In Re Anderson

932 P.2d 1110, 1996 WL 733257
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 24, 1996
Docket87784
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 932 P.2d 1110 (In Re Anderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Anderson, 932 P.2d 1110, 1996 WL 733257 (Okla. 1996).

Opinion

KAUGER, Vice Chief Justice:

A single issue is presented by the question certified: whether 31 O.S.1991 § 1(A)(21) 1 permits an Oklahoma debtor to exempt up to $50,000 for each interest in a separate and distinct claim for personal injury, death or workers’ compensation. We find that it does.

FACTS

The debtors, Donald Lynn and Stella Lynn Anderson (Andersons/debtors), filed bankruptcy on January 23,1996. The Andersons’ financial difficulties were caused by medical bills and lost wages associated with earing for their critically ill child. These problems were compounded when Mr. Anderson injured his shoulder at work. Anderson suffered a second injury when Dr. H. performed an unauthorized surgery on the shoulder. Three additional surgeries were required to correct the damage allegedly caused by Dr. H’s medical malpractice.

Mr. Anderson filed a workers’ compensation claim, and he has received total temporary disability benefits and medical treatment. He has also sued Dr. H for his personal injury in a medical malpractice action. Neither the workers’ compensation claim nor the personal injury action have been fully litigated, and there has been no recovery on the medical malpractice claim.

On March 15, 1996, the Andersons filed an amended Schedule C listing as exempt property under 31 O.S.1991 § 1(A)(21) a $50,000 exemption for the workers’ compensation injury and a $50,000 exemption for the medical malpractice injury. 2 The trustee in bankruptcy (trustee) filed an objection in the bankruptcy court to the exemptions claimed. The trustee asserted that § 1(A)(21) provided the debtor with a single $50,000 exemption for one personal injury, one workers’ compensation or one death claim. She requested that the bankruptcy court disallow the debtors’ claimed exemptions to the extent they exceeded one claim or $50,000.

The debtors responded to the trustee’s objection on April 19, 1996, asserting that 31 O.S.1991 § 1(A)(21) limits the value of a single exemption to a maximum of $50,000. However, they argued that § 1(A)(21) allows debtors to claim a $50,000 exemption for each separate and distinct injury — personal injury, death or workers’ compensation — enumerated by the statute. Under this analysis, the debtors would be entitled to two $50,000 exemptions — one for the workers’ compensation claim and one for the personal injury claim — for a total of $100,000.

*1112 Finding no Oklahoma precedent to resolve the question of law, the bankruptcy court certified the question to this Court pursuant to the Uniform Certification of Questions of Law Act, 20 O.S.1991 § 1601, et seq., on July 10, 1996. We set a briefing cycle which was completed when the final reply brief was filed on October 8,1996.

PURSUANT TO 31 O.S.1991 § 1(A)(21), AN OKLAHOMA DEBTOR MAY EXEMPT UP TO $50,000 FOR EACH INTEREST IN A SEPARATE AND DISTINCT CLAIM FOR PERSONAL INJURY, DEATH OR WORKERS’ COMPENSATION.

The debtors concede that 31 O.S.1991 § 1(A)(21) limits the value of a single interest which may be claimed as exempt to $50,000 regardless of the number of sources of payment. Nevertheless, they argue that multiple interests, separate and distinct from each other, may be claimed as exempt. Under the debtors’ analysis, if multiple interests are claimed, the exemption may exceed $50,000. The trustee asserts that § 1(A)(21) requires that the debtors’ claims be limited to a single action or claim for personal bodily injury, death or workers’ compensation for a net value not to exceed $50,000. In the alternative, the trustee suggests that if the statute is interpreted to exempt multiple interests in separate or distinct claims, the aggregate value of the exemption should be limited to $50,000.

Title 31 O.S.1991 § 1(A)(21) provides:

“A. Except as otherwise provided in this title and notwithstanding subsection B of this section, the following property shall be reserved to every person residing in the state, exempt from attachment or execution and every other species of forced sale for the payment of debts, except as herein provided:
(21) Such person’s interest in a claim for personal bodily injury, death or workers’ compensation claim, for a net amount not in excess of Fifty Thousand Dollars ($50,-000.00), but not including any claim for exemplary or punitive damages.”

Section 1(A)(21) addresses three classes of interests which qualify for exemption-personal bodily injury, death or workers’ compensation. The statute specifies that up to $50,000 of the interest is free from creditor claims. However, the statute is ambiguous in that it does not specifically delineate: 1) whether a debtor is limited to a single exemption from one of the three classes in an amount not to exceed $50,000; 2) whether two or more of the three classes of claims may be combined to exempt an amount not in excess of $50,000; or 3) whether a debtor with separate and distinct interests may exempt up to $50,000 for each interest claimed. 3 In considering the extent of the exemptions allowed by § 1(A)(21), we are committed to the rule that statutes exempting property from forced sale for the payment of debts are to be given a reasonable construction to effect their intent and purpose. In cases of doubt, the doubt will be resolved in favor of the exemption. 4

While recognizing that the case is not directly on point, the trustee relies on In re Celia, 128 B.R. 574, 577 (Bankr.W.D.Okla. 1991) for the proposition that § 1(A)(21) limits a debtor to a single $50,000 exemption in one of the three classes enumerated in the statute. In Celia, the bankruptcy court held that: 1) the debtor was barred by res judica-ta from relitigating a personal injury and death benefit claim previously determined in state court; and 2) annuity exemptions applied only to annuities established as a part of retirement programs not to annuities resulting from insurance settlements in tort actions. The trustee finds support in dicta located in footnote number 6 of the opinion indicating that the statutory language of § 1(A)(21) providing for a maximum $50,000 exemption for an “interest in a claim for personal bodily injury, death or workers’ compensation claim” indicates an intent that *1113 there be a single exemption for such claim. The same footnote also provides that if a debtor is receiving payment from two different sources, § 1(A)(21) could be construed as a basis for claiming a $50,000 exemption from each source. 5 Celia is factually distinguishable. Although Celia involved recovery for both workers’ compensation and a settlement received from a tortfeasor’s insurance carrier, only one injury occurred, a work-related death. Here, Mr. Anderson suffered two separate and distinct injuries to his shoulder — the work-related injury and the alleged medical malpractice.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
932 P.2d 1110, 1996 WL 733257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-anderson-okla-1996.