In Re Bennett

192 B.R. 584, 1996 Bankr. LEXIS 180, 1996 WL 84563
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Maine
DecidedFebruary 14, 1996
Docket12-21490
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 192 B.R. 584 (In Re Bennett) 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
In Re Bennett, 192 B.R. 584, 1996 Bankr. LEXIS 180, 1996 WL 84563 (Me. 1996).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION

JAMES B. HAINES, Jr., Bankruptcy Judge.

Frank and Ann Marie Bennett (“Bennetts” or “debtors”) assert exemption rights in a parcel of largely unimproved real estate. The Chapter 7 trustee objects. For the reasons set forth below, I conclude that, although the debtors’ claim to a “residence” exemption in the property rest on a strong emotional foundation, its legal foundation is too shaky to support it. The trustee’s objection will be sustained. 1

Facts

In 1986 Mrs. Bennett’s mother gave the debtors a house lot in Lisbon Falls, Maine, located next door to her own home. 2 Since then, the debtors have expended considerable time, money and energy working toward their goal of eventually constructing a home there. As of their bankruptcy filing, however, the goal remained unattained.

At the time of the gift transfer, the property’s title was clouded. With the assistance of counsel, the Bennetts established clear record ownership, a process that took about three years.

Mr. Bennett, a logger, firewood dealer and sometimes builder, cleared the land himself. He has purchased, dumped and spread many truckloads of gravel and fill on it, attempting to bring the lot up to grade for building, a process that has been in progress for “years and years.” 3 From 1987 to 1991 the Ben-netts, at their own expense, had town sewer and water service extended to the property. 4

Beginning in 1990, the Bennetts obtained estimates for construction of a variety of potential houses on the property. Starting with a proposed two-story home, they considered plans for increasingly modest structures. The debtors are now considering either building a house with the help of friends 5 or placing a mobile or modular home on the property.

Plans notwithstanding, no meaningful construction has been accomplished on the lot. As of August 1994, when the bankruptcy petition was filed, the only building on the property was a small, prefabricated tool shed. The debtors have stationed two pickup truck campers, sans pickups, on the land. *586 One camper affords temporary, rudimentary accommodations. The other serves as a workshop in which Mrs. Bennett repairs used and damaged toys and household goods for resale.

The Bennetts lived in one of the campers on the lot from April to August 1990 while they saved money so that they could rent an apartment. Since August 1990 they have resided in an apartment in Lisbon, Maine, not far from the Lisbon Falls property. In 1995, after the bankruptcy filing, Mr. Bennett spent several summer months living by himself in the camper. He has returned to the apartment.

The Bennetts do use the property regularly. Mr. Bennett splits wood on the lot. He parks an old truck there and hauls firewood, gravel and fill with it. During summer months, Mrs. Bennett conducts a running yard sale at the lot, selling the items she has repaired and refurbished. The debtors spend many, if not most, days on the property during summer months, returning to the apartment to sleep, shower and cook regular meals. 6

The Bennetts still plan to reside permanently on their property, but their plans are far from certain. Mr. Bennett had no firm idea from whom he could purchase building supplies or a mobile home or how such purchases would be financed. 7 Mrs. Bennett opined that she and her husband “might” now, in light of their bankruptcy discharge, be able to borrow from her mother sufficient funds to build. 8

Discussion

1. What’s Settled.

The resolution of this dispute does not turn on the burden of proof. 9 Nor does it turn on resolving disputed facts. 10 Moreover, the parties agree that the extent and scope of the debtors’ exemption rights are set by Maine’s statutory residence exemption 11 (governing by way of opt-out). 12

*587 The way in which the exemption statute is to be construed and applied (liberally, in favor of the fresh-start policy) is clear. 13 And the proposition that actual, physical occupancy of the premises is “neither necessary nor sufficient” to sustain the exemption claim is beyond dispute. 14 In other words, the principle of “constructive occupancy” may sustain a residence exemption claim in appropriate circumstances, notwithstanding the fact that the debtor(s) or their dependant(s) did not live on the property on the bankruptcy date. 15

2. What’s Not.

The rub here comes in applying the law to the facts. This court recently observed that cases sustaining a residence exemption in property that debtors did not occupy at bankruptcy “all involve situations where the debtor actually resided on the property at one time, and, although not resident there on the petition date, demonstrated an intention to return.” In re Cole, 185 B.R. at 97 (citing cases). Sustaining the trustee’s objection to the exemption claim in Cole, a ease in which the debtor was without any meaningful plans to move to property she had never before occupied and in which she had made a few historical improvements (installation of a septic system about one year before bankruptcy), I did not rule out the possibility that there may exist a case in which a debtor might sustain a residence exemption in never-before-oecupied property, but observed:

Even if I were to accept (for the moment) the proposition that a residence exemption can be established without prior occupancy, [the debtor] has demonstrated nothing more than a vague intention to live on the ... property and has shown no present plans or tangible, contemporary preparations to move there. That is not enough.

In re Cole, 185 B.R. at 98 (citing cases).

When evaluating a constructive occupancy based residence exemption claim, assaying a debtor’s intention to occupy is an essential inquiry. In re Grindal, 30 B.R. at 653; see also In re Snook, 134 B.R. 424, 425 (D.Kan.1991); In re Eckols, 63 B.R. at 527; 2 Norton § 46:10 at 46-17; 3 Collier ¶ 522.10 at 522-54. The Bennetts have, through actions spanning nearly ten years, objectively demonstrated their intention (someday) to make the Lisbon Falls lot their home. 16

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
192 B.R. 584, 1996 Bankr. LEXIS 180, 1996 WL 84563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-bennett-meb-1996.