In Re Coffey

339 B.R. 689, 2006 Bankr. LEXIS 662, 2006 WL 768840
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Indiana
DecidedMarch 27, 2006
Docket18-12420
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 339 B.R. 689 (In Re Coffey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Indiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Coffey, 339 B.R. 689, 2006 Bankr. LEXIS 662, 2006 WL 768840 (Ind. 2006).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION AND ORDER

J. PHILIP KLINGEBERGER, Judge Bankruptcy.

The matter before the Court is a contested matter arising from the objection of Chapter 7 Trustee Stacia Yoon (“Trustee”), as trustee of the Chapter 7 bankruptcy estate of Sharon Anne Coffey (“Coffey”), to an exemption claimed by Coffey in her amended Schedule C filed on May 9, 2005, which stated an exemption of $7,250.00 pursuant to I.C. 34-55-10-2(b)(l) with respect to her interest under a lease agreement, in which she is the lessee, concerning her lease of the real property in which she resides at 13110 Hobart Court, Cedar Lake.

Jurisdiction and Applicable Law

The Court has jurisdiction over this contested matter pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1334, 28 U.S.C. § 157(a) and N.D.Ind. L.R. 200.1. The matter before the Court is a core proceeding pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(B). Because Indiana has “opted out” with respect to exemptions applicable in bankruptcy cases in accordance with 11 U.S.C. § 522(b)(1), construction of the statute under which the exemption was claimed is a matter of Indiana law, and not of federal law.

Facts

The Trustee and Coffey filed a Stipulation of Facts on September 1, 2005. The facts therein stated, together with a copy of Coffey’s lease for the subject residential premises — submitted into evidence by the parties at a hearing held on July 22, 2005 — constitute the entire record upon which the contested matter is to be determined.

The stipulated facts establish that Coffey and her former husband sold their marital residence prior to entering into a settlement agreement in their dissolution of marriage action. The settlement agreement required Coffey’s counsel to hold $13,000.00 of the sales proceeds in an escrow account in order to negotiate and eliminate Coffey’s debt. Coffey entered *691 into a written residential lease with a Jim Hall for the lease of the property located at 13110 Hobart Court in Cedar Lake, Indiana. On or about September 25, 2004, the amount of $8000.00 was disbursed from the escrow account to Hall. The lease provides, in pertinent part:

RENT: Lessee agrees to pay to Lessor monthly rental in the sum of $725.00 each month, payable on the third day of each month at the following address or at any other address hereafter designated by the lessor. Paid 10 months plus security equals ($8,000.00).
[Lease Agreement, ¶ 4],

As the lease expressly states, ten months of rent were pre-paid at signing, in the amount of $7,250.00, and in addition to this a security deposit of $750.00 was provided to Hall. The lease is for a definite term, beginning October 1, 2004 and ending September 30, 2005. Designated paragraph 14 of the lease states:

IMMEDIATE POSSESSION. If the rent shall, at any time, be in arrears or if the Lessee should violate any obligation imposed by this lease, or if the premises are used in a manner to which Lessor reasonably objects, Lessor shall be entitled to immediate possession of the premises and the lease term shall cease, except Lessee shall remain liable for any damages, including rent, to the end of the original term where premises remain vacant. On tenant’s default, Lessor may without notice, declare an acceleration of the rent due for the balance of the original term of the lease.

Coffey filed her Chapter 7 case on January 10, 2005. She filed amendments to Schedules A, B and C on May 9, 2005. The amended Schedule A listed an equitable interest in a “Lease Agreement on Residence” at 13110 Hobart Court, Cedar Lake, IN; valued that interest at $7250.00; and stated that the rent had been “paid from 10-01-04 through 07-31-05”. Section 3 of the amended Schedule B listed a $750.00 security deposit held by James Hall. Amended Schedule C claimed an exemption in property described as “Real Property”, Lease Agreement on Residence ... Rent paid from 10-1-04 through 07-31-05 in the amount of $7250.00 under Ind.Code § 34-55-10-2(b)(l).

Legal Analysis

The sole issue before the Court is whether the exemption claimed in Coffey’s amended Schedule C is within the provisions of I.C. § 34 — 55—10—2(b)(1), and if so, the value of the allowable exemption under that statute which the debtor may claim under the factual circumstances.

The focus of the Trustee’s objection is not the debtor’s interest in the real property at 13110 Hobart Court, Cedar Lake, IN; rather, the Trustee contests Coffey’s claimed exemption in order to reach, or preserve her ability to potentially reach, the prepayment of the rent made by Coffey. The crux of the Trustee’s position is that pre-paid rent should be equated with a type of security deposit or escrow account, which the Trustee essentially contends is an intangible asset under Indiana law and is therefore only entitled to a $100.00 exemption. To support this assertion, the Trustee argues that since the lease is silent as to the prepayment of rent, and as to the status of the funds in the event of a breach, the money can only be a cash reserve held by the landlord to apply to the monthly rent when it became due. Consequently, so the argument goes, the rent is more like a security deposit which is held by the landlord for the term of the lease and is returned to the lessee if the rent is unpaid or there are damages to the property. (Trustee’s Initial Brief at 3).

*692 Coffey argues that Indiana law requires that exemption statutes must be construed in a manner which favors the claimant, and that in consonance with that principle, the claimed exemption should not be construed in a manner which requires the landlord Hall to turn over the prepaid rent to the Trustee.

In the Court’s view, the issue in this contested matter has been expanded by the parties far beyond its narrow scope. Perhaps this is in part the Court’s fault for not focusing the parties on the analysis which the Court deemed appropriate. Perhaps the expansion also derives from reported decisions from other jurisdictions which analyze issues relating to prepaid rent as part and parcel with issues relating to claimed exemptions in “homesteads” or “residences”. Whatever the reason, the issue in this matter is limited to a claimed exemption in a leasehold in which the debt- or is the lessee, a property interest under Indiana law which has nothing to do with whether or not rent for the interest in the leasehold was prepaid.

The Court does not agree with the Trustee’s interpretation of the rental agreement between the landlord and Coffey and its impact upon whether a cognizable property interest exists.

The lease is for a definite stated term of October 1, 2004 to September 30, 2005.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
339 B.R. 689, 2006 Bankr. LEXIS 662, 2006 WL 768840, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-coffey-innb-2006.