In Re Hedrick

441 B.R. 601, 2010 Bankr. LEXIS 2815, 2010 WL 3271246
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Illinois
DecidedAugust 17, 2010
Docket19-30000
StatusPublished

This text of 441 B.R. 601 (In Re Hedrick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Hedrick, 441 B.R. 601, 2010 Bankr. LEXIS 2815, 2010 WL 3271246 (Ill. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION

LAURA K. GRANDY, Bankruptcy Judge.

The debtors in this joint chapter 7 case are attempting to use the wife’s “wild card” exemption to shelter the entire value of household goods and other items of personal property (hereafter “household goods”) that are listed on schedule C as jointly owned. The chapter 7 trustee has objected that the wife may use her “wild card” exemption to protect only the value of her undivided one-half interest in the household goods. The debtors counter that the wife’s undivided interest in the whole allows the wife to exempt all of the household goods, including the share belonging to the husband.

The following facts are not disputed. The debtors filed this chapter 7 case on December 18, 2009, and, among other assets, listed the following household goods as jointly owned property on schedule B:

Type of Property Current Value
6 beds, 2 dressers, 2 nightstands, 4 chests, chiffarobe, lamp, coffee table, bookshelf, sofa, loveseat, recliner, curio cabinet, desk w/chair, kitchen table w/ 6 chairs, refrigerator, washer, dryer, freezer, microwave, stove $1,460.00
Technics radio/stereo, Milwaukee radio/stereo, JVC 27" television, Daewoo 19" television, Orion 13" television, Symphonic DVD player, Apex DVD player, Compaq computer, Toshiba laptop computer, Lexmark printer, Hewlett Packard printer $ 380.00
Ariens riding lawnmower, Craftsman push lawnmower, 2 BBQ grills, patio furniture, Craftsman weedeater, mise, tools $ 450.00
JVC camcorder, Kodak camera, scrapbooking materials $ 135.00
Dishes, pots & pans, linens, flatware, small appliances, utensils, mise, household goods $ 78.00
Pit Bull dog, mixed-breed dog, turtle, Quaker parrot, guinea pig $ 30.00

Among other exemptions listed on schedule C, the wife claimed as exempt under Illinois’ “wild card” exemption, 735 ILCS 5/12 — 1001(b), 1 the full schedule B value, totaling $2,533.00, of all of the jointly owned household goods listed above. The husband did not claim an exemption for any of the household goods listed above. 2 The debtors’ estates have not been consolidated pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 302(b).

*604 After the trustee filed an objection to the wife’s effort to use her “wild card” exemption to protect more than her undivided one-half interest in the joint property, the Court conducted a hearing to consider the objection on June 1, 2010. The debtors did not file a written response to the objection. However, the debtors and the trustee appeared and were represented by counsel during the hearing. Neither counsel presented authority in support of his clients’ position. The trustee argued that a debtor may claim an exemption only in property that he or she owns. According to the trustee, because the household goods were jointly owned, the wife was limited to claiming an exemption in her one-half share of the household goods. The debtors argued, nearly verbatim, that they had not encountered this objection before, that there was nothing in the 1978 Bankruptcy Code that restricted how debtors could use their exemptions if they have them, that the situation was equivalent to debtors with joint ownership of a car being forced to use their own respective exemptions on it, and that they had never heard of a trustee being able to tell chapter 7 debtors how they could allocate their exemptions if the exemptions were available to both of them. The debtors were present in court but their counsel did not request an evidentiary hearing. Following arguments, the Court sustained the trustee’s objection 3 and gave the debtors thirty days to amend schedule C. On June 14, 2010, the Court entered a written order that allowed the wife to claim as exempt one-half of the value of the jointly held property listed above.

On June 28, 2010, the debtors filed a motion pursuant to Bankruptcy Rule 9023, 4 asking the Court to reconsider and to alter, amend or vacate its June 14, 2010 order. In their motion, the debtors argued that the Court had misapplied Illinois law in holding that the wife had only an undivided one-half interest in the household goods, resulting in her inability to exempt more than her half share of the property. They contended that, instead, Illinois law created a rebuttable presumption that each owner of jointly owned personal property, such as a joint bank account, owned a 100 percent undivided interest in the property. According to debtors, once a co-owner makes a 'pri-ma facie case that personal property is jointly owned, unless rebutted by another co-owner’s showing of sole ownership of some portion of the property — which the *605 husband here did not do — the joint property is presumed to be jointly owned by each co-owner in its entirety.

The debtors also complained that the Court was arbitrary and capricious in ruling as it did without affording the debtors an evidentiary hearing “to determine what separate interest Mr. Hedrick and Ms. Hedrick each are asserting in the subject household goods” and to prove that the household goods in question were “jointly owned by each of them in their entirety.”

The trustee countered that the filing of the debtors’ joint case created two separate estates, enabling each debtor to assert his or her exemptions to protect the property that constituted the assets of his or her estate. While the wife was free to exempt her half share of the household goods, she was not entitled to exempt the husband’s half interest in this property.

The Court conducted a hearing on July 14, 2010, on the debtors’ motion to reconsider. The debtors reasserted their argument, raised for the first time in their written motion to reconsider, that owners of jointly owned property — whether it be “financial accounts,” “household goods,” “tenants in common,” or “real property,” each own a 100 percent undivided interest in the whole. After hearing the arguments of counsel, the Court entered an oral order denying the motion to reconsider, with the instant written order to follow.

Rule 59

The Court turns first to the debtors’ contention that they were not afforded the opportunity for an evidentiary hearing on June 1, 2010. Here, the debtors transfer to the Court the responsibility for presenting evidence to support their case. Such an argument is not supported by the facts of the case or the law.

The record reflects that the debtors were given ample notice of the issues raised by the trustee’s objection to the exemption and a full opportunity to present evidence at the June 1, 2010 hearing, if they chose to do so. The trustee filed the objection to the exemption on May 3, 2010.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
441 B.R. 601, 2010 Bankr. LEXIS 2815, 2010 WL 3271246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-hedrick-ilsb-2010.