In re Gamboa

578 B.R. 661
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Florida.
DecidedDecember 21, 2017
DocketCASE NO. 16-22495-RAM
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 578 B.R. 661 (In re Gamboa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.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 Gamboa, 578 B.R. 661 (Fla. 2017).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER OVERRULING OBJECTION TO HOMESTEAD EXEMPTION

Robert A. Mark, Judge, United States Bankruptcy Court

When he filed his chapter 13 petition, the Debtor was living in a trailer on a 14 acre parcel of land located outside of a municipality. The entire parcel was classified as agricultural for property tax pur-, poses, the Debtor did not claim the homestead exemption for property tax purposes, and he was living in the trailer in violation of a county ordinance. For the reasons discussed in this opinion, none of these facts defeat the Debtor’s homestead exemption because the evidence overwhelmingly established that when he filed this case, the Debtor was living on the property and had the intent to permanently reside there. Therefore, the Court is overruling the objection to exemptions filed by Creditors, Gail Perez and Advance Credit, Inc. (the “Objecting Creditors”).

Factual Background

The parties stipulated to the following material facts in their Joint Pretrial Stipulation [DE# 131]:

1. The debtor, Ronny Gamboa (the “Debtor”), is 73 years old, unmarried, and lives alone in a trailer (the “Trailer”) located on approximately 14 acres situated at 22600 S.W. 207 Avenue, Miami-Dade County, Florida (the “Property”). The Property is comprised of a single lot, and is not located within a municipality. The Trailer contains a bathroom with a shower, two bedrooms, a kitchen, and a living room, and has FPL electrical service and satellite television service. The Trailer has water service from an on-site well and electric pump system, and is attached to a septic tank.

2. Debtor purchased the Property in 1995, and has owned it continuously since that time.

3. Debtor owns the Property individually.

4. The Property is the only real estate the Debtor has owned since [the Objecting Creditors] foreclosed on property Debtor previously owned that was located at 2103 N. California Avenue, Chicago, Illinois.

5. Debtor bought the Trailer from the owner of the adjacent property located immediately to the north of the Pi^operty in 2008.

6. Debtor hired someone to hitch the Trailer, which is approximately 40’ long, to a very large tractor and pull it onto the Property in 2008.

7. In 2008, after Debtor caused the Trailer to be brought onto the Property, he poured a 1500 square foot concrete patio immediately in front of it.

8. In mid-November 2013, Debtor left Chicago, Illinois, drove to the Property, moved himself and his personal belongings into the Trailer, and began living there full-time. He has lived there continuously ever since.

9. Debtor began receiving mail at the Property as early as January 2014.

10. At the time he moved into the Trailer, Debtor believed he could legally reside in the Trailer, and therefore had no intention of building another residence on the Property.

11. Debtor’s Property remains 100% agricultural classification and no part of the Property has been separately assessed for tax purposes for residential use.

12. Debtor’s schedules and amended schedules- submitted in this case have not changed in any material respect through [the date of this Stipulation],

13. Debtor’s total and exclusive current regular monthly income is $717 per month.

14. Debtor does not anticipate an increase to his regular monthly income for the next 5 years.

15. Debtor first applied for a building permit on August 12,2016.

16. As of [the date of this Stipulation], no building permit has been issued to build a home on the Property.

17. Debtor has derived no income from the Property since 2014.

18. Debtor does not anticipate deriving any income from the Property for the next 5 years.

Although not included in the Joint Pretrial Stipulation, the facts relating to the Objecting Creditors’ judgment lien were determined in the Court’s Order Overruling In Part Creditors’ Objection to Exemptions [DE# 60], an Order discussed in greater detail later in this opinion. The Objecting Creditors hold two Illinois state court judgments against the Debtor, one for $141,562.30 entered on September 16, 2011 and one for $71,632.77, entered on February 6, 2012. The judgments were recorded in the Miami-Dade County Official Records on July 25, 2012, but that recording did not create a lien on the Debtor’s Property because the recorded judgments did not include the Objecting Creditors’ address in violation of Fla. Stat. § 55.10. The Objecting Creditors’ judgment lien on the Debtor’s Property was not perfected until the Objecting1 Creditors recorded the Illinois judgments a second time on January 8, 2015, after the Debtor began living full-time in the Trailer on the Property.

The Court will provide additional material facts later in this opinion in its discussion of the evidence presented at trial.

Procedural Background

The Debtor filed a voluntary chapter 13 petition on September 9, 2016. In his Schedule C [DE# 1, p. 19], the Debtor listed the Property as exempt under Article X, Section 4 of the Florida Constitution. On December 14, 2016, Creditors, Gail Perez and Advance Credit, Inc. (the “Objecting Creditors”), filed their Objection to Debtor’s Homestead Exemption [DE# 46] (the “Homestead Objection”).

The Objecting Creditors seek to disallow the homestead exemption in its entirety based upon the following facts:

A. The entire Property was classified agricultural for ad valorem tax purposes and a portion would have to be reclassified as residential to legally have a residence on the Property;

B. Although the Debtor was living in the Trailer on the Property on the petition date, the Trailer was not an approved dwelling under an applicable Miami-Dade County ordinance; and

C. The Debtor had not applied for a homestead tax exemption.

The Objecting Creditors argue alternatively that the entire Property cannot be claimed as homestead because the Debtor was allegedly utilizing most of the Property for business purposes. Finally, the Objecting Creditors argue that the exemption, if allowed, should be capped at $160,375 under 11 U.S.C. § 522(p) because the Debtor did not live on the Property until mid-November 2013, a date less than 1215 days before he filed his chapter 7 petition.

Pretrial Rulings

The Court conducted a prehearing conference on the Homestead Objection on January 26, 2017. Prior to the hearing, the Court reviewed the lengthy legal arguments contained in the Homestead Objection, the Debtor’s Response to the [Homestead Objection] [DE#48] and the Objecting Creditors’ Reply to Debtor’s Response [DE# 54],

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
578 B.R. 661, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-gamboa-flsb-2017.