With no explanation, chose the best option from "A", "B", "C" or "D". the bankruptcy plan). Choosing to exercise the right to prepayment, while allowed under the Code, does not alter the Mortgage’s original payment schedule. The last payment due under the Mortgage remains April 1, 2022. [Claim No. 11-1]. Irrespective of what happens during the life of the Debtors’ bankruptcy, Debtors will be able to pay the Mortgage until April 1, 2022. Debtors will complete their plan in 2021, one year before the last Mortgage payment is due. [ECF No. 99]. Therefore, as the Mortgage matures outside the life of the plan, § 1822(c)(2) is inapplicable to Debtors’ Sixth Amended Plan. Thus, as Debtors’ Mortgage cannot be modified pursuant to the Code, the Mortgage must be paid according to the contract interest rate of 17% per annum. See In re Gaetje, 2015 WL 3825972 at *4-5 (<HOLDING>). The Sixth Amended Plan seeks to pay the

A: holding that bankruptcy plan of reorganization rather than  1961 controlled the setting of the interest rate
B: holding that the proper rate for prejudgment interest is the rate fixed by the parties in a contract
C: holding that  1322b2 prohibits modification of the interest rate on the loan on the debtors principal residence
D: holding that modifying an interest rate in a bankruptcy plan constitutes an impermissible modification under  1322b2
D.