Canning, III v. Beneficial Maine, Inc. , 706 F.3d 64 ( 2013 )


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  •            United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    No. 12-9002
    IN RE: RALPH G. CANNING, III,
    MEGAN L. CANNING, f/k/a MEGAN L. OTIS,
    Debtors.
    RALPH G. CANNING, III and
    MEGAN L. CANNING, f/k/a MEGAN L. OTIS,
    Plaintiffs, Appellants,
    v.
    BENEFICIAL MAINE, INC.; HSBC MORTGAGE SERVICES, INC.;
    HSBC MORTGAGE CORPORATION,
    Defendants, Appellees.
    APPEAL FROM THE BANKRUPTCY
    APPELLATE PANEL FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    Before
    Torruella, Ripple,* and Howard,
    Circuit Judges.
    James F. Molleur, with whom Tanya Sambatakos, were on brief
    for appellants.
    Peter J. Haley, with whom Sean R. Higgins and Nelson Mullins
    Riley & Scarborough LLP, were on brief for appellees.
    February 1, 2013
    *
    Of the Seventh Circuit, sitting by designation.
    TORRUELLA, Circuit Judge.      Plaintiffs-Appellants, Ralph
    G. Canning III and Megan L. Canning (the "Cannings"), filed a
    Chapter    7    bankruptcy   petition   and   sought   to   surrender   their
    residence.       When their mortgage lenders, Defendants-Appellees,
    Beneficial       Maine, Inc., HSBC Mortgage Services, Inc., and HSBC
    Mortgage       Corporation   (collectively     "Beneficial"),   refused    to
    foreclose or otherwise take title to the residence, the Cannings
    demanded that the mortgage lien be released.1               Beneficial also
    refused to do so, and the Cannings began an adversary proceeding
    claiming a discharge injunction violation. On a stipulated record,
    the bankruptcy court found no discharge injunction violation in
    Beneficial's refusal to either foreclose or release the lien on the
    Cannings' residence.         The Cannings appealed to the Bankruptcy
    Appellate Panel ("BAP"), with the same result.          This second appeal
    followed, the parties reasserting the same arguments presented
    below.    Finding no error in the holdings at issue, we affirm.
    I. Background
    After an unsuccessful attempt to refinance the two-year
    old mortgage loan encumbering their residence, defaulting on the
    terms of said loan, and with foreclosure proceedings already
    underway in state court, the Cannings filed a Chapter 7 bankruptcy
    1
    Because the loan documents are not part of the record, we cannot
    determine the exact role the foregoing entities played in the
    original loan transaction. Nevertheless, there is no dispute that
    the Cannings' mortgage belongs to those entities, which, hereafter,
    we refer to in the singular for convenience.
    -2-
    petition   on   March   5,   2009.       According      to   their   bankruptcy
    schedules,    the    mortgage   loan    had   an   outstanding       balance    of
    $186,521, while the residence had a market value of $130,000.2                 The
    schedules also indicated that the Cannings intended to surrender
    the residence.3
    Early in the bankruptcy case, Beneficial voluntarily
    dismissed the state court foreclosure proceedings without prejudice
    "due to the [Cannings'] filing Chapter 7 bankruptcy." The Cannings
    received their bankruptcy discharge on June 3, 2009, and thus were
    released   from     their   outstanding      personal    obligations     on    the
    mortgage loan.       The exchange of correspondence underlying this
    appeal ensued two months thereafter.
    Beneficial began the exchange with a letter informing the
    Cannings that it would "not initiate and/or complete foreclosure
    proceedings on [your residence].         You will retain ownership of the
    property" and "we will no longer advance any payments for taxes and
    insurances.     You will be solely responsible for the payment of
    taxes, insurance, and maintenance of this property."4
    2
    The Cannings derived the market value of the residence from an
    informal appraisal obtained in mid-2008. As of the date of the
    bankruptcy petition, Beneficial valued the residence at $86,000.
    3
    On April 6, 2009, the Chapter 7 trustee filed a notice of
    abandonment of the residence.
    4
    The letter also stated that the Cannings still had "a financial
    obligation to repay [Beneficial] for the money borrowed.      This
    financial obligation . . . remains intact . . . ." The bankruptcy
    court held that that portion of Beneficial's initial letter
    -3-
    In response, the Cannings reminded Beneficial of the
    bankruptcy discharge injunction and demanded that it either "(1)
    immediately commence foreclosure proceedings or (2) immediately
    discharge the mortgage on the property."      With no answer from
    Beneficial, on October 1, 2009, the Cannings sent it another letter
    to follow up on their demand.
    Beneficial responded by letter dated October 19, 2009.
    As relevant here, Beneficial's letter stated: "we are unable to
    honor your request to release the lien until the lien balance is
    satisfied in the amount of $186,324.15. However, we could consider
    a settlement option or a short sale."    Beneficial also explained
    that the Cannings' account had been charged off, that they had no
    personal obligation to pay the lien balance, and that its letter
    was not an attempt to collect from them personally.
    Despite this disclaimer from Beneficial, the Cannings
    interpreted the letter as a further violation of the discharge
    injunction.   The next letter they sent to Beneficial emphatically
    indicated so and warned that a bankruptcy adversary proceeding
    would be filed if Beneficial failed to either foreclose or release
    its lien.   But Beneficial did not budge, reiterating, instead, its
    prior response.     The Cannings subsequently informed Beneficial
    that: (1) the residence had been vacated; (2) the utilities had
    violated the discharge injunction and ordered Beneficial to pay
    $7,000 in sanctions.    That order is not part of this appeal;
    therefore, we do not discuss it further.
    -4-
    been turned off; and (3) the municipal authorities, as well as the
    sewerage      company,      had    been     notified     that    Beneficial         was   the
    responsible party for any obligations pertaining to the residence.
    True to their word, on December 21, 2009, the Cannings
    reopened      their     bankruptcy        case     and     initiated      an    adversary
    proceeding against Beneficial.                Among other things, they claimed
    actual    and      punitive       damages    in    connection      with    Beneficial's
    "failure or refusal to commence foreclosure or otherwise recover
    possession      of    the   [residence]."           The Cannings        also        sought a
    declaratory        judgment   "ordering        [Beneficial] to         either        recover
    possession of the Property or deliver unencumbered title to . . .
    the[m]."        In    its   responsive        pleading,       Beneficial       denied     all
    material      allegations         and     raised    nine      affirmative       defenses,
    including lack of intent to violate the discharge injunction.                              At
    that time, Beneficial estimated the market value of the residence
    to be $75,000.
    After preliminary procedural nuances, the parties agreed
    to submit the issue of liability on the basis of a jointly filed
    "Stipulation and Exhibits" containing the facts just described.5
    In    their   submission,         the   Cannings     exclusively       relied        on   our
    decision in Pratt v. General Motors Acceptance Corp. (In re Pratt),
    
    462 F.3d 14
         (1st   Cir.     2006),    where     we     held   that     a    secured
    5
    The parties agreed to reserve evidence and arguments regarding
    sanctions for a later hearing, which was to take place only if the
    Cannings prevailed on their contentions regarding liability.
    -5-
    creditor's      refusal       to   foreclose      or   release        its   lien    on   an
    inoperable, worthless car was intended to objectively coerce the
    debtor into paying a discharged debt, in violation of the discharge
    injunction.       According to the Cannings, "[t]he material facts . .
    . considered in Pratt mirror the facts in this case so closely,
    that they dictate the . . . determination that [Beneficial] acted
    in   an      objectively      coercive      manner."          Beneficial     disagreed,
    advancing purported fundamental factual differences between the
    Cannings'      case     and   Pratt--mainly,         that     the    Cannings'      plight
    revolved around valuable real estate property while Pratt involved
    a worthless car.
    The bankruptcy court ruled in favor of Beneficial.                        See
    Canning v. Beneficial Maine, Inc. (In re Canning), 
    442 B.R. 165
    (Bankr. D. Me. 2011).              In so doing, it first noted that "[t]he
    Cannings' demand of 'foreclose or release, now' ignore[d] the
    prospect that real estate values change (up, as well as down) over
    time" and that "[a] critical component of Pratt's holding was the
    collateral's worthlessness and the fact that, unlike real estate,
    'vehicles rarely appreciate in value over time.'" 
    Id. at 172
    . The
    court     similarly      observed     that,       "unlike      the    Pratts'      secured
    creditor, [Beneficial] did not simply require that the Cannings
    'pay    in    full.'      Rather     it    responded     by    suggesting       either    a
    voluntary settlement or a 'short sale.'"                 
    Id.
        Such a proposal, the
    bankruptcy      court    reasoned,        "plainly     reveals       that   [Beneficial]
    -6-
    sought to collect no more than the value securing its lien."                
    Id.
    As a postlude, the court then added:
    Of course, [Beneficial's] chosen course
    of action, or inaction, did not make things
    easy for the Cannings.      Forces remained at
    work that could make their continued ownership
    of the real estate uncomfortable--forces like
    accruing    real    estate   taxes   and   the
    desirability     of    maintaining   liability
    insurance for the premises. But those forces
    are incidents of ownership. Though the Code
    provides debtors with a surrender option, it
    does not force creditors to assume ownership
    or take possession of collateral.          And
    although the Code provides a discharge of
    personal liability for debt, it does not
    discharge the ongoing burdens of owning
    property.
    
    Id.
    The Cannings timely appealed to the BAP, where both
    parties   reasserted     their    arguments   under    Pratt,   and   the    BAP
    affirmed on the same reasoning.          See Canning v. Beneficial Maine,
    Inc. (In re Canning), 
    462 B.R. 258
     (B.A.P. 1st Cir. 2011).                  Like
    the   bankruptcy   court,   the    BAP   found   dispositive    distinctions
    between the Cannings' case and Pratt, including that the Cannings'
    residence had significant value and that Beneficial had not simply
    required full payment on the loan to release its lien. 
    Id. at 268
    .
    The BAP also noted that Pratt's holding had been supported in part
    by evidence of actual expenses arising from the continued ownership
    of the collateral at issue.        
    Id. at 267
    .      It then established that
    the Cannings had failed to introduce evidence of similar expenses
    and   instead   rested   their    case   on   the    mere   possibility     that
    -7-
    liabilities could arise in the future.   
    Id.
       Accordingly, "[b]ased
    upon the facts presented to and considered by the bankruptcy
    court," the BAP found itself unable to conclude "that there was a
    particular confluence of circumstances that renders Beneficial's
    refusal to discharge its mortgage tantamount to coercing the
    payment of a discharged prepetition debt."       
    Id. at 268
    .   This
    second appeal followed.
    II. Discussion
    When an appeal comes to us by way of the BAP, we
    independently scrutinize the underlying bankruptcy court decision,
    reviewing factual findings for clear error and legal conclusions de
    novo.   Brandt v. Repco Printers & Lithographics, Inc. (In re
    Healthco Int'l, Inc.), 
    132 F.3d 104
    , 107 (1st Cir. 1997).        In
    reviewing for clear error, we "ought not to upset findings of fact
    or conclusions drawn therefrom unless, on the whole of the record,
    we form a strong, unyielding belief that a mistake has been made."
    Cumpiano v. Banco Santander Puerto Rico, 
    902 F.2d 148
    , 152 (1st
    Cir. 1990); see also In re Healthco Int'l, Inc., 
    132 F.3d at 108
    ("This familiar standard is not diluted merely because parties
    proceed on a stipulated record.").     In contrast, "[u]nder the de
    novo standard of review, we do not defer to the lower court's
    ruling but freely consider the matter anew, as if no decision had
    been rendered below."     United States v. Silverman, 
    861 F.2d 571
    ,
    576 (9th Cir. 1988).
    -8-
    In this case, the Cannings pose no challenge to the
    bankruptcy court's findings of fact, and we find that no mistake
    was made as to them.6          The Cannings do, however, challenge the
    bankruptcy court's legal conclusions, reasserting their contention
    that the facts in this case mirror the ones in Pratt so closely
    that the same result should follow.          Both the bankruptcy court and
    the BAP correctly rejected this argument in well-reasoned, thorough
    opinions.     Our       discussion   here   is   therefore    limited   to   the
    essentials.   See Holders Capital Corp. v. Cal. Union Ins. Co (In re
    San Juan Dupont Plaza Hotel Fire Litig.), 
    989 F.2d 36
    , 38 (1st Cir.
    1993) ("Where, as here, a trial court has produced a first-rate
    work   product,     a    reviewing   tribunal     should     hesitate   to   wax
    longiloquence simply to hear its own words resonate.").
    The Cannings' complaint is premised on 
    11 U.S.C. § 524
    (a), which sets forth an automatic injunction against efforts
    intended to collect an already discharged debt.                The injunction
    affords honest but unfortunate debtors with a "fresh start" from
    the burdens of personal liability for unsecured prepetition debts
    and thus advances the overarching purpose of the Bankruptcy Code.
    In re Pratt, 
    462 F.3d at 17-18
    ; see also Marrama v. Citizens Bank
    6
    As alluded to above, the relevant findings of fact are: (1) that
    the collateral at issue is real estate with an estimated value of
    $75,000, as of the time the adversary proceeding was initiated; (2)
    that the value of said collateral could change up as well as down;
    and (3) that Beneficial provided alternatives--that is, a
    settlement or a short sale--indicating that it sought to be paid no
    more than the value securing its lien.
    -9-
    of Mass., 
    549 U.S. 365
    , 367 (2007) ("The principal purpose of the
    Bankruptcy Code is to grant a 'fresh start' to the 'honest but
    unfortunate debtor.'"(quoting Grogan v. Garner, 
    498 U.S. 279
    , 286
    (1991))).    For that reason, the scope of the injunction is broad,
    and bankruptcy courts may enforce it through 
    11 U.S.C. § 105
    , any
    sanctions imposed for violations being in the nature of civil
    contempt.    In re Pratt, 
    462 F.3d at 17, 21
    .
    Despite its broad scope, the discharge injunction does
    not enjoin a secured creditor from recovering on valid prepetition
    liens, which, unless modified or avoided, ride through bankruptcy
    unaffected and are enforceable in accordance with state law.                
    Id. at 17
    . One of the ways through which debtors might free themselves
    from   a   prepetition     lien     is     by   surrendering   the    encumbered
    collateral to the secured creditor under 
    11 U.S.C. § 521
    (a)(2).
    Id. at 17-18.     "Surrendering" in this context means "that the
    debtor agree[s] to make the collateral available to the secured
    creditor--viz., to cede his possessory rights in the collateral .
    . . ."      Id. at 19.       The secured creditor, however, has the
    prerogative to decide whether to accept or reject the surrendered
    collateral,    since     "nothing     in     subsection   521(a)(2)    remotely
    suggests that the secured creditor is required to accept possession
    of the [collateral]."       Id.     But the creditor's decision in this
    respect must not constitute a subterfuge intended to coerce payment
    of a discharged debt.       Id. at 19-20.         Accordingly, when a debtor
    -10-
    satisfies his burden of showing that the creditor's reluctance is
    intended as a subterfuge to coerce such payment, a matter courts
    determine in the context of the particular facts, the discharge
    injunction applies with full force and effect.      Id.; see also
    ZiLOG, Inc. v. Corning (In re ZiLOG, Inc.), 
    450 F.3d 996
    , 1007 (9th
    Cir. 2006) (stating that the debtor bears the burden of proof in
    claims of discharge injunction violations).7
    We set forth and applied the foregoing requirements in
    Pratt, hence the Cannings' steadfast reliance on that case.     As
    previewed above, Pratt revolved around a secured creditor's refusal
    to either repossess or release a lien on an inoperable, worthless
    car that Chapter 7 debtors moved to surrender in bankruptcy.
    Finding the value of the car insufficient to satisfy foreclosure
    expenses, the secured creditor wrote off the balance of its loan,
    and left the debtors in possession of the encumbered collateral.
    Upon receiving their bankruptcy discharge, the debtors promptly
    sought to dispose of the car at a salvage dealer.      But because
    under applicable state law a dealer could receive a junk car only
    if free from all liens, the debtors were unsuccessful in their
    7
    In its brief in opposition, Beneficial raised the issue of
    whether the creditor's coercive intent must be proved under either
    the "preponderance of the evidence" or "clear and convincing
    evidence" standard. Because the Cannings complaint fails under
    either standard, we need not reach the issue here. All the same,
    the Cannings waived the issue by failing to raise it in their
    opening brief. Evans Cabinet Corp. v. Kitchen Int'l, Inc., 
    593 F.3d 135
    , 148 n.20 (1st Cir. 2010) ("Because this argument was not
    raised in its opening brief, it is waived.").
    -11-
    attempt to transfer possession of the car.            And when the debtors
    asked the secured creditor to either repossess the car or release
    its lien, it repeatedly refused, informing the debtors that the
    lien would be released only upon full satisfaction of the unpaid
    loan amount.
    After reopening their bankruptcy case, the debtors filed
    an   adversary   complaint,   alleging   that   the    secured   creditor's
    posture was intended to coerce payment on a discharged debt, in
    violation of the discharge injunction. In reversing the bankruptcy
    court's judgment for the secured creditor, we zeroed in on the
    following facts: (1) the secured creditor refused to repossess the
    car, but conditioned release of its lien upon full payment of the
    loan balance; (2) the debtors could not dispose of the car while
    encumbered and thus would have to keep it indefinitely (together
    with the accompanying costs) unless they "paid in full"; and (3)
    there were no reasonable prospects that the car would generate sale
    proceeds for the secured creditor to attach, as it was essentially
    worthless with limited possibilities of appreciation over time.
    Based on those facts, we held that the secured creditor's
    posture in exclusively conditioning release of its lien on full
    payment of the loan balance amounted to a reaffirmation of debt
    demand that contravened "the stringent 'anti-coercion' requirements
    of [the] Bankruptcy Code . . . ."        In re Pratt, 
    462 F.3d at 20
    .
    Similarly, we noted that the secured creditor's refusal to release
    -12-
    its lien "had the practical effect of eliminating the [debtors']
    'surrender' option under § 521(a)(2)."        Id.
    But given the secured creditor's prerogative to insist on
    its state-law in rem rights, we did not stop our analysis there.
    Rather, we set out to determine whether the secured creditor had
    articulated any reasons to explain away its posture.               Since the
    secured creditor only proffered its state-law rights as a defense,
    we analyzed the creditor's underlying conduct to see whether it
    could be legitimized as a valid pursuit of those rights.            We found
    that it could not, underscoring both the minimal value of the
    collateral and the lack of reasonable prospects that the collateral
    would ever be converted to attachable sale proceeds.         As we stated
    at   the   time:   "the   legitimate raison   d'etre   for   the    [secured
    creditor's] lien no longer obtained[;] the federal bankruptcy-law
    interest in according debtors a fresh start, free from objectively
    coercive reaffirmation demands, must be accorded supremacy."             
    462 F.3d at 20
    .8
    8
    The BAP appears to have interpreted the preceding language to
    mean that "a finding of significant value is sufficient to justify
    [a secured creditor's] refusal to discharge its mortgage." 462
    B.R. at 267. Such an interpretation is at odds with Pratt's case-
    by-case, factually-specific inquiry; therefore, we disavow the
    same.   The value of the underlying collateral is of course an
    important factor to consider when adjudicating controversies in
    these types of cases. Final adjudication, however, is a holistic
    process, where the conduct of the parties and their particular
    circumstances also play pivotal roles.
    -13-
    In this case, contrary to the Cannings' contentions, the
    factual scenario is much different than that in Pratt. Absent from
    this case is the exclusive "pay in full" conditional release
    presented in Pratt.   Rather, in this case, Beneficial offered to
    release its lien through either a settlement offer or a short sale.
    This not only indicates the intent to collect no more than the
    value secured by the underlying lien, as the bankruptcy court
    observed, but also denotes a willingness to negotiate a palatable
    solution for all involved.
    By like token, this case is missing the quandary the
    debtors in Pratt faced, where they were required to either yield to
    the secured creditor's "pay in full" demand or indefinitely remain
    in possession of inoperable, worthless and burdensome collateral.
    The BAP's opinion was right on point in this respect: "there is
    nothing in the record . . . to evidence any expenses related to
    [the Cannings' continued] equitable ownership other than the . . .
    reference in their brief to being exposed to liability."   462 B.R.
    at 267.   And to that we add that the appellate record also lacks
    evidence to show that the Cannings' residence was "inoperable" or
    unlivable when it was abandoned.9
    9
    The Cannings never argued, and nothing in the record shows, that
    they lacked the means to satisfy the incidental costs of owning a
    house--e.g., utilities, routine upkeep, liability insurance, etc.
    The Cannings did mention being unable to afford their monthly
    mortgage payments, but their bankruptcy discharge freed them from
    that obligation.
    -14-
    Furthermore, the record here does not paint a picture in
    which a secured creditor cornered the debtors between a rock and
    hard place. The record before us contains no evidence showing that
    the alternatives Beneficial proposed were unfeasible--that is, the
    Cannings never explained to the court exactly why a short sale or
    a settlement was out of the question for them.     The record is also
    devoid of any other indicia of coercion, such as, for example,
    Beneficial's refusal to negotiate with the Cannings a compromise
    different to the one originally proposed. In fact, from the record
    available to us, it seems that the Cannings employed a "take it or
    leave it" approach in negotiating with their mortgage lender, who,
    given its state-law rights over the collateral, did not have to
    accept   the   two   choices   presented.   Bankruptcy   law,   we   must
    emphasize, cannot alter a secured creditor's state-law rights,
    unless it is shown that those rights are relied upon to coerce
    payment of a discharged debt.       The record before us simply lacks
    that evidence.
    Last but not least, unlike the collateral in Pratt, the
    collateral involved here is far from worthless, and its value may
    increase over time.     A reasonable possibility that the collateral
    could be converted to attachable sale proceeds therefore exists,
    and, unlike Pratt's secured creditor, Beneficial can point to its
    state-law rights as one of the factors supporting its posture.
    -15-
    The    Cannings   downplay    the    foregoing   differences    and
    instead invite us to focus on the fact that their residence
    plummeted in value to little more than 38% of its original market
    price.   According to the Cannings, that fact invites the inference
    that "Beneficial decided not to foreclose on the property [because]
    it would not be cost effective."           Such a business decision, the
    Cannings continue, "clearly put into question [their] fresh start,
    which is what the First Circuit in Pratt specifically prohibited a
    creditor   from   doing."      There    are    several   problems   with   the
    Cannings' contentions.
    First, the record contains no evidence to support the
    inference the Cannings urge us to draw.10         Second, their reading of
    Pratt is overly broad.       Under the Cannings' reading, we would have
    to find a discharge injunction violation every time a secured
    creditor opposes a debtor's "foreclose or release" demand based on
    the business determination that repossession is not cost effective.
    But, on one hand, Pratt unequivocally held that the applicable
    inquiry revolves around the particular facts of each case, with the
    value of the underlying collateral being only one of several
    factors to be considered.       On the other, Pratt sought to strike a
    10
    To support their inference, the Cannings refer us to evidence
    that is not part of the record on appeal, and "[i]t is elementary
    that evidence cannot be submitted for the first time on appeal."
    United States v. Rosario-Peralta, 
    175 F.3d 48
    , 56 (1st Cir. 1999).
    In any event, were we to draw the Cannings' proposed inference, our
    decision would remain unchanged for the reasons discussed below.
    -16-
    balance between the competing state-law rights of secured creditors
    and the bankruptcy rights of debtors, and the reading the Cannings
    advance improperly skews that balance against secured creditors.
    Third, and perhaps most importantly, Pratt does not
    support the conception that the Cannings appear to have of the
    Bankruptcy Code's "fresh start."              The debtors in Pratt sought to
    disentangle themselves from an unduly burdensome situation by
    following     a   legally   feasible     alternative,       without    improperly
    burdening others.       The Cannings, in contrast, invoke the "fresh
    start"   to    indirectly   validate     the     decision    to     abandon   their
    residence.     They do so without providing any evidence showing that
    the   residence     posed   an   undue    burden    upon     them    after    their
    bankruptcy discharge.       The Cannings also fail to advance any legal
    authority, and we are not aware of any, to support the proposition
    that a homeowner may walk away, with no strings attached, from
    their legally owned residence.           But even worse, in vacating their
    residence, the Cannings placed many of the burdens of dealing with
    an abandoned property on their neighbors, their town, and their
    city -- in other words, on everyone but them.                The "fresh start"
    does not countenance that result.              Cf. In re Hermoyian, 
    435 B.R. 456
    , 466 (Bankr. E.D. Mich. 2010) ("A fresh start does not mean
    debtors are free from all of the consequence of every decision that
    they have made, which in hindsight, might have been ill-advised.").
    Nor does it generally "discharge the ongoing burdens of owning
    -17-
    property," as the bankruptcy court aptly noted. See In re Canning,
    
    442 B.R. at 172
    ;   cf. River Place E. Hous. Corp. v. Rosenfeld (In
    re Rosenfeld), 
    23 F.3d 833
    , 837 (4th Cir. 1994) (finding an
    obligation to pay postpetition assessments nondischargable because
    it arose from the debtor's continuing ownership of property, not
    from a prepetition obligation).
    A coda is necessary before we conclude.         Today, where
    both lenders and homeowners strive to recuperate from hard economic
    times, this opinion should not be relied upon to leverage a way out
    of the bargaining table.    It is one thing to insist upon state-law
    rights in refusing a recalcitrant "foreclose or release" demand by
    a debtor, and completely another to refuse negotiating with a
    debtor willing to compromise. Put differently, while this case may
    provide some guidance on the dos and don'ts applicable to the
    bargaining   dynamics   between   secured   creditors   and   bankruptcy
    debtors, our remarks in Pratt still control: "the line between
    forceful negotiation and improper coercion is not always easy to
    delineate, and each case must therefore be assessed in the context
    of its particular facts."    
    462 F.3d at 19
    .
    III. Conclusion
    For the reasons discussed above, we affirm the bankruptcy
    court’s judgment, each party bearing their own costs.
    Affirmed.
    -18-