In re Joseph William SULLIVAN, Debtor. Joseph William Sullivan, Appellant, v. William Harnisch; Peconic Partners LLC; Peconic Asset Managers LLC, Appellees.
BAP No. CC-14-1225-TaDKi. Bankruptcy No. SA 14-bk-10711-CB.
United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit.
Argued and Submitted on Oct. 23, 2014. Filed Dec. 22, 2014.
604-619
Y. David Scharf of Morrison Cohen LLP argued for Appellees William Harnisch, Peconic Partners LLC, and Peconic Asset Managers LLC.
Before: TAYLOR, DUNN, and KIRSCHER, Bankruptcy Judges.
OPINION
LAURA S. TAYLOR, Bankruptcy Judge:
INTRODUCTION
Fifteen days after debtor Joseph Sullivan filed a chapter 111 petition, Appellees, as holders of a large state court judgment
Debtor opposed the motion, supported by his declaration and timely filed schedules, statement of financial affairs, and a chapter 11 status report. In the status report, he outlined the events leading to the filing of his petition, including Appellees’ active efforts to execute on their judgment lien and to seize his non-exempt assets, and stated his intent to file a plan within the exclusivity period. The United States Trustee did not file any papers in response to Appellees’ motion but advised the bankruptcy court orally that it did not join in the motion.
Notwithstanding the early state of the chapter 11 case and the merely circumstantial nature of Appellees’ evidence, the bankruptcy court granted Appellees’ motion, finding that Debtor filed the case in bad faith without any possibility of confirming a plan. Then, without considering or determining whether dismissal or conversion of the case would be in the best interests of creditors and the estate, the bankruptcy court dismissed the case. Because we determine that the bankruptcy court‘s failure to consider the best interests of creditors and the estate was an abuse of its discretion and further because we determine that its finding of bad faith was in error on this record, we REVERSE.
FACTS
Debtor filed his bare bones petition for relief under chapter 11 on February 4, 2014. Eight days later he filed2 a Chapter 11 Status Report and supporting declaration.
Chapter 11 Status Report
In the status report, Debtor presented his version of the prepetition disputes and six years of litigation between Debtor and Appellees in New York and the events immediately leading to the petition. According to Debtor, he was employed until October 2008 as the Chief Operating Officer and Chief Compliance Officer of appellees Peconic Partners, LLC and Peconic Asset Managers, LLC (together, “Peconic“). He was also a member of Peconic entitled to share in profits. He described Peconic as an institutional investment manager and registered investment adviser founded by appellee William Harnisch.
Disagreements arose, Debtor‘s employment was involuntarily terminated in late 2008, and litigation followed. Although Debtor recited some initial successes at the trial court level, such successes were overturned on appeal and eventually Appellees obtained a judgment of approximately $1.5 million that resolved one of several counterclaims Appellees filed against Debtor. The record contains no evidence that this judgment is nondischargeable; it appears to be based exclusively on contract. Debtor described the judgment as requiring that he repay to Peconic a $1 million advance that Peconic made to him, with interest. The judgment
Debtor set forth his intent to resolve a tax issue that could provide recovery of over $550,0003 for the estate; to determine if and how to proceed with the remaining New York litigation; and to analyze the costs and benefits to recover as preferential transfers over $70,000 removed from Debtor‘s bank accounts by the sheriff as part of Appellees’ collection efforts on the unstayed judgment and to deal with Appellees’ judgment lien recorded against Debtor‘s New York residence.4 Debtor also stated his intent to file a plan and disclosure statement within the 120 day exclusivity period.
Debtor described his primary assets as consisting of: a 50% interest in a residence owned in New York with his wife, with a market value of approximately $700,000 and subject to a mortgage and Appellees’ judicial lien (combined total of $2.2 million); two 401K retirement accounts he claimed as fully exempt; and three vehicles owned free and clear, which he intended to claim as partially exempt. He estimated the total value of his assets at $749,002, exclusive of the potential tax refunds, a possible employment performance bonus, and pending claims against Appellees. Exclusive of the judgment, Debtor estimated total unsecured claims of $217,296.
Six days after filing the status report, Debtor filed his schedules and statement of financial affairs.
Schedules and Statement of Financial Condition
The Debtor‘s summary of schedules reflects $350,000 in real property assets and $397,985 in personal property assets for total assets of $747,985; secured debt of $2,007,347; unsecured claims of $231,036; and total liabilities of $2,238,383, which Debtor identified as primarily business debt, not consumer debt. Debtor‘s secured debt consisted of a $498,151 mortgage secured by the New York residence and the $1,509,195 judgment. His scheduled unsecured debt consisted of $52,208 on four credit cards; $73,192 owed to three different law firms; $600 in membership dues; $27.00 in unpaid utilities; and $105,000 in personal loans from two individuals (Gerard Sullivan and Thomas Sullivan, apparently members of Debtor‘s family).
In his statement of financial affairs, among other things, Debtor disclosed $875,000 in gross income in 2013 which included $675,000 that he described as a gross settlement amount; $242,639 in IRA distributions taken in the two years preceding bankruptcy; $249,000 paid to the IRS and Franchise Tax Board in November 2013; the pending litigation in New York and related entry of a sister state judgment in California in November 2013; and multiple restraining orders, account restrictions, and apparent levies on behalf of Appellees in the two months preceding the bankruptcy filing. Debtor also disclosed legal retainers of $222,543 paid in
The day after Debtor filed his schedules and statement of financial affairs, Appellees filed their motion seeking dismissal of the case.
The Motion to Dismiss
Appellees’ motion5 sought dismissal of the case under
Lack of a confirmable plan
Appellees argued that Debtor‘s chapter 11 case must be dismissed based on the lack of any reasonable likelihood that Debtor could propose a confirmable plan of reorganization. They argued that they would not consent to any plan that pro-
posed less than 100% payment on unsecured creditors’ claims.
Two-party dispute and timing of petition6
Appellees also contended that Debtor‘s case represented a typical two-party dispute and that through the bankruptcy case Debtor sought to collaterally attack final rulings in New York. They argued that Peconic was the creditor most impacted by any proposed plan and that the New York forum, not the bankruptcy court, would best and adequately protect all parties and assure a just and equitable result. Appellees made no attempt to explain how the New York forum would protect anyone other than Appellees.
Misrepresentations/manipulation
As additional indication of Debtor‘s alleged bad faith, Appellees asserted that Debtor was less than forthright in his filings in the bankruptcy case. In support, Appellees contended that Debtor‘s characterization of his debts as primarily business debts, rather than consumer debts, was improper. Appellees argued that the judgment debt was for repayment of funds Debtor borrowed for personal or family purposes, that Debtor mischaracterized this debt as a tax advance, and that the related legal fees also were not business expenses. They provided no case law support for their argument regarding characterization of Debtor‘s debts. Appellees also argued that Debtor lacked substantial
Other indicators of bad faith
Appellees also argued that Debtor‘s failure to pay anything toward the judgment prior to filing bankruptcy showed Debtor‘s bad faith. Finally, Appellees also contended that they would get nothing under a plan by Debtor, there was no business to be preserved, there were no jobs to be saved—and, thus, that there was no proper purpose for Debtor‘s case. Appellees failed to explain how their business preservation arguments squared with the fact that this is an individual chapter 11 case.
Conversion to chapter 7 not a proper option
Based on Appellees’ conclusion that Debtor‘s debts were primarily consumer debts, Appellees argued that a presumption of abuse would arise under
Debtor‘s Opposition
Debtor opposed the motion and supported the opposition with his declaration. Debtor described himself as a 57-year-old resident of Seal Beach, California, employed as an investment executive at a salary of $200,000 per annum.
Relying on the legal standard identified by the Ninth Circuit in Idaho Dep‘t of Lands v. Arnold (In re Arnold), 806 F.2d 937, 939 (9th Cir. 1986), and citing In re Marshall, 298 B.R. 670, 680-81 (Bankr. C.D. Cal. 2003), Debtor argued that the
“good faith inquiry ‘is essentially directed to two questions: (1) whether the debtor is trying to abuse the bankruptcy process and invoke the automatic stay for improper purposes; and (2) whether the debtor is really in need of reorganization.’ ” Opposition, Dkt. # 68 at 14:13-16. Debtor stated that he was forced to file bankruptcy to obtain a breathing spell from Appellees’ aggressive collection efforts and that he filed with the intent to prepare a fair and equitable plan of reorganization. He argued that he was hopelessly insolvent both from a balance sheet perspective and from his inability to pay debts as they became due in light of the accrual of 9% interest on the judgment ($150,000 annually) compared to his current before-tax annual salary of $200,000. Debtor also argued that through the bankruptcy filing he sought to preserve the home he owned in New York with his wife.
As to Appellees’ specific allegations of bad faith factors, Debtor responded as follows:
Plan confirmability
Debtor primarily argued that consideration of confirmability of a plan not yet filed was premature and placed an improper burden on him at such an early stage of the case. Debtor argued that despite Appellees’ contention that they will thwart any plan the Debtor files, “[f]requently even the most obstreperous of creditor ultimately finds common ground with the debtor later in the case.” Opposition, Dkt # 68 at 15:1-2. In addition, Debtor argued that ample law existed to justify separately classifying the Appellees’ claim given their particular characteristics, in-
Two-party dispute
Debtor argued that the bankruptcy case involved over $400,000 in other claims and thus, factually, did not constitute a two-party dispute. As to Appellees’ collateral attack argument, Debtor argued that he did not seek to defeat the validity of the judgment in the bankruptcy court, but would treat the judgment under the plan in accordance with the Bankruptcy Code, including distributions and appropriate discharge of any unpaid balance, “[u]nless and until the New York Judgment is vacated in the course of a continuation of the New York Action.” Id. at 18:10-11.
Alleged misrepresentations and the conversion option
Debtor argued that he properly categorized his case as a non-consumer case. Because the debt resulted from a judgment on a business dispute between employer and employee, Debtor argued it had no consumer attributes. Thus, Debtor argued that chapter 7 was clearly an option.
Other alleged bad faith indicators
Debtor argued that Appellees were wrong to contend that Debtor had the ability to pay the judgment, especially in light of the accruing interest.
Other arguments
Debtor finally argued that the Supreme Court‘s decision in Toibb v. Radloff, 501 U.S. 157, 111 S.Ct. 2197, 115 L.Ed.2d 145 (1991), specifically held that an individual is eligible to reorganize under chapter 11
despite the lack of any ongoing business. Further, Debtor argued that his filing was consistent with the objectives of the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Action (“BAPCPA“): “to channel individuals with higher levels of income and larger balance sheets into Chapter 13, or Chapter 11.” Id. at 21:20-21. He acknowledged in his opposition that
Appellees’ Reply
On reply, Appellees responded that although they believed Debtor was capable of paying all his debts, Debtor‘s allegation that he was insolvent established his inability to present a confirmable plan, and thus the case should be dismissed.9 Appellees argued that the case was simple: Debtor “lives a lavish lifestyle” and “filed this case in order to maintain his current level of spending,” and concluded that, therefore, the case “does not belong in bankruptcy.” Reply, Dkt. # 77 at 9:7-14.
The bankruptcy court‘s findings and conclusion
The hearing on the motion was set concurrently with Debtor‘s applications to employ two law firms, his motion for approval of his budget, and a chapter 11 scheduling and management conference. The bankruptcy court heard argument on the Appellees’ motion first. Counsel for the
In the Statement of Decision the bankruptcy court held that the bankruptcy case was not filed in good faith. It stated that “[t]he existence of good faith depends on an amalgam of factors and not upon a specific fact,” criticizing Debtor‘s argument that his subjective good faith in filing the case was important. Statement of Decision, Dkt. # 93 at 2 n.1 (citing In re Arnold, 806 F.2d at 939). It identified as the appropriate test: “whether a debtor is attempting to unreasonably deter and harass creditors or attempting to effect a speedy, efficient reorganization on a feasible basis.” Id. (again citing In re Arnold, along with In re Marsch, 36 F.3d 825, 828 [9th Cir. 1994]).
The bankruptcy court then specifically found that: “It is obvious that Debtor‘s sole purpose for filing bankruptcy was to stop Peconic from collecting on its judgment.” Id. at 3:1-3. As supporting facts it stated that the case was a two-party dispute filed after six years of litigation, only 89 days after judgment was entered against the Debtor, and when Peconic had just begun collection efforts.
In addition, the bankruptcy court found that “a confirmable plan of reorganization is not possible since Peconic (by far the largest unsecured creditor), has indicated that it will vote against any plan of reorganization that does not propose to pay unsecured creditors 100 percent of their claims.” Id. at 2. The bankruptcy court referred to Debtor‘s estimation in the bare bones petition that there would be no funds available for distribution to unsecured creditors; and it concluded that Debtor could not artificially impair his mortgage lender because there was no unsecured portion to impair.
The Debtor timely filed a notice of appeal to the BAP and an emergency motion with the bankruptcy court for stay pending appeal, which was denied. Debtor thereafter filed a motion with the BAP for a stay pending appeal, which a motions panel granted.
JURISDICTION
The bankruptcy court had jurisdiction pursuant to
ISSUES
Whether the bankruptcy court abused its discretion when it dismissed the bankruptcy case.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review the bankruptcy court‘s decision to dismiss a case under an abuse of discretion standard. Leavitt v. Soto (In re Leavitt), 171 F.3d 1219, 1223 (9th Cir. 1999). We apply a two-part test to determine whether the bankruptcy court abused its discretion. United States v. Hinkson, 585 F.3d 1247, 1261-62 (9th Cir. 2009) (en banc). First, we consider de novo whether the bankruptcy court applied the correct legal standard to the relief requested. Id. Then, we review the bankruptcy court‘s fact findings for clear error. Id. at 1262 & n. 20. See also Eisen v. Curry (In re Eisen), 14 F.3d 469, 470 (9th Cir. 1994) (the bankruptcy court‘s finding of “bad faith” is reviewed for clear error);
DISCUSSION
The bankruptcy court dismissed Debtor‘s case as a bad faith filing based on two primary determinations: (1) its factual finding that the case was a two-party dispute and that Debtor‘s sole purpose in filing was to stop Appellees’ collection efforts; and (2) its legal conclusion that Debtor could not propose a confirmable plan. These determinations are not supported adequately by the record. Alternatively, the bankruptcy court abused its discretion by dismissing the case without considering whether conversion or dismissal would be in the best interests of all creditors and the estate.
(chapter 13 case). And, if a bankruptcy court determines that there is cause to convert or dismiss, it must also: (1) decide whether dismissal, conversion, or the appointment of a trustee or examiner is in the best interests of creditors and the estate; and (2) identify whether there are unusual circumstances that establish that dismissal or conversion is not in the best interests of creditors and the estate.
A. The bankruptcy court abused its discretion when it failed to consider whether conversion or dismissal was in the best interests of all creditors and the estate.
We determine as a preliminary matter that even if we determine that the bankruptcy court‘s findings of bad faith and plan futility were not in error, the bankruptcy court abused its discretion by failing to consider whether conversion or dismissal was in the best interests of all creditors and the estate. We also determine that on the current record this error was not harmless. We begin here because clarification on this point provides guidance in our analysis of the bankruptcy court‘s other determinations.
Appellees argue on appeal that dismissal was in the best interests of creditors and that Debtor waived any contrary argument because he did not raise it in his opposition to the motion. We disagree. In the motion and opposition the parties both argued as to whether chapter 7 was an available option for the Debtor.10 And regardless of
When determining the best interest of the creditors under
While we acknowledge that unsecured creditors did not take a position here, it is notable that the United States Trustee made clear that it did not support dismissal.
Based on our reading of the hearing transcript, it appears that the bankruptcy court may have believed that its limited task was to grant or deny the relief requested by Appellees—dismissal. The bankruptcy court was not so limited. It had at least three options available to it: let Debtor try to propose a plan; convert the case to chapter 7; or dismiss it, as Appellees requested. When considering these options, the bankruptcy court was required to consider the unrefuted evidence that: (1) Appellees had judgment liens and immediate collection abilities superior to all of Debtor‘s unsecured creditors upon dismissal of the case; (2) Appellees’ judgment liens, however, were subject to attack as preferences; (3) there was no evidence that creditors other than Appellees had any avenue for prompt or meaningful payment outside a bankruptcy case; (4) recovery of the tax refund would be enhanced in either a chapter 11 or chapter 7 case; and (5) dismissal as a result of these factors was far less advantageous than conversion for all creditors of the estate other than Appellees. This was not harmless error.
We cannot determine from the record whether the bankruptcy court believed that
There is a substantial body of decisional law11 focusing on the applicability of
Further, the bankruptcy court‘s ability to rely on
Finally, we are aware of individual chapter 11 cases converted to chapter 7 by court order after either failure by debtors to achieve plan confirmation timely or as a result of default under confirmed chapter 11 plans—none of which involved “means test” or
The bankruptcy court here failed to consider whether dismissal or conversion was in the best interests of the creditors and the estate. Conversion was and is a viable option even if
Appellees. Thus, the bankruptcy court erred in this regard.
B. The bankruptcy court erred when it found the Debtor filed this case not in good faith.
The bankruptcy court has broad discretion in determining what constitutes “cause” under section 1112(b). See Chu v. Syntron Bioresearch, Inc. (In re Chu), 253 B.R. 92, 95 (S.D. Cal. 2000). The movant bears the burden of establishing by a preponderance of the evidence that cause exists. StellarOne Bank v. Lakewatch LLC (In re Park), 436 B.R. 811, 815 (Bankr. W.D.Va. 2010). Because good faith is required in the commencement and prosecution of a chapter 11 case, “the lack thereof constitutes ‘cause’ for dismissal under
The bankruptcy court found that the bankruptcy case was a two-party dispute with no possibility of plan confirmation and was filed for the sole purpose of stopping Appellees’ collection on their judgment. The limited record then before the bankruptcy court in the early stages of the case does not support these findings and conclusions.
1. The bankruptcy court erred by finding Debtor‘s sole and bad faith purpose was to stop Appellees’ collection efforts.
It is well recognized that the automatic stay under
The bankruptcy court here found that Debtor filed his chapter 11 case solely to stop Appellees’ collection efforts and concluded that this constituted bad faith. The bankruptcy court made no finding that stopping Appellees’ collection efforts was unreasonable or was intended to harass Appellees, however, and we find no support in the record for such inferences.
Based on Debtor‘s schedules and statement of financial affairs, for at least the two years preceding the bankruptcy filing, Debtor supplemented his salary with substantial withdrawals from retirement accounts, credit cards, and significant loans from family members. Then two months before filing, Appellees commenced aggressive collection efforts, freezing or levying against bank and brokerage accounts. The Debtor concurrently continued to incur substantial legal fees. As stated in
Debtor‘s declaration in opposition to the motion, which was not disputed by any evidence submitted by Appellees, the litigation costs, entry of the judgment, and unpaid legal bills left him insolvent. Appellees’ contrary argument that Debtor was solvent and could and should have paid Appellees’ judgment is not supported by the record.
At oral argument, the bankruptcy court expressed its disbelief12 in assertions by Debtor that he was financially strapped prepetition, when he had a house in New York that he planned to keep and three high-end vehicles—unlike the people the bankruptcy court was “used to“—“people who literally are living in homeless shelters.” Hr‘g Tr. (Apr. 9, 2014) at 17:22-23. The bankruptcy court directed argument away from Debtor‘s alleged insolvency,13 as a “non-issue.” Id. at 15:17. As articulated by the Ninth Circuit, however, when assessing a debtor‘s good faith the bankruptcy court “should examine the debtor‘s financial status [and] motives....” In re Arnold, 806 F.2d at 939. Here, the bankruptcy court‘s disinclination to examine the Debtor‘s financial status beyond his possession of a home in New York and three admittedly valuable vehicles contributed to its erroneous conclusion.14
Debtor‘s petition, filed within 8915 days of perfection of Appellees’ judgment lien,
In addition, Debtor stated his clear intention to save equity in the New York home, where his wife lived, and his desire for orderly liquidation of assets if he could not propose a confirmable plan. The record does not evidence that the bankruptcy court considered either of these goals. But both goals are legitimate reasons to file bankruptcy. See Warner v. Universal Guardian Corp. (In re Warner), 30 B.R. 528, 529 (9th Cir. BAP 1983) (nothing in the Code prohibits the use of chapter 11 by debtors seeking to save their family home from foreclosure); and In re Soundview Elite, Ltd., 503 B.R. 571, 580 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 2014) (“[I]t is not bad faith to file a chapter 11 petition for the purpose of a more orderly liquidation.“). And although Debtor had not filed a proposed plan as of the hearing on the motion, Debtor argued that through the chapter 11 bankruptcy process he intended to seek recovery of as much as $850,000 on overpayment of taxes.
All the evidence before the bankruptcy court indicated that Debtor had significant financial need for protection under the Bankruptcy Code. No evidence was presented from which the bankruptcy court could infer that Debtor intended to unrea-
sonably deter or harass Appellees or any of his other creditors.
2. The existence of disputes between Debtor and Appellees does not render the case a two-party dispute filed in bad faith.
“Petitions in bankruptcy arising out of a two-party dispute do not per se constitute a bad-faith filing by the debtors.” In re Stolrow‘s, Inc., 84 B.R. 167, 171 (9th Cir. BAP 1988). Courts that find bad faith based on two-party disputes do so where “it is an apparent two-party dispute that can be resolved outside of the Bankruptcy Court‘s jurisdiction.” Oasis at Wild Horse Ranch, LLC v. Sholes (In re Oasis at Wild Horse Ranch, LLC), 2011 WL 4502102 at *10, 2011 Bankr.LEXIS 4314 at *29 (9th Cir. BAP Aug. 26, 2011) (emphasis added) (citing N. Cent. Dev. Co. v. Landmark Capital Co. (In re Landmark Capital Co.), 27 B.R. 273, 279 (Bankr. D. Ariz. 1983)); and see In re St. Paul Self Storage Ltd. P‘ship, 185 B.R. at 583 (debtor‘s only significant asset was a claim against one creditor set to be tried in state court and bankruptcy court supervision of debtor‘s liquidation was not necessary to protect other creditors). Typical bad faith two-party dispute cases may involve delays on the eve of trial (litigation tactics), forum shopping, new-debtor syndrome (special purpose entities), repeat filers, and repeatedly delayed foreclosure sales. There are no such common indicators here.
The evidence before the bankruptcy court established that the parties were involved in six years of litigation in state court prior to the petition date; Debtor was using exempt assets, family loans, and credit card debt to fund the litigation and his expenses; and Appellees started to
During oral argument on the motion, the bankruptcy court repeatedly stated that Debtor had one creditor. Appellees argued that Debtor‘s scheduled debts were insignificant and questionable—Appellees were most affected by the filing, and, implicitly, of singular importance. To the contrary, Debtor‘s schedules, which the bankruptcy court acknowledged having reviewed, establish the existence of significant debt owed to credit card companies,
attorneys, and family members. The bankruptcy court had no evidence before it from which it could appropriately infer that any of such debt was not legitimate. Nor did any evidence exist to dispute Debtor‘s contention that the interest accrual on the judgment alone made his financial survival outside of bankruptcy impossible. To conclude otherwise was not supported by the record.
3. Appellees’ stated intention not to accept a less-than-100%-plan by Debtor, alone, does not support a conclusion that Debtor filed the case in bad faith.
The bankruptcy court also found that Debtor could not propose a confirmable plan because Appellees argued they would vote against it. Many are the judgment creditors who gnash their teeth (metaphorical or otherwise) in chagrin when their collection campaign is stayed by a bankruptcy filing. Only slightly less frequent are the immediate post-filing threats that no quarter will be given. Such jeremiads, however, are not a sufficient basis for a universal conclusion of plan futility. And they certainly do not unequivocally establish the debtor‘s bad faith. Economic considerations and rationality often result in resolution.
Here, the Appellees’ statements must be taken in context. Debtor had not filed a plan, and Appellees, apparently, had not had time to compare their possible treatment under a plan with the certainly less favorable treatment in a chapter 7 case. It is indeed possible that Appellees would elect chapter 7, notwithstanding that they lose the opportunity to obtain any access to Debtor‘s post-petition income. It is further possible that the tax refunds will not be more easily collected in a chapter 11 case such that this factor does not support a continuation in chapter 11. And it is
Moreover, nothing in the record indicates that Debtor was aware that Appellees would take such a position when he filed his petition. And when the bankruptcy court ruled on the motion, Debtor had not filed a proposed plan at all.17 In essence, the bankruptcy court concluded,
based on a very scant record, that Debtor could neither propose the 100% plan Appellees demanded, negotiate a consensual resolution, or cram down a lesser payout plan.18 Such determinations were premature.
We note that Debtor acknowledged that his postpetition earnings and net disposable income are available in a chapter 11 plan. Under
Although it is well within a bankruptcy court‘s decision-making authority to determine facial non-confirmability of a proposed plan (such as when considering a
CONCLUSION
Based on the foregoing, we REVERSE.
LAURA S. TAYLOR
Bankruptcy Judge
