In Re Dudley

72 F. Supp. 943, 1947 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2419
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. California
DecidedAugust 4, 1947
Docket44706
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 72 F. Supp. 943 (In Re Dudley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Dudley, 72 F. Supp. 943, 1947 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2419 (S.D. Cal. 1947).

Opinion

YANKWICH, District Judge.

The Bankruptcy Act of 1938 recognizes exemptions to which bankrupts are entitled by state laws and requires them to be claimed. 1 The duty of the Trustee to set apart the exempt property is also prescribed *944 by the Act. 2 The effect of these provisions is that the right to exemptions, their nature and amount, are governed strictly by state laws, and the decisions of state courts interpreting them. 3 The law of California is very generous in the matter of exemptions. The exemptions are varied and numerous. 4 Exemption statutes are not only liberally construed, but “are generally subject to the most liberal construction which the courts can possibly give them.” 5 The courts of California have been most liberal in interpreting such statutes. They have taken the view that their object is to put a protective-guard around the debtor’s property for his protection and that of his family. And because the exemption flows from the nature of the property and not from any claim of exemption 6 , the courts have protected it against attachment and execution 7 , against a claim for unpaid alimony 8 , and even against a waiver in advance by the debtor. 9

The problem involved in this review must be approached in the light of these facts. The petitioner was adjudicated a bankrupt on January 11, 1947, on a voluntary petition. In his schedules, he claimed as exempt ten shares of stock in the Hollywood Building & Loan Association, of the value of One Thousand Dollars ($1000.00), under the Bankruptcy Act and the California Statute. 10 On February 20, 1947, the Trustee filed a report of exempt property in which he denied the exemption. The bankrupt filed objections to the report. After a hearing, the Referee, on March 31, 1947, made an Order approving the Trustee’s re-po; i Factually, the conclusion reached by tb>° Referee was based on the fact that the stociv vas purchased about a week before the adjudication, at a time when the bankrupt was “heavily in debt and clearly insolvent”. This is a petition to review the Order. The applicable California Code of Civil Procedure section, which is very brief, exempts: . “690.21. (Same: Shares in Building and Loan Association). Shares of stock in any building and loan association to the value of one thousand dollars.”

Legally, the Referee grounded his decision on an opinion of one of our former Referees, Earl E. Moss, interpreting this ' section. 11 In it, Referee Moss held that a purchase of such stock while insolvent, immediately prior to bankruptcy, was a fraud on the creditors.

I do not have before me the evidence upon which the Trustee in that case based his denial of exemption. The opinion of the Referee would seem to indicate that the purchase was a part of a scheme on the part of the bankrupt to divert the sum of $4000, which he received shortly before he signed his petition, and of which $1000 was applied to the purchase of the stock. Counsel for the Trustee in the present case base their position entirely,—as did the Referee,—upon this, opinion. In fact, their brief merely urges us to read the cases upon which Referee Moss bases his decision. We have done so. And our conclution is that whatever particular facts may have justified the Trustee and, later, the Referee in finding that a fraudulent scheme *945 was in effect at the time of this transfer, the opinion, insofar as it holds that the acquisition of such exempt property with nón-exempt funds by an insolvent debtor is, ipso facto, fraudulent, is unsound and should not be followed. For, if it were, the entire law of exemptions would be destroyed, and every Trustee could invalidate any acquisition of exempt property within the four-months period prior to adjudication. 12 It is to be borne in mind that our Circuit Court of Appeals has held that the effect of the exemption of property under state statutes is that the property does not pass to the trustee and is “not subject to administration by the bankruptcy court.” 13

An analysis of the opinion on which the claim of the Trustee is based leads to the conclusion that the Referee relied solely on cases in which the courts were satisfied that the acquisition of exempt property was a part of a scheme to divert non-exempt funds to exempt property, under circumstances which constituted actual fraud. 14 But cases in which the sole question involved was whether mere diversion by an insolvent debtor, without actual fraud, led to different conclusions. We find, for instance, that a chattel mortgage given to secure a creditor within the four-months period, and which, under the laws of California, was exempt from execution, was sustained against the claim of the Trustee. 15 More recently, our Circuit Court of Appeals protected a homestead against the claim of fraud of the Trustee. 16 In that case, the court held that the insolvency of the debtor at the time was immaterial. Among the cases it followed, was a leading California case, — Yager v. Yager. 17 That case has a very terse statement of the approach of the law when it deals with homestead or other exempt property which the law seeks to protect against creditors. And it determines unequivocally that the doctrine applicable to fraudulent conveyances docs not apply to exemptions of this type. We quote:

“A declaration of homestead may be filed during the pendency of litigation, at any time before the judgment has become a lien upon the property. It may be filed subsequent to the rendition of the judgment. Beaton v. Reid, 111 Cal. 484, 44 P. 167; Simonson v. Burr, 121 Cal. 582, 54 P. 87; Eby v. Foster, 61 Cal. 282. It will defeat an existing attachment lien. Lucci v. United Credit & Collection Co., 220 Cal. 492, 31 P.2d 369; Jacobson v. Pope & Talbot, 214 Cal. 758, 7 P.2d 1017. It may be filed after levy of execution, and, provided there is not a valid and subsisting judgment lien on the property, it is not subject to execution sale except upon proceedings had under sections 1245-1259, Civil Code, for reaching the excess in value above the homestead exemption of $5,000. Beaton v. Reid, supra. The very purpose of the homestead law is to protect the property from existing debts. Gray v. Brunold, 140 Cal. 615, 621, 74 P. 303. The doctrine hearing on conveyances to delay and defraud creditors has no application to the creation of a homestead Lucci v. United Credit & Collection Co., supra; Simonson v. Burr, supra; 13 Cal.Jur. 477)” (Emphasis added.)

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
72 F. Supp. 943, 1947 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-dudley-casd-1947.