#2558        signed 8-14-01 (corrected 10-10-01)

IN THE UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT

FOR THE DISTRICT OF KANSAS

In re:

WALTER B. ANDERSON,

DEBTOR.

CASE NO. 99-40093-7
CHAPTER 7

ORDER ON MOTION TO RECONSIDER ORDER

APPROVING TRUSTEE'S FINAL REPORT (CORRECTED)

This case is before the Court for a determination of the payment priorities of several late-filed

tax claims. The claims were filed by the Missouri Department of Revenue (“MDOR”), the Kansas

Department of Revenue (“KDOR”), and the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”). The trustee for the

bankruptcy estate in this case, Robert L. Baer, objects to the claims. Creditor Barbara A. Mitchell also

objects. The MDOR appears by counsel Sheryl L. Moreau, Special Assistant Attorney General,

Missouri Department of Revenue, General Counsel's Office. The KDOR appears by counsel Jay D.

Befort, Legal Services Bureau, Kansas Department of Revenue. The IRS appears by Katja M.

Eichinger, Trial Attorney, Tax Division, U.S. Department of Justice. The debtor, who supports the

payment of the claims, appears by counsel Jeannie M. Bobrink of Kansas City, Missouri. The trustee

appears by counsel Cosgrove, Webb & Oman of Topeka, Kansas. Ms. Mitchell appears by counsel

Robert D. Berger of Lentz & Clark of Overland Park, Kansas.

FACTS

Walter B. Anderson filed a chapter 7 bankruptcy petition in January 1999. A few days later,

notice of the filing was sent to the creditors listed on the mailing matrix submitted with the petition. The

MDOR was not listed on either the schedules or the mailing matrix. Although the KDOR was listed on

the debtor's schedules as a creditor, it was not included on the mailing matrix. The IRS was listed in

the schedules and on the mailing matrix. The address given on the matrix for the IRS was a valid

address in St. Louis, Missouri, but was not the Kansas address that District of Kansas Bankruptcy

Court Standing Order 96-2, then in effect, directed bankruptcy filers to use. The notice sent to

creditors stated that no assets appeared to be available from which to pay unsecured creditors, so

creditors were advised not to file proofs of their claims until they received directions to do so.

In December 1999, notice was sent to the creditors listed on the mailing matrix that assets had

been recovered, and they should file claims. Governmental units were given until June 29, 2000, to file

proofs of claim, but no tax claims were filed before that deadline. The debtor did not file any proofs of

claim for the MDOR, the KDOR, or the IRS (collectively, “the Tax Claimants”), although Federal Rule

of Bankruptcy Procedure 3004 authorized him to do so.

In October 2000, the trustee submitted his final report (“the Report”) to the United States

Trustee for approval. The Report showed the trustee had received around $22,600 for the debtor's

bankruptcy estate, and projected distributing about $18,900 to four unsecured creditors who held

about $81,000 in timely-filed claims. The United States Trustee approved the Report a few weeks

later, and it was filed with the Court on November 3. The Report was subsequently noticed to

creditors and the debtor, who were given until December 20 to object to it. On December 4, the

MDOR was the first of the Taxing Authorities to file a proof of claim. It asserted an unsecured priority

claim of $5,387.22 and a general unsecured claim of $739.25. On December 7, the debtor filed an

objection to the Report, indicating that he owed significant debts to the Tax Claimants and that his

counsel had contacted them to try to convince them to file proofs of claim. About a week later, Ms.

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Mitchell, one of the creditors who had timely filed a proof of claim, filed a response to the debtor's

objection, contending that the debtor had no standing to object to the Report, and that it was too late

for claims to be filed. On December 15, the KDOR became the second of the Taxing Authorities to

file a proof of claim. The KDOR indicated that its claim of $1,862.48 was secured by tax warrants it

had filed in state district court, but it also asserted a contingent priority claim of $1.00 in the event the

security was insufficient to pay the claim in full.

At a hearing on the Report on January 25, 2001, the Court sustained Ms. Mitchell's response

to the debtor's objection. However, because nothing presented showed that the MDOR had received

timely notice of the case or the need to file a proof of claim, the Court allowed the MDOR's claim

under 11 U.S.C.A. §726(a)(2)(C). Because the KDOR had been listed in the debtor's schedules as a

creditor (its omission from the mailing matrix was discovered later), the Court concluded that the

KDOR did have notice in time to file a timely proof of claim, so its claim was not covered by

§726(a)(2)(C). The Court also ruled that the KDOR's claim did not satisfy §726(a)(1) because the

trustee had “commence[d] distribution” before the claim was filed. At this point, the KDOR was still

asserting that its claim was, at least potentially, fully secured. An order approving the trustee's Report

was filed on February 16.

Ten days later, the debtor filed a motion to reconsider the order approving the Report. A

hearing was held on March 29, and the parties were given a schedule to submit briefs supporting their

positions. A number of briefs have now been filed. At some time after the January 25 hearing, it was

discovered that the KDOR was not included on the debtor's mailing matrix, even though it was listed in

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the schedules. This meant that neither notice of the case nor of the need to file a claim had been sent to

the KDOR.

While the briefs were being written, the KDOR filed an amended proof of claim on April 3,

adding a $21 priority tax claim and $35 general unsecured claim. It also repeated its secured claim of

$1,862.48 but increased the contingent priority component of that secured claim to $1,552.23.1 On

April 19, the IRS became the last of the Taxing Authorities to file a proof of claim, asserting a priority

claim of $12,384.50 and a general unsecured claim of $3,215.72. About two months later, the MDOR

filed an amendment changing its priority claim to $5,037.22 and its general unsecured claim to $778.25.

DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS

Distribution of the property of a bankruptcy estate is governed by 11 U.S.C.A. §726. As

pertinent here, it provides:

(a) . . . [P]roperty of the estate shall be distributed—

(1) first, in payment of claims of the kind specified in, and in the order specified in, section 507 of this title, proof of which is timely filed under section 501 of this title or tardily filed before the date on which the trustee commences distribution under this section;

(2) second, in payment of any allowed unsecured claim, other than a claim of a kind specified in paragraph (1), (3), or (4) of this subsection, proof of which is—

(A) timely filed under section 501(a) of this title;

. . .

(C) tardily filed under section 501(a) of this title, if—

1The KDOR has explained that its proof of claim was meant to indicate that $1,552.23 of its claim would qualify for priority tax status if it were not a secured claim.

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(i) the creditor that holds such claim did not have notice or

actual knowledge of the case in time for timely filing of a proof of such claim under section 501(a) of this title; and

(ii) proof of such claim is filed in time to permit payment of such claim.

(3) third, in payment of any allowed unsecured claim proof of which is tardily filed under section 501(a) of this title other than a claim of the kind specified in paragraph (2)(C) of this subsection.

(Emphasis added.) The crux of the dispute in this case is the two italicized phrases. The Tax Claimants

contend that a trustee does not “commence[] distribution” under §726(a)(1) until the Court signs an

order approving the final report or until the trustee actually writes and mails the distribution checks to

the creditors. The trustee and Ms. Mitchell respond that tax claims filed when they were in this case

must be disallowed under §502(b)(9) as untimely filed, or at most, allowed only under §726(a)(2)(C) if

the creditor had no notice of the case but filed “in time to permit payment” of the claim. They argue that

the trustee “commence[d] distribution” under §726(a)(1) when he submitted his Report to the U.S.

Trustee for approval, or alternatively, when the Report was filed with the court or when it was noticed

to creditors.

A careful review of the facts reveals that the MDOR and the KDOR would not have been sent

any of the notices in this case because they were not included on the mailing matrix that controls to

whom official notices are directed. No evidence was presented to show that either of them had actual

notice of the case in time to file timely proofs of claim. The trustee and Ms. Mitchell concede that the

trustee still has not written or mailed checks distributing the estate to the creditors who filed timely

proofs of claim. Consequently, both the MDOR and the KDOR filed their proofs “in time to permit

payment” of their unsecured claims, which therefore qualify at least for distributions under

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§726(a)(2)(C) on an equal basis with the timely-filed unsecured claims. The question remains whether

the proofs were filed before the trustee “commence[d] distribution” under §726(a)(1).

On the other hand, the IRS was included on the mailing matrix and so was sent all the official

notices issued in the case, just not to the address specified in the Court's standing order. The IRS does

not contend that the notices were not received in its St. Louis office, or that any of the information

contained in the notices, such as the debtor's name or Social Security number, this Court's location, or

the case number assigned to the debtor's case, was incorrect. Thus, although notice to the IRS may

have been technically deficient, the IRS did receive actual notice in time to have filed a timely proof of

claim. Since the IRS had actual, timely notice of the case, it does not qualify for any distribution under

§726(a)(2)(C). Nevertheless, like the MDOR and the KDOR, the IRS argues its proof of claim was

filed before the trustee “commence[d] distribution” under §726(a)(1).

The MDOR and the KDOR rely on what appears to be the only published decision that has

addressed the meaning of “commences distribution” in §726(a)(1). See In re Wilson, 190 B.R. 860,

861-62 (Bankr. E.D. Mo. 1996). In Wilson, the court held that the phrase means the date on which

the Court approves the trustee's final report. Id. at 862. Because the IRS filed its claim after the Court

had already approved the trustee's Report, the IRS does not rely heavily on Wilson. However, the

IRS does assert in a footnote in its brief that Wilson arguably supports its position because, in light of

the motion to reconsider, the trustee's Report has not yet actually been approved in this case. The

MDOR and the KDOR also point to phrases appearing in §1101(2)(C) and §1326(a)(1) that are

similar to “commences distribution” and suggest they show the phrase refers to the time payment is

actually made rather than the time the Court approved the trustee's Report. The IRS more strongly

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argues that the phrase “commences distribution” allows priority claims to be filed and be paid until the

trustee actually mails the distribution checks to the creditors whose claims have been allowed. The IRS

suggests this meaning is required because not all final reports, when first filed, reflect the distribution that

is ultimately made since objections can be made and sometimes will be sustained. Finally, the IRS

contends proposed legislation currently pending before Congress that would amend §726 supports its

interpretation of the phrase.

For a variety of reasons, the Court concludes that the last date on which a priority claim can be

filed before the trustee “commences distribution” under §726(a)(1) is the date when the trustee's initial

version of the final report is filed with the Court. By that time, all listed creditors have been given notice

to file proofs of claim. The debtor has also had the opportunity to file any claims he or she may wish to,

as authorized by Bankruptcy Rule 3004. The trustee has collected and liquidated the assets of the

estate, reviewed the claims on file and obtained a determination of any objection he or she might have

to any of them, and then submitted a proposed final report to the U.S. Trustee declaring that his or her

administration of the estate is complete except for writing and mailing checks to pay the administrative

fees and expenses and the allowed claims entitled to share in the available distribution. See 11

U.S.C.A. §704(9); 28 U.S.C.A. §586; Fed. R. Bankr. P. 3009 and 1993 Advisory Committee Note

(requirement that court approve amounts and times of distributions in chapter 7 cases deleted,

recognizing that U.S. Trustee supervises trustees); Fed. R. Bankr. P. 5009 and 1991 Advisory

Committee Note (when trustee certifies estate fully administered, court may discharge trustee and close

case without reviewing final report or trustee's certification). After the U.S. Trustee approves the

trustee's final report, it is filed with the court and then noticed to the debtor and the creditors on the

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mailing matrix. If priority tax creditors are not barred at that point, they could cause successive

extensions for the benefit of other dilatory tax creditors by filing their claims one by one after each

successive version of the trustee's final report has been filed, because if allowed under §726(a)(1),

those claims would reduce or even eliminate the distributions that the trustee had reported would be

made to the general unsecured creditors, and so the final report would have to be noticed again and

again. If the Court were to accept the Tax Claimants' arguments in this case, the MDOR and the

KDOR (and for that matter, the debtor by objecting to the Report and seeking reconsideration of its

approval) would have effectively obtained an extension of time for the IRS by filing their claims after the

Report was filed. A chapter 7 trustee's first-listed duty is to “collect and reduce to money the property

of the estate for which such trustee serves, and close such estate as expeditiously as is compatible with

the best interests of the parties in interest.” 11 U.S.C.A. §704(1); see also Yadkin Valley Bank &

Trust Co. v. McGee (In re Hutchinson), 5 F.3d 750, 753-54 (4th Cir. 1993) (expeditiously closing

estate is trustee's main duty); Estes & Hoyt v. Crake (In re Riverside-Linden Inv. Co.), 925 F.2d

320, 322 (9th Cir. 1991) (same); Kowal v. Malkemus (In re Thompson), 965 F.2d 1136, 1145 (1st

Cir. 1992) (important policy favors efficient bankruptcy administration); Fed. R. Bankr. P. 3009

(“dividends to creditors shall be paid as promptly as practicable”). Fixing the date the trustee

“commence[d] distribution” as the date he first filed his Report helps the trustee fulfill this duty much

more than the perhaps frequently delayed and extended time the Tax Claimants ask the Court to apply.

As the Tax Claimants would have it, in a case like this with three tax creditors, the trustee could

prepare a final report, obtain the U.S. Trustee's approval, and file the report, then have to do the same

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things two more times when a new tardy tax claim is filed after each version of the final report has been

filed and noticed to creditors.

The Court is not inclined to accept the date the trustee sent the Report to the U.S. Trustee or

when the U.S. Trustee approved it because, unlike the date a pleading is filed with the Clerk of the

Bankruptcy Court, neither of those dates is readily available to the public. When filed with the Clerk,

the Report becomes a public record, marked with its filing date, and both the Report and the date may

be found and reviewed either in person or electronically from a distance. This is not true of the U.S.

Trustee's records. The Court does not believe it would be appropriate to interpret “commences

distribution” to refer to any date not readily available from a public record.

It is true that phrases similar to “commences distribution” appear in at least two other provisions

of the Bankruptcy Code, as pointed out by the MDOR and the KDOR. However, the different

contexts in which the phrases appear indicate that they logically refer to something different than the

phrase in §726(a)(1). See Conroy v. Aniskoff, 507 U.S. 511, 515 (1993) (statute must be read as a

whole because the meaning of statutory language depends on context). Under the MDOR and the

KDOR's argument, a chapter 7 trustee would not only commence but also complete distribution at the

same time, because the trustee is finished distributing the estate once he or she, in accordance with the

final report, writes and mails the checks to all the creditors. This is not true in the other cited contexts

where similar phrases appear.

For purposes of a chapter 11 plan, “substantial consummation” means, among other things,

“commencement of distribution under the plan.” §1101(2)(C). Unlike the distribution of a chapter 7

estate, however, distribution under a confirmed chapter 11 plan typically occurs over a period of time,

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not all at once, in some cases continuing for twenty or thirty years. In this context, it makes sense to

use “commencement of distribution” to refer to the beginning of what may be many years of payments

under the plan. Similarly, under §1326(a)(1), a chapter 13 debtor is ordinarily supposed to

“commence making the payments proposed by a plan within 30 days after the plan is filed,” but will be

making payments for anywhere from three to five years, see §1322(d). As in chapter 11, it makes

sense to refer to the time when the debtor actually makes the first payment in a chapter 13 case as the

time payments “commence.” In those contexts, commencement of distribution or payments truly is a

beginning. However, since a chapter 7 trustee will ordinarily distribute the property of the estate all at

once, it makes much less sense to refer to the time the property is actually distributed as the time the

trustee “commences distribution.” Instead, that is the time the trustee finishes distribution. Before the

word was omitted from its latest revision, a leading legal dictionary's first definition for “commence”

was: “To initiate by performing the first act or step. To begin, institute or start.” Black's Law

Dictionary 268 (6th ed. 1990); cf. Black's Law Dictionary on Westlaw (Bryan A. Garner, ed., 7th

ed. 1999) (“commence” does not have a separate entry in this edition, but “initiate” is defined as, “To

begin or start; commence”). In the chapter 7 context, the Court simply cannot agree that the

completion of the distribution is the “first step” in the distribution.

The Tax Claimants' assertion that “commences distribution” means when the trustee sends all

the distribution checks to the appropriate creditors also overlooks a phrase that Congress used in

§726(a)(2)(C)(ii). Where an unsecured creditor does not have notice or actual knowledge of the

bankruptcy case in time to file a timely proof of claim, the claim is still to share equally with other

allowed unsecured claims if the creditor files a proof of claim “in time to permit payment of such claim.”

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Because such a creditor has not received the due process—that is, notice and an opportunity to be

heard, Mullane v. Central Hanover Bank & Trust Co., 339 U.S. 306, 313-20 (1950) (“due

process” under Fourteenth Amendment); City of New York v. New York, N.H. & H.R. Co., 344 U.S.

293, 296-97 (1953) (“reasonable notice” under statute required reasonable opportunity to be heard

that must precede judicial denial of party's claimed rights)—that would have enabled it to file a timely

proof of claim, it seems logical to assume that Congress intended the phrase “in time to permit

payment” to provide the most time possible for such a creditor to share in the estate, so that the injury

caused by the lack of notice would be minimized as much as possible, short of requiring other creditors

to return some of their share of the distribution so this creditor can be paid. Yet, the Tax Claimants'

proposed construction of “commences distribution” would refer to exactly the same time. Surely using

“commences distribution” to refer to the last possible time in the distribution process when money could

be reallocated (without recovering any already distributed) would be an exceedingly strange use of the

word “commences.” This is especially true here because the phrase “in time to permit payment” was

already in §726(a)(2)(C)(ii) when Congress added the phrase “commences distribution” to §726(a)(1).

See Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1978, Pub. L. No. 95-598, §726(a)(2)(C)(ii), reprinted in 1978

U.S.C.C.A.N. (92 Stat.) 2549, 2608 (enacting §726(a)(2)(C)(ii) as it now exists); Bankruptcy Reform

Act of 1994, Pub. L. No. 103-394, §213(b), 1994 U.S.C.C.A.N. (108 Stat.) 4106, 4126 (adding

“commences distribution” to §726(a)(1)). Since “in time to permit payment” clearly refers to the latest

possible time when a claim could share in the distribution of a chapter 7 estate, the Court is convinced

that Congress would have added that phrase to §726(a)(1) if it wanted the same time to apply under

that subsection. See BFP v. Resolution Trust Corp., 511 U.S. 531, 537 (1994) (in construing

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statutes, courts generally presume Congress acts intentionally and purposely when it includes particular

language in one section of a statute but omits it in another).

To the Court, it seems reasonable to conclude that the filing of the trustee's Report, already

approved by the U.S. Trustee, formally initiates—in other words, “commences”—the distribution

process that culminates in the mailing of checks to creditors. The Report is the official notice to all

concerned that the trustee has finished the tasks of liquidating the estate and reviewing the claims, and

has determined how the estate should be distributed. While interested parties have the opportunity to

object to the Report, in the Court's experience, the most common types of objection, by far, are to:

(1) the amount of fees and expenses that the trustee intends to pay as administrative expenses, and (2)

the validity or amount of other claims that the trustee intends to pay. If sustained, these types of

objections cause an increase in the amounts to be paid to the other administrative or general unsecured

creditors, and require no further notice to them since they are favorably, not adversely, affected. Under

the Tax Claimants' theories, however, tax claims filed and allowed under §726(a)(1) after the trustee

filed his Report would require more noticing because, since they would be paid, the claims would

reduce the amounts to be distributed to all other creditors (except sometimes other administrative

creditors, when they are all being paid in full). The administrative inconvenience of this added noticing

counsels against construing “commences distribution” to refer to such a late time in the distribution

process.

Finally, the IRS suggests that proposed legislation pending before Congress would amend

§726(a)(1) to distinguish between the time a trustee files a final report and the time he or she

commences distribution. The proposal would make §726(a)(1) read:

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(a) . . . [P]roperty of the estate shall be distributed—

(1) first, in payments of claims of the kind specified in, and in the order specified in,

section 507 of this title, proof of which is timely filed under section 501 of this title or tardily filed on or before the earlier of—

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(A) the date that is 10 days after the mailing to creditors of the summary of the trustee's final report; or

(B) the date on which the trustee commences final distribution under this section;

Bankruptcy Reform Act of 2001, S. 420, 107th Cong., §713 (as engrossed in Senate); Bankruptcy

Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2001, H.R. 333, 107th Cong., §713 (as engrossed

in Senate), available at http://thomas.loc.gov/home/c107query. html (August 9, 2001). The IRS cites

no case law or other authority indicating the Court can properly rely on this proposed legislation to help

it construe §726(a)(1) as it exists today, nor does the Court believe it would be appropriate to do so.

In any event, while it is true that the proposed amendment distinguishes between the time a trustee files

a final report and the time the trustee “commences final distribution,” the proposal seems to indicate that

the commencement of final distribution could, at least sometimes, occur before ten days after a

summary of the trustee's final report is mailed to creditors. If it could not, then the deadline contained

in subsection (A) would always be the earlier of the two dates, and subsection (B) would be

superfluous. Furthermore, subsection (B) refers to the commencement of “final distribution,” which

could surely not occur before simple “distribution” has commenced. To the extent this proposed

legislation provides any guidance here, then, it can only indicate that a trustee might sometimes

“commence[] distribution” before ten days after his or her final report is filed and mailed to creditors.

The proposal certainly does not support the IRS's construction of “commences distribution” as the time

the trustee writes and mails the last distribution checks.

Applying the Court's construction to the events that occurred in this case leads to the following

results. First, none of the Tax Claimants' claims are entitled to a distribution under §726(a)(1) because

they were all filed after the trustee had “commence[d] distribution” by filing his Report. Second, the

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MDOR's amended unsecured priority claim of $5,037.22 and its general unsecured claim of $778.25

are both entitled to share in the distribution, pursuant to §726(a)(2)(C), meaning they will be paid pro

rata with the other general unsecured claims. Third, the KDOR's unsecured priority claim of $21 and

its general unsecured claim of $35 are also entitled to share in the distribution, pursuant to

§726(a)(2)(C), meaning they will also be paid pro rata with the other general unsecured claims. The

KDOR's secured claim, however, is not entitled to share in the distribution because it is not unsecured.

The KDOR has had ample time to liquidate the property securing its claim and assert any remaining

deficiency as an unsecured claim, but it has failed to do so. Given no basis for determining the value of

the KDOR's security, the Court is forced, pursuant to §502(c)(1), to estimate the KDOR's contingent

unsecured deficiency claim to be $0. Finally, the Court concludes the IRS's priority and unsecured

claims are entitled to no distribution from the estate because the IRS had timely notice of the filing of the

debtor's bankruptcy case and of the need to file a proof of claim, so its claims do not qualify for

treatment under §726(a)(2)(C). Instead, the IRS's claims would fall under §726(a)(3), and the estate

does not have sufficient assets to distribute anything to claims in that class.

The trustee shall distribute the estate in accordance with this decision.

IT IS SO ORDERED.

Dated at Topeka, Kansas, this _____ day of August, 2001.

__________________________________

JAMES A. PUSATERI

CHIEF BANKRUPTCY JUDGE

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