In re: Andrew Reder ( 2016 )


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  •                                                             FILED
    MAR 08 2016
    1                          NOT FOR PUBLICATION
    SUSAN M. SPRAUL, CLERK
    U.S. BKCY. APP. PANEL
    2                                                         OF THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    3                  UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY APPELLATE PANEL
    4                            OF THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    5   In re:                        )       BAP No.    CC-15-1321-FTaKu
    )
    6   ANDREW REDER,                 )       Bk. No.    13-17664-MT
    )
    7                  Debtor.        )       Adv. No.   14-01191-MT
    _____________________________ )
    8                                 )
    ANDREW REDER,                 )
    9                                 )
    Appellant,     )
    10                                 )
    v.                            )       MEMORANDUM*
    11                                 )
    PAUL FISHER; UNITED STATES    )
    12   TRUSTEE, WOODLAND HILLS,**    )
    )
    13                  Appellees.     )
    ______________________________)
    14
    Argued and Submitted on February 19, 2016
    15                           at Pasadena, California
    16                            Filed – March 8, 2016
    17             Appeal from the United States Bankruptcy Court
    for the Central District of California
    18
    Honorable Maureen A. Tighe, Bankruptcy Judge, Presiding
    19
    20   Appearances:      Adam Apollo argued for Appellant Andrew Reder;
    Scott E. Shapiro of Appell Shapiro, LLP argued for
    21                     Appellee Paul Fisher.
    22
    Before: FARIS, TAYLOR, and KURTZ, Bankruptcy Judges.
    23
    24
    *
    This disposition is not appropriate for publication.
    25   Although it may be cited for whatever persuasive value it may
    26   have, see Fed. R. App. P. 32.1, it has no precedential value, see
    9th Cir. BAP Rule 8024-1.
    27
    **
    The United States Trustee did not file an answering brief
    28   or otherwise make an appearance in this appeal.
    1                               INTRODUCTION
    2        Debtor/Appellant Andrew Reder appeals from the bankruptcy
    3   court’s judgment determining that his $110,000 debt to Appellee
    4   Paul Fisher is nondischargeable pursuant to § 523(a)(2)(A).1
    5   Mr. Reder argues that the court erroneously rejected his argument
    6   that the confirmation of his chapter 11 plan discharged
    7   Mr. Fisher’s debt despite a pending adversary proceeding to
    8   determine the dischargeability of that debt.    Nothing in the
    9   relevant statutes or the confirmed plan supports such a
    10   conclusion.   Accordingly, we AFFIRM.
    11                            FACTUAL BACKGROUND2
    12        Mr. Reder and Mr. Fisher were longtime friends.    In December
    13   2010, while Mr. Reder was on a trip to Thailand, he contacted
    14   Mr. Fisher to request an urgent $110,000 loan to purchase a
    15   rubber tree farm.    Mr. Reder told Mr. Fisher that he had the
    16   money to repay Mr. Fisher when he returned to the United States,
    17   but he could not access his account while abroad and needed the
    18   funds immediately.    Mr. Fisher complied and wired Mr. Reder
    19
    20
    21        1
    Unless specified otherwise, all chapter and section
    22   references are to the Bankruptcy Code, 
    11 U.S.C. §§ 101-1532
    , all
    “Rule” references are to the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy
    23   Procedure, Rules 1001-9037, and all “Civil Rule” references are
    to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, Rules 1-86.
    24
    2
    Mr. Reder’s excerpts of record are incomplete, and both
    25   parties make reference to certain documents on the bankruptcy
    26   court’s docket without providing the Panel with the actual
    document. We have exercised our discretion to review the
    27   bankruptcy court’s docket, as appropriate. See Woods & Erickson,
    LLP v. Leonard (In re AVI, Inc.), 
    389 B.R. 721
    , 725 n.2 (9th Cir.
    28   BAP 2008).
    2
    1   $110,000.3
    2        Thereafter, Mr. Reder refused to repay Mr. Fisher and put
    3   him off with various excuses.    After numerous attempts to collect
    4   on the debt, Mr. Fisher had Mr. Reder sign a promissory note, in
    5   which Mr. Reder acknowledged the debt and agreed to repay the
    6   $110,000 within a year.
    7        When Mr. Reder still failed to repay Mr. Fisher, Mr. Fisher
    8   began collecting information to support a lawsuit against
    9   Mr. Reder.   He allegedly learned that Mr. Reder had told friends
    10   in Thailand that he had conned a “Jew Boy,” i.e., Mr. Fisher;
    11   that Mr. Reder had spent money extensively renovating his house
    12   in Thailand; that Mr. Reder had purchased or put a down payment
    13   on a new truck; that Mr. Reder had only expended $12,000 of his
    14   own funds on the rubber tree farm; that Mr. Reder had expended
    15   $8,000 on elective plastic surgery in Thailand; and that
    16   Mr. Reder had arranged a “sham” marriage to a Thai woman so that
    17   he could purchase the rubber tree farm.
    18        In April 2012, Mr. Fisher filed suit against Mr. Reder in
    19   the superior court of Los Angeles.    The superior court entered
    20   judgment in favor of Mr. Fisher for $135,670.44.
    21        On December 11, 2013, Mr. Reder filed his chapter 11
    22   petition.    Mr. Reder thereafter filed his chapter 11 plan and a
    23
    3
    24          There was some dispute as to whether the $110,000 was a
    loan or investment. Mr. Fisher claimed that Mr. Reder
    25   represented that he could elect to have $55,000 returned and
    26   share in half of the proceeds of the farm, or receive the entire
    loan amount upon request. Mr. Reder claimed that Mr. Fisher was
    27   interested in investing in a rubber tree farm and put up the
    $110,000 as an investment. The bankruptcy court found Mr. Reder
    28   not credible and agreed with Mr. Fisher’s version of events.
    3
    1   succession of amended plans.    Mr. Fisher, proceeding pro se,
    2   objected to the confirmation of the first amended plan in a
    3   three-page letter detailing Mr. Reder’s alleged fraud.    In
    4   response, Mr. Reder argued that the objection was insufficient as
    5   a matter of law and moved to strike the unsupported statements
    6   therein.
    7        On October 31, 2014, Mr. Fisher, proceeding pro se,
    8   initiated the underlying adversary proceeding against Mr. Reder.4
    9   He articulated the circumstances surrounding the alleged fraud
    10   and requested that the court deem the debt nondischargeable.
    11        The bankruptcy court confirmed Mr. Reder’s fourth amended
    12   plan (the “Plan”).    Later, the bankruptcy court closed the
    13   bankruptcy proceedings, having found that the Plan had been fully
    14   implemented.
    15        On August 17, 2015, the bankruptcy court held a trial on
    16   Mr. Fisher’s nondischargeability claim in the adversary
    17   proceeding.    Prior to commencing with trial, counsel for
    18   Mr. Reder argued that the trial was moot due to the prior
    19   confirmation of the Plan.    He contended that Article VI of the
    20   Plan had already discharged Mr. Fisher’s claim and precluded
    21   relitigation of that issue.    Article VI, section A stated:
    22        Discharge. Upon completion of all payments under the
    Plan, the Debtor shall receive a discharge of all
    23        preconfirmation debts, whether or not the creditor
    filed a proof of claim, or accepts the Plan, unless the
    24        court orders otherwise. Such discharge will not
    discharge Debtor from any debts that are
    25        nondischargeable under § 523 or the obligations created
    26
    4
    27          Mr. Fisher’s adversary complaint may have been filed after
    the deadline to file a complaint to determine dischargeability of
    28   certain debts, but Mr. Reder never raised this defense.
    4
    1         by this Plan.
    2         The bankruptcy court denied Mr. Reder’s oral motion to
    3   dismiss, holding that “§ 1141(d)(2) doesn’t permit you to
    4   discharge debts that are nondischargeable under [§] 523.     It
    5   specifically provides that a Chapter 11 discharge does not
    6   discharge an individual Chapter 11 from debts excepted from
    7   discharge under [§] 523.”
    8         At the conclusion of the day-long trial, the court held that
    9   the $110,000 debt was nondischargeable under § 523(a)(2)(A) and
    10   thereafter entered judgment in favor of Mr. Fisher.     Mr. Reder
    11   timely appealed.
    12                               JURISDICTION
    13         The bankruptcy court had jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C.
    14   §§ 1334, 157(b)(1), and 157(b)(2)(I).      We have jurisdiction under
    15   
    28 U.S.C. § 158
    .
    16                                  ISSUE
    17         Whether the bankruptcy court erred in holding that the
    18   $110,000 debt owed to Mr. Fisher is nondischargeable under
    19   § 523(a)(2)(A).
    20                           STANDARD OF REVIEW
    21         We review “the bankruptcy court’s interpretation of the
    22   Bankruptcy Code de novo and its factual findings for clear
    23   error[.]”   Hedlund v. Educ. Res. Inst. Inc., 
    718 F.3d 848
    , 854
    24   (9th Cir. 2013) (quoting Miller v. Cardinale (In re DeVille),
    25   
    361 F.3d 539
    , 547 (9th Cir. 2004)).
    26   ///
    27   ///
    28   ///
    5
    1                                 DISCUSSION
    2   A.   The bankruptcy court did not err in holding that
    Mr. Fisher’s adversary proceeding was not mooted by Plan
    3        confirmation.
    4        Mr. Reder’s overarching argument on appeal is that, by
    5   virtue of Article VI of the Plan, confirmation of the Plan
    6   discharged Mr. Fisher’s claim and precluded relitigation of the
    7   dischargeability issue.    We find no merit to Mr. Reder’s argument
    8   and will not disturb the bankruptcy court’s ruling.
    9        1.   The Plan did not trump §§ 1141(d)(2) and 523(a)(2).
    10        Mr. Fisher initiated his adversary proceeding against
    11   Mr. Reder under § 523(a)(2)(A), essentially alleging that
    12   Mr. Reder defrauded him out of $110,000.    Section 523(a)(2)(A)
    13   provides, in relevant part:
    14        (a) A discharge under section 727, 1141, 1228(a),
    1228(b), or 1328(b) of this title does not discharge an
    15        individual debtor from any debt -
    16             . . .
    17             (2) for money, property, services, or an
    extension, renewal, or refinancing of credit, to
    18             the extent obtained by -
    19                     (A) false pretenses, a false representation,
    or actual fraud, other than a statement
    20                     respecting the debtor’s or an insider’s
    financial condition[.]
    21
    22   § 523(a)(2)(A).
    23        Section 1141 specifies the effects of confirmation of a
    24   chapter 11 plan.    Section 1141(a) provides that “provisions of a
    25   confirmed plan bind the debtor, . . . and any creditor . . . ,
    26   whether or not such creditor . . . has accepted the plan.”
    27   § 1141(a).   Subsection (a) must be read in conjunction with
    28   subsection (d)(2), which states that “[a] discharge under this
    6
    1   chapter does not discharge a debtor who is an individual from any
    2   debt excepted from discharge under section 523 of this title.”
    3   § 1141(d)(2) (emphases added).
    4        It is well accepted in this circuit that the confirmation of
    5   a plan does not discharge an otherwise nondischargeable debt of
    6   an individual debtor, including § 523(a)(2) claims.   See Comput.
    7   Task Grp., Inc. v. Brotby (In re Brotby), 
    303 B.R. 177
    , 189 (9th
    8   Cir. BAP 2003) (“Section 1141(d)(2) plainly limits the discharge
    9   of debts provided to individual debtors in § 1141(d)(1).    The
    10   reference to § 1141(d)(2) in § 1141(a) makes it clear that while
    11   all creditors are bound by the provisions of a confirmed plan,
    12   this binding effect cannot operate to discharge an otherwise
    13   nondischargeable debt.” (emphasis added)); Dolven v. Bartleson
    14   (In re Bartleson), 
    253 B.R. 75
    , 80 (9th Cir. BAP 2000) (“most
    15   courts interpreting section 1141 have concluded that a chapter 11
    16   plan does not have a binding effect with respect to
    17   nondischargeable debts of an individual debtor” (citation
    18   omitted)).
    19        Similarly, the Ninth Circuit has made clear that
    20   confirmation of a chapter 13 plan does not preclude post-
    21   confirmation litigation of nondischargeability claims.5    It
    22
    5
    23          Section 1327(a) states that “[t]he provisions of a
    confirmed plan bind the debtor and each creditor, whether or not
    24   the claim of such creditor is provided for by the plan, and
    whether or not such creditor has objected to, has accepted, or
    25   has rejected the plan.” There is no material difference between
    26   § 1327(a) and § 1141(a).
    27        Section 1328 provides that the completion of a chapter 13
    plan results in discharge “except any debt . . . of the kind
    28                                                      (continued...)
    7
    1   stated:
    2             We have recently observed that in the unique
    bankruptcy context, “the principle of res judicata
    3        should be invoked only after careful inquiry because it
    blocks unexplored paths that may lead to truth . . . .”
    4        Although confirmed plans are res judicata to issues
    therein, the confirmed plan has no preclusive effect on
    5        issues that must be brought by an adversary proceeding,
    or were not sufficiently evidenced in a plan to provide
    6        adequate notice to the creditor.
    7   Enewally v. Wash. Mut. Bank (In re Enewally), 
    368 F.3d 1165
    ,
    8   1172-73 (9th Cir. 2004) (quoting Latman v. Burdette, 
    366 F.3d 774
    9   (9th Cir. 2004)) (emphasis added).    As in the present case, the
    10   bankruptcy court had confirmed the chapter 13 plan before
    11   deciding the adversary complaint.    Id. at 1168.   Regardless, the
    12   appellate court held that, “‘if an issue must be raised through
    13   an adversary proceeding it is not part of the confirmation
    14   process and, unless it is actually litigated, confirmation will
    15   not have a preclusive effect.’   Thus a Chapter 13 plan confirmed
    16   while an adversary proceeding was pending would not have res
    17   judicata effect on the adversary proceeding.”   Id. at 1173
    18   (quoting Cen–Pen Corp. v. Hanson, 
    58 F.3d 89
    , 93 (4th Cir. 1995))
    19   (emphasis added).
    20        Mr. Reder completely fails to cite or discuss this Panel’s
    21   relevant decisions.   He cites Enewally, but he does not discuss
    22   it or recognize its effect on this case.    Instead, his argument
    23   is based on his idiosyncratic interpretation of the language of
    24   § 1141 (and a court decision from another circuit which, as we
    25
    5
    26         (...continued)
    specified in . . . paragraph (1)(B), (1)(C), (2), (3), (4), (5),
    27   (8), or (9) of section 523(a).” § 1328(a)(2). We perceive no
    substantive difference in the relevant chapter 11 and chapter 13
    28   statutes.
    8
    1   explain below, Mr. Reder has mischaracterized).
    2        He notes that § 1141(d)(2) says that a chapter 11 discharge
    3   does not discharge an individual debtor from any debt “excepted
    4   from discharge under section 523 . . . .”     He argues that,
    5   because the statute speaks in the present tense, such a debt is
    6   discharged unless it already has been held nondischargeable,
    7   i.e., the court has already ruled that it is not dischargeable.
    8   We reject this argument for multiple reasons.
    9        First, the language of § 1141(d)(2) will not bear the weight
    10   that Mr. Reder puts on it.    If Congress intended the meaning that
    11   Mr. Reder advocates, § 1141(d)(2) would say that plan
    12   confirmation does not discharge an individual debtor from “any
    13   debts that the court has determined, on or before the entry of
    14   the confirmation order, are not discharged under § 523 . . . .”
    15   But Congress did not include these additional words, or anything
    16   like them, in § 1141(d)(2).
    17        Second, the argument incorrectly conflates the confirmation
    18   order and the discharge order in an individual chapter 11 case.
    19   Section 1141(d)(1)(A) provides that the confirmation of a plan
    20   discharges certain debt.   But a different rule applies if the
    21   debtor is an individual.   In such a case, § 1141(d)(5)(A)
    22   provides that “unless after notice and a hearing the court orders
    23   otherwise for cause, confirmation of the plan does not discharge
    24   any debt provided for in the plan until the court grants a
    25   discharge on completion of all payments under the plan[.]”
    26   § 1141(d)(5)(A) (emphasis added).     In other words, where the
    27   debtor is an individual, confirmation of the plan does not
    28   discharge any of the debtor’s debts, let alone those debts that
    9
    1   are not dischargeable under section 523.
    2        Thus, we reject the view that confirmation of the chapter 11
    3   plan of an individual debtor discharges debts that are otherwise
    4   not dischargeable.
    5        2.      The court did not err in its interpretation of the
    Plan.
    6
    7        Mr. Reder also argues that Article VI of the confirmed Plan
    8   discharged Mr. Fisher’s claim.     We disagree.
    9        In the first place, there is no material difference between
    10   the language of Article VI and the comparable provisions of
    11   § 1141.     Thus, there is no reason to conclude that Article VI
    12   supports a different result.
    13           In the second place, we see no reason to disturb the
    14   bankruptcy court’s interpretation of its own confirmation order.
    15        It is well accepted that, when a court enters an order and
    16   later interprets that order, its interpretation is entitled to
    17   deference.     “We owe substantial deference to the bankruptcy
    18   court’s interpretation of its own orders and will not overturn
    19   that interpretation unless we are convinced that it amounts to an
    20   abuse of discretion.”     Marciano v. Fahs (In re Marciano),
    21   
    459 B.R. 27
    , 35 (9th Cir. BAP 2011), aff’d, 
    708 F.3d 1123
     (9th
    22   Cir. 2013) (quoting Ill. Inv. Tr. No. 92 7163 v. Allied Waste
    23   Indus., Inc. (In re Res. Tech. Corp.), 
    624 F.3d 376
    , 386 (7th
    24   Cir. 2010)).
    25        In the present case, the bankruptcy court entered the order
    26   granting confirmation of the Plan.     The Plan is not attached to
    27   the order, but the order makes no sense unless read with the
    28   Plan.     Therefore, the Plan is an integral part of the order.
    10
    1   When the bankruptcy court held that the Plan confirmation did not
    2   dispose of the nondischargeability claim, the court was
    3   effectively interpreting its own prior order.     The bankruptcy
    4   court’s interpretation of its order granting confirmation of the
    5   Plan was not illogical, implausible, without support in
    6   inferences that may be drawn from the facts in the record, or
    7   otherwise an abuse of discretion.     Further, if the court had
    8   adopted the contrary interpretation, the confirmation order would
    9   have been erroneous.    See generally United Student Aid Funds,
    10   Inc. v. Espinosa, 
    559 U.S. 260
    , 277 (2010) (holding that a
    11   bankruptcy court may not confirm a plan contrary to the law and
    12   that the court is under an obligation to direct a debtor to
    13   conform a deficient plan to the governing statutes).     As such, we
    14   find no reason to overturn the bankruptcy court’s reasoned
    15   interpretation of its own order.
    16        3.     The court’s interpretation of § 1141(d)(2) does not
    lead to an “open-ended” right to seek
    17               nondischargeability determinations.
    18        Mr. Reder argues that the bankruptcy court’s order
    19   erroneously “provides creditors with an open-ended right to
    20   determine nondischargeability, irrespective of Plan
    21   confirmation.”    This argument is unsupported and unsupportable.
    22        Mr. Reder is essentially arguing that there are two
    23   deadlines for nondischargeability claims in individual chapter 11
    24   cases.    First, it is undisputed that a creditor generally must
    25   file a complaint within a prescribed period of time.     Rule 4007
    26   requires that “a complaint to determine the dischargeability of a
    27
    28
    11
    1   debt under § 523(c)6 shall be filed no later than 60 days after
    2   the first date set for the meeting of creditors under § 341(a).”
    3        Second, he wants us to rule that, in order to survive plan
    4   confirmation, a nondischargeability claim must be adjudicated
    5   prior to plan confirmation.   However, no authority supports the
    6   imposition of a second deadline.     The Bankruptcy Code and Rules
    7   do not require a court to make a determination on
    8   nondischargeability claims before plan confirmation.7
    9        Mr. Reder’s argument is also unsound on policy grounds.
    10   Courts should be encouraged to confirm plans as soon as possible,
    11   so creditors can begin to receive distributions.    Courts should
    12   also be encouraged to take an appropriate amount of time to
    13   decide the often complicated matters presented in
    14   dischargeability proceedings.   If courts were precluded from
    15   confirming plans until they decided all adversary proceedings,
    16   creditors would be forced to wait much longer to receive
    17   distributions.   Similarly, if courts hurried to decide
    18
    6
    19          Section 523(c)(1) provides that “the debtor shall be
    discharged from a debt of a kind specified in paragraph (2), (4),
    20   or (6) of section (a) of this section, unless, on request of the
    creditor to whom such debt is owed, and after notice and a
    21   hearing, the court determines such debt to be excepted from
    22   discharge . . . .”
    7
    23          The timing of chapter 7 cases provides the clearest
    illustration of the irrelevance of the timing of the
    24   determination of dischargeability. A court must generally enter
    a discharge sixty days after the first § 341(a) meeting of
    25   creditors. See Rule 4004(c)(1). While certain events may delay
    26   discharge (such as the filing of a complaint under § 727), a
    pending complaint seeking a determination of dischargeability is
    27   not one of those events. In other words, in a chapter 7 case, a
    nondischargeability claim may be decided long after a debtor
    28   receives his discharge.
    12
    1   dischargeability proceedings in the interest of timely confirming
    2   plans, they might find it more difficult to engage in reasoned
    3   consideration of the dischargeability issues.    Neither approach
    4   would serve the purposes of the Bankruptcy Code.
    5        We thus decline to impose a second deadline on
    6   nondischargeability claims.
    7        4.   Schupbach is inapposite.
    8        Mr. Reder relies almost exclusively on an unpublished
    9   disposition out of the Tenth Circuit, Bank of Commerce & Trust
    10   Co. v. Schupbach (In re Schupbach), No. 14-3166, 607 Fed. App’x
    11   831, 
    2015 WL 2372784
     (10th Cir. May 19, 2015).    Mr. Reder
    12   misstates the holding of that case.
    13        In Schupbach, the debtors were individuals who were the
    14   principals of an LLC.    The LLC obtained financing from the
    15   creditor bank, and the individual debtors personally guaranteed
    16   the loans.    Both the individual debtors and the LLC filed
    17   chapter 11 bankruptcy.    The bank filed an adversary proceeding
    18   against the individual debtors, alleging that some of the debt
    19   was nondischargeable under §§ 523(a)(2) and (a)(6).    The court
    20   dismissed the bank’s § 523(a)(2) claim as untimely.    Id. at 833.
    21        Shortly thereafter, the court confirmed the plan of
    22   liquidation in the LLC’s bankruptcy.    The plan provided for the
    23   transfer to the bank, on account of its secured claim, of all
    24   real property in which the bank held a first mortgage,
    25   “includ[ing] the properties serving as collateral on the six
    26   loans at issue in the Bank’s adversary proceeding.”    Id.
    27        The court held a bench trial on the bank’s adversary
    28   proceeding.    It denied the bank’s § 523(a)(6) claim on the merits
    13
    1   and entered judgment in favor of the debtors.    The bank appealed
    2   to the BAP the bankruptcy court’s earlier dismissal of the
    3   § 523(a)(2) claim as untimely.
    4        While the appeal was pending, the individual debtors filed a
    5   proposed chapter 11 plan.     The plan had to address an issue which
    6   is common in such cases: where the debtor is the guarantor of a
    7   debt, and the principal obligor is likely to pay or otherwise
    8   satisfy the debt in whole or in part, the plan must coordinate
    9   the amount the individual debtor/guarantor will pay with the
    10   amount the principal debtor will pay.    In Schupbach, the plan
    11   provided that “[t]he value of the collateral for the Class 4
    12   Claim of [the Bank] far exceeds the claim asserted by [the Bank].
    13   As such, the treatment in the LLC Plan ‘shall be provided to [the
    14   Bank] in full satisfaction of the Class 4 Claim.’”    Put simply,
    15   the debtors’ plan provided that, because the bank’s collateral
    16   was worth more than the amount of its debt, and the LLC’s plan
    17   provided that the LLC would transfer the collateral to the bank,
    18   the bank’s claims against the debtors had been satisfied.    The
    19   bank did not object to the plan or any calculation therein.    Id.
    20   at 834.
    21        The debtors later moved to dismiss the BAP appeal, arguing
    22   that the nondischargeability claim was moot because the bank’s
    23   claims against the debtors had been satisfied in full.    The BAP
    24   granted the motion and dismissed the appeal for lack of
    25   jurisdiction.   Id. at 835.
    26        On appeal to the Tenth Circuit, the appeals court held that
    27   the nondischargeability claim was mooted by the confirmation of
    28   the plan, which provided that the bank’s claim was fully
    14
    1   satisfied.   The court held:
    2        Even if the Bank were to prevail in its appeal by
    obtaining a reversal of the bankruptcy court’s
    3        dismissal of its § 523(a)(2) claim as untimely, and
    even if the bankruptcy court held on remand that a
    4        portion of the Bank’s claim is nondischargeable, it
    remains impossible for that court to grant the Bank any
    5        effectual relief because the Bank’s claim against
    Debtors — including the portion it sought to exclude
    6        from discharge — has been satisfied in full.
    7   Id. at 836 (emphasis in original).
    8        Schupbach has nothing to do with this case.   Schupbach did
    9   not address the effect of plan confirmation on
    10   nondischargeability claims, but rather the manner in which a
    11   particular claim was satisfied under a specific plan.      The
    12   court’s decision was based on the fact that the creditor’s claim
    13   was satisfied – i.e., paid by surrender of collateral – and not
    14   by the fact that the adversary proceeding had not yet been
    15   adjudicated.   The court stated that, because the bank’s
    16   nondischargeability “claim in the Individual Case was fully
    17   satisfied by the previous transfer of real property to the Bank
    18   under the terms of the confirmed LLC Plan[,] . . . once the
    19   Individual Plan was confirmed and the Confirmation Order was
    20   unchallenged on appeal, there was no remaining case or
    21   controversy regarding the Bank’s nondischargeability claim.”     Id.
    22   (emphases added).   In other words, the satisfaction of the bank’s
    23   claim, not the mere fact that the plan was confirmed, mooted the
    24   adversary proceeding.
    25        In any event, we are not bound by an unpublished disposition
    26   from another circuit.   Accordingly, Schupbach does not control,
    27   and Mr. Fisher’s claim was not discharged.
    28   / / /
    15
    1   B.   Mr. Fisher’s objection to the Plan is not relevant to the
    issues on appeal.
    2
    3        Finally, Mr. Reder argues that Mr. Fisher’s failure to
    4   object to the Plan was a waiver of his right to seek relief
    5   outside of the scope of the Plan.    We disagree.
    6        In California State Board of Equalization v. Ward
    7   (In re Artisan Woodworkers), 
    225 B.R. 185
     (9th Cir. BAP 1998),
    8   aff’d, 
    204 F.3d 888
     (9th Cir. 2000), we considered whether the
    9   appellant’s failure to object to the chapter 11 plan bound him to
    10   the plan terms and resulted in the discharge of the appellant’s
    11   claims.   Relying on § 1141(d)(2), we stated, “[i]n general, a
    12   confirmed chapter 11 plan binds all creditors, including
    13   creditors who may have rejected the plan or objected to its
    14   confirmation.   A confirmed plan may not, however, extinguish or
    15   discharge an otherwise nondischargeable debt, even where the
    16   creditor fails to participate in the confirmation process.”      Id.
    17   at 190 (internal citation omitted) (emphasis added).
    18        In short, Mr. Fisher was entitled to pursue his
    19   nondischargeability action regardless of whether he objected to
    20   the Plan.
    21        Moreover, Mr. Reder took conflicting positions regarding
    22   Mr. Fisher’s objection.   In response to Mr. Reder’s amended plan,
    23   Mr. Fisher filed a detailed, three-page objection.   Mr. Reder
    24   responded by urging the court to overrule the objection, stating
    25   that an adversary proceeding was the proper avenue for Mr. Fisher
    26   to seek relief on his claims: “If Fisher is Objecting to the
    27   discharge of his claim, the Bankruptcy Rule requires an adversary
    28   proceeding and the Court cannot rule on the dischargeability of
    16
    1   Fisher’s claim based on any motion that Fisher may file. . . .
    2   Fisher has not filed a complaint as required by the Bankruptcy
    3   Rule.   Therefore, the Court should overrule Fisher’s Objection to
    4   Confirmation of Debtor’s Plan.”    Nevertheless, despite
    5   Mr. Fisher’s adversary proceeding based on the same allegations,
    6   Mr. Reder now argues that Mr. Fisher needed to object to the
    7   Plan, rather than file an adversary proceeding.    Mr. Reder cannot
    8   have it both ways.   We reject his argument that Mr. Fisher failed
    9   to preserve his claim.
    10                               CONCLUSION
    11        For the reasons set forth above, we conclude that the
    12   bankruptcy court did not err in holding the $110,000 debt
    13   nondischargeable under § 523(a)(2)(A).    Accordingly, we AFFIRM.
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