First National Bank of Oneida, N.A. v. Donald H. Brandt , 887 F.3d 1255 ( 2018 )


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  •                 Case: 17-11654       Date Filed: 04/24/2018       Page: 1 of 15
    [PUBLISH]
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
    ________________________
    No. 17-11654
    ________________________
    D.C. Docket No. 8:16-cv-00051-EAK-MAP
    FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF ONEIDA, N.A.,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    versus
    DONALD H. BRANDT,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    ________________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Middle District of Florida
    ________________________
    (April 24, 2018)
    Before WILLIAM PRYOR and JULIE CARNES, Circuit Judges, and ANTOON, *
    District Judge.
    PER CURIAM:
    *
    Honorable John Antoon II, United States District Judge for the Middle District of Florida,
    sitting by designation.
    Case: 17-11654       Date Filed: 04/24/2018   Page: 2 of 15
    First National Bank of Oneida, N.A. (“First National”) brought this action
    against Donald Brandt to collect the remaining amounts due on several loans after
    the real estate securing those loans was sold and the proceeds of those sales did not
    cover the outstanding balances. Brandt, who had earlier filed a Chapter 11
    bankruptcy petition, moved to dismiss First National’s claims on the ground that
    First National could not state a claim for a deficiency because it had not complied
    with certain provisions of Brandt’s previously confirmed Chapter 11 plan. The
    district court agreed with Brandt and dismissed all of First National’s deficiency
    claims that related to loans made before Brandt filed his Chapter 11 petition. First
    National appeals that dismissal.
    After the parties had filed their briefs in this appeal, Brandt moved the
    bankruptcy court to dismiss his Chapter 11 case. The bankruptcy court granted the
    motion to dismiss. Given this dismissal of his underlying bankruptcy petition,
    none of Brandt’s debts or liabilities were discharged and the automatic stay was
    terminated. Brandt and First National disagree as to whether that dismissal has any
    effect on this case, but neither party has meaningfully briefed the issue. In light of
    what is potentially a significant development in the case, we vacate the district
    court’s dismissal of First National’s deficiency claims and remand for the district
    court to consider, in the first instance, whether the dismissal of Brandt’s
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    Chapter 11 case without a discharge has any effect on First National’s ability to
    pursue its deficiency claims in this case.
    I.     BACKGROUND
    A.      Brandt’s Bankruptcy Proceedings
    In July 2009, Brandt filed a voluntary Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition.
    When he filed the petition, Brandt owned, managed, and rented approximately 50
    single-family homes and duplexes in Ohio, Tennessee, Arizona, and Florida. He
    was also in the business of selling and developing raw land in Tennessee.
    One of Brandt’s creditors was First National Bank. Brandt owed First
    National more than $1.3 million on real-estate loans. First National filed eleven
    proofs of claim in Brandt’s bankruptcy case—ten for the real-estate loans and one
    for a car loan that is not at issue in this appeal. In its proofs of claim, First
    National asserted that its real-estate loans were fully secured.1 Brandt did not
    object to any of First National’s proofs of claim. See 11 U.S.C. § 502(a)
    (providing that a claim is deemed allowed unless a party in interest objects).
    Brandt filed his Chapter 11 plan in February 2010. He grouped all of First
    National’s real-estate loans into a single class—Class 19—“to the extent allowed
    1
    Seven of the proofs of claim explicitly asserted that the property securing the relevant loan was
    worth more than the amount of the loan. Three did not list a value for the collateral, but
    identified the entire amount of the claim as secured.
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    as . . . secured claims[s] under” 11 U.S.C. § 506. No other claims were included in
    that class.
    The plan further provided that Brandt would issue a promissory note to First
    National secured by $150,000 worth of real estate.2 In exchange for Brandt
    assuming this additional obligation, First National would deem Brandt current on
    his real-estate loans through August 2010. Brandt would then resume his
    payments to First National in September 2010.
    The plan also established Class 45—a single class of all unsecured claims
    allowed under 11 U.S.C. § 502. In its description of Class 45, the plan stated:
    “Any secured creditor who has filed a secured claim and claims an entitlement
    to an unsecured claim must file an amended claim seeking entitlement to an
    unsecured claim by 30 days after the confirmation hearing (including any
    continued dates).” (Bolded emphasis in original).
    The bankruptcy court confirmed Brandt’s Chapter 11 plan on December 31,
    2011. Believing itself oversecured at that time as to its claims, First National did
    2
    First National asserts that the promissory note was for post-petition interest, and its assertion is
    supported both by the fact that the note brought Brandt current on his obligations to First
    National through August 2010 and by statements that First National’s attorney made at the
    confirmation hearing on Brandt’s Chapter 11 plan. At the confirmation hearing, First National’s
    attorney explained to the bankruptcy court that Brandt had granted First National a lien on
    approximately nine previously unencumbered properties worth $150,000 to cover interest that
    had accrued on six of First National’s real-estate loans. Brandt had already issued a promissory
    note—for $142,353.65—and a deed of trust for the relevant real estate to First National in May
    2010. The bankruptcy court approved and ratified that transaction.
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    not amend its proofs of claim within 30 days after confirmation to claim an
    entitlement to an unsecured claim.
    By February 2013, which was a little over a year later, Brandt had defaulted
    on his obligations to First National: both on the pre-petition real-estate loans and
    on the post-petition promissory note. First National moved the bankruptcy court to
    lift the automatic stay so it could foreclose on the real estate securing its loans to
    Brandt. The bankruptcy court granted the requested relief.
    First National subsequently sold the real estate securing its loans. After
    applying the proceeds to the outstanding balances on Brandt’s loans, Brandt still
    owed First National more than $1.2 million. According to First National, more
    than $180,000 of that $1.2 million deficiency was related to the post-petition
    promissory note, while the rest related to the pre-petition real-estate loans.
    At a hearing on November 3, 2015, First National moved the bankruptcy
    court to lift the automatic stay to allow it to pursue in personam relief against
    Brandt. Brandt did not oppose the motion. Accordingly, the bankruptcy court
    granted the motion and lifted the automatic stay specifically to allow First National
    “to pursue its rights and claims (if any) against Brandt.”
    First National then brought this case seeking to collect from Brandt the
    remaining amounts due on both the pre-petition real-estate loans and the
    post-petition promissory note.
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    B.     Procedural History of this Case
    First National filed its original complaint in January 2016. Brandt moved to
    dismiss that complaint. In his motion to dismiss, Brandt argued, among other
    things, that First National could not seek an unsecured deficiency judgment related
    to its pre-petition real-estate loans because First National “did not take the steps
    delineated in Class 45 [of the Chapter 11 plan] to assert an unsecured deficiency
    claim.” Specifically, First National did not file an amended claim seeking
    entitlement to an unsecured claim within 30 days after the confirmation hearing.
    Brandt further argued that allowing First National to obtain a deficiency judgment
    would “disrupt [the plan’s] distribution scheme” and cause Brandt to default on his
    payments to other creditor classes.
    In an order entered on May 13, 2016, the district court concluded that First
    National’s original complaint stated a plausible claim for a deficiency only with
    respect to the post-petition promissory note. It reasoned that, because the note was
    executed post-petition, any deficiency claim arising under the note would not have
    been included in Class 45 of Brandt’s Chapter 11 plan, which dealt only with pre-
    petition unsecured claims. However, the district court concluded that any
    deficiency claims related to the pre-petition real-estate loans “necessarily would
    have been classified in Class 45.” Because First National had not alleged that it
    “compl[ied] with the Plan’s requirements pertaining to Class 45 deficiency
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    claims,” the district court dismissed First National’s deficiency claims related to
    the pre-petition real-estate loans. The district court instructed First National that if
    it wished to file an amended complaint, it “must attach copies of the Plan,
    Confirmation Order, and Proofs of Claim, and allege compliance with the
    provisions relating to Class 45 deficiency claims.”
    First National then filed an amended complaint that, like the original
    complaint, sought the remaining amounts due on both the pre-petition real-estate
    loans and the post-petition promissory note. First National attached copies of the
    plan, the confirmation order, and the relevant proofs of claim. It did not, however,
    allege compliance with the provisions relating to Class 45 deficiency claims.
    Instead, First National argued that it was not required to comply with those
    provisions because Brandt did not assert in his bankruptcy case that First
    National’s claims were undersecured. First National contended that because, by all
    accounts, it was oversecured during the relevant time period and because Brandt’s
    Chapter 11 plan brought Brandt current on his obligations to First National through
    August 2010, First National “was not required to file a contingent unsecured claim
    in a speculative unknown amount to preserve its right to receive the full payment
    promised by the Plan, in the event that Brandt should perhaps default at some later
    date on his Plan obligations.”
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    The district court again dismissed First National’s deficiency claims related
    to the pre-petition real-estate loans. The court reiterated that dismissal was
    warranted because First National had failed to allege compliance with the
    provisions of Brandt’s Chapter 11 plan relating to Class 45 deficiency claims, as
    the court had directed it must do to state a viable claim. Explaining its insistence
    on First National’s compliance with the plan’s requirements, the court stated that
    “the theory of recovery articulated in the [amended complaint was] antithetical to
    the dual purposes underlying the Bankruptcy Code,” which are to give the debtor a
    fresh start and to promote equality of distribution among creditors. See 5 Collier
    on Bankruptcy ¶ 541.01, at 541-10 (Richard Levin & Henry J. Sommer eds., 16th
    ed. 2017) (identifying “the fundamental purposes of the Bankruptcy Code” as “the
    breathing room given to a debtor that attempts to make a fresh start, and the
    equality of distribution of assets among similarly situated creditors, according to
    the priorities set forth within the Code”). 3 As the district court saw it:
    Under [First National’s] theory, a secured creditor would never have
    an incentive to pursue an unsecured deficiency claim in bankruptcy.
    Rather, a secured creditor could file a fully secured claim, sit back,
    and assuming the debtor later fails to pay its claim in full, reforeclose
    its lien and pursue a deficiency claim against the debtor. If permitted,
    such a practice would undermine debtors’ ability to obtain a “fresh
    start,” while at the same time permit secured creditors to obtain
    unsecured pre-petition deficiency claims without having to share in
    the distribution provided to general unsecured creditors.
    3
    Because we vacate the district court’s order on other grounds, we take no position on the
    soundness of the district court’s reasoning.
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    The district court granted First National leave to file a second amended complaint
    to pursue only its claim under the post-petition promissory note.
    First National filed a second amended complaint in compliance with the
    district court’s order. Brandt failed to answer the second amended complaint and
    the clerk entered a default against him. After the district court denied Brandt’s
    motion to set aside that entry of default, Brandt and First National stipulated to the
    entry of a judgment against Brandt for $180,000 related to the post-petition
    promissory note. Judgment was entered on March 28, 2017. First National then
    brought this appeal.
    However, on December 14, 2017, after this appeal had been fully briefed,
    Brandt moved the bankruptcy court to dismiss his bankruptcy case. The
    bankruptcy court granted the motion and dismissed the case. Given this dismissal,
    the automatic stay was terminated and “[n]one of [Brandt’s] debts, liabilities, or
    obligations [were] discharged.”
    First National asked us to take judicial notice of the dismissal of Brandt’s
    bankruptcy case. We granted that motion.
    II.   DISCUSSION
    The district court dismissed First National’s claim for a deficiency judgment
    related to its pre-petition real-estate loans because First National had not filed an
    amended proof of claim in Brandt’s bankruptcy case, as required by the Chapter 11
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    plan in order to seek an unsecured claim. Later, after this appeal was fully briefed,
    Brandt’s Chapter 11 case was dismissed without a discharge of any of his debts.
    Accordingly, this appeal presents two issues for our review. The first
    question is the one that the parties briefed: whether a secured creditor whose pre-
    petition debt is oversecured at the time of the Chapter 11 filing—and who therefore
    fails to identify any part of the debt as unsecured—is precluded from later seeking
    a deficiency judgment after the debtor has failed to comply with the terms of the
    plan and the collateral no longer fully secures the debt. The second question arose
    after the parties had filed their briefs, when Brandt dismissed his bankruptcy
    petition. That question is whether, by dismissing his Chapter 11 case without a
    discharge, Brandt is now foreclosed from arguing that First National cannot seek a
    deficiency judgment related to its pre-petition real-estate loans based on First
    National’s failure originally to identify any portion of these loans as being
    undersecured. Notably, because Brandt’s Chapter 11 case was dismissed after this
    appeal was already fully briefed, the effect of that dismissal, as well as the facts
    and circumstances surrounding it, have not been meaningfully briefed by the
    parties.
    The dismissal of Brandt’s Chapter 11 case without a discharge—after
    issuance of the district court order on appeal here—is a potentially significant
    event that may affect the ultimate disposition of this case and on which there has
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    been insufficient briefing. For that reason, we vacate the district court’s dismissal
    order4 and remand for that court to consider this newly raised issue and, if
    necessary, to develop a fuller factual record. Although we do not now decide what
    impact Brandt’s dismissal of his bankruptcy petition may ultimately have, we offer
    some preliminary discussion of the issues for the district court to consider in
    reaching its decision.
    According to the pertinent statute, once a Chapter 11 plan is confirmed, it is
    binding on both the debtor and his creditors. See 11 U.S.C. § 1141(a). The plan
    cannot be revoked unless, within 180 days after confirmation, it is shown that the
    plan was procured by fraud. 5 See 11 U.S.C. § 1144. In a corporate Chapter 11
    proceeding, confirmation of the plan also discharges any debts that arose before the
    date of confirmation. 11 U.S.C. § 1141(d)(1)(A). Thus, as bankruptcy courts
    within this circuit have noted, “a confirmed plan of reorganization creates a
    contractual relationship between the debtor and the creditor” where “[t]he
    creditor’s pre-confirmation claim is subsumed in and replaced by the new contract
    created by the confirmed plan.” In re Winn-Dixie Stores, Inc., 
    381 B.R. 804
    , 807
    (Bankr. M.D. Fla. 2008) (quoting In re New River Shipyard, Inc., 
    355 B.R. 894
    ,
    4
    Because we vacate the district court’s dismissal order on the basis of changed circumstances,
    we do not reach the merits of that order at this time.
    5
    Notably, the standard for revoking a Chapter 11 plan is the same as the standard for revoking a
    Chapter 12 or Chapter 13 plan. See 11 U.S.C. §§ 1144, 1230, 1330; see also 8 Collier on
    Bankruptcy ¶ 1144.02[2], at 1144-4 (Richard Levin & Henry J. Sommer eds., 16th ed. 2017).
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    912 (Bankr. S.D. Fla. 2006)), aff’d, 
    414 B.R. 764
    (M.D. Fla. 2009), aff’d, 
    639 F.3d 1053
    (11th Cir. 2011). In other words, as a result of confirmation and discharge,
    “[t]he initial claim filed by the creditor during the pendency of the case is dead,
    replaced by the new contractual obligation created by the creditor’s treatment
    under the confirmed plan.” 
    Id. (quoting In
    re New River Shipyard, 
    Inc., 355 B.R. at 912
    ).
    Before 2005, the same result occurred when the Chapter 11 debtor was an
    individual: that is, confirmation of the Chapter 11 plan also discharged any debts
    that arose before the date of confirmation. See 11 U.S.C. § 1141 (2000); In re
    Depew, 
    115 B.R. 965
    , 966, 973 (Bankr. N.D. Ind. 1989). In 2005, however,
    Congress amended § 1141 to provide that, when the debtor is an individual rather
    than a corporation or other business entity, “confirmation of the plan does not
    discharge any debt provided for in the plan until the court grants a discharge on
    completion of all payments under the plan.” 11 U.S.C. § 1141(d)(5)(A) (emphasis
    added); see also Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of
    2005, Pub. L. No. 109-8, § 321(d), 119 Stat. 23, 95–96 (adding 11 U.S.C.
    § 1141(d)(5)).
    Of course, Brandt is an individual, not a corporation, and he is an individual
    who dismissed his Chapter 11 bankruptcy case prior to any discharge of his debts
    by the bankruptcy court. Moreover, given the amended § 1141’s emphasis on the
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    need for a discharge order in an individual’s Chapter 11 case, and the fact that
    Chapter 13 likewise conditions a discharge on the debtor’s fulfillment of his
    obligations under the confirmed plan, see 11 U.S.C. § 1328(a), opinions discussing
    the dismissal of Chapter 13 cases without a discharge could perhaps become
    relevant to a determination of whether and how the dismissal of Brandt’s
    Chapter 11 case without a discharge affects the enforceability of his confirmed
    Chapter 11 plan. See, e.g., Nash v. Kester (In re Nash), 
    765 F.2d 1410
    , 1413 (9th
    Cir. 1985); In re Templeton, 
    538 B.R. 578
    , 587 (Bankr. N.D. Ala. 2015); In re
    Irons, 
    173 B.R. 910
    , 910–11 (Bankr. E.D. Ark. 1994); In re Groves, 
    27 B.R. 866
    ,
    867–68 (Bankr. D. Kan. 1983).
    We further note that, under 11 U.S.C. § 349(b) and unless the bankruptcy
    court, for cause, orders otherwise, the dismissal of a bankruptcy case:
    (1) reinstates—
    (A) any proceeding or custodianship superseded under section
    543 of [the Bankruptcy Code];
    (B) any transfer avoided under section 522, 544, 545, 547, 548,
    549, or 724(a) of [the Bankruptcy Code], or preserved
    under section 510(c)(2), 522(i)(2), or 551 of [the
    Bankruptcy Code]; and
    (C) any lien voided under section 506(d) of [the Bankruptcy
    Code];
    (2) vacates any order, judgment, or transfer ordered, under section
    522(i)(1), 542, 550, or 553 of [the Bankruptcy Code]; and
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    (3) revests the property of the estate in the entity in which such
    property was vested immediately before the commencement of
    the case . . . .
    11 U.S.C. § 349(b).
    Thus, insofar as the dismissal of a bankruptcy case is concerned, the aim of
    § 349(b) is to return the parties, as far as practicable, to the financial positions they
    occupied before the case was filed. Czyzewski v. Jevic Holding Corp., 
    137 S. Ct. 973
    , 979 (2017) (noting that dismissal of a Chapter 11 case “aims to return to the
    prepetition financial status quo”); S. Rep. No. 95-989, at 49 (1978) (“The basic
    purpose of [§ 349(b)] is to undo the bankruptcy case, as far as practicable, and to
    restore all property rights to the position in which they were found at the
    commencement of the case.” (capitalization omitted)), as reprinted in 1978
    U.S.C.C.A.N. 5787, 5835; see also HSBC Bank USA v. Blendheim (In re
    Blendheim), 
    803 F.3d 477
    , 487 (9th Cir. 2015) (noting that, upon dismissal of a
    Chapter 13 case, the “debtor loses any benefits promised in exchange for the
    successful completion of the plan—whether in personam, such as discharge, or
    in rem, such as lien voidance,” and further asserting that, in effect, “dismissal
    returns to the creditor all the property rights he held at the commencement of the
    Chapter 13 proceeding and renders him free to exercise any nonbankruptcy
    collection remedies available to him”); 3 Collier on Bankruptcy ¶ 349.01[2], at
    349-3 (Richard Levin & Henry J. Sommer eds., 16th ed. 2017).
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    We acknowledge, however, that § 349(b) does not provide that dismissal of
    a bankruptcy case without a discharge vacates a previously confirmed Chapter 11
    plan or otherwise renders that plan unenforceable by the debtor. Stated another
    way, the vacating of a previously confirmed plan is not one of the consequences
    expressly identified as occurring upon the dismissal of a bankruptcy case. See
    11 U.S.C. § 349(b); United States v. Standard State Bank, 
    91 B.R. 874
    , 876–79
    (W.D. Mo. 1988). But that silence does not necessarily mean that the confirmed
    plan can survive the dismissal of the bankruptcy case. Antonin Scalia & Bryan
    Garner, Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts 107 (2012) (“Virtually all
    the authorities who discuss the negative-implication canon emphasize that it must
    be applied with great caution, since its application depends so much on context.”).
    Therefore, we leave it for the district court, in the first instance, to determine
    the extent to which Brandt’s dismissal of his Chapter 11 case without a discharge
    impacts the merits of First National’s claim.
    III.   CONCLUSION
    For the reasons explained above, we VACATE the district court’s dismissal
    of First National’s claim for a deficiency judgment related to the pre-petition
    real-estate loans and REMAND for the district court to consider, in the first
    instance, whether and to what extent the dismissal of Brandt’s Chapter 11 case
    without a discharge affects the ultimate disposition of this action.
    15