In re: Gil Alberto De Jesus Gomez, III

592 B.R. 698
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedNovember 9, 2018
DocketBAP SC-18-1089-FLS; Bk. 16-07502-LT7
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 592 B.R. 698 (In re: Gil Alberto De Jesus Gomez, III) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re: Gil Alberto De Jesus Gomez, III, 592 B.R. 698 (bap9 2018).

Opinion

FARIS, Bankruptcy Judge:

INTRODUCTION

This appeal illustrates what can happen when a debtor's lawyer asserts an exemption claim without performing adequate legal analysis. Because counsel claimed a baseless exemption and stubbornly refused to admit his error, counsel has incurred sanctions well in excess of the value of the property claimed exempt.

Chapter 7 1 debtor Gil Alberto de Jesus Gomez, III and his attorney, Francisco Javier Aldana (collectively, "Appellants"), appeal from the bankruptcy court's order sanctioning Mr. Aldana for improperly claiming an exemption on behalf of Mr. Gomez in a vehicle after appellee Ronald E. Stadtmueller, Chapter 7 Trustee (the "Trustee") avoided a lien and recovered the vehicle. The Appellants argue that they can exempt property at any time during a bankruptcy case and that they did not act in bad faith.

The Appellants misstate the statutory framework and a Supreme Court case. Their inaction and dilatoriness before the bankruptcy court give the lie to their claim of good faith. Their arguments are unsupported and frivolous. We AFFIRM.

The Trustee also filed a separate motion requesting sanctions against the Appellants for filing a frivolous appeal. We GRANT the request for fees and double costs as to Mr. Aldana.

We publish to explain how § 522(g) limits a debtor's right to claim exemptions in property after a trustee uses the avoiding powers to recover an interest in that property and that the Supreme Court's decision in Law v. Siegel , 571 U.S. 415 , 134 S.Ct. 1188 , 188 L.Ed.2d 146 (2014), is inapplicable.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND 2

A. Mr. Gomez's bankruptcy case

On December 10, 2016, Mr. Gomez, through his counsel, Mr. Aldana, filed a chapter 7 petition. He scheduled a 2001 Ford Focus automobile as his personal vehicle and claimed an exemption for the full value of the car. He failed to disclose his ownership of a 2012 Chevrolet Malibu, which he allegedly purchased approximately two months earlier.

After remaining silent about the Malibu at two § 341(a) meetings of creditors, Mr. *701 Gomez amended his Schedule A/B to include the Malibu, which he valued at $4,500. He listed Anayas Auto Sales as holding a $2,700 claim secured by the Malibu. He did not amend his Schedule C to claim the Malibu as exempt. The bankruptcy court granted Mr. Gomez his discharge.

The Trustee discovered that Anayas Auto failed to perfect its lien on the Malibu until after the petition date. 3 The Trustee requested that Anayas Auto release its lien, but it did not do so. As a result, the Trustee initiated an adversary proceeding against Anayas Auto for avoidance and recovery of a postpetition transfer under § 549. Anayas Auto did not answer the complaint, and the Trustee obtained default judgment and a release of the lien.

The Trustee e-mailed Mr. Aldana to inform him of the default judgment against Anayas Auto and request that Mr. Gomez either surrender the Malibu to the Trustee's auctioneer or offer to purchase the vehicle. Mr. Aldana did not respond.

The Trustee also went to Mr. Gomez's residence to inquire about the Malibu. Mr. Gomez was not home, but a woman at the residence told the Trustee that she would tell Mr. Gomez to contact the Trustee about turning over the Malibu. Mr. Gomez did not contact the Trustee.

B. The motion to compel cooperation and turnover

The Trustee filed a motion to compel turnover of the Malibu ("Motion to Compel"). He stated that he had used his avoidance power under § 549 to obtain a release of Anayas Auto's lien, but despite repeated requests for Mr. Gomez to surrender the Malibu, Mr. Gomez had failed to do so. He requested that the court order immediate turnover of the Malibu.

On January 10, 2018, the bankruptcy court issued its tentative ruling stating its inclination to grant the Motion to Compel.

Later that day, Mr. Aldana contacted the Trustee to inform him that he had "just read" the Motion to Compel (even though the Trustee had filed and served the Motion to Compel six weeks earlier) and was puzzled by the court's ruling, because the Malibu was exempted. The Trustee left Mr. Aldana a voicemail informing him that Mr. Gomez did not exempt the Malibu and that the avoidance of a lien by the estate does not restore the property to the debtor. Mr. Aldana did not respond.

Still later that same day, Mr. Gomez filed an amended Schedule C, wherein he exempted the full value of both the Focus and Malibu under both California Code of Civil Procedure ("CCP") sections 703.140(b)(2) (special bankruptcy exemption) and 704.010 (regular exemption). 4 However, he did not oppose the Motion to Compel.

The bankruptcy court, noting that no one filed an opposition, granted the Motion *702 to Compel and ordered Mr. Gomez to turn over the Malibu.

C. The Trustee's objection to claimed exemption

The Trustee filed an objection to Mr. Gomez's claimed exemptions in the Focus and Malibu ("Objection"). He argued that Mr. Gomez had not claimed the Malibu exempt prior to the Trustee's avoidance of Anayas Auto's lien, so Mr. Gomez could not claim the recovered property as exempt under § 522(g)(1). He also asserted that Mr. Gomez is only entitled to seek an exemption under either CCP section 703.140(b)(2) or section 704.010, but not both. Finally, he argued that Mr. Gomez amended Schedule C in bad faith because "[d]espite all of these pleadings, requests and explanation, filed over the course of many months, Attorney Aldana now files a tardy, improper and clearly objectionable amendment to further delay the administration of this estate." The Trustee requested that the bankruptcy court award him his fees and costs.

Mr. Gomez did not file an opposition to the Objection.

Both Mr. Aldana and the Trustee appeared at the telephonic hearing on the Trustee's Objection. The court sustained the Objection as to the Focus and Malibu and denied both exemptions. It continued the hearing on the issue of sanctions and stated that it "will consider granting compensatory sanction[s], for Trustee's expenses incurred in connection to the opposition to exemption, and coercive sanction[s] under [its] inherent authority ...." It allowed Mr. Aldana to file a response arguing against sanctions by February 22 and allowed the Trustee to respond by March 1.

Mr. Aldana did not file a timely response to the sanctions query. The Trustee filed his brief on February 27 and requested sanctions because: (1) Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
592 B.R. 698, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-gil-alberto-de-jesus-gomez-iii-bap9-2018.