In Re Gorman

68 B.R. 541, 1986 Bankr. LEXIS 4966
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Vermont
DecidedNovember 14, 1986
Docket19-10068
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 68 B.R. 541 (In Re Gorman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Gorman, 68 B.R. 541, 1986 Bankr. LEXIS 4966 (Vt. 1986).

Opinion

Opinion & Order on the Objections to Debtors’ Homestead Exemptions

FRANCIS G. CONRAD, Bankruptcy Judge.

The debtors have claimed homestead exemptions for a property referred to as The Ledges Apartments. Several creditors have objected to these claims, alleging that the debtors conveyed the property to a Vermont partnership, also known as The Ledges Apartments, that the debtors had formed. They contend that this entity and not the debtors is the owner of the property the debtors claim as exempt. The debtors reply that the deed the objecting creditors are relying on and two earlier deeds in the chain of title are defective and that a later corrective deed demonstrates that title to The Ledges Apartments is in the debtors as tenants in common. Because we hold that these defects, even if they were significant, have been remedied by corrective deeds that established that the *542 title the debtors conveyed to the partnership was good, we sustain the creditors’ objections to the claimed homestead exemptions.

Objections to the debtors’ claim that The Ledges Apartments is an exempt homestead were filed by the Dartmouth Savings Bank, by Richard Michaelenoick d/b/a Red-water Blueberry Farms and Nursery, and by the Vermont Rehabilitation Corporation, to which the Randolph National Bank assigned its mortgage. The debtors, the Vermont Rehabilitation Corporation, and Dartmouth Savings Bank filed memoranda of law. On August 6,1986 we held an eviden-tiary hearing on the creditors’ objections. After the hearing, the debtors and the Vermont Rehabilitation Corporation filed supplementary memoranda. In reaching our conclusions, we considered the documentary evidence, the arguments of counsel, and the parties’ several memoranda of law.

The Vermont statute under which the debtors are claiming homestead exemptions, 27 V.S.A. § 101, requires that a debt- or own the property claimed as exempt. The statute provides:

The homestead of a natural person consisting of a dwelling house, outbuildings and the land used in connection therewith, not exceeding $30,000.00 in value, and owned and used or kept by such person as a homestead together with the rents, issues, profits and products thereof, shall be exempt from attachment and execution except as hereinafter provided.

Ownership of the property as of the date of the filing of the petition for relief is a prerequisite for the assertion of a homestead right. See In re Avery, 41 B.R. 224, 226, 12 B.C.D. 162 (Bkrtcy.D.Vt.1984); Thorp v. Thorp, 70 Vt. 46, 49-50 (1897). Under Vermont law, it is the partnership as a separate legal entity and not the individual partners that owns real property acquired by the partnership. See 11 V.S.A. §§ 1163, 1282(a).

The following deeds reflecting transfers of the claimed property were introduced in evidence:

(A) Warranty deed from Charles B. and Phyllis S. JOHNSON to Lou Aileen Clark GORMAN, dated February 1, 1965, and recorded in Book 31, page 316, of the land records for the Town of Norwich.
(B) Warranty deed from Lou Aileen GORMAN to John J. LONG, Jr., dated October 26, 1977, filed October 27, 1977, and recorded in Book 57, pages 74-76, of the land records for the Town of Norwich. This deed recites that “[t]his is a straw conveyance for the sole purpose of placing title to the within granted premises in the names of Lou Aileen Gorman, Sondra Lou Gorman, and John Douglas Gorman as tenants in common, and the grantor has no other interest herein.”
(C) Quitclaim deed from John J. LONG, Jr. to Lou Aileen, Sondra Lou, and John Douglas GORMAN, dated October 26, 1977, filed October 27, 1977, and recorded in Book 57, pages 77-79, of the land records for the Town of Norwich. This deed recites that “[t]his is a straw conveyance for the sole purpose of placing title to the within granted premises in the names of Lou Aileen Gorman, Sondra Lou Gorman, and John Douglas Gorman as tenants in common, and the grantor has no other interest herein.”
(D) Warranty deed from Lou Aileen, Sondra Lou, and John Douglas GOR-MAN, tenants in common, to THE LEDGES APARTMENTS, a Vermont Partnership, dated October 26,1977, filed October 27, 1977, and recorded in Book 57, pages 80-82, of the land records for the Town of Norwich.
(E) Warranty deed from Lou Aileen GORMAN to John J. LONG, Jr., dated October 28, 1977, filed October 28, 1977, and recorded in Book 57, pages 87-89, of the land records for the Town of Norwich. This deed recites that “[tjhis is a straw conveyance for the sole purpose of placing title to the within granted premises in the names of Lou Aileen Gorman, Sondra Lou Gorman, and John Douglas Gorman as tenants in common, and the grantor has no other interest herein.” The deed further recites that “[t]he pur *543 pose of this deed is to correct and modify the deed recorded in Book 57 at Page 74 wherein one of the witnesses to the grantor’s signature was the grantee thereunder. The correction and modification consists in the use of two witnesses, neither of whom is the grantee hereunder.”
(F) Quitclaim deed from John J. LONG, Jr. to Lou Aileen, Sondra Lou, and John Douglas GORMAN, dated October 28, 1977, filed October 28, 1977, and recorded in Book 57, pages 90-92, of the land records for the Town of Norwich. This deed recites that “[tjhis is a straw conveyance for the sole purpose of placing title to the within granted premises in the names of Lou Aileen Gorman, Sondra Lou Gorman, and John Douglas Gorman as tenants in common, and the grantor has no other interest herein.” The deed further recites that “[t]he purpose of this deed is to correct and modify the deed recorded in Book 57 at Page 77 wherein one of the witnesses to the grantor’s signature was grantee thereunder. The correction and modification consists in the use of two witnesses, neither of whom is a grantee hereunder.”

On October 24, 1983, Sondra Lou Gor-man, as duly authorized agent of the partnership The Ledges Apartments, gave a mortgage to the Dartmouth Savings Bank. On October 12, 1984, each of the four partners, Lou Aileen Gorman, Sondra Lou Gor-man, John Douglas Gorman, and John Douglas Gorman’s wife, Christina Lynne Gorman, on behalf of The Ledges Apartments, gave a mortgage to the Randolph National Bank. On July 23, 1985, the Randolph National Bank assigned the mortgage to the Vermont Rehabilitation Corporation. These deeds and mortgages are all properly recorded in the Town Clerk’s Office in Norwich, Vermont.

The debtors’ argument, to the extent we have succeeded in unraveling it, appears to be that the two corrective deeds (E) from Lou Aileen Gorman to John J. Long, Jr., and (F) from John J. Long, Jr., to the Gormans establish title in the debtors individually. The debtors take the position that the straw deed (B) from Lou Aileen Gorman to John J. Long, Jr. is defective because the grantee, John J. Long, Jr., served as one of the witnesses; that the quitclaim deed (C) from John J. Long, Jr.

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Bluebook (online)
68 B.R. 541, 1986 Bankr. LEXIS 4966, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-gorman-vtb-1986.