In Re Jacobs

264 B.R. 274, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 837, 2001 WL 811077
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. New York
DecidedJune 1, 2001
Docket2-19-20071
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 264 B.R. 274 (In Re Jacobs) 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 Jacobs, 264 B.R. 274, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 837, 2001 WL 811077 (N.Y. 2001).

Opinion

MICHAEL J. KAPLAN, Bankruptcy Judge.

This is a Trustee’s objection to Debtors’ claimed exemption in life insurance policies under 11 U.S.C. § 522 and state law. There are two policies owned by the insured individuals, Kenneth and Kathleen Jacobs, respectively, as to which the beneficiaries are the spouse of the owner/insured. (In addition, Mrs. Jacobs is the owner of a third policy naming her spouse as the insured. That policy is clearly exempt.)

SUMMARY OF REASONING AND RESULT: THE MYTH THAT ALL INTERESTS OF HUSBAND AND WIFE IN LIFE INSURANCE ARE EXEMPT IN NEW YORK

This case presents the same issue addressed by this Court in In re Mata, 244 B.R. 580 (Bankr.W.D.N.Y.1999) — whether a husband and wife, as joint Chapter 7 debtors who have each “effected” a life insurance policy on their own life and have named their spouse as the beneficiary, may exempt the loan value of the policies (or cash value) under § 3212(b)(1) of N.Y. Insurance Law.

In many other jurisdictions, the loan value of life insurance, or the cash surrender value or death benefits thereof, etc. are not entirely exempt.

But New York permits an unlimited exemption in one narrow instance. It has provided an unlimited exemption for all “proceeds and avails” of any life insurance policy that a husband owns on the life of his wife, or that a wife owns on the life of her husband. 1 Therefore, while bank *277 ruptcy courts in New York take pride in the fact that the horror stories of multimillion dollar homesteads “can’t happen here” (only $10,000 is allowed for a homestead; $20,000 in a joint case), and in the fact that even a pension or personal injury recovery are limited by a “reasonableness” standard, it appears that there is no limit whatsoever (the possibility of fraudulent transfer aside) on what may be placed beyond creditors’ reach in the form of a life insurance policy that one “effects” on his or her spouse’s life. 2 (This is the only “unlimited” exemption, under New York law, that can be found.)

In separate decisions, the other judges of this Court have decided that the statutory text set forth in footnote 1 must be interpreted such that it makes no difference who owns the policy. Hence, according to my colleagues, if I put a hundred thousand dollars into a policy on my own life naming my wife as beneficiary, I have put that money beyond the reach of her creditors (as well as mine), whether or not I can borrow-against or surrender the policy at will for cash.

That may have been correct before the 1978 Bankruptcy Reform Act, when there could be no “joint” cases, and when the interest of one who is merely a beneficiary in a whole life policy was probably too ephemeral to become property of the bankruptcy estate unless the designation of the bankrupt as beneficiary was irrevocable. But the Bankruptcy Reform Act of *278 1978 dramatically changed such things, and there should be no doubt that in the absence of an exemption statute, the beneficiary’s interest (whatever that is) in a life insurance policy is not exempt in the bankruptcy case of the beneficiary.

How that might work in a bankruptcy case of the beneficiary alone remains to be seen, and will be explored a bit at the end of this decision. But this writer rendered a decision in the case of In re Mata, 244 B.R. 580 (Bankr.W.D.N.Y.1999) that examined the joint bankruptcy case of a husband and wife who had reciprocal policies in which each was a beneficiary of a policy owned by the other and on which the owner was the insured. The decision in Mata was that where the two people, husband and wife, were joint debtors under 11 U.S.C. § 302, and the two people together could at will elect to convert the policy into cash, then their bankruptcy trustee could do so as well, because the exemption statute protects the value of the policy only as against the creditors of the insured or of the owner, not against the creditors of one who is a mere beneficiary. 3

In Mata, it was not necessary for the Court to decide which spouse’s creditors would benefit from which policy. Since then, the intervening decisions by the two other judges of this Court are persuasive that the creditors of the owner/insured may not enjoy the value of the policy, as discussed hereinafter. The fact that those two other decisions disagree with the result in Mata necessitates (for the benefit of any reviewing court and for the benefit of practitioners attempting to determine how the law on this subject might eventually be resolved in this District) a more detailed examination of the applicable law than might otherwise be necessary.

With deep respect for my esteemed colleagues, I dissent from their elevating, to law, their profound concern for matters of social policy. Such concern, explained in their decisions, 4 is not a reason to ignore an unambiguous statute, but rather is reason to return this issue to the legislature, where it belongs. This is done by applying the statute as written.

It is a clear statute in the relevant regard (though opaque in other regards). It is at odds with the view noted in the Polanowski case that “all insurance poli *279 cies are exempt in bankruptcy in New York.” This writer submits that that is a myth. The statute may be flawed in that it might be a trap for the unwary, or it may result in disparate and untoward results when cases are filed separately rather than jointly. But to jump to the conclusion that the legislature of the state of New York has already provided an exemption, unlimited in dollar amount, for any and all interests in all life insurance policies between husband and wife flies in the face not only of the particular exemption statute at hand, but in the face of the fact that there is no unlimited exemption anywhere in New York Law for any type of asset, except for the value of a life insurance policy owned by the beneficiary on his or her spouse’s life.

The myth and the two cases that elevate it to law do not adequately address the panoply of circumstances under which a beneficiary spouse in modern times is not the second-class citizen that the 19th century wife was when the early statutes in this regard were enacted. In present time it is routine that a policy cannot be borrowed-against, assigned, used as security, surrendered, allowed to lapse, or cashed-in, without the beneficiary’s consent. The beneficiary spouse has rights, and so too might the beneficiary’s creditors.

Further, as working adults and then-spouses have become what some observers think to be the largest and most powerful special interest group in the nation (through their pension plans, IRA’s, 401K’s, etc.), “whole life” insurance policies are no longer irreplaceable retirement devices.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
264 B.R. 274, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 837, 2001 WL 811077, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-jacobs-nywb-2001.