With no explanation, chose the best option from "A", "B", "C" or "D". those transfers which a debtor would transact anyway as a function of its day to day operations. Under this reading of § 1146(c), it is unlikely that the debtor’s transfers in NVR Homes would have been eligible for § 1146(c) relief. More significantly, however, limiting eligible transfers to those “under a plan confirmed” limits such transfers to those over which the bankruptcy court has jurisdiction, i.e., those which concern the debtor and property of the debtor’s estate. Several courts, including the Fourth Circuit, have relied on this meaning of “under a plan confirmed” to exclude transfers between third parties over which the bankruptcy court may otherwise lack jurisdiction. See, e.g., Mensh v. Eastern Stainless Corp. (In Case of Eastmet Corp.), 907 F.2d 1487, 1489 (4th Cir.1990) (<HOLDING>); In re Kerner Printing Co., Inc., 188 B.R.

A: holding that while nondebtor purchase money deed of trust can be described as part of the same transaction by which the buyer acquired debtors real property that does not elevate the deed of trust to status of something under a plan confirmed
B: holding that mers is capable of being a valid beneficiary of a deed of trust and that while entitlement to enforce both the deed of trust and the promissory note is required to foreclose nothing requires those documents to be unified from the point of inception of the loan
C: holding that mers was not the beneficiary of a deed of trust under the oregon trust deed act absent conveyance to mers of the beneficial right to repayment and that mers could not hold or transfer legal title to the deed as the lenders nominee
D: holding that a beneficiary under a deed of trust was entitled to reformation of the grantors deed
A.