liability on a claim.” “Claim,” in turn, is defined in Section 101(5) as a “right to payment, whether or not such right is reduced to judgment, liquidated, un-liquidated, fixed, contingent, matured, unma-tured, disputed, undisputed, legal, equitable, secured or unsecured.” Congress intended in Section 101(5) to incorporate the broadest available definition of claim.
In re Irizarry,
Section 524(c) applies to agreements “between a holder of a claim and the debtor, the consideration for which, in whole or in part, is based on a debt that is dischargeable....” In substance, the Bank extended GAC’s loan in consideration for Getzoffs promise to guaranty the loan. Since the consideration for the loan extension was based on a discharged debt, Getzoffs continuing obligation to guarantee GAC’s debt, the Second Guaranty is subject to the requirements of Section 524(c).
Although there is little case law in the Ninth Circuit concerning whether a postpetition obligation is a new debt or an attempted reaffirmation of a discharged debt, cases outside this circuit have invalidated various types of postpetition debts as violating Section 524(c) and (d).
See Artzt, supra,
The Bank contends that Getzoff is a sophisticated accountant and businessman who does not need the protections of Section 524. This reasoning was used by the court in
Petersen.
The court noted that the debtor did not need protection from an over-reaching creditor, since the debtor was a sophisticated, experienced businessman who knowingly and willingly entered into the postpetition agreement with the assistance of counsel. The court refused to let the debtor use Section 524(c) “as a sword against the Creditor rather than the shield that was intended.”
V
CONCLUSION
The Second Guaranty, a reaffirmation of the First Guaranty, was not made in compliance with the requirements for reaffirming a discharged debt under Section 524(c) and (d). The summary judgment in favor of the Debt- or is therefore AFFIRMED.
