In Re Cantrell

270 B.R. 551, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 1648, 2001 WL 1598242
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedDecember 13, 2001
Docket19-50190
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 270 B.R. 551 (In Re Cantrell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Cantrell, 270 B.R. 551, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 1648, 2001 WL 1598242 (Conn. 2001).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION SUSTAINING TRUSTEE’S AMENDED OBJECTION TO SCHEDULE C 1

LORRAINE M. WEIL, Bankruptcy Judge.

The matter before the court is the chapter 7 trustee’s (the “Trustee”) Amended Objection to Schedule C (Doc. I.D. No. 8, the “Amended Objection”) pursuant to which the Trustee objects to the above-captioned debtor’s (the “Debtor”) purported exemption under Bankruptcy Code § 522(b) and the Connecticut statutory homestead exemption of a beneficial interest under an alleged resulting trust in respect of certain real property (the “Property”) located in Madison, Connecticut. 2

1. Procedural History

The Debtor commenced this chapter 7 case by voluntary petition filed on February 12, 2001 (the “Petition Date”). The Debtor is married but her husband neither joined in the chapter 7 petition nor filed *553 his own. The Debtor also filed her original bankruptcy schedules and Statement of Financial Affairs (included in Doc. I.D. No. 1, collectively, the “Schedules”) on the Petition Date. The Debtor did not list an interest in the Property on the Schedules. The Debtor’s Schedule J — Current Expenditures of Individual Debtor(s) shows no cash outflows for mortgage payments or real property taxes whatsoever, but does show a monthly expense of $200 for “[h]ome maintenance (repair and upkeep)”. At the meeting of creditors held on March 15, 2001 pursuant to Bankruptcy Code § 341 (the “Meeting”), the Debtor disclosed certain facts in respect of the Property and the funding sources for its acquisition in response to the Trustee’s questions. After the conclusion of the Meeting, the Debtor served on the Trustee an amended Schedule A, listing as an asset a “constructive trust interest” in the Property valued by the Debtor at $78,000.00. The Debtor also served on the Trustee an amended Schedule C, claiming an exemption of $76,000 in respect of that “trust” pursuant to Sections 52-352b(t) and 52-352b(r) of the Connecticut General Statutes (the Connecticut homestead exemption). 3 The Debtor received her chapter 7 discharge on May 29, 2001.

The Trustee timely filed 4 an objection (Doc. I.D. No. 4) to the claimed exemption on the grounds that the Debtor cannot claim an exemption in a constructive trust as her homestead under Connecticut law. The Trustee then filed the Amended Objection (Doc. I.D. No. 8) which added the further objection that, since the alleged “constructive trust” arose. from a voluntary transfer from the Debtor to her husband (which transfer is described below), the Debtor is prohibited by Bankruptcy Code § 522(g) 5 from claiming an exemption in respect of the Property.

A hearing (the “Hearing”) on the Amended Objection was held on August 2, 2001. At the Hearing, it was agreed by the parties and the court that the Debtor’s interest in the Property (to the extent, if any, that such interest exists at all) would be properly characterized under Connecticut law as a “resulting trust” rather than as a “constructive trust”. 6 Both parties *554 placed documentary exhibits (the “Exhibits”) into the record at the Hearing. The Debtor was the sole witness at the Hearing. At the conclusion of the Hearing, the court took the matter under advisement and ordered a briefing schedule. The matter now has been briefed by the parties and is ripe for decision.

For the reasons set forth in part III of this memorandum, the court hereby sustains the Amended Objection. However, because the court’s analysis differs somewhat from the Trustee’s analysis, it is unnecessary to discuss Bankruptcy Code § 522(g). Based upon the record made at the Hearing 7 , the briefs of the parties and the entire record in this chapter 7 case, the court finds the facts set forth immediately below.

II. Facts

On July 22, 1999, the Debtor’s husband purchased the Property purportedly in his own name. The Debtor funded a down payment (the “Down Payment”) in respect of the purchase in the approximate amount of $78,000.00 and the remainder of the contract purchase price appears to have been paid primarily from the proceeds of a new mortgage loan from a bank or other mortgage lender. The Debtor’s husband holds sole record title to the Property (subject to the mortgage) and is the sole obligor with respect to the related mortgage loan.

The source of the Down Payment was the Debtor’s inheritance of the proceeds of the sale of her deceased parents’ home. 8 Before that home had been sold, the Debt- or had lived there with her husband and her children. (See Schedules (Statement of Financial Affairs, item no. 15).) Prior to the purchase of the Property, the Debt- or and her husband consulted a real estate agent for the purpose of buying a family home. Both the Debtor and her husband signed the documents necessary to retain the real estate agent. (See Debtor’s Exhibit 2.) Thereafter, the Debtor and her husband sought the services of a mortgage broker. The Debtor remitted a check to the mortgage broker for the loan application. That check (a copy of which is Debt- or’s Exhibit 1) was drawn by the Debtor upon a joint account standing in the names of the Debtor and her husband. At the Hearing, the Debtor testified that the mortgage broker advised the Debtor and her husband that the broker would be able to get them a substantially better interest rate if the purchase were to be solely in the husband’s name. The Debtor further testified that she and her husband consulted another mortgage broker who gave them substantially the same advice. 9 Based upon the advice of the two mortgage brokers, the Debtor testified, she and her husband decided to proceed with the purchase solely in the husband’s name. The Debtor further testified at the Hearing that she never intended her funding of the Down Payment to be a gift to her husband. Rather, she testified, it was her intention that both she and her husband were buying a house together for the purpose of obtaining a family home for her, her husband and her children. The Debt- or also testified that record title to the Property was not changed after closing to *555 give the Debtor a record interest in the Property because she was told at closing (by some unidentified person) that such a transfer was not permitted under the mortgage documents. 10

At the time of the Debtor’s funding of the Down Payment, the Debtor owed approximately $40,000 to her creditors. Her husband was not liable on those debts. The Debtor either was unemployed at the time she funded the Down Payment or intended to give up her outside job shortly after she and her family moved into the Property. As of the Petition Date, the Debtor had been employed as an x-ray technician for about eleven months.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
270 B.R. 551, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 1648, 2001 WL 1598242, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-cantrell-ctb-2001.