In Re Colbert

5 B.R. 646, 1980 Bankr. LEXIS 4634
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedAugust 14, 1980
DocketBankruptcy 2-80-00096
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 5 B.R. 646 (In Re Colbert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Colbert, 5 B.R. 646, 1980 Bankr. LEXIS 4634 (Ohio 1980).

Opinion

FINDINGS, OPINION AND ORDER ON CLAIM OF EXEMPTION IN INCOME TAX REFUND

Grady L. PETTIGREW, Bankruptcy Judge.

This matter is before the Court on a dispute between the trustee and the debtors over the debtors’ right to a claimed exemption.

The facts are uncontroverted. The debtors’ amended Schedule B-2 reveals Federal and State income tax refunds totaling $1,611 as property of the debtors. Each joint debtor claimed $400 of this amount as exempt under ORC § 2329.66(A)(4)(a) and $400 as exempt under ORC § 2329.-66(A)(17). The debtors filed joint tax returns for 1979. However, only Everett Lee Colbert, Sr., was employed outside the home and received income from which money was withheld to satisfy the anticipated tax liability for that year. The trustee has objected to the claim of exemption in the tax refunds by Sarah Ellease Colbert. The debtors have opposed the trustee’s objection.

The trustee contends that Sarah Ellease Colbert has no property interest in the tax refunds and is not entitled to claim any portion of the refunds as exempt because no portion of the refund is attributable to withholdings from income she earned. He also contends that she can claim no property interest in the refunds by virtue of the marital relationship, relying upon ORC § 3103.04 which states in pertinent part:

“Neither husband nor wife has any interest in the property of the other. . . ”

The debtors advance three arguments in support of the claimed exemption. First, they contend that the tax refund check is joint property because both spouses are named payees on the check. Further, they argue that the joint tax liability created by filing a joint tax return under 26 U.S.C. § 6013 creates a property interest in the refund for the non-income producing spouse. Finally, they contend that to deny Mrs. Colbert the exemption discriminates against a non-income producing wife on the basis of sex and violates the Constitutional guaranty of equal protection.

The Ohio exemption statutes in question state:

“§ 2329.66(A) Every person who is domiciled in this state may hold property exempt from execution, garnishment, attachment, or sale to satisfy a judgment or order as follows:
“(4)(a) the person’s interest, not to exceed four hundred dollars, in cash on *648 hand, money due and payable, money to become due within ninety days, tax refunds, . . . . This division applies only in bankruptcy proceedings. .
******
“(17) the person’s interest, not to exceed four hundred dollars, in any property, except that this division applies only in bankruptcy proceedings.”

The sole issue before this Court is whether a non-income producing spouse has a property interest in the tax refunds of an income producing spouse so as to be entitled to claim an exemption in the refunds.

The fact that an income tax refund is a property right of a debtor in bankruptcy was decided by this Court in In Re Robert C. DeVoe, 5 B.R. 618 (BC S.D. Ohio, 1980). The extent to which one possesses an interest in property is governed by applicable state law. Hayes v. Schaefer, 399 F.2d 300 (6th Cir., 1968).

At common law, the husband and his wife were considered to be a single legal entity. As to the personal and property rights of the wife,

“ ‘the very legal existence of the wife was regarded as suspended for the duration of the marriage . ... The husband acquired the right to possession and use of his wife’s real and personal property. . .'
“Every state has enacted statutes which have changed the common law rule and have assigned to a married woman a separate legal identity and secured for her a separate legal estate in her own property.” Damm v. Lodge, 158 Ohio St. 107 at 113, 107 N.E.2d 337 at 341 (1952).

The Ohio Supreme Court has further discussed these statutes stating:

“The rights of a married woman in this state have been extended by express provisions of our laws, and she now has full power to contract, and the unlimited right to have and enjoy the benefits of her contracts and the fruits of her employment. These modern statutes relating to the property rights of married women are generally intended to cut off the common-law rights of the husband to the personal estate of the wife. They have been construed to constitute as her separate estate a separate business or trade which she may carry on, and all the property incident thereto. Under the provisions referred to, the earnings of a married woman, or property acquired by her labor constitute her separate property, and no part thereof or interest therein can in any wise be claimed by the husband as against her.” Board of Education v. Boal, 104 Ohio St. 482 at 484, 135 N.E. 540 at 540 (1922).

Ohio Revised Code § 3103.04 is such a statute stating that neither spouse shall have an interest in the property of the other. The earnings of an income producing spouse are the property of that person alone. One spouse has no property interest in the earnings of the other spouse, neither the husband in the wife’s nor the wife in the husband’s.

Usually, income tax liability arises from the receipt of income. To facilitate the collection of taxes owed on such income, both the Internal Revenue Service and the Department of Taxation of the State of Ohio have adopted a scheme whereby a portion of the taxpayer’s earnings is withheld by an employer and remitted to the taxing authority to be applied against the taxpayer’s total tax liability at the end of the year. During the course of the year withholdings are in the nature of a savings account, unreachable by, but nevertheless property of the income producing taxpayer.

A taxpayer’s withholdings in excess of any tax liability are returned to the taxpayer in the form of a refund. That refund is the property of the taxpayer from whose earnings it was withheld.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 B.R. 646, 1980 Bankr. LEXIS 4634, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-colbert-ohsb-1980.