IN RE: PATRICK J. RYAN, PATRICK J. RYAN v. UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
No. 12-3398
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
ARGUED APRIL 15, 2013—DECIDED JULY 8, 2013
On Appeal from the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 11 B 34346 — A. Benjamin Goldgar, Judge.
ROVNER, Circuit Judge. Patrick James Ryan failed to pay his federal income taxes for 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, and 2010, resulting in outstanding liabilities totaling at least $136,898.93. In January 2011, pursuant to Internal Revenue Code
On August 23, 2011, Ryan filed a voluntary Chapter 13 bankruptcy petition.
Section 506(a) of the Bankruptcy Code separates loans into secured and unsecured portions. In re Wright, 492 F.3d 829, 830 (7th Cir. 2007). As we explained in In re Howard, 597 F.3d 852, 854 (7th Cir. 2010), “[t]he bankruptcy judge first determines the market value of the collateral . . . [and] [t]he creditor‘s claim is treated as a secured claim to the extent of that value.” If the value is less than the unpaid balance of the secured loan, the difference is considered an unsecured claim of the creditor. Id.;
Section 506(d) of the Code provides:
(d) To the extent that a lien secures a claim against the debtor that is not an allowed secured claim, such lien is void, unless—
(1) such claim was disallowed only under section 502(b)(5) or 502(e) of this title; or (2) such claim is not an allowed secured claim due only to the failure of any entity to file a proof of such claim under section 501 of this title.
Ryan maintains that
The obvious problem with that argument is that
In a transparent attempt to avoid that straightforward application, Ryan asserts that the Supreme Court in Dewsnup was not really interpreting the term “allowed
Ryan is left, then, with arguing that we should interpret
Ryan argues that the alternative remedies identified by those courts and commentators are not in fact available here and that even if generally available, they are not options for him because the United States has not waived its sovereign immunity with respect to those provisions. There is no support for basing statutory interpretation on the government‘s decision to waive, or not waive, sovereign immunity. In fact, that argument reveals the underlying problem with Ryan‘s position here. He encourages us to read the terms in a manner that maximizes the Congressional intent, but for Ryan that is dependent here on the Chapter involved and the government‘s decision not to waive sovereign immunity. Our role in interpreting a statute does not extend to rewriting that statute based upon the individual circumstances of each litigant to ensure that Congressional purposes are attained. It is the province of the legislature to choose language that maximizes its own purposes, and for the courts to give that language its plain meaning or, where it is ambiguous, to interpret it in the manner most consistent with the statutory language as a whole, its purpose, and in a manner that will render it constitutional.
The Supreme Court in Clark v. Martinez, 543 U.S. 371 (2005), addressed a similar argument that a statute should be given differing meanings based on divergent applications, and the court held that the language of a statute should be read consistently.
The Court nevertheless held that such disparity cannot justify giving the statute a different meaning for one set of aliens than another, noting that “[i]t is not at all unusual to give a statute‘s ambiguous language a limiting construction called for by one of the statute‘s applications, even though other of the statute‘s applications, standing alone, would not support the same limitation.” Id. Because the operative language of the statute applied without differentiation to all three categories of aliens, the Court held that the meaning must be consistent because “[t]o give these same words a different meaning for each category would be to invent a statute rather than interpret one.” Id. at 378.
Section 506(d) similarly does not distinguish claims under Chapter 7 from those under Chapter 13. The language is uniform and does not lend itself to any differential treatment, and
Ryan relies on court decisions that have refused to extend the interpretation of “secured” in
The Tenth Circuit in Woolsey, 696 F.3d 1266, addressed the precise issue before us today in a thorough decision, concluding that the Dewsnup interpretation of
Not only is the rule against multiple interpretations of the same statute well entrenched, it is of special importance. Without it, even a statutory term used but a single time in a single statute risks never settling on a fixed meaning. And this surely would leave citizens at sea, only and always guessing at what the law might be held to mean in the unique “fact situation” of the next case—a result in no little tension with the rule of law itself.
Id. at 1277-78. We agree with Woolsey, and join it in holding that the Court‘s interpretation of
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