In Re Lubecki

332 B.R. 256, 2005 Bankr. LEXIS 1866, 2005 WL 2385846
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. New York
DecidedAugust 23, 2005
Docket2-19-20194
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 332 B.R. 256 (In Re Lubecki) 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 Lubecki, 332 B.R. 256, 2005 Bankr. LEXIS 1866, 2005 WL 2385846 (N.Y. 2005).

Opinion

DECISION and ORDER

CARL L. BUCKI, Bankruptcy Judge.

The primary issue in the present dispute is whether life insurance proceeds retain their exempt status after the beneficiary commingles those proceeds with other funds on deposit in a bank account.

Morgan Lubecki is the widow of James Lubecki. At the time of James’s death, Mrs. Lubecki was the beneficiary and owner of a policy of insurance on her hus *258 band’s life. Pursuant to the terms of that policy, the insurer paid the sum of $18,227.08 to Morgan, who promptly deposited the proceeds into a money market account at HSBC Bank on October 8, 2004. Immediately prior to that deposit, her account held a balance of $9.88. Between October 8, 2004, and January 20, 2005, in addition to the deposit of insurance proceeds, the money market account was augmented by twelve other additions. Eight of these were deposits of earnings from Mrs. Lubecki’s employment, while the remaining four represented accruals of interest. During this same period of time, Morgan Lubecki made nineteen withdrawals, so that the account held a balance of $8,492.83 on January 20, 2005. On that date, Morgan Lubecki filed a petition for relief under chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code.

In schedules filed with her bankruptcy petition, Mrs. Lubecki claimed an exemption for the money market account at HSBC Bank. Having otherwise exhausted her cash exemption, Lubecki relies upon the Insurance Law as the basis to exempt the account from administration. The chapter 7 trustee has filed a timely objection to this claim of exemption.

The New York Insurance Law provides that because Morgan Lubecki was the individual who effected the insurance on the life of her spouse, “the proceeds and avails” of that policy are exempt as against “her own creditors, trustees in bankruptcy and receivers in state and federal courts.” N.Y. Ins. Law § 3212(b)(2) (McKinney 2000). She asserts that by its reference to “proceeds”, the statute extends the benefit of the exemption to the account where she had deposited the insurance distribution. In objecting to the exemption, the trustee argues that upon the deposit into the account at HSBC Bank, the insurance proceeds were commingled with other assets, and that by reason of that commingling, the proceeds lost their exempt character.

As authorized by 11 U.S.C. § 522(b), the State of New York has opted to establish its own list of assets that are exempt from bankruptcy distribution. In particular, section 282 of the New York Debtor and Creditor Law states that an individual may exempt from property of the bankruptcy estate “insurance policies and annuity contracts and the proceeds and avails thereof as provided in section three thousand two hundred twelve of the insurance law.” Because state law establishes the debtor’s exemption, state law will also define the scope of that exemption.

New York law generally distinguishes between exemptions for particular assets and exemptions for an entitlement to cash or cash equivalents. As to the former, a disposition of the asset will cause a forfeiture of the exemption. As to the later, the exemption will follow the cash into any separately identifiable assets whose acquisition is traceable to the originally exempt fund. In Yates County National Bank v. Carpenter, 119 N.Y. 550, 23 N.E. 1108 (1890), the New York Court of Appeals recognized this difference when it considered the exempt status of real estate that a judgment debtor had purchased with a military pension that was exempt under the then applicable provisions of New York law:

The general exemption laws of the state provide for the protection of specific articles or classes of property with a view of alleviating the condition of the poor by securing to them the use or consumption of the property exempted; but the present law has departed from the ordinary form of exemption, and, while seeking to accomplish the same object, provides, in terms, for the exemption of money or its equivalent. It is quite *259 obvious that such an exemption can produce no beneficial effect, unless it is extended beyond the letter of the act, and given life and force, according to its evident spirit and meaning.

119 N.Y. at 554, 23 N.E. 1108. Accordingly, the court allowed the debtor to exempt the real estate from execution. Similarly, New York Insurance Law § 3212 recognizes an exemption not for particular policies of insurance, but for their “proceeds and avails.” Thus, with respect to the type of insurance covered by this provision of the Insurance Law, the Second Circuit has held that the exemption protects proceeds after distribution to the policy’s beneficiary. Schwartz v. Holzman, 69 F.2d 814 (1934).

The trustee does not dispute that the exempt proceeds of life insurance can retain their exempt status after payment to a beneficiary. Rather, he contends that in the present instance, those proceeds lost their exemption when the debtor commingled them with other assets. In opposition, the debtor cites In re Rundlett, 142 B.R. 649 (Bankr.S.D.N.Y.1992), a case that was thereafter affirmed by the District Court in a decision that more specifically considers the issue of commingling. 153 B.R. 126 (S.D.N.Y.1993). Although I believe that Rundlett was incorrectly decided, the outcome of the present dispute will require a more precise analysis than that which the trustee suggests.

In Rundlett, the debtor had commingled the exempt proceeds of two insurance policies with the non-exempt proceeds of three other policies. Thereafter, the debtor withdrew considerable sums from the single account into which all of the proceeds had been deposited. Nonetheless, on the day of bankruptcy filing, this account still contained approximately $2.2 million, a sum greater than the value of the originally exempt proceeds but less than the total of non-exempt funds. Objecting to a claim of exemption, Rundlett’s chapter 7 trustee contended that the remaining balance should be deemed to derive from the non-exempt property of the bankruptcy estate. Instead, both the bankruptcy and district courts ruled that the trustee’s interest arose from the date of bankruptcy filing, and that as of that date, the debtor could assert her exemption with respect to the remaining funds. In reaching this conclusion, the district court provided the following rationale:

[F]or purposes of this bankruptcy proceeding, Rundlett’s exemption was not created until the bankruptcy petition was filed. In bankruptcy, an exemption functions to carve out a certain amount of the debtor’s assets and protect them from creditors. No exempt proceeds exist prior to the commencement of bankruptcy proceedings. Thus, contrary to the trustee’s contentions, commingling could not have functioned to cause the proceeds of the two assigned policies to lose their status as exempt proceeds because such status had not yet been created.

153 B.R. at 134. Respectfully, I disagree with this reasoning. Not being bound by the decision of a District Court in a different district, I reject the holding in

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
332 B.R. 256, 2005 Bankr. LEXIS 1866, 2005 WL 2385846, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-lubecki-nywb-2005.