In Re Hejmowski

296 B.R. 645, 2003 Bankr. LEXIS 886, 92 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 6027, 2003 WL 21782378
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. New York
DecidedJuly 17, 2003
Docket2-11-22294
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 296 B.R. 645 (In Re Hejmowski) 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 Hejmowski, 296 B.R. 645, 2003 Bankr. LEXIS 886, 92 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 6027, 2003 WL 21782378 (N.Y. 2003).

Opinion

MICHAEL J. KAPLAN, Bankruptcy Judge.

The Court writes to express its agreement with the result reached in In re Aldrich, 250 B.R. 907 (Bankr.W.D.Tenn.2000) and its disagreement with the reasoning and result reached in In re Kleinfeldt, 287 B.R. 291 (10th Cir. BAP 2002). 1

The question is this: for § 541 and § 522 purposes only, is the joint taxpayers’ income tax “refund” owned by both spouses even if only one has income, and, if so, is it owned equally or in some sort of pro rata shares. 2 This writer finds that for § 541 and § 522 purposes only, 3 the “refund” is owned jointly, and in equal shares.

*647 BACKGROUND

When a wife causes her paycheck to be deposited in her and her husband’s joint checking account, she is “gifting” her husband half of her pay. He does the same as to his paycheck. If he takes a day or week or month off from work, or a year off, or if he never worked, the result does not change. His wife’s gift to him might be a fraudulent transfer, but it is nonetheless a desire to “create ownership” in him. In its holding to the contrary in Kleinfeldt, the 10th Circuit BAP seems, to this writer, to be out of touch with this practical reality. (See footnote 5 below.)

The issue arises in at least two important contexts (outside the community property states)—

— 1. In a state like New York which has a cash exemption ($2500, so long as no homestead exemption is claimed) that may be claimed in a yet-to-be-received tax refund, may joint debtors double up the exemption under § 522(m) even if only one had income? That is the question at bar.

— 2. If only one spouse is a debtor, but that spouse is the one who had income, may the non-debtor spouse claim some portion of the “refund” as not being part of the debtor-spouse’s § 541 estate? That is not at bar, but is often asked, and is usually the subject of compromise between a trustee and the debtor or debtors.

In the Aldrich case, the second context above was presented. United States Bankruptcy Judge David Kennedy reasoned from state matrimonial law and from the fact that joint taxpayers have joint and several liability for tax due without regard to respective earnings or lack thereof, and concluded that indeed a tax refund is jointly owned property without regard to the fact that the non-debtor spouse did not have any earnings.

On the other hand, in the Kleinfeldt case, the 10th Circuit BAP, reasoning from what this writer believes a false presumption — that a dictionary definition applies and that a tax “refund” is in fact a “refund,” — concluded that it belongs only to the spouse whose dollars were being “refunded.”

This Court rejects the latter reasoning. An income tax “refund” is no more a “refund” of dollars paid than is a “refund” of a credit balance from a credit card account. It simply is not a “refund.”

ANALYSIS

First consider a different type of joint debt. When one overpays a joint credit card account, the surplus dollars are property of the issuing bank or the servicer. A “refund” is not a “refund” of anyone’s dollars. Nor was that surplus held in trust. (In some states, tenants’ security deposits paid to a landlord, on the other hand, are in trust).

Moreover, if I overpay the tax liability of my son or daughter, the “refund” is not his dollars or her dollars or my dollars. They are the Treasury’s dollars.

The overpayment is a payment on account. If the account is a joint account, the payment is a “credit” to the benefit of both persons liable on the account, but the dollars are the dollars of the payee. This is the crux. In no sense of the word is the issuance of a “credit balance” check a “refund” to the one account holder whose wages paid the overpayment. If one of the two paid more than the other was entitled to, it was a gift.

The act of remittance as payment on the account turned those wages into the “property” of the card issuer or servicer. The act of payment of the “credit balance” by the card issuer or servicer jointly to the account holders turned the issuer’s property into the jointly owned property of the two account holders (subject, of course, to *648 any disputes or agreements they might have inter se).

Overpayment of tax withholding and issuance of the so-called “refund” check is precisely the same. What had been wages of one joint taxpayer became property of the United States to the credit of both joint taxpayers, and the “refund” check turned property of the United States into jointly owned property of the two taxpayers.

The holding Second Circuit decision in the case of Callaway v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 231 F.3d 106 (2d Cir.2000) is not to the contrary. The holding of that case is that filing a joint tax return does not give one spouse property rights in the property of the other spouse. Specifically, if one spouse has ownership of an asset, such as a business, that has tax attributes for the two taxpayers jointly, the fact of joint filing does not give the other spouse a property interest in the business. That Second Circuit holding says nothing about ownership of a resulting tax “refund.” 4

Apart from its holding, however, the Second Circuit did, however, quote from a Fourth Circuit decision in the case of McClelland v. Massinga, 786 F.2d 1205, 1210 (4th Cir.1986), wherein it was stated that “mere filing of a joint tax return by a husband and wife does not render the property taxed or the tax paid joint property.” [Emphasis mine.] To the extent, if any, that this might be viewed as a Second Circuit endorsement of that McClelland statement, it must be addressed. The McClelland decision upheld the constitutionality of a state statute empowering the intercept of tax refunds that would otherwise go to deadbeat dads, some of whom were married to “non-obligated spouses” and had filed joint tax returns with those spouses. The Fourth Circuit cited Maryland law for the proposition that the issuance by an insurance company of a check jointly payable to a husband and wife did not “evidence an intention by the husband and wife to create an estate by the entire-ties.” The Fourth Circuit stated that

“[i]t is manifest that, in making the payment pursuant to a joint tax return, the husbands in this case were not intending to create an interest in any possible overpayment in favor of their wives as tenants by the entireties; ... the husbands were seeking the advantage that would accrue to them as taxpayers by filing a joint tax return. At the time they filed their returns, the husbands presumably had no idea whether they were entitled to refunds or whether the State would voluntarily grant them refunds.

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Bluebook (online)
296 B.R. 645, 2003 Bankr. LEXIS 886, 92 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 6027, 2003 WL 21782378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-hejmowski-nywb-2003.