MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
SIDNEY B. BROOKS, Bankruptcy Judge.
THIS MATTER came before the Court for the trial of the Plaintiffs Complaint. The Court, having reviewed the file and being advised in the premises, makes the following findings of fact, conclusions of law, and Order.
For the reasons stated herein, all claims in Plaintiffs Complaint are DENIED and the Plaintiffs Complaint is DISMISSED.
I. Facts
The plaintiff, Jeffrey L. Hill (“Plaintiff’), the Chapter 7 Trustee of the bankruptcy estate of Angela Marie Garberding (“Debt- or/Defendant”), brought this adversary proceeding against the Debtor/Defendant and her boyfriend, Gordon Koching, a/k/a Cory G.G. Koching (“Defendant Koching”) seeking turnover of a 1983 or 1984 500 SEC Mercedes Benz (“Mercedes”).
In the underlying bankruptcy case, the Debtor/Defendant scheduled the Mercedes in her Schedule B. She placed a value on the vehicle of $1,050.00. In the form of the schedules filed, the Debtor/Defendant is directed to “list all personal property of the debtor of whatever kind” in Schedule B. In describing the Mercedes, the Debt- or/Defendant stated that the Mercedes was “titled in Debtor’s name but paid for an used by Debtor’s boyfriend.” The Debtor/Defendant also claimed the Mercedes exempt pursuant to Colo.Rev.Stat. § 13-5<W02(l)(j)(I).
The Plaintiff demanded that the vehicle be turned over to him to be liquidated and the proceeds distributed to creditors. The Debtor/Defendant responded to the trustee stating that she believed that her boyfriend, the Defendant Koching, owned the vehicle. The Defendant Koching has possession of the automobile and uses the vehicle. He claims that it belongs to him and that it is not property of the Debt- or/Defendant’s bankruptcy estate.
The parties, at trial, stipulated that the Mercedes was purchased in December of 1998. The loan was entered into by the Debtor/Defendant because Defendant Koching was unable to get a loan to finance the Mercedes.
The loan term was forty-eight months with the first payment due in February of 1999. Of the forty-eight payments, seven were made from Debtor/Defendant’s bank account.
Despite being made from Debtor/Defendant’s bank account, Defendant Koching tendered the same amount to Debtor/Defendant as reimbursement for the car payments made on the Debtor’s account. In addition, one other payment was made on her parents’ bank account. This payment was paid in consideration of Defendant Koching’s installation of hardwood floors in Debtor/Defendant’s parents’ home. In other words, Defendant Koching, in lieu of taking the compensation himself, directed that the payment for his installation of the floors go to payoff the Mercedes. The remaining forty payments were made by Defendant Koching. The only evidence of value of the Mercedes is that it is worth between $1,000.00 and $1,300.00.
The parties further stipulated that the Debtor/Defendant never made a single payment out of her own funds on the loan, the insurance,
or maintenance of the Mercedes. Moreover, Defendant/Debtor has never driven the Mercedes because she has her own Nissan Altima. Nevertheless, the loan for the Mercedes was in Debt- or/Defendant’s name and the Mercedes was and is titled in Debtor/Defendant’s name.
The within Complaint was filed on July 21, 2004. Only Defendant Koching filed an Answer (filed on August 9, 2004). The parties do not dispute that the Debtor/Defendant is in default, but that no default judgment has yet been sought against her.
II.
Issue
The issue before the Court is whether the Plaintiff, in accordance with 11 U.S.C.
§ 544(a), may avoid any equitable interest that Defendant Koching has in the Mercedes so as to make the Mercedes—the legal and equitable interests therein— property of the estate.
III.
Discussion
A. 11 U.S.C. § 541 Versus 11 U.S.C. § 544
Section 541 defines what constitutes property of the estate. The focus of this case is on subsection (d) of this Section, which provides that the estate is comprised of:
Property in which the debtor holds, as of the commencement of the ease, only legal title and not an equitable interest, such as a mortgage secured by real property, or an interest in such a mortgage, sold by the debtor but as to which the debtor retains legal title to service or supervise the servicing of such mortgage or interest, becomes property of the estate under subsection (a)(1) or (2) of this section only to the extent of the debtor’s legal title to such property, but not to the extent of any equitable interest in such property that the debtor does not hold.
Defendant Koching, throughout this proceeding, asserts that Debtor/Defendant only holds “bare legal title” within the meaning of this section. Since the Defendant Koching has made all payments on the loan, the insurance, and the repairs of the Mercedes, he contends that he is the beneficial or equitable owner of the Mercedes. Consequently, Defendant Koching argues that the Debtor’s “bare legal title” to the Mercedes does not constitute an economic interest such that it is not part of the estate.
Pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 544(a),
the Plaintiff is asserting the rights of a judicial lien creditor who extended credit to the Debtor/Defendant at the time of the commencement of the case and has rights to avoid any interest in property which could have been avoided by such judicial lien. As the Honorable Elizabeth E. Brown, Bankruptcy Judge, of this District has noted,
Essentially, under section 541(d), the trustee does not acquire greater rights than the debtor had to the property, in seeming contradiction of the trustee’s avoidance powers [under 544(a) ] and Section 541(a)(3), which includes avoided transfers among property of the estate.
Judge Brown went on to discuss the split in the case law dealing with this dilemma,
noting that the Tenth Circuit has
not
ruled directly on the seeming contradiction between 11 U.S.C. §§ 541(a)(3) and (d) and 544(a).
In her final analysis, she concluded that the majority view was the best approach; that is, the trustee’s strong-arm powers under 11 U.S.C.
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MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
SIDNEY B. BROOKS, Bankruptcy Judge.
THIS MATTER came before the Court for the trial of the Plaintiffs Complaint. The Court, having reviewed the file and being advised in the premises, makes the following findings of fact, conclusions of law, and Order.
For the reasons stated herein, all claims in Plaintiffs Complaint are DENIED and the Plaintiffs Complaint is DISMISSED.
I. Facts
The plaintiff, Jeffrey L. Hill (“Plaintiff’), the Chapter 7 Trustee of the bankruptcy estate of Angela Marie Garberding (“Debt- or/Defendant”), brought this adversary proceeding against the Debtor/Defendant and her boyfriend, Gordon Koching, a/k/a Cory G.G. Koching (“Defendant Koching”) seeking turnover of a 1983 or 1984 500 SEC Mercedes Benz (“Mercedes”).
In the underlying bankruptcy case, the Debtor/Defendant scheduled the Mercedes in her Schedule B. She placed a value on the vehicle of $1,050.00. In the form of the schedules filed, the Debtor/Defendant is directed to “list all personal property of the debtor of whatever kind” in Schedule B. In describing the Mercedes, the Debt- or/Defendant stated that the Mercedes was “titled in Debtor’s name but paid for an used by Debtor’s boyfriend.” The Debtor/Defendant also claimed the Mercedes exempt pursuant to Colo.Rev.Stat. § 13-5<W02(l)(j)(I).
The Plaintiff demanded that the vehicle be turned over to him to be liquidated and the proceeds distributed to creditors. The Debtor/Defendant responded to the trustee stating that she believed that her boyfriend, the Defendant Koching, owned the vehicle. The Defendant Koching has possession of the automobile and uses the vehicle. He claims that it belongs to him and that it is not property of the Debt- or/Defendant’s bankruptcy estate.
The parties, at trial, stipulated that the Mercedes was purchased in December of 1998. The loan was entered into by the Debtor/Defendant because Defendant Koching was unable to get a loan to finance the Mercedes.
The loan term was forty-eight months with the first payment due in February of 1999. Of the forty-eight payments, seven were made from Debtor/Defendant’s bank account.
Despite being made from Debtor/Defendant’s bank account, Defendant Koching tendered the same amount to Debtor/Defendant as reimbursement for the car payments made on the Debtor’s account. In addition, one other payment was made on her parents’ bank account. This payment was paid in consideration of Defendant Koching’s installation of hardwood floors in Debtor/Defendant’s parents’ home. In other words, Defendant Koching, in lieu of taking the compensation himself, directed that the payment for his installation of the floors go to payoff the Mercedes. The remaining forty payments were made by Defendant Koching. The only evidence of value of the Mercedes is that it is worth between $1,000.00 and $1,300.00.
The parties further stipulated that the Debtor/Defendant never made a single payment out of her own funds on the loan, the insurance,
or maintenance of the Mercedes. Moreover, Defendant/Debtor has never driven the Mercedes because she has her own Nissan Altima. Nevertheless, the loan for the Mercedes was in Debt- or/Defendant’s name and the Mercedes was and is titled in Debtor/Defendant’s name.
The within Complaint was filed on July 21, 2004. Only Defendant Koching filed an Answer (filed on August 9, 2004). The parties do not dispute that the Debtor/Defendant is in default, but that no default judgment has yet been sought against her.
II.
Issue
The issue before the Court is whether the Plaintiff, in accordance with 11 U.S.C.
§ 544(a), may avoid any equitable interest that Defendant Koching has in the Mercedes so as to make the Mercedes—the legal and equitable interests therein— property of the estate.
III.
Discussion
A. 11 U.S.C. § 541 Versus 11 U.S.C. § 544
Section 541 defines what constitutes property of the estate. The focus of this case is on subsection (d) of this Section, which provides that the estate is comprised of:
Property in which the debtor holds, as of the commencement of the ease, only legal title and not an equitable interest, such as a mortgage secured by real property, or an interest in such a mortgage, sold by the debtor but as to which the debtor retains legal title to service or supervise the servicing of such mortgage or interest, becomes property of the estate under subsection (a)(1) or (2) of this section only to the extent of the debtor’s legal title to such property, but not to the extent of any equitable interest in such property that the debtor does not hold.
Defendant Koching, throughout this proceeding, asserts that Debtor/Defendant only holds “bare legal title” within the meaning of this section. Since the Defendant Koching has made all payments on the loan, the insurance, and the repairs of the Mercedes, he contends that he is the beneficial or equitable owner of the Mercedes. Consequently, Defendant Koching argues that the Debtor’s “bare legal title” to the Mercedes does not constitute an economic interest such that it is not part of the estate.
Pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 544(a),
the Plaintiff is asserting the rights of a judicial lien creditor who extended credit to the Debtor/Defendant at the time of the commencement of the case and has rights to avoid any interest in property which could have been avoided by such judicial lien. As the Honorable Elizabeth E. Brown, Bankruptcy Judge, of this District has noted,
Essentially, under section 541(d), the trustee does not acquire greater rights than the debtor had to the property, in seeming contradiction of the trustee’s avoidance powers [under 544(a) ] and Section 541(a)(3), which includes avoided transfers among property of the estate.
Judge Brown went on to discuss the split in the case law dealing with this dilemma,
noting that the Tenth Circuit has
not
ruled directly on the seeming contradiction between 11 U.S.C. §§ 541(a)(3) and (d) and 544(a).
In her final analysis, she concluded that the majority view was the best approach; that is, the trustee’s strong-arm powers under 11 U.S.C. § 544 take precedence over a party claiming a beneficial interest in property titled in the name of the debtor.
This Court concurs with Judge Brown’s conclusions resolving the conflict between 11 U.S.C. §§ 541 and 544. In other words, a trustee,
under appropriate facts and circumstances,
has the ability to exercise his strong-arm powers to recover, for the benefit of the estate, property that the debtor held subject to an equitable lien,
as long as the trustee, as a hypothetical lien creditor, would prevail under state law against an equitable lien claimant.
Nevertheless, the inquiry does not stop here. The issue presented to this Court and the facts herein are
not
identical to those in the
Richards
case and require further examination and discussion. In
Richards,
the trustee was attempting to avoid an unperfected lien of a creditor. Here, the Defendant Koching does not assert that he holds a lien of any sort in the Mercedes. Instead, he is asserting
ownership
in—that is,
beneficial ownership and economic interest
in-—the Mercedes. The cornerstone of the analysis herein is whether the Plaintiff would prevail under state law.
B. State Law Governs Rights and Title to Property
“For the purposes of most bankruptcy proceedings, ‘[pjroperty interests are created and defined by state law.’ ”
Once a determination as to the property interest is made under state law, however, the Court must still look to federal bankruptcy law to resolve the extent to which that interest is property of the estate.
Thus, the Court must first determine whether, under the law of Colorado, the Debtor/Defendant’s certificate of title demonstrates that the Mercedes is conclusively and decisively property of the Debtor/Defendant. If it is, the Plaintiff prevails. If not, the Court must then determine to what extent Debtor/Defendant’s interest in the Mercedes is property of the estate under federal bankruptcy law and what rights the trustee may succeed to in such interest or rights in the Mercedes.
C. The Mercedes is Not Property of the Estate
Pursuant to Colo.Rev.Stat. § 42-6-107, a certificate of title shall be
prima facie
evidence of the matters contained therein.
The Plaintiff cites to
Doenges-
Glass, Inc. v. General Motors Acceptance
Corp,
for this proposition. But the Plaintiff stops short of advising this Court of the full quotation in this opinion and other cases seemingly on par with the present matter.
“A certificate of registration is presumptive evidence of ownership of an automobile
but the presumption is rebutta-ble.”
Indeed, “a certificate of title does not represent conclusive proof of ownership.”
To overcome this presumption, Debtor/Defendant herein must demonstrate that, under the facts of the case, that title alone does
not
determine ownership.
The stipulated facts in this adversary proceeding demonstrate that: (1) the loan for the Mercedes was in Debtor/De
fendant’s name, (2) the Mercedes was and is titled in Debtor/Defendant’s name, (3) Debtor/Defendant has never made a single payment out of her own funds on the loan, the insurance, or maintenance of the Mercedes, and (4) that she has never driven the Mercedes. In a case very similar to this one, the Honorable John F. McGrath, Bankruptcy Judge for the District of Colorado, concluded that a vehicle was not property of the debtor’s estate where: (1) the vehicle was purchased in the name of the debtor and his son with funds belonging
only
to the debtor’s son, a minor, (2) the debtor never used the vehicle, and (3) the debtor never intended to have an interest in the vehicle.
In reaching this conclusion, the Court held:
The father’s interest created by his name on the Bill of Sale and Application for Title seems, therefore, to be in the nature of a resulting trust. The marks of a resulting trust are found in
First National Bank of Denver v. Harry W. Rabb Foundation,
29 Colo.App. 34, 479 P.2d 986 (1970).
“... one in which a party, through no actual or constructive fraud, becomes invested with legal title, but holds that title for the benefit of another...”
First National Bank,
[29 Colo.App. 34,] 479 P.2d 986.
The fact that the Debtor has not done anything to remove his name from the Bill of Sale or the application for Colorado title since the son reached the age of contractual majority does not change our finding that the actual ownership of this automobile is in [debtor]. Therefore, we find the [vehicle] is not property of the Debtor’s estate.
Does Judge McGrath’s case square up with Judge Brown’s
Richards
opinion? The Court concludes that it does. Judge Brown noted in her decision that “Sections 541(a)(1), (2) and (d) guarantee that the trustee will succeed to whatever rights the debtor had, no more or no less.”
The Court finds it not unimportant that counsel for the Plaintiff stated during argument that because the car was and is titled in Debtor/Defendant’s name on the day she filed bankruptcy, she could have transferred good title to a third-party purchaser.
Counsel acknowledged, however, that she might be liable to Defendant Koching if she had done so.
By implication, counsel acknowledges,
at the very least,
that there might be some legal right that Defendant Koching has in the Mercedes. If so, then, if the Plaintiff acquires and sells the vehicle, is he not potentially liable to Defendant Koching? The Court concludes that under the stipulated facts and circumstances of this case, the Plaintiff succeeds to the rights the Debtor/Defendant had,
no more or no less.
In this
rare
instance, because of the Debtor’s
absence
of actual ownership interest in the Mercedes, the Mercedes is not property of the Debt- or/Defendant’s estate.
D. Debtor’s Claim of Exemption is Not an Admission that the Mercedes is Property of the Estate
Finally, to the extent that Debt- or’s claim of exemption is an admission that this is property of the estate, the Court concludes that this is not an admission. If anything, the exemption under the stipulated facts before this Court is claimed in
error.
Admittedly, by implication, a claim of exemption in accordance with 11 U.S.C. § 522(b)(1) implies that
property exempted is property of the estate. A curious feature, however, of the Colorado exemption statute related to automobiles is that legal title to the automobile (i.e. ownership) is
not
a requirement. Colo.Rev.Stat. § 13—54—102(l)(j)(I) allows a debtor in Colorado to exempt “one or more motor vehicles or bicycles
kept and used
by any debtor in the aggregate value of three thousand dollars.”
The stipulated facts before this Court demonstrate that the Debtor/Defendant
has not ever kept or used
the Mercedes. It would seem that, even if this Court were to determine that the Mercedes was property of the estate, Debtor/Defendant
may
not be the proper party to exempt this item under Colo.Rev.Stat. § 13-54-102(l)(j)(I).
On the other hand, Defendant Koching, upon writ of attachment, writ of execution, or his own filing of bankruptcy
may
be the proper party to exempt the Mercedes under Colo.Rev.Stat. § 13—54—102(l)(j)(I). Thus, in effect, if this Court were to rule in favor of the Plaintiff, and the Plaintiff were to execute on the judgment, the Defendant Koching could conceivably turn around and claim this property exempt.
IV.
Order
Based upon the above and foregoing,
IT IS ORDERED that all claims as against both Debtor/Defendant and Defendant Koching in Plaintiffs Complaint are DENIED and the Plaintiffs Complaint is DISMISSED. The Clerk of the Court may close the within adversary proceeding ten (10) days after this Order becomes final and non-appealable.