In Re Crum

414 B.R. 103, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 265, 2009 WL 426098
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Texas
DecidedFebruary 20, 2009
Docket19-30736
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 414 B.R. 103 (In Re Crum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Crum, 414 B.R. 103, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 265, 2009 WL 426098 (Tex. 2009).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

ROBERT L. JONES, Bankruptcy Judge.

The debtor, Ralph Crum (“Crum”), the chapter 7 trustee, Kent Ries, and creditor Randi Crum have submitted to the Court on joint stipulations their disputes regarding the exemption claims made by Crum to funds maintained in three accounts ($254,-902.04, $38,080.64, and $79.58, respectively) as of the filing of Crum’s bankruptcy case and to funds ($11,000) conveyed by Crum to a third-party prior to the bankruptcy filing.

The Court has jurisdiction over this matter under 28 U.S.C. § 1334(b); this is a core proceeding pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(B). This Memorandum Opinion contains the Court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law. Bankruptcy Rule 7052.

Statement of Facts

The parties have stipulated to the relevant facts that underlie their disputes, which stipulations are set forth as follows:

1. The Debtor, Ralph Crum, filed his first Amended Claims of Exemptions on August 27, 2008, and a Creditor, Randi Crum, and the Trustee, Kent Ries, have filed Objections to those claims of exemptions which ... [were] set for hearing on November 6, 2008, at 1:30 pm. The Debtor filed additional claims of exemption on November 2, 2008, which the parties agree may be hereafter subject to further objections by creditors and the Trustee. However, the parties agree that the claims of exemptions filed by the Debtor which were set for hearing on November 6, 2008, have not substantially changed (although the legal basis for those exemptions may have been expanded by the Debtor as set forth by the Debtor in its November 2, 2008 amendments), and the parties believe that the issues concerning *106 those claims of exemptions and the objections to exemptions set for hearing on November 6, 2008, are ripe for determination....
3. The parties stipulate that the account claimed as exempt identified by the Debtor as “Group SAMA Internacional, G.S.S.A, IRA Account No. 10673534” (the “Group SAMA account”) is not an IRA account, or an otherwise “qualified” IRS account, as can be claimed as exempt, without a showing of other circumstances or law by the Debtor, in his bankruptcy proceeding in its current form under federal law, including United States Bankruptcy Code section 522, or the laws of the State of Texas. However, the parties stipulate that the $254,902.04 in funds deposited into the Group SAMA Account on May 29, 2008, were the proceeds of two IRA accounts which had been funded over time by regular contributions from the Debtor’s salary or self-employment income, and which funds, if they had remained in those original accounts, would have been exempt under federal law from the claims of his general creditors. The parties do not stipulate that the funds in the original two IRA accounts would have been exempt from the alimony/child support claims of Randi Crum, and that issue is presented to the court for determination.
4. The parties stipulate that the sworn testimony of Ralph Crum in support of his claims of exemptions would be as follows: that he withdrew funds from the IRA and qualified retirement accounts in April, 2008, and when he deposited those funds into the Group SAMA account, he was attempting to “roll over” those same funds in the amount of $254,902.04 into a qualified IRA account[.] Dr. Crum would testify that when he deposited the $254,902.04 into the Group SAMA account, it was under the mistaken belief (based on the misrepresentation by Group SAMA, with no complicity of Ralph Crum) that he was rolling exempt funds into a new IRA that was a “qualified” IRS retirement account. Dr. Crum would testify that only approximately 2 weeks ago did he discover that the Group SAMA accounts were in fact not exempt IRAs or otherwise “qualified” IRS accounts, and that it was a misrepresentation of Group SAMA which resulted in funds from his IRA’s and qualified retirement accounts being placed in a non-IRS qualified account. Dr. Crum would testify that all of the documentation provided to him by Group SAMA supporting the investment was entirely written in Spanish, a language in which he is not literate....
5.The Parties stipulate that Dr. Crum withdrew $97,307.83 in funds by a check written payable to himself from his Prudential qualified Retirement Account [the “Prudential IRA”] on April 29, 2008; that Dr. Crum withdrew $157,594.21 in funds by a check written payable to himself from his Wachovia SEP IRA account No. 2790-9071 [the ‘Wacho-via IRA”] on April 26, 2008; that Dr. Crum deposited the funds he received from the Prudential Account and Wachovia Account, totaling $254,902.04, into the Group SAMA account on May 29,2008; that Dr. Crum filed his petition in Bankruptcy on May 30, 2008; and that the $254,902.04 now remains in the Group SAMA account. The par *107 ties agree, in general, that federal law allows a taxpayer 60 days after taking a distribution from an IRA or other qualified retirement account to deposit those funds into another IRA or tax qualified account to avoid such funds losing their tax-deferred and exempt status.
6. The parties stipulate that the Fidelity Retirement account No. 139913995 [the “Fidelity IRA”] in the amount of $38,080.64 (and any increase thereof) is a Roll Over IRA account and that the Wachovia SEP IRA Account No. 2790-9071 in the amount of $79.58 is a SEP IRA account, and that those accounts are exempt under federal law from the claims of Dr. Crum’s general creditors. The parties do not stipulate that those two IRA accounts are exempt from the alimony/child support claims of Randi Crum, and that issue is presented to the court for determination!.]
7. The court will be asked to determine Randi Crum’s Objection to Exemptions with respect to the Group SAMA and the IRA accounts described above. Specifically the court is asked to determine whether the funds in those accounts, to the extent they are found to be exempt from the claims of Dr. Crum’s general creditors, are exempt from the alimony/child support claims of Randi Crum, on behalf of herself and their children. The parties stipulate that Randi Crum was awarded in the “Memorandum of Decision” terminating the marriage of Randi Crum and Dr. Crum on April 8, 2008, child support/alimony of $12,000 per month plus the Debt- or’s obligation to provide health insurance coverage for his 2 minor children; and that Dr. Crum owed Randi Crum child support of $38,298.86 on May 30, 2008, when he filed his petition in Bankruptcy....
8. The court will be asked to determine, based on the Objections filed by the Trustee and Randi Crum, whether the funds contained in the Group SAMA Account meet the requirements for Dr. Crum to claim those funds as exempt under federal law in his bankruptcy proceeding.
9. The Parties stipulate that Dr. Crum withdrew $13,000 from his Fidelity IRA on May 15, 2008, and that he has claimed $11,000 of these funds, which he paid to his fiance, Trudy-Herrmann-Hall, before he filed his bankruptcy proceeding, as exempt as “Fidelity IRA Proceeds.” The court will be asked to determine, based on the objection filed by the Trustee, whether the funds paid by Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
414 B.R. 103, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 265, 2009 WL 426098, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-crum-txnb-2009.