In re Cole

559 B.R. 919, 2016 WL 5173215
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedSeptember 20, 2016
DocketCase No. 8:15-bk-07459-MGW
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 559 B.R. 919 (In re Cole) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Cole, 559 B.R. 919, 2016 WL 5173215 (Fla. 2016).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION ON HOMESTEAD EXEMPTION

Michael G. Williamson, Chief United States Bankruptcy Judge

This case turns on a familiar baseball adage: a tie goes to the runner. The Chap-ter 7 Trustee in this case has objected to the Debtor’s attempt to claim a house she acquired as á beneficiary under her mother’s living trust as homestead. According to the Trustee, the homestead exemption cannot be used to extinguish a preexisting lien. Here, the Trustee holds the rights of a hypothetical judgment lien creditor as of the petition date. But the property could not have become homestead until the Debtor’s mother passed away two weeks after the petition date. Although the hypo-thetical lien existed on the petition date, it could not have attached to the house until the Debtor acquired an interest in it. At best, the Trustee’s hypothetical judgment lien attached to the property at the same time the property acquired its homestead status. Where, like here, a judgment lien and homestead status attach to property at the same time, the homestead exemption defeats the hypothetical judgment lien.

Background

For the three years before the petition date, the Debtor lived in a home located at 1955 Brookhaven Drive, Sarasota, Florida.1 That home was titled in the name of a living trust created by the Debtor’s mother.2 The Debtor, along with two siblings, was a beneficiary under her mother’s liv-ing trust and, under its terms, would in-herit a one-third interest in the Brookha-ven Drive property when her mother passed away.3

When the Debtor filed this case, she listed her interest in the living trust on Schedule B (at $0).4 Shortly after the case was filed, the Debtor’s mother passed away.5 So the Debtor amended her sched-ules to list her one-third interest in the Brookhaven Drive property and claim it as exempt homestead since she currently lives in the property and intends to contin-ue living 'there.6 The Trustee has objected to the Debtor’s claim of exemption with respect to the Brookhaven Drive property and other personal property belonging to her mother.7 The Debtor now asks the Court to overrule the Trustee’s objection to the Debtor’s claim of exemption as a matter of law.8

Conclusions of Law

It is worth noting, as a threshold mat-ter, that the Debtor claims the Brookha-[921]*921ven Drive property is not property of the estate in the first place.9 The Debtor says her interest in her mother’s home was not property of the estate at the time of filing since her mother’s living trust contained valid spendthrift provisions.10 Nor did her interest become property of the estate under § 541(a)(5), the Debtor says, be-cause a transfer under a living trust is not a bequest, devise, or inheritance.11 The Trustee, for her part, says the § 541(c)(2) exception for spendthrift trusts does not apply because the trust at issue here was a revocable self-settled trust,12 and in any event, the distribution of the house to the Debtor is a “devise” under Florida law because Florida law defines “devise” to mean “to dispose of real or personal property by will or trust.”13

The Court is inclined to agree that neither the Debtor’s interest in the trust nor the house became property of the estate in the first place. The § 541(c)(2) exception does apply since the Debtor did not settle the trust, nor did she did have any dominion or control over the trust assets as of the petition date.14 Moreover, the Court agrees with Judge Kimball’s analysis in In re Rogove, where he ruled that post-petition distributions to the debt- or from a special needs trust created for the benefit of the debtor’s mother were not property of the estate under § 541(a)(5).15 The Florida Probate Code does, as the Trustee argues, define “devise” as dispos-ing of property by trust; however, that definition must be read in conjunction with the meaning of the term when used as a noun, which is defined as a “testamentary disposition.”16 A testamentary trust, of course, “is created by a will and takes effect when the settlor (testator) dies.”17 But a living trust does not become testa-mentary simply because it has some testa-mentary aspects:

If by the terms of the trust an interest passes to the beneficiary during the life of the settlor, although that interest does not take effect in enjoyment or possession before the death of the set-tlor, the trust is not testamentary.18

That being said, the Court need not decide whether the house is property of the estate because, even if it is, it is exempt home-stead.

Article X, section 4(b) of the Florida Constitution provides that the homestead exemption shall inure to the benefit of an owner’s heirs. There is no question that the Brookhaven Drive property was the mother’s homestead and that her homestead exemption inures to the Debt- or’s benefit. But that only means the Debt- or takes the house protected from forced sale by her mother’s creditors.19 The intent [922]*922of Article X, section 4(b) was to “protect the decedent’s homestead from the dece-dent’s creditors for the benefit of the dece-dent’s heirs.”20

If the Brookhaven Drive property is protected from forced sale, then it is pro-tected by the Debtor’s homestead exemption—not her mother’s homestead exemption. The Trustee does not dispute that the Debtor has an ownership interest in the Brookhaven Drive property, that she has lived there for the past three years, and that she intends to live there permanently. In other words, the Trustee does not really dispute that the Brookhaven Drive property is homestead. The Trustee’s sole objection is that the Debtor cannot use the homestead exemption to extinguish her preexisting lien.

Under Bankruptcy Code § 544(a), the Trustee has the status of a hypothetical judgment lien creditor as of the petition date. Although the Debtor lived in the Brookhaven Drive property as of the petition date, the Trustee argues the Debtor could not claim it as homestead since she had no ownership interest in the property at that time. After all, the Debtor did not acquire an interest in the Brookhaven Drive property until her mother passed away, and her mother was still alive as of the petition date. So the Trustee contends the Debtor is attempting to use the home-stead exemption, which did not ripen, in her view, until after the petition date, to extinguish a lien that existed on the petition date.

To be sure, the Florida Supreme Court has previously held that the homestead exemption must give way to a judgment lien where the judgment lien, went into effect before the homeowner became eligible to claim the homestead as exempt.21 In Pasco v. Harley, for instance, Pasco (a bank receiver) obtained a judgment against Harley and recorded the judgment in the county where Harley owned property.22 Because Harley was not married at the time, he could not claim the homestead, exemption under then Florida law.23

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
559 B.R. 919, 2016 WL 5173215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-cole-flmb-2016.