Gold v. United States (In Re Laines)
This text of 352 B.R. 416 (Gold v. United States (In Re Laines)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
MEMORANDUM OPINION
This adversary proceeding is before the court on the trustee’s motion for a default judgment as to Jose Donaldo Aguirre and Maximo Portillo. The trustee previously avoided the debtor’s March 2001 transfers of two properties as fraudulent conveyances under § 55-80 of the Code of Virginia (1950) as made applicable by Bankruptcy Code § 544(a). Three individuals and three other entities docketed judgments, or in the case of the United States recorded notices of federal tax liens, in Fairfax County, Virginia, the situs of the two real properties in question. None was a party to the avoidance action and, consequently, their docketed judgments and notices of federal tax liens were not affected by the prior adjudication. This adversary proceeding addresses the status of the docketed judgments and the notices of federal tax liens. The trustee asserts that none constitutes a lien against the property. The present motion addresses only Aguirre’s and Portillo’s docketed judgments.
The trustee asserts that Aguirre’s and Portillo’s docketed judgments are not liens against the two properties because they do not attach to the properties. 1 One property, a townhouse, was purchased by the debtor on December 9, 1998. He conveyed it to himself and his wife as tenants by the entirety on March 26, 2001. On December 24, 2002, they conveyed the property to themselves and Miguel Perez as tenants in common. The other property, a single family residence, was purchased by the debtor on October 21, 2000. The debtor conveyed it to himself and his wife as tenants by the entirety on March 18, 2001. They conveyed it to the debtor’s wife and Fidel Rovira on October 7, 2003. On December 23, 2003, Aguirre and Portil-lo docketed their judgments. The debtor filed his petition in bankruptcy on January 2, 2004. The March 2001 transfers were avoided on February 16, 2005, as fraudulent conveyances and the properties were recovered from the debtor’s wife, Perez and Rovira under Bankruptcy Code § 550. Neither Aguirre nor Portillo filed a response to the trustee’s complaint.
The trustee argues that under Virginia law the docketed judgments do not attach to the properties. 2 Thus, if *418 under Virginia law, the docketed judgments did not constitute liens against the properties before the trustee avoided the March 2001 transactions, they do not be-corné liens merely by the trustee’s avoid-anee of the transactions. Conversely, if they constituted liens before the trustee avoided the March 2001 transactions on February 16, 2005, they remain liens enforceable against the trustee and the bank *419 ruptcy estate. Retail Clerks Welfare Trust v. McCarty (In re Van de Kamp’s Dutch Bakeries), 908 F.2d 517, 519 (9th Cir.1990) (“Appellants correctly note that the court must refer to state law to determine the relative priorities of competing liens.”); Matter of DeLancey, 94 B.R. 311, 313 (Bankr.S.D.N.Y.1988).
The Virginia Supreme Court succinctly stated the law in Tucker v. Foster, 154 Va. 182, 192-193, 152 S.E. 376, 379 (1930):
When a judgment has been rendered and duly docketed the effect thereof is to impose a lien both upon the real estate then held by the judgment debtor and also upon any that he may have theretofore conveyed away in fraud of such judgment creditor after his debt was contracted and before judgment rendered, subject of course in the latter case to the superior equities of bona fide purchasers for value and without notice. Sections 6470 and 6471, Code of Virginia
(citations omitted.). 3
The trustee is correct under the first prong of the Tucker rule as to the single family residence. The debtor did not own the home when Aguirre and Portillo docketed their judgments on December 23, 2003. It was owned by the debtor’s wife and Rovira. The trustee is partially correct as to the townhouse. He alleges in his complaint that the debt- or owned a one-third interest in the townhouse when the judgments were docketed. Aguirre’s and Portillo’s judgment liens attached to this interest but not to the interests owned by the debt- or’s wife and Perez. Va.Code (1950) § 8.01-458. The trustee’s avoidance of the March 2001 transactions and the application of § 551 do not change these results. Even though the March 2001 transactions were avoided by the trustee, Aguirre’s and Portillo’s docketed judgments were not avoided. Their liens on the townhouse remain intact until they are avoided. 4
The second prong of the Tucker rule requires further examination. The docketed judgments could also be liens against the single family residence if the debtor conveyed the residence “in fraud of such judgment creditor after his debt was contracted and before judgment rendered.” Id. The fact that the March 2001 transfers were fraudulent conveyances does not bring Aguirre and Portillo within the parameters of Tucker’s second rule. Aguirre’s and Portillo’s debts must have been contracted before the fraudulent conveyance, that is before March 18, 2001.
The court cannot determine from the record when the debtor incurred the obligations. All that can be gleaned from the record is that both Aguirre’s and Portillo’s judgments are for unpaid wages; that Aguirre’s judgment is for $966.00; that Portillo’s is for $1,392.00; and that the judgments were docketed on December 23, 2003. Neither filed a proof of claim. The debts would have had to have been incurred before March 18, 2001 when the debtor transferred the home from himself to himself and his wife as tenants by the entirety for the second prong of the Tuck *420 er rule to apply. 5 The trustee’s complaint is sufficient on its face to entitle the trustee to the relief requested as to the residence, that is, a determination that Aguirre’s and Portillo’s docketed judgments do not attach to the single family residence and are not liens against it. Without a response from Aguirre and Por-tillo, the court cannot assume that they have a valid defense, that is, that their obligations were incurred before March 18, 2001.
The motion for default judgment will be granted as to the single family home but will be denied as to the townhouse.
. The trustee sold the properties free and clear of all liens and potential liens under 11 U.S.C. § 363(f). All liens were transferred to the proceeds of sale.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
352 B.R. 416, 2006 Bankr. LEXIS 1891, 2006 WL 2501455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gold-v-united-states-in-re-laines-vaeb-2006.