Why We Should All Be Booing Boodrow
<p><img src="/AM/images/letters/h.gif" align="LEFT" border="0" vspace="5" hspace="5">aving used Christie's auction house to sell assets some time ago in a bankruptcy case was enough to have
put me on its mailing list ever since to receive its catalogs. Occasionally, I'll glance at one for a moment
while going through my mail before sending it into my recycling bin. While on my way to recycling
another catalog recently, I stopped when an offering of "art" caught my eye—not because it was
magnificent, but because it was banal and unexceptional. It consisted of nothing but light blue wax crayon
lines swirled over white latex house paint on a rectangular canvas. I became intrigued when I saw that there
was a lengthy narrative accompanying it. What of substance, I wondered, could one write about such a
prosaic piece. I suspect that even the artist himself wasn't sure what to make of it, as he called it
(appropriately) "Untitled."
</p><p>The narrator, showing no such diffidence, however, offered that "each scrawling loop is a unique and
distinctive mark that is a cyclical graphic record of its own precise moment of creation," and that "Untitled"
was an expression of the artist's "highly sophisticated ideas about time," which were "inspired by both the
directness and spontaneity of the rectangular blackboard format." Those swirls that any four-year-old could
have drawn "evoke a powerful sense of both unity and diversity," the reader was assured. By the end of
the narrative, it had become clear that virtually any interpretation of "Untitled" would be found to be valid
and legitimate. Plunk!
</p><p>It is sometimes this way too with the Bankruptcy Code. Most judges, heeding what has become a
drumbeat from the Supreme Court, appropriately see their role as limited to making a genuine, intellectually
honest effort to fairly find, interpret and objectively apply the "plain meaning" of the Code in a consistent
fashion, both where the result that ensues comports with their view of what is good and right and where
it may not. However, experience teaches that there are a few judges who pay lip service to "plain meaning."
For them there exists a greater good of achieving a result they think desirable, and thus solaced by that good
intention, if the words of a statute stand in the way of that, they believe justified in working around and
through them. Judges, who know this temptation better than practitioners, well recognize this process at
work when it surfaces among their brethren, evident in a federal district judge's recent barbed observation
in ruling on a bankruptcy matter that a line of Ninth Circuit cases "was federal judicial legislation at its
worst."<small><sup><a href="#1" name="1a">1</a></sup></small>
</p><p>Such cases of ad hoc adjudicating fall into an established pattern; a textual or contextual ambiguity is
proclaimed, despite that a more concerted effort to find the essence of a statute would dissipate the
supposed "fog." Then, after reaching into the trumpeted ambiguity for their own favored rule, they
predictably proceed to "backfill" their pronouncement of it with incantations of "policy," excerpts from a
law review article and select references to legislative history of varying quality. The problems these ad hoc
adjudications engender are particularly troublesome when made by a circuit court of appeals panel on a
recurring consumer bankruptcy issue where, short of an infrequent <i>en banc</i> reconsideration, Supreme Court
ruling or act of Congress, such a ruling will thereafter govern the tens of thousands of cases within its
bankruptcy courts. A regrettable example of this is the Second Circuit's <i>Boodrow</i> decision.<small><a href="#2" name="2a">2</a></small>
</p><p>At issue in <i>Boodrow</i> was Bankruptcy Code §521(2), which provides, in pertinent part, that an
individual chapter 7 debtor with a consumer debt secured by property of the estate
</p><blockquote>
(A)...shall file with the clerk a statement of his intention with respect to the retention or surrender
of such property and, if applicable, specifying that such property is claimed as exempt, that the
debtor intends to redeem such property, or that the debtor intends to reaffirm debts secured by such
property;
<br>(B) within 45 days after the filing of a notice of intent under this section...the debtor shall perform
his intention with respect to such property, as specified by subparagraph (A) of this paragraph.
</blockquote>
<p>These provisions of §521(2), along with §521(2)(C)—a reconciling provision that preserves a trustee's
rights, including his avoidance and sale<small><sup><a href="#3" name="3a">3</a></sup></small> rights in such property—became part of the Code in 1984.
Included in the same bill was an amendment to §704 adding §704(3), which, as an obvious corollary to the
§521(2) additions, provides that among the chapter 7 trustee's duties are that he "shall ensure that the debtor
shall perform his intention as specified in §521(2)(B)..." The statute provides that a chapter 7 debtor with
a loan to a bank consensually secured by a vehicle, for example, has three<small><sup><a href="#4" name="4a">4</a></sup></small> options: If he wishes to retain
the vehicle, he is either to <i>reaffirm</i> the debt secured by it, or <i>redeem</i> it; and if he doesn't perform either of
those specified retention options, he is to <i>surrender</i> the vehicle to the creditor.
</p><p>Certainly, it would be a better "deal" for a chapter 7 debtor to have no duty in this regard and be able
to discharge his debt to the bank and still retain its collateral simply by continuing to make payments. There
are plenty of compelling reasons why Congress provided no such "fourth option" (that it would impose a
new, unfavorable non-recourse relationship upon a creditor in a chapter 7 case is but one), and why it
crafted §521(2) as it did to provide laudable certainty and finality in the dealings between individual chapter
7 debtors and their secured creditors.
</p><p>How then, in the face of the apparent plain meaning of §521(2), did two judges on the Second Circuit
panel in <i>Boodrow</i>, like our narrator, get to the point of §521(2) not meaning what its words say, and
permitting a chapter 7 debtor to retain a secured vehicle without either reaffirming or redeeming? Presaging
its ruling with its comment that the words of a statute are <i>only a starting point</i>, the <i>Boodrow</i> majority, like
our narrator, wished to persuade its readers that if one looked hard enough, the words of §521(2), including
its "if applicable" phrase, may legitimately be found to mean different things. It offered that "if applicable"
introduced an element of debtor discretion to this imperatively worded statute, and could be read to mean
that if the debtor unilaterally decided that not any one of the three enumerated options was "applicable" to
him, he was free to choose some other option not specifically listed in §521(2) but more to his liking. Under
that strained construction, the phrase "if applicable" is transformed into "if the debtor feels like it."
</p><p>Giving it a natural reading, however, "if applicable," juxtaposed to the almost immediately preceding
words, "retention or surrender," simply refers to the general threshold determination of whether there will
be a "retention or surrender" of the property with, thereafter, the more specific requirement of specifying
the method of retention—redemption or reaffirmation—logically: only "applicable" if there is to be a
<i>retention</i> of the property, and obviously not "applicable" if there will be a <i>surrender</i> of it. The phrase
further serves the equally sensible purpose of acknowledging that certain retention options are not always
"applicable." The option of redemption, for instance, would not be "applicable" where the property in
question is real estate, since only tangible personal property may be redeemed.
</p><p>Next (following an established pattern), in resorting to legislative history to sort through this supposed
ambiguity in §521(2), the <i>Boodrow</i> majority, without so noting, looked not to the legislative history that
produced §521(2) in 1984 (also ignoring altogether its illuminating corollary in §704(3)), but to the
"legislative history" to a 1981 bill before a different Congress that never became law and that, in any event,
dealt principally with providing notice, having no §521(2)(B) "performance" component. From this, the
<i>Boodrow</i> majority denuded §521(2) down to merely a "procedural" statute, its function merely being to
assure notice to a secured creditor of the debtor's intentions, and thereby unwittingly relegated it to being
entirely redundant of Bankruptcy Rule 1007(b)(2) (requiring that a §521(2) statement of intention be served
upon the creditor), to which it never referred. Aside from the troubling internal inconsistency in its
holding—that "shall" really means "shall" in §521(2)'s first subparagraph where specifying one's intention
is required, but "shall" doesn't mean "shall" in the very next and identically phrased subparagraph where
performance of it is commanded—the <i>Boodrow</i> majority never stepped back far enough from its holding
to see the irreconcilable contradiction in what it said was merely a "notice" or <i>procedural</i> statute giving rise
to a new <i>substantive</i> right, its newly minted "fourth-option right of reinstatement" for debtors. Such a right,
concocted out of the whole cloth of a law review article (completing the pattern), ignores the fact that it
hardly produces a "reinstatement" from the creditor's perspective.
</p><p>District Judge Milton Shadur from the Northern District of Illinois, invited by the Second Circuit to
sit by designation on the <i>Boodrow</i> panel, was so moved by the flimsiness of the majority's rationales that
he wrote a lengthy and pointed dissenting opinion. Shadowed by Judge Shadur's compelling dissent, the
<i>Boodrow</i> majority at the end sounded a partial retreat from its full frontal assault on §521(2)'s plain
meaning by deciding (with no support in the Code for doing so) to condition its judicially created right
of reinstatement on a debtor being "current" in his payments to the creditor on the petition date: A debtor
current in his payments to the creditor on that date would be excused from the literal performance
mandate of §521(2), while one who was not would have to perform one of its three options. A noted
commentator has pointed out the illogical results produced by this judge-made rule, which is predicated
on the legally irrelevant happenstance of a debtor being current or not on the petition date.<small><sup><a href="#5" name="5a">5</a></sup></small>
</p><p>Combined, Congress used the word "shall" <i>four</i> times in §§521(2) and 704(3) in setting out a debtor's
duties, and yet remarkably the <i>Boodrow</i> majority, with a near-defiant determination to create a right for
debtors that simply does not exist, held that a debtor who is "current" need not do anything. If a court
may do this to the words of a statute, then what point of law may not be said to be "up for grabs?"
Shortly after <i>Boodrow</i>, in another consumer bankruptcy matter, the Second Circuit held that "shall"
means "shall," and when used, it leaves a court no discretion.<small><sup><a href="#6" name="6a">6</a></sup></small> A cynic would seize upon this as evidence
of the worst type of judicial inconstancy, while an apologist would simply note that it was a different
panel. Regardless, what is clear is that the <i>Boodrow</i> majority, having paid little heed to "plain meaning,"
has left parties, practitioners and lower courts to wade through the legal muck that is inevitably produced
"when courts create and propagate ambiguity even where there is absolutely none in the original
statute."<small><sup><a href="#7" name="7a">7</a></sup></small>
</p><hr>
<h3>Footnotes</h3>
<p><sup><small><a name="1">1</a></small></sup> <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&vr=1.0&cite=… v. Yucaipa Capital Fund, et al.</i> 218 B.R. 656, 672 (D. R.I. 1998)</a>. <a href="#1a">Return to article</a>
</p><p><sup><small><a name="2">2</a></small></sup> <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&vr=1.0&cite=… re Boodrow,</i> 126 F.3d 43 (2nd Cir. 1997)</a>. <a href="#2a">Return to article</a>
</p><p><sup><small><a name="3">3</a></small></sup> The <i>Boodrow</i> majority missed this point entirely, and implied that §521(2) was flawed because it did not provide for the option of
a trustee's sale of the property at issue. Such a right, however, is clearly reserved in §521(2)(C). <a href="#3a">Return to article</a>
</p><p><sup><small><a name="4">4</a></small></sup> The other retention option in §521(2) (exemption) refers to the debtor's right to retain property under §522(f) by, for example,
avoiding a <i>judicial</i> lien that impairs one's exemption therein. For the sake of simplicity, this article will presume that only the two retention options of reaffirmation or redemption are applicable here. <a href="#4a">Return to article</a>
</p><p><sup><small><a name="5">5</a></small></sup> <i>See</i> Waxman, Ned W., "Redemption or Reaffirmation: The Debtor's Exclusive Means of Retaining Possession of Collateral in Chapter 7,"
U. Pitt. L.R., Vol 56, No. 1, at 202 (Fall 1994). <a href="#5a">Return to article</a>
</p><p><sup><small><a name="6">6</a></small></sup> <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&vr=1.0&cite=… re Barbieri,</i> 199 F.3d 616 (2nd Cir. 1999)</a>. <a href="#6a">Return to article</a>
</p><p><sup><small><a name="7">7</a></small></sup> <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&vr=1.0&cite=… re Chacon,</i> 202 F.3d. 725, 726 (5th Cir. 1999)</a>. <a href="#7a">Return to article</a>