In Re Erickson

406 B.R. 522, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 1367, 2009 WL 1479407
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Michigan
DecidedMay 20, 2009
Docket19-03210
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 406 B.R. 522 (In Re Erickson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Erickson, 406 B.R. 522, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 1367, 2009 WL 1479407 (Mich. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION RE: TRUSTEE’S MAY 19, 2008 OBJECTION TO DEBTORS’ EXEMPTIONS

JEFFREY R. HUGHES, Bankruptcy Judge.

Jeff A. Moyer (“Trustee”) has objected to the Section 522(d)(5) 1 exemption claimed by Larry and Cindy Erickson (the “Ericksons”) in the 2006 and 2007 refunds they received from various taxing authorities. Trustee’s objection is sustained.

PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

When the Ericksons filed their Chapter 7 case on December 10, 2007, they indicated in their schedules that they were not owed any tax refunds for previous years and that they did not expect to receive a refund for the current year. However, five months later the Ericksons amended their schedules to include 2006 and 2007 tax refunds totaling $13,810. They also amended their Schedule C at that time to add the now disclosed refunds to the property they claimed as exempt.

Trustee had not raised an objection up to that point. However, the Ericksons’ May 16, 2008 amendment prompted a response. Originally, Trustee objected on the theory that the Ericksons were time-barred as a matter of law from claiming any exemption in the tax refunds because *524 they had not disclosed them at the outset of their case. However, that theory was rejected at a prior hearing. 2 Consequently, Trustee has since proceeded against the Ericksons based upon the alternate theory that their exemption of the refunds should at least be partially disallowed because it exceeded the maximum amount permitted under the applicable statute. 3

An evidentiary hearing was then held. Larry Erickson was the only witness and the Ericksons’ original and amended Schedules B and C were the only exhibits offered. 4

FACTS

Although the Ericksons did not initially claim their 2006 and 2007 tax refunds as exempt, they did claim exemptions in other items of the estate’s property. Specifically, the Ericksons claimed Section 522(d)(5) exemptions in cash and bank accounts and in a vacant parcel of land in Tawas Township, Michigan (the “Tawas property”). 5 According to Mr. Erickson, the Tawas property is unencumbered.

The Ericksons’ original Schedule C itself discloses these claimed exemptions as follows:

Current Value of Specify Law Value of Property Without Providing Each Claimed Deducting Description of Property Exemption Exemption Exemptions

SCHEDULE A — REAL PROPERTY Parcel 4 Part of SE 1/4 of SE 1/4 Section 18, T22N, R.7E, Tawas Township 11 USC § 622(d)(5) 6 12,500.00 12,500.00

*525 SCHEDULE B — PERSONAL PROPERTY_

Cash on hand_11 USC § 522(d)(5)_551)0_55.00

Lake Michigan CU — checking_11 USC § 522(d)(5)_107.00_107.00

Northland Federal CU 11 USC § 522(d)(5) 75.00 75.00

Equating the value of the Tawas property with the exemption claimed suggests on its own that the Ericksons wanted to actually keep it as a so-called “in-kind” exemption. 7 Moreover, Mr. Erickson himself confirmed at the ensuing evidentiary hearing that his intention at the outset of the case was in fact to keep the property. But Mr. Erickson also testified that he and his wife had had a change of heart sometime after they had attended the meeting of creditors on January 15, 2008. 8 What had prompted this change was their discovery that the 2006 and 2007 tax refunds would be much larger than what they had originally anticipated. When exactly after the January 15, 2008 meeting the Ericksons learned of their good fortune is unknown. However, it is clear that the Ericksons did not attempt to include the tax refunds among the assets they claimed as Section 522(d)(5) exemptions until they filed their amended Schedule C on May 16, 2008.

The monetary limit imposed by Section 522(d)(5), though, precluded the Ericksons from simply adding these refunds to the Section 522(d)(5) exemptions they had already taken in the cash, the bank accounts, and the Tawas property. Specifically, the $13,810 tax refund, when combined with the values of this other property, totaled $26,547 and Section 522(d)(5) permitted the Ericksons a maximum of only $22,400.

The Ericksons’ solution was to reduce the amount they had claimed as their Section 522(d)(5) exemption in the Tawas property from $12,500 to $5,853. In other words, when the Ericksons filed their amended Schedule C on May 16, 2008, their plan was 1) to still use $237 of their available Section 522(d)(5) exemption to keep the cash and bank accounts they had originally reported; and 2) to use another $13,810 of the available exemption to keep all of the 2006 and 2007 tax refunds that they were then disclosing for the first time; but 3) to now abandon what they had previously intended to be an “in-kind” exemption of the entire interest in the Tawas property and instead accept simply the balance of their available Section 522(d)(5) exemption, that being $5,853, from whatever Trustee himself might realize as proceeds from the sale of the same. 9

Trustee, though, contends that the Ta-was property had been already removed from the estate as a $12,500 exemption and, therefore, that the remaining Section 522(d)(5) exemption is not enough to cover the entire tax refund. Trustee asserts instead that the Ericksons can keep only $9,113 of the refund and that the remain *526 der must be turned over for distribution to their creditors. 10

ISSUE

May the Ericksons claim a Section 522(d)(5) exemption in the entire $18,810 of tax refunds now included in their amended Schedule C?

DISCUSSION

If, as Trustee contends, the estate’s interest in the Tawas property was removed by the Ericksons’ unopposed exemption of the same in their original Schedule C, then it follows that the Erick-sons could not later unwind what has already been done. Certainly, the Erick-sons had the right to amend their Schedule C however they wished. Fed.R.Bankr.P. 1009(a). Such an amendment, though, is meaningless if the subject property has already been removed from the estate, for the Bankruptcy Code provides no mechanism for a debtor to return already exempted property to the bankruptcy estate short of the trustee’s agreement to accept it again, which is clearly not the case in this instance. Simply said, the Ericksons cannot, to use their own metaphor, “put the toothpaste back into the tube.” See also, In re Brown, 375 B.R. 362, 376-78 (Bankr.W.D.Mich.2007). 11

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
406 B.R. 522, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 1367, 2009 WL 1479407, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-erickson-miwb-2009.