In rе Gary A. SHELTON; Elizabeth Dawn Shelton, also known as Dawn Shelton Debtors. Gary A. Shelton; Elizabeth Dawn Shelton, Appellants v. Citimortgage, Inc., Appellee.
No. 12-3555
United States Court of Appeals, Eighth Circuit
Filed: Nov. 4, 2013
Rehearing and Rehearing En Banc Denied Dec. 17, 2013
747 F.3d 747
AFFIRMED
Submitted: Sept. 24, 2013.
John Alexander Flynn, argued, Cabot, AR, for Appellants.
Charles Thomas Ward, Little Rock, AR, Edward D. Russell, argued, Brentwood, TN, for appellee.
Before MURPHY, MELLOY, and SHEPHERD, Circuit Judges.
MELLOY, Circuit Judge.
Chapter 13 Debtors Gary A. Shelton and Elizabeth Dawn Shelton appeal the bankruptcy court‘s dismissal of their аdversary proceeding. The bankruptcy court held that a secured creditor‘s lien was not void due solely to the fact that the secured creditor filed an untimely claim. The BAP affirmed. We also affirm.
The claims bar date in the Shelton bankruptcy was January 25, 2011. Secured creditor Citimortgage, Inc., held a lien on Debtors’ primary residence and filed a claim for $210,596.66 on August 22, 2011. A week after Citimortgage filed its claim,
After disallowance of the claim, Debtors initiated an adversary proceeding seeking the avoidance of Citimortgage‘s lien. Again Debtors did not challenge the substantive validity of the lien or debt. Debtors relied upon
(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) or502(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.
According to Debtors, Citimortgage‘s lien secured a claim that was “not аn allowed secured claim[.]”
Citimortgage filed a motion to dismiss, аrguing that because a secured creditor‘s lien generally survives bankruptcy even if the secured creditor elects not to file a claim, lien avoidance (rather than mere claim disallowance) would be an unjustified and overly punitive result where the sole basis of claim disallowance was the untimeliness of the claim.
Acknowledging the “superficial” appeal of the plain-text support for the Debtor‘s position, the bankruptcy court nevertheless granted Citimortgage‘s motion. In doing so, the court relied upon the longstanding principle that valid liens pass through bankruptcy unaffected. See Dewsnup v. Timm, 502 U.S. 410, 418 (1992) (noting that “a bankruptcy discharge extinguishes only one mode of enforcing a claim—namely, an action against the debtor in personam—while leaving intact another—namely, an action against the debtor in rem” (quoting Johnson v. Home State Bank, 501 U.S. 78, 84 (1991))). The bankruptcy court also relied on authority from the only circuits to have addressed the issue, both of which concluded the plain language of
On appeal, Debtors again urge a plain language interpretation of
In 1984, the Seventh Circuit in In re Tarnow, 749 F.2d at 465-66, held that lien avoidance in this context was too great a departurе from pre-Code law to have been Congress‘s intended effect. The court explained that the reason a secured creditor might file a claim is tо stand in line as an unsecured creditor for that portion of debt that is not adequately secured; there was no suggestion in legislative history or pre-Code рractice that a secured creditor could only file such a claim “on pain of losing his lien.” Id. at 465. In reaching this conclusion, the Seventh Circuit emphasized thе absurdity of heavily penalizing a secured creditor who files an untimely claim as contrasted with a secured creditor who preserves its lien by remaining wholly “aloof from the bankruptcy proceeding[.]” Dewsnup, 502 U.S. at 417. The Seventh Circuit stated:
The destruction of a lien is a disproportionately severe sanction for a default that can hurt only thе defaulter.
... While no one wants bankruptcy proceedings to be cluttered up by tardy claims, the simple and effective method of discouraging them is to dismiss the claim (that is, the claim against the bankrupt estate, as distinct from the claim against the collateral itself), out of hand, because it is untimely.... If an ordinary plaintiff files a suit barred by the statute of limitations, the sanction is dismissal; it is not to take away his property. And a lien is property.
Then, in 1992, the Supreme Court reaffirmed the gеneral principle that valid liens pass through bankruptcy unaffected. The court determined that Congress must not have intended to legislate contrary to this general principle without at least some explanation of such an intent in the legislative history. See Dewsnup, 502 U.S. at 416-17 (“[Section] 506 of the Bankruptcy Code and its relationship to other provisions of that Code do embrace some ambiguities ... [such that] we are not convinced that Congress intended to depart from the рre-Code rule that liens pass through bankruptcy unaffected.“). Dewsnup involved an examination of
In 2003, the Fourth Circuit recognized these general principles from Dewsnup when it joined the Seventh Circuit and held that liens for disallowed claims survive bankruptcy if the sole basis for disallowance is untimeliness. In re Hamlett, 322 F.3d at 348. There, the Fourth Circuit stated:
We therefore align ourselves with the Fourth and Seventh Circuits and reject the Debtor‘s superficially aрpealing, but ultimately inequitable and isolated, reading of
We affirm the judgments of the Bankruptcy Court and the BAP.
MELLOY
CIRCUIT JUDGE
