OPINION RE: EXEMPTION OF HOMESTEAD PROCEEDS
RANDOLPH J. HAINES, Bankruptcy Judge.
The issue here is whether a debtor must reinvest homestead proceeds within the time required by the state exemption statute in order for them to remain exempt under Bankruptcy Code § 522.
The Court concludes that Debtors’ homestead proceeds that were exempt as of the petition date remain exempt notwithstanding the Arizona exemption statute’s requirement that they be reinvested in another homestead within eighteen months.
Background Facts
Debtors Peter and Debra Konnoff sold their home on October 29, 2004. They did not commingle the sales proceeds with other funds, and the sales proceeds remained identifiable as of the petition date. Debtors filed voluntary Chapter 7 bankruptcy on June 15, 2005, and claimed as exempt the remaining sales proceeds in the amount of $83,000.00.
Arizona’s homestead exemption statute applies to a homestead up to $150,000 in equity value.
If a homestead is sold, the homestead exemption “automatically attaches to the person’s interest in identifiable cash proceeds” from the sale and so “continues for eighteen months after the date of the sale of the property or until the person establishes a new homestead with the proceeds, whichever period is shorter.”
Chapter 7 Trustee Jill Ford timely objected to exemption of the sales proceeds. At the hearing on her objection, the Trustee conceded that the proceeds are presently exempt but sought an order that they would become nonexempt property of the estate if Debtors fail to reinvest the proceeds into a new homestead within 18 months of the sale date, or by April 29, 2006.
Analysis
It is generally agreed that exemptions are determined as of the petition date. To some extent this conclusion may flow from the language of the Code. At least when an exemption is claimed under state law, the Code provides that the exemption is determined pursuant to “State or local law that is applicable on the date of the filing of the petition.”
This answer is not necessarily dispositive, however, when the applicable state law provides a time limit on the exemption. Even if the case is filed within that time limit, so the property was exempt as of the petition date, does the state law time limit continue to run postpetition and render the property nonexempt when it expires?
The Ninth Circuit effectively so held in
Golden,
The court there held that a debt- or lost his exemption in the sales proceeds of a homestead, even though exempt as of the petition date, because the California homestead statute requires a debtor to take affirmative steps to reinvest the proceeds in another homestead within six months. . The debtor had sold his residence only two months prepetition so the proceeds were exempt both on the petition date and by the deadline for objections to claimed exemptions. Nevertheless, when the six months did expire after the objection deadline, the bankruptcy court ordered the proceeds turned over to the trustee, and the Ninth Circuit affirmed. The court stated that it “must apply California law in determining whether the debtor may claim the exemption” and concluded that the purpose of California homestead statute is “not intended to allow the debtor to withdraw sales proceeds from the reach of creditors unless the proceeds were invested in another homestead.”
Thus, the court concluded, the sales proceeds should revert to trustee when debtor failed to reinvest them into another homestead within the time permitted by the state statute, even though that time was postpetition and after the deadline for objecting to claimed exemptions.
The
Golden
opinion effectively relied on the debtor’s post-petition conduct (or lack of action) to determine the debtor’s exemption rights.
Subsequent decisions by the Ninth Circuit Bankruptcy Appellate Panel (“BAP”) held that the debtor’s postpetition conduct may not alter the exempt status of property as of the petition date.
For example, the debtor in
Kim
filed a Chapter 7 petition and ten days later retired and received a lump-sum payment from his retirement plan. Trustee objected to debtor’s claim of exemption of these “retirement funds” under California law because they were no longer “amounts held, controlled, or in process of distribution by a ... retirement plan.”
The BAP held that the cash remained exempt because “the relevant date for determining the status of the exemptions was the petition date.”
The Panel also rejected the argument that “California exemption law permits a court to consider post-petition use of property in determining whether that property is exempt” under California law.
The reasoning and holding of
Kim
conflict with those of
Golden.
But obviously a BAP opinion cannot overrule a Ninth Circuit opinion. And even though
Kim
was affirmed by the Ninth Circuit expressly for the reasons stated in the BAP’s opinion, that Ninth Circuit disposition was unpublished and therefore cannot be cited.
In any event one panel of the Ninth Circuit
(e.g.,
the uncitable
Kim
affirmance panel) cannot overrule a prior holding by another panel (the
Golden
panel), which can only be accomplished by an
en banc
decision.
Moreover, the BAP’s
Kim
opinion purported to distinguish
Golden
on the ground that it dealt with a state statute that contained an express “sunset provision” whereas the retirement fund exemption statute at issue in
Kim
had no such express provision dealing with the retirement funds once they were distributed.
That distinction is unavailable here, because the Arizona statute at issue does contain an express “sunset provision” essentially identical in function to the provision at issue in
Golden.
But of course the BAP’s purported distinction does not distinguish
Golden
from the BAP’s conclusions that federal law (1) requires exemptions to be determined as of the petition date and (2) does not permit the consideration of post-petition conduct in determining exemptions.
Similarly, in Herman>
where the debt- or contracted to sell her homestead the day after filing Chapter 7, the lien creditor objected because the California automatic homestead exemption did not apply to the proceeds of a voluntary sale, but only to the proceeds of an involuntary sale.
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OPINION RE: EXEMPTION OF HOMESTEAD PROCEEDS
RANDOLPH J. HAINES, Bankruptcy Judge.
The issue here is whether a debtor must reinvest homestead proceeds within the time required by the state exemption statute in order for them to remain exempt under Bankruptcy Code § 522.
The Court concludes that Debtors’ homestead proceeds that were exempt as of the petition date remain exempt notwithstanding the Arizona exemption statute’s requirement that they be reinvested in another homestead within eighteen months.
Background Facts
Debtors Peter and Debra Konnoff sold their home on October 29, 2004. They did not commingle the sales proceeds with other funds, and the sales proceeds remained identifiable as of the petition date. Debtors filed voluntary Chapter 7 bankruptcy on June 15, 2005, and claimed as exempt the remaining sales proceeds in the amount of $83,000.00.
Arizona’s homestead exemption statute applies to a homestead up to $150,000 in equity value.
If a homestead is sold, the homestead exemption “automatically attaches to the person’s interest in identifiable cash proceeds” from the sale and so “continues for eighteen months after the date of the sale of the property or until the person establishes a new homestead with the proceeds, whichever period is shorter.”
Chapter 7 Trustee Jill Ford timely objected to exemption of the sales proceeds. At the hearing on her objection, the Trustee conceded that the proceeds are presently exempt but sought an order that they would become nonexempt property of the estate if Debtors fail to reinvest the proceeds into a new homestead within 18 months of the sale date, or by April 29, 2006.
Analysis
It is generally agreed that exemptions are determined as of the petition date. To some extent this conclusion may flow from the language of the Code. At least when an exemption is claimed under state law, the Code provides that the exemption is determined pursuant to “State or local law that is applicable on the date of the filing of the petition.”
This answer is not necessarily dispositive, however, when the applicable state law provides a time limit on the exemption. Even if the case is filed within that time limit, so the property was exempt as of the petition date, does the state law time limit continue to run postpetition and render the property nonexempt when it expires?
The Ninth Circuit effectively so held in
Golden,
The court there held that a debt- or lost his exemption in the sales proceeds of a homestead, even though exempt as of the petition date, because the California homestead statute requires a debtor to take affirmative steps to reinvest the proceeds in another homestead within six months. . The debtor had sold his residence only two months prepetition so the proceeds were exempt both on the petition date and by the deadline for objections to claimed exemptions. Nevertheless, when the six months did expire after the objection deadline, the bankruptcy court ordered the proceeds turned over to the trustee, and the Ninth Circuit affirmed. The court stated that it “must apply California law in determining whether the debtor may claim the exemption” and concluded that the purpose of California homestead statute is “not intended to allow the debtor to withdraw sales proceeds from the reach of creditors unless the proceeds were invested in another homestead.”
Thus, the court concluded, the sales proceeds should revert to trustee when debtor failed to reinvest them into another homestead within the time permitted by the state statute, even though that time was postpetition and after the deadline for objecting to claimed exemptions.
The
Golden
opinion effectively relied on the debtor’s post-petition conduct (or lack of action) to determine the debtor’s exemption rights.
Subsequent decisions by the Ninth Circuit Bankruptcy Appellate Panel (“BAP”) held that the debtor’s postpetition conduct may not alter the exempt status of property as of the petition date.
For example, the debtor in
Kim
filed a Chapter 7 petition and ten days later retired and received a lump-sum payment from his retirement plan. Trustee objected to debtor’s claim of exemption of these “retirement funds” under California law because they were no longer “amounts held, controlled, or in process of distribution by a ... retirement plan.”
The BAP held that the cash remained exempt because “the relevant date for determining the status of the exemptions was the petition date.”
The Panel also rejected the argument that “California exemption law permits a court to consider post-petition use of property in determining whether that property is exempt” under California law.
The reasoning and holding of
Kim
conflict with those of
Golden.
But obviously a BAP opinion cannot overrule a Ninth Circuit opinion. And even though
Kim
was affirmed by the Ninth Circuit expressly for the reasons stated in the BAP’s opinion, that Ninth Circuit disposition was unpublished and therefore cannot be cited.
In any event one panel of the Ninth Circuit
(e.g.,
the uncitable
Kim
affirmance panel) cannot overrule a prior holding by another panel (the
Golden
panel), which can only be accomplished by an
en banc
decision.
Moreover, the BAP’s
Kim
opinion purported to distinguish
Golden
on the ground that it dealt with a state statute that contained an express “sunset provision” whereas the retirement fund exemption statute at issue in
Kim
had no such express provision dealing with the retirement funds once they were distributed.
That distinction is unavailable here, because the Arizona statute at issue does contain an express “sunset provision” essentially identical in function to the provision at issue in
Golden.
But of course the BAP’s purported distinction does not distinguish
Golden
from the BAP’s conclusions that federal law (1) requires exemptions to be determined as of the petition date and (2) does not permit the consideration of post-petition conduct in determining exemptions.
Similarly, in Herman>
where the debt- or contracted to sell her homestead the day after filing Chapter 7, the lien creditor objected because the California automatic homestead exemption did not apply to the proceeds of a voluntary sale, but only to the proceeds of an involuntary sale. The BAP rejected the objection on the ground that the exempt status must be determined as of the date of the petition,
when it was still a homestead instead of proceeds. That opinion distinguished
Golden
because it dealt with proceeds existing as of the date of the petition,
a distinction that fails to explain why the rationale ap
plied in
Herman
would not have compelled a different result in
Golden.
This Court concludes that the Ninth Circuit’s holding and analysis in
Golden
is no longer good law, having been overruled by the Supreme Court in
Owen.
In
Owen,
Supreme Court had to decide whether a state’s definition of the scope of an exemption could limit the exemption under Code § 522(b), and particularly under the Code’s lien-avoidance provision of § 522(f). The debtor claimed the Florida homestead provision as to his condominium, but under Florida law that exemption was inapplicable to judicial liens that attached before the property acquired its homestead status. In concluding that the lien could be avoided under § 522(f), the Court reached two interim conclusions that are significant here. First, it held that even in an “opt out” state, the state’s exemptions do not necessarily include all of their “built-in limitations.”
The Court was there referring to Florida’s “built-in limitation” that its exemptions do not apply to pre-existing liens, but the concept applies equally as well to Arizona’s 18-month “built-in limitation” for the exemption of homestead proceeds. Secondly, the Court concluded that “exempt property is determined ‘on the date of the filing of the petition,’ not when the lien fixed.”
Both of those conclusions are contrary to the Ninth Circuit’s holdings in
Golden,
and to that extent
Golden
must be regarded as having been overruled by
Owen.
After
Owen,
the Ninth Circuit would have had to decide
Golden
using the principles that a state law’s built-in limitations on an exemption are not necessarily binding in bankruptcy, and that the exempt status must be determined as of the petition date. Those rules would have dictated the opposite result in
Golden.
Because
Owen
knocked the props out from under
Golden,
it is no longer good law
and this Court is not bound by it.
Instead, the BAP’s analysis in
Herman
and
Kim
are controlling. Because preemptive federal law does not permit the debtor’s postpetition use of exempt property to change its exempt status as of the date of the petition, Arizona’s “built-in limitation” of 18 months for homestead proceeds is not controlling for these purposes.
The Trustee is therefore not entitled to the order requested, requiring the Debtor to invest the proceeds in a new homestead within 18 months or else forfeit the pro
ceeds to the estate. The Trustee’s objection to that extent is denied, and the Debt- or’s claim of exemption for the proceeds is upheld.