In re: Maria Teresa Melendez Rey

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedMarch 29, 2024
Docket23-1120
StatusPublished

This text of In re: Maria Teresa Melendez Rey (In re: Maria Teresa Melendez Rey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re: Maria Teresa Melendez Rey, (bap9 2024).

Opinion

FILED MAR 29 2024 ORDERED PUBLISHED SUSAN M. SPRAUL, CLERK U.S. BKCY. APP. PANEL OF THE NINTH CIRCUIT UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY APPELLATE PANEL OF THE NINTH CIRCUIT

In re: BAP No. CC-23-1120-SGC MARIA TERESA MELENDEZ REY, Debtor. Bk. No. 2:22-bk-14119-WB

MARIA TERESA MELENDEZ REY, Appellant, v. OPINION PETER URQUIJO, Appellee.

Appeal from the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Central District of California Julia Wagner Brand, Bankruptcy Judge, Presiding

APPEARANCES Christopher J. Langley of Shioda, Langley & Chang LLP argued for Appellant; Thomas H. Casey argued for Appellee.

Before: SPRAKER, GAN, and CORBIT, Bankruptcy Judges.

Opinion by Judge Spraker Concurrence by Judge Corbit SPRAKER, Bankruptcy Judge:

INTRODUCTION

Chapter 131 debtor Maria Teresa Melendez Rey appeals from the

bankruptcy court’s order sustaining the objection of creditor Peter Urquijo

to Rey’s homestead exemption claim. Her appeal presents a single legal

issue: when the real property in question includes two separate residential

structures, one of which is the debtor’s residence and the other is a rental

property, does California consider the two structures as a single unit for

purposes of applying its homestead exemption? We answer this question

in negative. Because Rey has not presented any other grounds to justify

reversal of the order on appeal, we AFFIRM.

FACTS2

A. Rey’s bankruptcy filing and her homestead exemption claim.

The relevant facts are undisputed.3 Rey filed for relief under chapter

7 in July 2022. The court later granted Rey’s motion to convert to chapter

13, subject to reconversion to chapter 7 if Rey should fail to successfully

complete her chapter 13 case.

Unless specified otherwise, all chapter and section references are to the 1

Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. §§ 101–1532. 2 We exercise our discretion to take judicial notice of documents electronically filed in the underlying bankruptcy case. See Atwood v. Chase Manhattan Mortg. Co. (In re Atwood), 293 B.R. 227, 233 n.9 (9th Cir. BAP 2003). 3 Because Rey has not disputed any factual findings on appeal, our recitation of

facts draws heavily from the bankruptcy court’s statement of facts contained in its memorandum decision disposing of Urquijo’s exemption objection. 2 On her Schedule A/B, Rey listed her fee simple interest in 1922-1924

Bunker Ave (“Property”). Rey valued the Property at $930,000. In the

operative version of her schedules, she described the Property as: “Two

houses on parcel, front house is 920sq/ft, 1 bd plus den where debtor

resides. Back house is 2,300 sq/ft, 6 bd and 3 bath, currently rented to two

sisters. Property purchased in 1987.” Rey listed $583,518 in secured debt

against the Property owed to one creditor. In her Schedule C, she claimed a

homestead exemption in the Property for $626,400 based on the maximum

statutory amount set forth in California Code of Civil Procedure (“CCP”)

§ 704.730(a)(1), as adjusted for inflation pursuant to CCP § 704.730(b).4

Rey listed Urquijo in her schedules as a disputed, contingent, and

unliquidated unsecured creditor for $494,000 in attorney fees. Urquijo filed

an unsecured proof of claim for $511,968.80.

B. Urquijo’s objection to Rey’s claimed homestead exemption.

Urquijo objected to Rey’s homestead exemption of the Property on

the basis that it did not extend to the rented duplex. He conceded that Rey

had resided in the smaller house at 1922 Bunker Avenue since 2017 and

was continuing to reside there at the time of her bankruptcy filing. But he

maintained that the six-bedroom duplex at 1924 Bunker Avenue had been

constructed and always used as a rental property. In fact, he pointed out

that each unit in the duplex had been rented out to the same two tenants

4 This is the maximum statutory amount of the homestead exemption rather than the equity under the debtor’s valuation. 3 since at least 2020, that Rey had not even entered the duplex since 2020,

and that the terms of her lease with the tenants prohibited her from

entering the duplex unless she gave advance written notice.

In addition to having separate addresses, the two structures are

separated by a fence and have separate driveways, entrances, parking,

utilities, and mailboxes. As Urquijo put it, the only things the structures

had in common besides ownership were a single assessor’s parcel number,

and a mortgage encumbering the entire Property. Based on these facts,

Urquijo contended that Rey had a right to claim only 1922 Bunker Avenue

as her residence and her homestead. The rental duplex at 1924 Bunker

Avenue, he insisted, was not her residence and did not qualify for the

automatic residential homestead exemption. 5

In support of his objection, Urquijo submitted two appraisals—one

appraising 1922 Bunker Avenue and the other appraising 1924 Bunker

Avenue. The appraisals separately valued the structures and concluded

that 1922 Bunker Avenue had a fair market value of $574,000 and 1924

Bunker Avenue had a fair market value of $830,000.

Rey’s opposition to Urquijo’s objection focused on the fact that the

structures were situated on a single lot of land subject to a single assessor’s

5 Urquijo’s objection also discusses a separate garage structure, consisting of two two-car garages separated by a wall but sharing a common roof. Though Rey used half of the garage space for personal storage, one of Rey’s tenants leased and used the other half of the garage space. Consequently, Urquijo asserted that Rey could claim as exempt only 50% of the garage space. 4 parcel number. Because it was undisputed that she resided in the house at

1922 Bunker Avenue, she maintained that she was entitled to the automatic

homestead exemption as to the whole of the Property. According to Rey,

the structures only could be sold as a single unit under current California

real property law. Therefore, she reasoned that it made no sense to

separately evaluate the structures in the process of determining whether

each individual structure qualified as part of her residence. Rather, she

maintained that the duplex and garage were “outbuildings” or

“appurtenances” that were part of her homestead regardless of the actual

use of those structures. She further argued that Urquijo relied on outdated

case law that was no longer applicable to a single lot. Instead, Rey insisted

that the entire lot was indivisible and exempt as her homestead.6

Urquijo replied that Rey was attempting to expand the statutory

scope of the homestead to include all outbuildings and appurtenances

adjacent to the residence and the land on which they are situated. Urquijo

maintained that California case law had clarified that the inclusion of

outbuildings and land in the homestead was limited to those actual and

customary appurtenances necessary or convenient for personal household

6 Rey also challenged Urquijo’s two separate appraisals as defective because they incorrectly assumed that the two structures could be sold separately, and each had its own separate fair market value. Rey posited that the two appraisals grossly inflated the fair market value of each structure. The bankruptcy court made no determination as to the value of the Property.

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In re: Maria Teresa Melendez Rey, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-maria-teresa-melendez-rey-bap9-2024.