In Re Law

336 B.R. 144, 2005 Bankr. LEXIS 2628, 2005 WL 3620152
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Missouri
DecidedJune 27, 2005
Docket19-40430
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 336 B.R. 144 (In Re Law) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Law, 336 B.R. 144, 2005 Bankr. LEXIS 2628, 2005 WL 3620152 (Mo. 2005).

Opinion

AMENDED MEMORANDUM OPINION

JERRY W. VENTERS, Bankruptcy Judge.

It is well established law in this jurisdiction that a tax refund arising from an overpayment of taxes or from the federal earned income credit constitutes property of the estate and is not exempt under Missouri law. What is not clear, though, is whether a tax refund arising from the federal child tax credit is property of the estate, and that is the question now before *145 the Court. The Debtors maintain that the portion of their federal income tax refund attributable to the child tax credit ($2,000 out of $4,703) is not property of the estate, but the chapter 7 panel trustee assigned to their bankruptcy case, David C. Stover, disagrees. The Court held a hearing on this matter on June 7, 2005. Both parties appeared in person and through counsel. The Court took the matter under advisement at the conclusion of the hearing.

Upon consideration of the parties’ arguments and the relevant law, the Court is ready to rule. The following constitutes the Court’s Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law in accordance with Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52 and Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure 7052.

BACKGROUND

There is no factual dispute. The Debtors filed for protection under chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code on October 25, 2004. The Debtors’ 2004 Federal income tax return provides for a total refund of $4,703. 1 The tax refund calculated on their Form 1040 may be summarized as follows:

“Taxes and Credits”
Tax on Taxable Income (line 43) ($69)
Child Tax Credit (line 51) $69
“Other Taxes”
Self-Employment Tax (line 57) ($410)
“Payments”
Taxes Withheld (line 63) $1,122
Earned Income Credit (line 65a) $2,060
Additional Child Tax Credit (line 67) $1,931
Total Federal Income Tax Refund $4,703

Of this refund, the Debtors’ amended bankruptcy Schedules B and C indicate that only $2,207.29 is property of the estate. 2 The Debtors arrive at this figure by deducting the $2,000 child tax credit from the total refund and then calculating the pre-petition pro rata portion (298/365) of the remainder. 3 The Trustee’s objection ensued.

DISCUSSION

Two preliminary matters: First, the Trustee brought this matter to the attention of the Court by way of an objection to the Debtors’ exemption, but the Trustee’s objection does not actually speak to the propriety of the exemptions claimed by the Debtors in their tax refunds. This disconnect may be attributable to the Debtors’ description of the tax refund in Schedule C to advance their position that the child tax credit was not property of the estate. In truth, the actual exemptions claimed on Schedule C for the tax refunds—$531.62 pursuant to Mo.Rev.Stat. § 513.430(3) and $1,293.38 pursuant to Mo.Rev.Stat. § 513.440—have not been challenged, and the Court finds that they are, indeed, valid.

*146 The actual issue raised by the Trustee in his objection and addressed by both parties at the June 7, 2005 hearing, is whether the $2,000 portion of the tax refund attributable to the “Child Tax Credit” is property of the estate. The Trustee contends that it is, and the Debtors, relying on In re Schwarz, 4 maintain that it is not.

Second, some clarification of the property at issue is necessary. Both of the parties focus their arguments on a supposedly unitary $2,000 child tax credit. However, the federal child tax credit received by the Debtors actually has two distinct components—a non-refundable component, denominated on Form 1040 as the “Child Tax Credit,” and a refundable component, denominated on Form 1040 (under the “Payments” section) as the “Additional Child Tax Credit.” The non-refundable portion is limited by the amount of tax owed, and the refundable portion is only available to taxpayers meeting certain criteria beyond what is required to qualify for the Child Tax Credit. 5 In this case, the Debtors qualified for both, taking a $69 Child Tax Credit against their total tax liability, 6 and receiving a $1,931 refund as an Additional Child Tax Credit. As discussed below, the distinction between the refundable and non-refundable components of the federal child tax credit is crucial.

Whether a federal child tax credit (either component) is property of the estate is an issue of first impression in this Court, as it would be in most other jurisdictions judging from the paucity of cases discussing a debtor’s interest in the credit. And of the few cases that have discussed it, only two have specifically addressed whether a child tax credit is property of the estate—In re Beltz and In re Schwarz. The court in Beltz held that the entire credit was property of the estate, 7 and the court in Schwarz held that it was not. The other cases discussing the child tax credit have implicitly held that the credit is property of the estate, as a predicate to a determination of whether the credit was exempt under state law as a form of public assistance. 8 Obviously, the discussion of whether a debtor could claim an exemption in the federal child tax credit would be moot unless the credit is first considered property of the bankruptcy estate.

In the tradition of Solomon, this Court will split the proverbial and literal child (tax credit), by holding that the refundable portion of the child tax credit claimed by the Debtors ($1,931) is property of the estate but that the non-refundable portion ($69) is not. In doing so, we respectfully *147 disagree with Schwarz. 9

The decision here is driven by the Supreme Court’s statement in Sorenson v. Secretary of the Treasury of the United States 10 that the refundability of the federal earned income tax credit (“EIC”) makes it “inseparable from its classification as an overpayment of tax,” 11 and the precedent in this jurisdiction that overpayments of tax, i.e., tax refunds (including the EIC) are property of the estate. 12

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
336 B.R. 144, 2005 Bankr. LEXIS 2628, 2005 WL 3620152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-law-mowb-2005.