Davis v. Cox (In Re Cox)

274 B.R. 13, 2002 Bankr. LEXIS 163, 2002 WL 334113
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Maine
DecidedFebruary 22, 2002
Docket19-10027
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 274 B.R. 13 (Davis v. Cox (In Re Cox)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. Cox (In Re Cox), 274 B.R. 13, 2002 Bankr. LEXIS 163, 2002 WL 334113 (Me. 2002).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION

JAMES B. HAINES, JR., Chief Judge.

The matter pending before me on a stipulated record 1 requires harmonizing bankruptcy principles with state property rights, more particularly the property rights of divorcing spouses, insofar as possible. 2

Introduction

While a hotly-contested divorce proceeding was pending between Thomas Cox (“Cox”) and Laura Davis (“Davis”), Cox voluntarily initiated personal bankruptcy. I granted relief from stay so that Cox and Davis could litigate dissolution-related issues to judgment. In due course, the state divorce court entered its final decree. Per the terms of the order granting relief from stay, the Code’s automatic stay remains in effect as to enforcement of that judgment’s provisions addressing property division, property disposition, and responsibility for debts.

Davis now seeks relief from the stay to implement the property division components of the divorce decree. She also seeks an order “recognizing and giving full force and effect to,” the state court judgment. Cox and the Chapter 7 trustee, William Howison (“Howison”), object. Today, I must address the import of the state court’s judgment as it relates to the content of Cox’s bankruptcy estate, Cox’s exemption rights, Davis’s entitlements, and the Code’s distributional priorities.

Background

Cox was a successful commercial lawyer with considerable bankruptcy experience. He has suffered from mental illness since March 1997 and is now totally disabled.

After thirteen years of marriage, including a period of separation, Davis initiated divorce proceedings on November 4, 1998. Divorce litigation was protracted. Cox’s first attorney, Pamela Lawrason, withdrew from the case in late 1999. Cox proceeded pro se for about two months, then hired new counsel, this time with bankruptcy expertise. After repeatedly threatening bankruptcy, Cox made good on those threats, filing for relief under Chapter 13 on April 5, 2000, the day set for the divorce trial.

On May 30, 2000, Davis obtained limited relief from stay, permitting her to prosecute the divorce action to conclusion in state court. Although the stay relief permitted litigation of all issues within the divorce court’s purview, it did not extend *18 to enforcement of contempt orders or orders relating to property division, asset transfers, debt payment, or debt allocation. 3 Pursuant to the order granting relief, the Chapter 13 trustee entered his appearance in the divorce action to represent the interests of Cox’s bankruptcy estate. The bankruptcy case converted to Chapter 7 on October 30, 2000.

On November 21, 2000, the divorce court entered its final decree. Among other things, the decree ordered an equitable distribution of marital property and, in several instances, ordered that certain joint obligations be paid from identified marital assets. 4 Divorce Judgment, Stip. Ex. W. Thereafter, Cox and Davis began litigating whether, and to what extent, further relief from stay should enter to permit execution of the state court judgment’s terms. As noted above, the contest extended beyond garden variety relief from stay issues, bringing into question the extent and nature of Davis’s rights in specific assets vis-a-vis Cox and the bankruptcy estate. 5

Although issues regarding real estate have been resolved, 6 there remain deep divides between and among Cox, Davis, and Howison regarding the impact of the post-petition divorce judgment on their rights in bankruptcy. Cox contends that this court cannot permit enforcement of the divorce decree’s provisions distributing estate property to unsecured, non-priority creditors (a category which, he asserts, includes Davis) in derogation of his exemption rights and until administrative and priority creditors are satisfied. Davis asserts that the “thoughtful and holistic” (and unappealed) divorce decree, which “gave credit to Mr. Cox for marital assets titled in Ms. Davis’s name and credited to [sic] Ms. Davis for marital assets in Mr. Cox’s name” is a final determination of the former spouses’ rights in identified personal property — and, thus, the content of Cox’s bankruptcy estate.

Discussion

By agreement, the first issue for decision is the respective rights of Cox (and his estate) and Davis in “specific assets, taking into account the status of those rights on the date of bankruptcy and, thereafter, under the final divorce judgment. ...” 7 The extent of Cox’s exemption *19 rights will be addressed later, if necessary. 8

The essential legal issue is this: What recognition is accorded as-yet-undeclared marital rights in specific assets when, while a divorce action is pending, one spouse files for bankruptcy relief? The answer is a function of federal law defining the bankruptcy estate’s content and of state law limning the character of marital property rights.

At the outset, however, it is necessary to examine the divorce decree provisions that trouble Cox and Howison to ascertain whether they have standing to pursue their arguments.

I. Challenged Provisions of the Divorce Decree

A. Cox’s contentions

Cox challenges implementation of those divorce decree provisions that order distribution or allocation of property insofar as they do not comply with the Bankruptcy Code’s express priorities. More specifically, he asserts that the decree improperly allocates or orders disposition of all or part of two individual retirement accounts, a partnership interest, and funds in two escrow accounts held by divorce counsel. Howison objects to the decree’s implementation in other respects. Their concerns are detailed below:

1. Advest IRA

The Advest individual retirement account is worth approximately $65,000.00. At bankruptcy, it was held in Cox’s name alone. During the course of the divorce proceeding, Cox made several withdrawals from the account, some authorized by the state court, some not. Two withdrawals were made after Cox filed bankruptcy. The divorce court deemed the Advest IRA marital property, and awarded Davis $65,250.00 from it, styling its award as a “sanction” for Cox’s violation of divorce court orders (ie., for repeated transgression of orders prohibiting him from disposing of property without authorization) and because it was “equitable” under the circumstances in light of the value of assets he had wrongfully sold or spent. As a matter of property division, the sanction made Davis whole, as though Cox had not appropriated the assets to his own use in violation of court orders. 9 Cox objects to paying the award out of the account, which he claims as entirely exempt.

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Bluebook (online)
274 B.R. 13, 2002 Bankr. LEXIS 163, 2002 WL 334113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-cox-in-re-cox-meb-2002.