In Re Keenan

443 B.R. 169, 64 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1635, 2011 Bankr. LEXIS 42, 2011 WL 62922
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 7, 2011
Docket19-30648
StatusPublished

This text of 443 B.R. 169 (In Re Keenan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Keenan, 443 B.R. 169, 64 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1635, 2011 Bankr. LEXIS 42, 2011 WL 62922 (Minn. 2011).

Opinion

ORDER SUSTAINING TRUSTEE’S OBJECTION TO CLAIM OF EXEMPTION

GREGORY F. KISHEL, Bankruptcy Judge.

This Chapter 7 case came before the Court on October 26, 2010, on the Trustee’s objection to the Debtors’ claim of exemption in various sorts of assets. Trustee Nauni Jo Manty appeared by her attorney, Jacqueline D. Kuiper. The Debtors appeared by their attorney, Arian Tavakolian. The following order is based on the record made for the Trustee’s objection, including briefing and argument by counsel.

*171 The Debtors filed a voluntary petition under Chapter 7 on June 18, 2010. In their original Schedule B, for personal property, they included the following entry under Item 21, for “Other contingent and unliquidated claims of every nature”:

Personal injury claims against representatives of Catholic Church in Minnesota. In “John Doe” litigation in St. Paul

They designated these “claims” as the property of “Husband,” i.e., James Keenan.

Via an amended Schedule C filed on October 8, 2010, James Keenan claimed this asset as exempt. He cited “Unknown” as its current value and as the value of the claimed exemption. He recited the following as the legal authority for the claimed exemption:

11 U.S.C. § 522(d)(5) Husband intends to allocate all otherwise unused 522(d)(5) exemptions to this asset
11 U.S.C. § 522(d)(ll)(D)

The Trustee’s objection to this claim of exemption is the matter at bar. 1 She concedes that the unused portion of available rights of exemption under the “wild card” provision of 11 U.S.C. § 522(d)(5) may be applied to the value of the claim for damages in question. 2 However, she challenges James Keenan’s invocation of 11 U.S.C. § 522(d)(ll)(D). That statute provides an exemption in bankruptcy for:

The debtor’s right to receive, or property that is traceable to—
(D) a payment, not to exceed $20,200, on account of personal bodily injury, not including pain and suffering or compensation for actual pecuniary loss, of the debtor or an individual of whom the debtor is a dependent....

The Trustee’s objection goes to the basis and nature of the claim in litigation. The question she poses is whether the alleged wrong underlying the claim is within the class specified by the statute’s language.

The record presented on that issue consists of three documents. The first is the complaint in a lawsuit commenced by James Keenan under the designation of “John Doe 76C.” 3 The complaint is brought in the name of only one plaintiff, identified as such. The litigation is venued *172 in the Minnesota State District Court for the Second Judicial District, Ramsey County. The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis and the Diocese of Winona are the named defendants. 4 The other two are one-page declarations executed separately by James Keenan and his attorney in the state-court lawsuit. These declarations were prepared specially for the defense of the Trustee’s objection.

These documents are all the evidence that James Keenan brought forth, toward a basis for characterizing the claims in litigation as exemptible under the statute. The Trustee has not submitted any separate materials; she structures her argument on the content of James Keenan’s submissions alone.

From that content, the following bears on the nature of the claims in suit:

1.In the complaint, James Keenan alleges that, “[i]n approximately 1980-1982, when [he] was approximately 18-15 years of age,” one Father Thomas Adamson, “an ordained Roman Catholic priest employed” by the two defendants, “engaged in unper-mitted, harmful and offensive sexual contact” with him, while Adamson was assigned to the parish attended by James Keenan’s family. He alleges that officials of both defendants, including a bishop and an archbishop, had known before then that Adamson had repeatedly committed acts of sexual abuse against minors while serving as a parish priest elsewhere. James Keenan frames the defendants’ liability to him under a number of pleaded theories: several varieties of negligence (in failing to provide “a reasonably safe learning and spiritual environment” to James Keenan, and in supervising and retaining Adamson as a priest); vicarious liability; and fraud via active misrepresentation and failure to disclose Adamson’s past.

2. James Keenan then pleads that he “suffered a traumatic amnesia, or memory repression, of the sexual abuse when he was a child,” having “no memory of [it] from the time that he was a child until July of 2002.”

3. At the close of its general pleading of facts, the complaint recites:

As a direct result of the sexual abuse and sexual exploitation, Plaintiff has suffered and will continue to suffer great pain of mind and body, severe and permanent emotional distress, physical manifestations of emotional distress, embarrassment, loss of self-esteem, humiliation and psychological injuries, was prevented and will continue to be prevented from performing his normal daily activities and obtaining the full enjoyment of life, has incurred and will continue to incur expenses for medical and psychological treatment, therapy and counseling and, on information and belief, has incurred and will continue to incur loss of income and/or loss of earning capacity.

4. James Keenan’s unsworn declaration consists of six paragraphs. All of them are three lines or less in length.

5. After stating that Adamson “did sexually abuse and exploit [him] when [he] was a minor child,” James Keenan states:

a. The abuse “included actual physical abuse of a sexual nature,” Adamson *173 having “engaged in unpermitted, harmful contact with [his] person”;
b. “The physical abuse ... resulted in both bodily injury to [his] person, physical manifestations of emotional and psychological stress, and other physical effects”; and
c. The “abuse occurred on at least three separate and distinct occasions over the course of three years.”

6. The unsworn declaration of Jeffrey R. Anderson, Esq., primarily functions as a vehicle to farm the complaint into the record here. 5 The affidavit consists of two paragraphs.

7. The first paragraph recites only that Anderson has represented James Keenan “for a number of years in the prosecution of [the] civil action” in the Ramsey County District Court.

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Bluebook (online)
443 B.R. 169, 64 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1635, 2011 Bankr. LEXIS 42, 2011 WL 62922, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-keenan-mnb-2011.