In Re Lawrence

205 B.R. 115, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 102, 1997 WL 54509
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 14, 1997
Docket96-11249
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 205 B.R. 115 (In Re Lawrence) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Lawrence, 205 B.R. 115, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 102, 1997 WL 54509 (Tenn. 1997).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

JOHN C. COOK, Bankruptcy Judge.

Before the court is the trustee’s objection to an exemption claimed by the debtor in the sum of $140,000. According to a stipulation of facts entered into by the parties, the debt- or is engaged in business as a podiatrist and had accumulated $140,000 in accounts receivable from various patients at the time of his bankruptcy filing. In his schedule of exemptions he claimed 75% of these accounts receivable as exempt property under Tenn. Code Ann. § 26-2-106. The propriety of that claim is the issue in this case.

The parties disagree about the functioning of Tenn.Code Ann. § 26-2-106. Specifically, the trustee argues that § 26-2-106 merely limits the amount of earnings that may be garnished outside bankruptcy and does not purport to create an exemption within the purview of 11 U.S.C. § 522(b)(2)(A). He further argues that the accounts receivable of a professional podiatrist are not enough like wages or salary paid by an employer to an employee to qualify as “earnings” within the meaning of Tenn.Code Ann. § 26-2-105(1). The debtor, on the other hand, contends that the garnishment restriction effected by §§ 26-2-105, -106 constitutes a kind of state exemption recognizable by 11 U.S.C. § 522(b)(2)(A) and that the debtor’s accounts receivable qualify for exemption under the state statute. For the reasons that follow, the court concludes that the Tennessee garnishment statute does not create an exemption cognizable in bankruptcy.

*117 I.

In 1968 Congress passed the Consumer Credit Protection Act (“CCPA”), 15 U.S.C. §§ 1671-77, which imposed nationwide restrictions on garnishments in order to protect debtors from what Congress believed to be the predatory lending practices of some credit institutions. In so doing, Congress provided that the CCPA would preempt any less protective state statutes, 15 U.S.C. § 1673(c), and so Tennessee, like many other states whose garnishment laws had been rendered obsolete, eventually enacted its own version of the CCPA, adopting the operative provisions of the CCPA almost verbatim. Tenn.Code Ann. §§ 26-2-105, -106 (“garnishment statute”). Both statutes provide in their material parts that

[t]he maximum part of the aggregate disposable earnings of an individual for any workweek which is subjected, to garnishment may not exceed
(1) Twenty-five percent (25%) of his disposable earnings for that week....

Tenn.Code Ann. § 26-2-106(a); see 15 U.S.C. § 1673(a). Both statutes define earnings as

compensation paid or payable for personal services, whether denominated as wages, salary, commission, bonus, or otherwise, and includes periodic payments pursuant to a pension or retirement program.

Tenn.Code Ann. § 26-2-105(1); 15 U.S.C. § 1672(a). They also define garnishment as

any legal or equitable procedure through which the earnings of an individual are required to be withheld for the payment of any debt.

Tenn.Code Ann. § 26-2-105(3); 15 U.S.C. § 1672(e).

The debtor argues that a bankruptcy case fits the foregoing definition of “garnishment” and that Tennessee, by the enactment of this garnishment statute, must have intended to allow a debtor to exempt 75% of his disposable earnings in bankruptcy. 1 The trustee insists that the garnishment statute does not create an exemption in bankruptcy because it does not use any form of the word “exempt” and in its own terms purports to do nothing more than limit the amount of earnings that may be garnished in the hands of a third party.

Before resolving this question, it must be observed that the answer does not turn entirely upon state law. The exemption provision of the Bankruptcy Code allows a debtor to “exempt from property of the estate” such property as is “exempt under ... State ... law,” 11 U.S.C. § 522(b)(2)(A). While it is certainly fitting for a state to declare a list of assets that it considers to be exempt from the reach of creditors and therefore exempt in bankruptcy, the question of whether an asset is exempt in bankruptcy is ultimately a question of federal, not state, law. This is so because the word “exempt” as used in § 522(b)(2)(A) must be given the meaning intended by Congress. In bankruptcy, property of the debtor that is “exempt from property of the estate” is property that the debtor may sequester to himself forever beyond the reach of his creditors in bankruptcy. Exempt property is subtracted from the estate, and no creditor will benefit from it in distribution. Furthermore, no creditor may attempt to execute on it thereafter because the debtor’s obligation to the creditor will have been discharged and the debt itself wiped out. The discharge injunction will also be in full force and effect. 11 U.S.C. § 524(a). Thus, the effect of exempting property in bankruptcy is to sequester the property from creditors in the most complete and permanent way by removing it from the estate while destroying the very debtor-creditor relationship that would otherwise permit creditors to threaten property with execution, seizure, or attachment.

Of course, state exemption laws cannot destroy the debtor-creditor relationship by discharge, but they do sequester certain assets of the debtor from his creditors, at least while those assets are maintained in their exempt forms. These are the kinds of exemptions Congress must have had in mind when it permitted debtors in bankruptcy to *118 exercise state exemptions as alternatives to those in the federal list. See 11 U.S.C. 522(d).

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Related

In Re Irish
303 B.R. 380 (N.D. Iowa, 2003)
In re Wiener
276 B.R. 810 (N.D. Ohio, 2001)
Pruss v. Butler (In Re Pruss)
235 B.R. 430 (Eighth Circuit, 1999)
Yaden v. Osworth (In Re Osworth)
234 B.R. 497 (Ninth Circuit, 1999)
Lawrence v. Jahn (In Re Lawrence)
219 B.R. 786 (E.D. Tennessee, 1998)
In Re Siegel
214 B.R. 329 (W.D. Tennessee, 1997)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
205 B.R. 115, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 102, 1997 WL 54509, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-lawrence-tneb-1997.