In Re Hildebrandt

432 B.R. 852, 22 Fla. L. Weekly Fed. B 451, 2010 Bankr. LEXIS 2002, 2010 WL 2718044
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Florida
DecidedJune 30, 2010
Docket10-40232
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 432 B.R. 852 (In Re Hildebrandt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Hildebrandt, 432 B.R. 852, 22 Fla. L. Weekly Fed. B 451, 2010 Bankr. LEXIS 2002, 2010 WL 2718044 (Fla. 2010).

Opinion

ORDER ON CHAPTER 7 TRUSTEE’S OBJECTION TO CLAIM OF EXEMPTION

LEWIS M. KILLIAN, Jr., Bankruptcy Judge.

THIS MATTER came before the Court for hearing on June 10, 2010 on the Trustee’s Objection to the Debtor’s Claim of Exemptions (the “Objection,” Doc. 19). In the Objection the Trustee, Mary W. Colon, seeks to disallow Martha Ann Hilde-brandt’s (“Debtor”) claim that a parcel of property located in Havana, Florida, in which Debtor has a vested remainder interest, is exempt as her homestead. Having considered the arguments of counsel, the evidence presented, and the relevant *853 cases, for the reasons stated more fully herein, I find that under certain circumstances, a remainder interest can support a homestead exemption, and the Trustee’s Objection to Debtor’s Claim of Exemption is overruled.

FACTS

The Debtor filed a petition for relief under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code on March 15, 2010. The Debtor listed property located at 430 Fields Road, Havana, Florida, as her homestead and claimed it as exempt pursuant to Article X, Section 4(a) of the Florida Constitution. The property was originally purchased by the Debtor’s aunt on May 1, 1989, and the Debtor and her aunt immediately moved into the home. On September 13, 1996, the Debtor’s aunt executed a quitclaim deed transferring the home and five acres to the Debtor, subject to a life estate reserved for herself. The Debtor’s mother died when the Debtor was three months old, and the Debtor’s aunt was more of a surrogate mother to the Debtor. The Debtor’s aunt is now eighty-nine years old, and the Debtor testified that she and her husband provide daily assistance to her aunt and have been doing so for many years. The Debtor also testified that she is the “ultimate authority” in any decision regarding the home and that she contributes financially to the repairs and renovations of the home. The Debtor’s husband provides the lawn care and the Debtor has replaced the hot water heater, the faucets, the washer and dryer, and the refrigerator and has plans to hire an electrician. The Debtor’s aunt receives retirement and social security and the money is kept in the aunt’s bank account which the Debtor is named on.

The Trustee objects to the Debtor’s claim of the constitutional homestead exemption on the property, arguing that I found in In re Lewis, 226 B.R. 703 (Bankr. N.D.Fla.1998) that a vested remainder interest is not enough to qualify for a homestead exemption. The Debtor cites to a recent case from the Middle District of Florida, In re Williams, 427 B.R. 541 (Bankr.M.D.Fla.2010), which held that under facts similar to this case, the debtor was entitled to claim the Florida constitutional homestead exemption.

DISCUSSION

A debtor’s homestead exemption is determined solely by Florida law. See In re Crump, 2 B.R. 222, 223 (Bankr. S.D.Fla.1980). Article X, § 4(a) of the Florida Constitution provides: “There shall be exempt from forced sale under process of any court, and no judgment, decree or execution shall be a lien thereon ... the following property owned by a natural person: (1) a homestead ...” Fla. Const, art. X, § 4(a)(1). As a matter of policy, Florida courts have held that the homestead exemption “should be liberally construed in favor of protecting the family home and those whom it was designed to protect.” In re Williams, 427 B.R. at 544 (quoting Southern Walls, Inc. v. Stilwell Corporation, 810 So.2d 566, 569-70 (Fla. 5th DCA 2002)). Florida courts have also found that “[t]o qualify for Florida’s homestead exemption, an individual must have an ownership interest in a residence that gives the individual the right to use and occupy it as his or her place of abode.” In re Alexander 346 B.R. 546, 547 (Bankr. M.D.Fla.2006); See also In re Kent, 411 B.R. 743, 750 (Bankr.M.D.Fla.2009).

The Trustee relies primarily on my decision in Lewis, which stated that a debtor is not entitled to claim a homestead exemption in real property in which the debtor has only a remainder interest. In re Lewis, 226 B.R. at 705. Lewis involved a debtor seeking to claim a homestead ex- *854 eruption on the real property on which her homestead mobile home was located. The debtor held a vested remainder interest in the property, subject to her parents’ life estate. In Lewis, I found that based on Florida law, the permission to live on the property “did not give the debtor the right to exempt the property as her homestead as long as she had only a vested remainder interest in the property.” Id.

Lewis was based entirely on the Supreme Court of Florida’s decision in Aetna Insurance Company v. LaGasse, 223 So.2d 727 (Fla.1969). Aetna involved a priority dispute between the debtor and a judgment creditor. The debtor received a remainder interest in the family home, subject to her mother’s life estate, after her father’s death. A couple of months after her father’s death, the debtor moved into the home to take care of her mother who died five months later. Several years pri- or, Aetna had obtained and recorded a judgment against the debtor. After the debtor’s mother died, Aetna sought a declaration that its prior judgment lien was superior to the debtor’s claim that the property was exempt as homestead. The Supreme Court of Florida determined that Aetna’s prior judgment lien was entitled to priority over the debtor’s claim of exemption because the judgment lien attached when the debtor became vested with the remainder interest, at a time when her surviving mother had the right of occupancy and use essential to a homestead claim. The Court, as well as this Court in Lewis, cited an earlier Supreme Court of Florida case which held “by great weight of precedent a claim of homestead may not attach to either vested or contingent future estates or interests in land, because a remainder expectant upon cessation of a preceding estate creates no present right to possession and is not susceptible to immediate occupancy by the remaindermen.” Aetna, 223 So.2d at 729 (quoting Anemaet v. Martin-Senour Co., 114 So.2d 23, 26 (Fla. 2d DCA 1959)); In re Lewis, 226 B.R. at 704 (quoting Anemaet, 114 So.2d at 26).

The Court in Aetna held that upon the death of the debtor’s father, the judgment lien attached to the debtor’s remainder interest. The debtor’s fee simple interest was therefore a form of ownership, but it lacked a right of possession necessary for a homestead exemption. Since the debtor was not living in the home at the time she became vested, Aetna’s lien attached to her interest in the property and her subsequent occupancy did not impact this superior position.

The debtor in Aetna also argued that she was already living with her mother at the time of her father’s death and this was sufficient to give a possessory right to support a claim for homestead exemption by her as head of the family. The court stated that consent by a life tenant to a remainderman’s occupancy does not divest the life tenant of a paramount present interest and that the record in the case presented “no reasonable basis upon which any conveyance of a present interest to respondent can be found.” Aetna,

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Bluebook (online)
432 B.R. 852, 22 Fla. L. Weekly Fed. B 451, 2010 Bankr. LEXIS 2002, 2010 WL 2718044, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-hildebrandt-flnb-2010.