In Re Grucza

413 B.R. 96, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 2720, 2009 WL 2902083
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. New York
DecidedSeptember 9, 2009
Docket2-17-20137
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 413 B.R. 96 (In Re Grucza) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Grucza, 413 B.R. 96, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 2720, 2009 WL 2902083 (N.Y. 2009).

Opinion

ORDER AND OPINION

MICHAEL J. KAPLAN, Bankruptcy Judge.

This case presents a question that seems to have no precedent in New York law (perhaps because a five-fold increase in the state homestead exemption — from $10,000 to $50,000 — was enacted just four years ago, thereby making more of such issues worth arguing).

When $7,000 worth of cement block (the Chapter 7 Trustee has a bid in that amount for the block) is sitting on the Debtor’s homestead land, but not yet installed as a retaining wall necessary to prevent severe damage to the home, is it non-exempt personalty that the Trustee may sell, or is it part of the Debtors’ exempt homestead? (Perhaps importantly, the block was bought pre-petition with the Debtors’ tax refund; it was not bought on credit from a lender whose debt will be *97 discharged, as discussed later.) 1

The Court finds that the New York homestead exemption, construed liberally (as it must be construed 2 ), is broad enough to encompass the block.

FACTS

The evidence is clear that the Debtors’ home is greatly threatened by the erosion of a massive dirt cliff, topped by large trees, within a few yards of the rear foundation of the house. The house is truly endangered. Though conceivably worth $ 436,000 but for that condition, any possible purchaser of the house would have to remediate that condition, and so would pay less.

The Debtors bought the blocks with tax refund money just prior to filing their Chapter 7 petition. It was their intention to move and install the block themselves. It simply didn’t get done before the petition was filed.

Now the Trustee wishes to sell the blocks for $ 7,000.00.

The Debtors argue that it is “equitably” part of their exempt homestead, even though it is not “in-place” and, thus not yet a “fixture” on their homestead.

The Court agrees with the Debtors, but wishes to articulate a very narrow set of factors, for future eases that might involve a myriad of possible similar claims for other types of materials or devices not yet permanently “affixed” to the land.

NEW YORK EXEMPTION LAW AND LAW OF FIXTURES

New York C.P.L.R. § 5206 provides New York’s homestead exemption. It simply states, “property of one of the following types, not exceeding $50,000 in value above liens and encumbrances, owned and occupied as a principal residence, is exempt from application to the satisfaction of a money judgment, unless the judgment was recovered wholly for the purchase price thereof: (1) a lot of land with a dwelling thereon, (2) shares of stock in a cooperative apartment corporation, (3) units of a condominium apartment, or (4) a mobile home.”

The statute is silent as to the matter of appurtenances, whether they be affixed to the land (such as, perhaps, a free standing garage built upon a foundation) or not affixed to the land (such as a free standing tool shed, perhaps). New York exemptions must be construed liberally in favor of the debtor. 3

Initially, we turn to the New York State Law of Fixtures. Doing so, we find that what had begun a long time ago as a black letter principle that something that is not physically attached to the realty could not be a fixture, “has been enlarged to include items that are ‘constructively annexed’ to the land.” In re City of New York, 11 N.Y.3d 353, 870 N.Y.S.2d 827, 899 N.E.2d 933 (N.Y.2008). Chattels that have been examined by the New York Courts under the doctrine of “constructive annexation” range from the drawers that slid into built-in cabinets in a country store (Tabor v. Robinson, 1862 WL 4457 (N.Y. General Term 1862)), wherein the drawers were found to be part of the realty that the plaintiff had purchased from the defen *98 dant, to power tools in a woodworking shop (In re City of New York, supra) which were found not to be part of the real estate for purposes of a condemnation award. Most useful for current purposes are cases that examined chattels that were so heavy as not to need any type of affixation to the realty.

Thus in the case of Snedeker v. Warring, 12 N.Y. 170 (N.Y.1854) the defendant had purchased from the County Sheriff a home, in the yard of which stood a three ton ornamental statue of George Washington and a 200 pound sundial. They were in place on the land when the land was purchased by the defendant at a foreclosure sale. Later the Sheriff sought to levy on the items to satisfy an unrelated judgment, and the new landowner refused to permit it. The highest court of the state ruled that “a thing may be as firmly affixed to the land by gravitation as by clamps or cement. Its character may depend much upon the object of its erection. Its destination [and] the intention of the person making the erection often exercise a controlling influence, and its connection with the land is looked to principally for the purpose of ascertaining whether the intent was that the thing in question should retain its original chattel character, or whether it was designed to make it a permanent accession to the lands.”

The author of the opinion found irrelevant the fact that the original owner of the land, who also sculpted the statue, testified that he intended to sell the statue when an opportunity arose. The court stated “his secret intention in that respect can have no legitimate bearing on the question. He clearly intended to make use of the statue to ornament his grounds, when he erected for it a permanent mound and base; and a purchaser had a right so to infer and to be governed by the manifest and unmistakable evidences of intention.” 4

The court further stated that the question of “whether the pyramids of Egypt or Cleopatra’s Needle are real or personal property, does not depend on the result of a inquiry by the antiquarian whether they were originally made to adhere to their foundations with wafers, or ceiling wax or a handful of cement. It seems “... puerile to make the title to depend upon the use of such or any other adhesive substances, when the great weight of the erection is a much stronger guarantee of permanence.” (Snedeker, supra)

The court also ruled that the sundial was part of the realty.

This leaves no doubt in this writer’s mind that if the block in question today were stacked layer upon layer, and without any fixation whatsoever, in such a way as to protect the house from the eroding cliff-side, it would be found to be part of the exempt homestead, despite the fact that there would be no actual attachment to the *99 land, but rather merely permanence afforded by the wall’s great weight.

This leaves, then, only the question of whether the fact that the debtor had yet to move the stack of block from “here” to “there” is dispositive.

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Related

In Re Rasmussen
456 B.R. 1 (E.D. New York, 2011)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
413 B.R. 96, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 2720, 2009 WL 2902083, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-grucza-nywb-2009.