OPINION
Thе appellants, debtors Robert L. Washington, III and Gloria Jean Washington, challenge an order of the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Middle District of Alabama, sustaining the objection of the appellee, trustee Curtis C. Red-ing, to confirmation of the Washingtons’ Chapter 13 bankruptcy plan and conditionally dismissing this case. This court’s appellate jurisdiction is proper under 28
I.STANDARD OF REVIEW
“The district court in a bankruptcy appeal ... functions as an appellate court in reviewing the bankruptcy court’s decision.”
In re Sublett,
II.BACKGROUND
The relevant facts in this case are not in dispute. The Washingtons filed a voluntary bankruptcy petition under chapter 13 of the United States Bankruptcy Code. In their chapter 13 plan, they proposed that they pay nothing to their unsecured creditors.
The Washingtons indicated on their Schedule I statement of current income that Mr. Washington receives $953.33 per month in unemployment compensation as a result of his prior employment. On line 8 of Official Form 22C, the “Chapter 13 Statement of Current Monthly Income and Calculation of Commitment Period and Disposable Income,” they listed $146.67 as the average monthly unemployment compensation Mr. Washington received over the six months preceding their bankruptcy petition. They did not list the $146.67 as income for the calculation of disposable income. The instructions at line 8 of Official Form 22C state:
“Unemployment compensation. Enter the amount in the approрriate column(s) of Line 8. However, if you contend that unemployment compensation received by you or your spouse was a benefit under the Social Security Act, do not list the amount of such compensation [in the income column], but instead state the amount in the space below.”
Id. The space below, whеre the Washing-tons listed the $146.67, is labeled, “Unemployment compensation claimed to be a benefit under the Social Security Act.” Id. At line 59 of Official Form 22C, they list a negative number for their disposable income: -$53.05. If the $146.67 in unemployment compensation were included in their disposable income calculation, it would result in a рositive disposable income of $93.62. This, in turn, would result in payment of $5,617.20 to their unsecured creditors over the life of their chapter 13 plan.
The trustee filed an objection to confirmation of the Washingtons’ chapter 13 plan. In particular, he objected to their failure to include Mr. Washington’s unemployment compensаtion in their calculation of current monthly income. The bankruptcy court sustained the trustee’s objection, holding that: “[U]nemployment compensation is not a benefit received under the Social Security Act as that phrase is used in 11 U.S.C. § 101(10A)(B). Therefore, unemployment compensation cannot be excluded from ‘current monthly income’ calculation to ultimately arrive at the debtors’ disposable income.” Bankr. Ct. Order at 3 (Doc. No. 2-10). The bankruptcy court further ordered that this case be conditionally dismissed.
The Washingtons responded with this appeal.
III.DISCUSSION
“If the trustee ... objects to the confirmation of [a debtor’s chapter 13] plan, then the court may not approve the plаn unless, as of the effective date of the plant,] ... the plan provides that all of the debtor’s projected disposable income to be received in the applicable commitment pe
At issue in this case is whether a debt- or’s unemployment compensation is a “benefit! ] received under the Social Security Act” and thus excluded from the calculation of that debtor’s current monthly income. This is a question of first impression in the district courts; one that has divided the bankruptcy courts and scholars that have addressed it elsewhere.
1
Prior to the order by the bаnkruptcy court below, only three bankruptcy courts had published opinions on this issue. Two of these courts held that unemployment compensation is a benefit received under the Social Security Act,
see In re Sorrell,
“In answering this question [for itself, the court] begin[s] with the understanding that Congress ‘says what it means and means in a statute what it says there.’ ”
Hartford Underwriters Ins. Co. v. Union Planters Bank, N.A.,
At first blush, the court would read the phrase “benefits received under the Social Security Act” to encompass, and mean, only “Social Security benefits,” which has a common understanding that does not include unemployment compensation; the language of two phrases is obviously quite similar. Indeed, unemployment compensation programs are administered at the state level in accordance with state law.
Carmichael v. Southern Coal & Coke Co.,
On the other hand, contributions to the Alabama fund, like contributions to all state unemployment funds, must “be рaid over immediately to the [United States] Secretary of the Treasury to the credit of the ‘Unemployment Trust Fund.’ ”
Steward Machine Co. v. Davis,
Federal law does not “require[] any State to adopt, or to maintain, an unemployment compensation program.”
Baker v. CM Corp.,
Of course, the United States “naturally has attached some strings to its largesse.”
Jenkins v. Bowling,
Not only is a State ineligible for federal funding if it fails to meet the requirements established by the Social Security Act, but courts may enjoin provisions of an unemployment compensation program that are incоnsistent with the requirements and objectives of the Social Security Act.
Jenkins,
The Court reached this conclusion through an examination of “[t]he purpose of the
federal
statutory scheme.”
Id.
at 130,
The Supreme Court has also explained that the Social Security Act and state unemployment compensation programs “embody a cooperative legislative effort by state and national governments, for carrying out a public purpose common to both,”
Carmichael,
The Washingtons therefore argue that, when the Social Security Act is viewed as the federal statutory component of a “federal-state cooperative” program directed at “providing a ‘substitute’ for wages,” then unemployment benefits received through federally funded state programs should be viewed as also “received under the Social Security Act.” They conclude that the phrase “benefits received under the Social Security Act” is sufficiently broad to include unemployment benefits and that 11 U.S.C. § 101(10A)(B) permits debtors, like them, to exclude unemployment benefits from their calculation of current monthly income.
However, the trouble with this extreme expansive reading of the overall Soсial Security Act is that, in the end, it gets the court nowhere, for this reading also supports the conclusion that not only the phrase “benefits received under the Social Security Act” includes unemployment benefits but that the phrase “Social Security benefits” does as well, and it cannot be reasonably argued that the cоmmon understanding of the phrase “Social Security benefits” includes unemployment benefits. Indeed, the difference between the phrases (the presence of the words “received under”) cannot carry weight that one excludes unemployment benefits while the other does not, when neither phrase refers to unemployment benefits at all; to the contrary, the phrases are otherwise so similar that if one excludes unemployment benefits (as does “Social Security benefits”) then the other must as well. The court is therefore left with its initial, straightforward, and plain understanding that the phrase “benefits received under the Social Security Act” dоes not include unemployment benefits — a plain and straightforward understanding that the court believes the legislators had when they wrote and adopted the language.
For the forgoing reasons, the court holds that the bankruptcy court did not err in sustaining the objection of trustee Curtis C. Reding to confirmation of the Chapter 13 bankruptcy plan proposed by Robert L. Washington, III and Gloria Jean Washington. An appropriate judgment will be entered.
Notes
. Indeed, even the drafters of Official Form 22C are undecided. As noted above, the form completed by the Washingtons directed them not to list unemployment compensation as income "if you contend that ... [it] was a benefit under the Social Security Act.” Official Form 22C (Doc. No. 2-2). The 2005-2008 Committee Notes to Form 22C state that,
"Unemployment compensation is given special treatment. Because the federal government provides funding for state unemployment compensation under the Social Security Act, there may be a dispute about whether unemployment compensation is a 'benefit received under the Social Security Act.’ The forms take no position on the merits of this argument.”
USCS Bankruptcy F 22C n.B.
. Black’s Law Dictionary defines 'benefit' as "Financial assistance that is received from an employer, insurance, or a public program (such as social security) in time of sickness, disability, or unemployment.” Black’s Law Dictionary 167 (8th ed. 2004).
