The appellants, Walter Marlin Brown and Burdean Ruth Brown, are the farmer-debtors in this proceeding under the newly enacted Chapter 12 of the Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. §§ 1201 et seq. The appellee, First National Bank in Lenox, has a security interest in a contract for deed under which the debtors have been buying a piece of real property. The question presented is whether a contract for deed is to be classified for purposes of Chapter 12 as an exec-utory contract, which the debtors must either reject or complete, or a lien, in which event the bank would be treated as a secured creditor only to the extent of the fair market value of the property at the time of the filing of the bankruptcy proceeding.
The Bankruptcy Court 1 held that the bank’s interest was properly classified as an executory contract and gave the debtors ten days either to assume or reject it. The District Court 2 affirmed, and the debtors brought this appeal.
In
In re Speck,
It follows, under Speck, that contracts for deed in Iowa, as in South Dakota, are executory contracts, rather than liens, for purposes of the Bankruptcy Code. The debtors suggest that because this is a Chapter 12 proceeding, a different result should follow, but it is impossible to square this argument with the statute itself, which expressly adopts the same executory-con-tract provisions applicable to bankruptcy proceedings generally. See 11 U.S.C. §§ 1222(b)(6), 365. It is true enough, as the debtors point out, that Chapter 12 was intended to be remedial and to relieve the situation of some farmer-debtors who were unable to obtain relief under pre-existing law. But this general purpose cannot pre *582 vail against explicit statutory language, such as that which faces us here.
Appellants’ real argument, and their brief frankly concedes it, is that “[t]his appeal is a request to this Court to review the position taken in
In re Speck,
Affirmed.
