Chapter 13
Memorandum Opinion and Order Sustaining Trustee’s Objections to Confirmation of Chapter 13 Plan and Objections to Exemption
Janice Miller Karlin, United States Bankruptcy Judge
Debtors, William and Bonnie McDonald and Kliffton and Jeanette Scott, have filed chapter 13 plans that do not propose to pay any amount to satisfy the best interest of the creditors test of 11 U.S.C. § 1325(a)(4) with regard to per capita payments they receive from the Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation Indian Tribe (hereinafter “Prairie Band” or the “Tribe”). Building on governing precedent, the Court con-eludes that despite changes to the Prairie Band Per Capita Ordinance and Tribal Code since it last ruled on these issues, the per capita payments remain property of the respective chapter 13 estates, and the Debtors’ plans have thus failed to satisfy the best interest of the creditors test with respect to this contingent, unliquidated property.
Debtors William and Bonnie McDonald also seek to exempt the per capita payments from the bankruptcy estate by arguing they are exempt under 11 U.S.C. § 522(b)(3)(A) as “local law that is applicable ... at the place in which the debtor’s domicile has been located for the 730 days immediately preceding the date of the filing of the petition.” The McDonalds have stipulated that their domicile is in Topeka, Kansas, however, and they are not domiciled on Prairie Band land. As a result, § 522(b)(3)(A)’s exemption based on “local law” is not applicable. The McDonalds’ other exemption arguments likewise fail.
As a result of the conclusions discussed more fully herein, the Court sustains the Chapter 13 Trustee’s objections to confirmation and objections to exemption in each case.
I. Background and Procedural Facts
Both sets of Debtors filed joint bankruptcy petitions under chapter 13 of the Bankruptcy Code.1 The Trustee objected to confirmation of plans filed in each case because neither plan satisfied the best interest of the creditors test as to Debtors’ per capita payments.2 The Trustee also [327]*327objected in each case to the Debtors’ claimed exemption of the per capita payments. In their joint stipulation and briefing, the Scott Debtors abandoned their exemption claim, so only the McDonald Debtors still claim the per capita payments as exempt.
The Court has jurisdiction over this contested matter pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 157 and 1334. This is a core proceeding under 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(L). The following findings of fact are based upon the stipulations filed by the parties, including stipulated exhibits.3
A. William and Bonnie McDonald
The McDonald Debtors filed their chapter 13 bankruptcy petition on May 14, 2014. Debtors are married and have below median income for their household size and geographical region under § 1325(b)(3) and (4). Debtor Bonnie McDonald is a member of the Tribe. As a member, Bonnie receives quarterly “per capita” gaming revenue distributions in accordance with the Prairie Band Per Capita Ordinance. The McDonald Debtors claim an exemption in Bonnie’s per capita payments.
When Debtors filed their bankruptcy petition, they lived at an address in Topeka, Kansas where they had resided for at least 730 days prior to filing. This residence is not located on the Tribe’s reservation. In addition, Bonnie holds a non-transferable joint tenancy interest in approximately 86 acres of Tribal trust agricultural land managed by the Secretary of the Interior pursuant to 25 U.S.C. § 3701-3715. Bonnie values that interest at zero.
Debtors’ Schedule I estimates Bonnie’s per capita payment at $361/mo. This income is also listed on Debtors’ Form 22C. Debtors’ only other income is from Bonnie’s receipt of Social Security disability payments. Debtors’ plan provides for monthly payments of $130, paying attorney fees, a secured debt to the Shawnee County Treasurer for real estate taxes, the filing fee, Trustee fees, and approximately $495 to unsecured creditors. The plan is a 36 month base case, makes no specific reference to per capita payments, and states the amount payable under paragraph 15’s “Best Interests of Creditors Test” is zero.
B. Kliffton and Jeanette Scott
The Scott Debtors filed their chapter 13 bankruptcy petition filed on May 15, 2014. Debtors are married and have below median income for their household size and geographical region under § 1325(b)(3) and (4). Debtor Jeanette Scott is a member of the Tribe. As a member, Jeanette receives quarterly per capita gaming revenue distributions in accordance with the Prairie Band Per Capita Ordinance. The Scott Debtors originally claimed an exemption in Jeanette’s per capita payments but have now abandoned that exemption. Debtors had no per capita funds on hand when they filed their bankruptcy petition.
[328]*328When Debtors filed their bankruptcy petition, they lived in Topeka, Kansas, and had lived in either Topeka or nearby Car-bondale for at least 730 days prior to filing. Neither the Topeka nor Carbondale residence is located on the Tribe’s reservation. Debtors’ Schedule I estimates Jeanette’s per capita payment at $472.80/mo.4 This income is also listed on Debtors’ Form 22C. Debtors’ plan provides for monthly payments of $270, and proposes to pay the filing fee, attorney fees, a priority tax debt, and a special class claim for unpaid rent. The plan proposes no distribution to unsecured creditors and makes no specific reference to per capita payments. The plan provides a zero amount under paragraph 15’s “Best Interests of Creditors Test.”
II. Analysis
A. Relevant Case Law From This District
This Court first addressed the issue of per capita payments from the Prairie Band Tribe in In re McDonald.5 In In re McDonald, the debtors did not deny that the per capita payments were property of the estate, and instead argued that the per capita payments were exempt.6 Before addressing the debtors’ exemption argument, the Court first relied on two prior decisions from other jurisdictions, In re Kedrowski7 and Johnson v. Cottonport Bank,8 to affirmatively hold that the per capita distributions were property of the estate.9
In their prior case, Debtors claimed the per capita payments were exempt under the then-active Potawatomi tribal code provision providing that “per capita distributions ‘shall be exempt, from garnishment, attachment, execution, sale, and other process for the payment of principal and interest, costs, and attorney fees upon any judgment of the Tribal Court.’ ”10 The Court held that debtors were not “entitled to rely upon the exemptions contained in the Potawatomi Tribal Code,”11 reasoning that because Kansas is an opt-out state, debtors were limited to the exemptions allowed under Kansas law.12 Because Kansas law did not permit exemption based on the Potawatomi tribal code, debtors could not thus rely.13
[329]*329The debtors in In re McDonald next argued that the per capita payments were excluded from the property of the estate by § 541(c)(2), as trust funds protected by a spendthrift provision.14 The Court again ruled against the debtors, holding that the postpetition per capita payments were not held in trust because the Tribe’s per capita ordinance placed no restrictions on the per capita payments to be made to competent, adult members of the Tribe.15 Regarding the debtors’ argument that the tribal code exemption somehow created a trust, the Court stated:
Although the Tribe, through the Ordinance, clearly indicates that the per cap-ita distributions are not subject to garnishment, attachment, execution, sale or other process under tribal law, it just as clearly does not impose a trust upon all of the per capita distributions. If the Court were to follow Debtors’ argument in .this case — that because the property is exempt, it is by definition also trust property, every piece of real or personal property that is exempt under state or federal law would have to likewise be considered trust property and excluded from the bankruptcy estate pursuant to § 541(c)(2), including wages, homesteads, automobiles, tools of the trade, etc. Property is not subject to a trust simply because a governmental entity has declared that property exempt from execution to satisfy a judgment.16
The Court did find that the Tribe had expressly created a trust for per capita payments to “incompetents and minors,” but that no other trust was created by the per capita distributions which, per tribal code and ordinance, were to be made to all members, regardless of need or individual circumstances.17
In a decision issued the same day as In re McDonald, in the case of In re Hutchinson,18 the Court also addressed whether the per capita payments were exempt as “a local public assistance benefit” under § 522(d)(10)(A).19 The Court adopted the following definition of “public assistance benefit:” “government aid to needy, blind, aged, or disabled persons and to dependent children.”20 Because the Tribe’s per capita payments were not based on need, but were distributed simply on a per capita basis (specifically, “in equal amounts to all enrolled tribal members regardless of need”), the Court concluded they were not an exempt public assistance benefit.21
The In re Hutchinson case then addressed the § 1325(a)(4) best interest of the creditors test. First, the Court clarified that the best interest of the creditors test of § 1325(a)(4) is a separate and distinct test from the “best effort” requirement of § 1325(b)(1). As such, the fact that the debtors were proposing to commit all of their disposable income to plan payments during the life of their chapter 13 plan had no bearing on the § 1325(a)(4) analysis.22 Second, the Court rejected the argument that the per capita payments could not be valued because of their uneer-[330]*330tain nature. The Court concluded that the fact that “the present value of the per capita distributions might be difficult to ascertain does not mean that those distributions have no value.”23 Because the per capita payments were capable of being valued, the payments “must be provided for in [the debtors’] Chapter 13 plan in the form of payments to the unsecured creditors to satisfy the ‘best interest of the creditors test.’ ”24
Four years later, in In re Howley,25 another judge from this District, Judge Somers, addressed the same Prairie Band Tribe per capita payments. In In re How-ley, the debtors again attempted to exempt their Tribe per capita payments under the tribal code, which was worded the same as it had been at the time both In re McDonald and In re Hutchinson were decided.26 The Court, relying on In re McDonald, held that because the debtors were domiciled in Kansas, they could only use Kansas’ state law exemptions and were not entitled to use the exemptions of the tribal code.27 Judge Somers also addressed the additional argument that the Tribe’s exemption was a “local law” within the meaning of § 522(b)(3)(A)’s provision of an exemption for property exempt under “State or local law.”28 Judge Somers concluded that, even if the Tribe’s exemption could be considered a local law, the Tribe’s exemption could not apply because § 522(b)(3)(A) “expressly requires use of state or local law applicable at the place in which the debtor’s domicile has been located for a specific period.”29 Because the debtors in In re Howley did not live on the Tribe’s reservation, the Tribe’s exemption did not apply because it had no extraterritorial effect.30
B. The Current Relevant Tribal Authority
The Indian Gaming Regulatory Act of 1988 generally governs the practice of casino gambling on tribal lands.31 Pursuant to this Act, the Tribe has adopted a' Per Capita Ordinance. Some version of that Ordinance was approved by the Secretary of the Interior on August 25, 2008.32 The [331]*331Per Capita Ordinance directs that “every eligible Potawatomi tribal member” receive an “equal share” of the Tribe’s net gaming revenues.33 The Per Capita Ordinance also states: “Every living person who is an enrolled member of the Prairie Band of Potawatomi Indians on the eligibility determination date is eligible to receive a Per Capita Payment.”34 The distribution is solely “based on the latest membership list as of the eligibility determination date.”35 The per capita payments are to be disbursed within certain time periods, and are to be made by “tribal check ... payable to the eligible tribal member.”36 Each per capita payment must be accompanied by a notice that federal law requires that the per capita payments be subject to federal taxation and that the Tribe will withhold federal income tax from each per capita payment.37 Both minors and legally incompetent tribal members are the only individuals whose payments are treated differently.38
The Tribe has also enacted a “Law and Order Code” (the “Tribal Code”), with section 4-14-1 of the Tribe’s Civil Procedure Code dealing specifically with “claims against per capita.”39 Several terms are specifically defined within this section of the Tribal Code. The term “per capita” means “the payment provided to all enrolled members of the Prairie Band ... which are paid directly from the Prairie Band ... Net Gaming Revenues pursuant to-the ... Per Capita Ordinance.”40
This section of the Tribal Code also defines the term per capita share as “a Tribal member’s equal share of a Per Cap-ita payment prior to a reduction for any withholding, garnishment, or levy permitted by this Section, but after withholding at the source required by federal income tax law.”41 The term per capita payment is then defined as “a personal benefit to a Tribal member,” and “a periodic payment not a property right.”42 The same section also states that a per capita share “is property of the [Tribe] until such time as a distribution is duly made.”43 The Tribal Code then states that a “distribution of a Per Capita payment occurs when the Per Capita payments are placed in the U.S. Mail or otherwise transferred to a Tribal member.”44
Two additional sections of the Tribal Code are pertinent. In a section titled “Permitted Claims against a Per Capita Share,” the Tribal Code states: “A Per Capita Share shall not be subject to anticipation, alienation, sale, transfer, assignment, pledge, encumbrance, charge, seizure, attachment or other legal or equitable process.”45 Three exceptions to this general rule are then listed: for debts owed by tribal members to the Tribe, for garnishments for child support, and for federal income tax levies.46 And [332]*332finally, in a section titled “Prohibited Claims,” the Tribal Code states again: “a Per Capita Share shall not be subject to anticipation, alienation, sale, transfer, assignment[,] pledge, encumbrance or charge, seizure, attachment or other legal or equitable process; and any proceeding for those purposes shall not be recognized nor enforceable.”47 The same exceptions for debts owed to the Tribe, child support, and federal tax levies apply to this section as well.
The major changes to the Tribal Code and Per Capita Ordinance are three-fold. First, the Tribal Code distinguishes between per capita shares and per capita payments, and includes an anti-alienation provision for per capita shares. Second is the addition of the language stating that a per capita payment “is a personal benefit” and “a periodic payment not a property right,” while a per capita share “is property of the [Tribe] until such time as a distribution is duly made.” Finally, the Per Capita Ordinance no longer has a section on exemption, but instead the language of the Tribal Code includes the anti-alienation language previously noted.48
C. Analysis of the Arguments of the Parties
1. Property of the Estate
The Bankruptcy Code defines property of the estate in § 541. Under § 541(a), property of the estate includes “all legal or equitable interests of the debt- or in property as of the commencement of the case,” except for property that is excluded from the estate by § 541(b) and § 541(c)(2).49 While no party has argued that § 541(b) has any applicability to this case, both the McDonalds and the Scotts rely on § 541(c)(2) — which excludes from the bankruptcy estate “a debtor’s beneficial interest in a spendthrift trust”50 — to support their argument that the per capita payments are not property of their respective bankruptcy estates.
To determine whether a debtor’s interest in a trust is excluded from the bankruptcy estate, the Court must “analyze the nature of that interest, under applicable state law.”51 Under Kansas law, a “spendthrift trust is a trust created to provide a fund for the maintenance of a beneficiary and at the same time to secure [333]*333the fund against his improvidence or incapacity. Provisions against alienation of the trust fund by the voluntary act of the beneficiary or by his creditors are its usual incidents.”52
To exclude property from the bankruptcy estate under § 541(c)(2), Debtors must satisfy three criteria. “First, they must show that they have a beneficial interest in a trust. Second, they must show that there is a restriction on the transfer of that interest. Third, they must show that the restriction is enforceable under nonbankruptcy law.”53 Debtors bear the burden of proof regarding whether property can be excluded from the bankruptcy estate.54
As discussed above, this Court in In re McDonald previously considered the issue of whether Prairie Band per capita payments could be excluded from property of the estate by § 541(c)(2) as trust funds protected by a spendthrift provision. Because there were no restrictions made on the per.capita payments actually made to competent adult members of the Tribe, and because the property’s Tribal exempt status did not transform it into a trust, however, there was no spendthrift trust found.55 The In re McDonald opinion also noted that the Tribe obviously knew how to create a trust via per capita payments, because trust provisions were included for both minors and incompetent persons.56
The same remains true today, regardless of the changed state of the Prairie Band’s Per Capita Ordinance and Tribal Code. The current Prairie Band Per Cap-ita Ordinance directs that “every eligible Potawatomi tribal member” receive an “equal share” of the Tribe’s net gaming revenues.57 The distribution is not based on need, disability, or any other qualifier, but is instead solely “based on the latest membership list as of the eligibility determination date.”58 The Tribal Code elects to only treat per capita payments for minors and legally incompetent tribal members differently.59
The Tribal Code dictates that the “per capita” is “the payment provided to all enrolled members of the Prairie Band ... which are paid directly from the Prairie Band” from the Tribe’s net gaming reve-[334]*334núes.60 So again, no restrictions or discretion is present to transform the per capita into a trust. There is simply no trust created by the Per Capita Ordinance or Tribal Code; i.e., there is no “beneficial interest in a trust,”61 which is a required element to find a spendthrift trust.
Debtors argue that other changes in the Per Capita Ordinance and Tribal Code change this conclusion. The current Tribal Code — in the changes spawning this litigation — distinguishes between a per capita share, which is the Tribal member’s share of the per capita prior to distribution,62 and a per capita payment, which is the per capita distribution made when the Tribe mails the per capita payment to each Tribal member.63 The cited language is merely an anti-alienation provision against the per capita share held by the Tribe before it is disbursed as a per capita payment. Although the Tribe places restrictions on claims against the per capita share,64 it is the per capita payment ultimately distributed to these Debtors that is at issue.
Again, none of this word smithing does anything to satisfy the criteria for excluding the per capita as a spendthrift trust under § 541(c)(2).65 The Tribal Code simply fails to create a trust for payments made to anyone except minors and incompetent adults, which is the basic requirement for § 541(c)(2) to apply to Debtors’ per capita payments here.
The post -In re McDonald changes to the Tribal Code simply do not alter this Court’s analysis. They do not affect the right of any eligible member to receive a per capita payment. Neither the Per Cap-ita Ordinance, nor the Tribal Code, restrict or prohibit the distribution of a per capita payment to a competent, adult Tribal member. No trust is created by the per capita distributions that, per Tribal Code and Ordinance, are to be made to all mem[335]*335bers, regardless of need or individual circumstances. And the anti-alienation provision of the per capita share has no impact on this analysis: as stated in McDonald, “[property is not subject to a trust simply because a governmental entity has declared that property exempt from execution to satisfy a judgment.”66
The individual Debtors make a couple of additional arguments. The Scott Debtors refer to per capita funds held in trust by the Secretary of the Interior under 25 U.S.C. § 117a, which governs “[fjunds held in trust by the Secretary of the Interior ... for an Indian tribe,” and argue that “by analogy, the per capita from Indian gaming, under the Tribe’s current per cap-ita ordinance and its code of procedure on ‘per capita payments, create a trust similar to that described in 25 U.S.C. § 117a.”67 But of course, this is not the reality. The reality is that the Prairie Band has not elected to create a trust with respect to per capita payments. The Per Capita Ordinance directs that “every eligible Pota-watomi tribal member” receive an “equal share” of the Tribe’s net gaming revenues,68 and these payments are made regardless of need.
The McDonald Debtors then argue that their current financial situation dictates a different result from their prior case because now Debtor Bonnie McDonald receives Social Security disability income. Debtors argue that because she is disabled, her per capita payment should be viewed as a public assistance benefit, and the Court should thus infer the creation of a spendthrift trust as to her. But as discussed at length, the per capita payments simply do not work that way. Just because Bonnie McDonald happens to be disabled, does not mean that the Prairie Band Tribe has in the past- or is presently treating her any differently than any other legally competent adult. There is simply no evidence in the record that Bonnie McDonald has been adjudged incompetent by a court of competent jurisdiction, or that she has a legal guardian appointed to receive her per capita payments, or that her payments are received from an independent trustee after meeting the stringent provisions in Section 4 of Article V of the Per Capita Ordinance. Her disability for Social Security purposes is simply irrelevant to the provisions of the Tribal Code and Per Capita Ordinance.
And finally, Debtors point to other courts outside of Kansas addressing tribal per capita payments that have concluded [336]*336that per capita payments are not property of the estate. For example, in Dietz v. Barth (In re Barth),69 the bankruptcy court concluded that tribal per capita payments were not property of the bankruptcy estate where the tribal ordinance at issue stated that the per capita payments were not a property right but a personal benefit, did not vest until actually paid out, and were not subject to alienation.70 The bankruptcy court concluded that the tribe had “the authority to limit the definition of property right with rpspect to tribal property to exclude the per capita payments of tribal funds paid by the tribe to qualified members,” and that there was “no credible reason” why the tribe could not define property rights with respect to property within its jurisdiction and exclude them from property of the estate.71
But In re Barth did not address any of the above case law or assess the Bankruptcy Code in any way. Instead, its rationale centered around the existence of prior harms by the United States to Native Americans.72 And while those harms cannot be denied, Congress has not seen fit to directly address those harms within its liberal treatment of what constitutes “property” under the Bankruptcy Code.
As a result, this Court concludes that the Bankruptcy Code defines “property of the estate” via § 541(a), and the scope of that definition is broad and equally applicable to the per capita payments these Debtors receive.73 The controlling law in the Tenth Circuit requires this Court to determine the existence and scope of Debtors’ interest in property by reference to the underlying property law, and contingent interests fall within the bankruptcy estate.74 Nothing in the changes to the Prairie Band’s legal definitions concerning per capita alter this result.
[337]*3372. Best Interest of the Creditors Test of § 1325(a)(4)
Regarding the best interest of the creditors test under § 1325(a)(4), this Court in In re Hutchinson stated:
The test, articulated under § 1325(a)(4), requires that the Chapter 13.plan provide distributions to each allowed unsecured creditor that are not less than what the unsecured creditor would have received if the debtor’s estate were liquidated under a Chapter 7 proceeding. This provision essentially allows Chapter 13 debtors to “buy-out” non-exempt, prepetition assets by paying their value to unsecured creditors with increased payments (or payments over a longer term) to the Trustee over the life of the plan.
[I]n order to comply with this test, Debtors’ plan must propose to pay their unsecured creditors an amount at least equal to what those creditors would have received had the bankruptcy estate been liquidated under a Chapter 7 proceeding. According to the parties’ stipulations, the amended plan “does not propose to pay any money to unsecured creditors.” Therefore, the plan can only be confirmed if Debtors can show that a liquidation of the estate would have resulted in no payments to unsecured creditors.
If the bankruptcy estate were liquidated, the trustee would collect and sell all non-exempt, unencumbered property of the estate of consequential value and divide the proceeds from the sale among the unsecured creditors.75
Debtors have the burden of proving that they have “met all of the requirements of § 1325, including the ‘best interest of the creditors’ test under § 1325(a)(4).”76
Again, Debtors argue that the changes to the Tribal Code and Per Capita Ordinance require a different result than the Court’s prior determination concerning their per capita payments and the best interest of the creditors test. Debtors argue that because of the anti-alienation provision as to the per capita share, and the Tribal Code’s labeling of the per capita payment as “a personal benefit” and “a periodic payment not a property right,” while the per capita share is labeled “property of the [Tribe] until such time as a distribution is duly made,” that their per capita cannot be alienated and would thus have no value in a chapter 7 proceeding that could be realized to pay claims of unsecured creditors.
The Court disagrees with Debtors’ conclusion. The Tribal Code asserts anti-alienation provisions as to the per capita shares while they are held by the Tribe prior to disbursement to the Tribal member. Once the Tribe makes the decision to make a disbursement, however, the per capita payment is automatically distributed to all Tribal members on a per capita basis. As such, these Debtors continue to have an expectation of payment, unchanged by the modifications to the Tribal Code. Once that payment is received, it is transferable by Debtors. The interest is admittedly a contingent interest, but as an interest that is property of the estate, it must be accounted for in the best interest of the creditors test.
This Court has previously rejected the argument that the per capita payments cannot be valued because of their uncertain nature. In In re Hutchinson, this Court concluded that the fact that “the [338]*338present value of the per capita distributions might be difficult to ascertain does not mean that those distributions have no value.”77 Because the per capita payments are capable of being valued, the payments “must be provided for in [the debtors’] Chapter 13 plan in the form of payments to the unsecured creditors to satisfy the ‘best interest of the creditors test.’ ”78
Debtors also again contend they should not have to account for the per capita payments in the best interest of the creditors test of § 1325(a)(4), because they are already accounting for them in their disposable income and satisfying the best efforts test of § 1325(b)(1)(B). As stated previously in In re Hutchinson, however, the best interest of the creditors test of § 1325(a)(4) is a separate and distinct test from the best effort requirement of § 1325(b)(1). Because of this, the fact that Debtors are proposing to • commit all of their disposable income to plan payments during the life of their chapter 13 plan has no bearing on the § 1325(a)(4) analysis.79 If the result of subtracting their living expenses from their income demonstrates an inability to repay the value of this contingent interest, that unfortunately means that their plan is not feasible, not that they do not have to account for that interest in the first instance.
And finally, Debtors point to a line of cases that conclude per capita payments are property of a bankruptcy estate, but that then conclude that in the .chapter 7 setting, the per capita payments are of inconsequential value to the estate for purposes of analyzing turnover to the chapter 7 trustee. In In re Meier,80 the bankruptcy court first presumed — without deciding — that tribal per capita payments were property of the estate.81 The In re Meier decision then held that the per capita payments were nevertheless not subject to turnover because § 542(a) sanctions non-turnover, even of estate property, if “such property is of inconsequential value or benefit to the estate.”82 The Meier court followed a Ninth Circuit BAP case holding that an interest in a future distribution “ ‘is only of value to the estate if it can be assigned, sold or reached for the enforcement of judgments,’ ”83 and concluded that the per capita payments the debtor expected to receive were nontransferable based on “the tribe’s clear intent to preclude sale [339]*339or transfer of the right to receive payments to anyone outside of the tribe.”84 Because of this finding, the In re Meier court concluded the per capita payments were of negligible value to the estate.85 In addition, that court concluded that because the per capita payments would be hard to market due to the variability of the payments and the fact that the payments would cease immediately upon the death of a member, and the fact that the bankruptcy case would have to be held open for a lengthy time for the trustee to administer the payments, the chapter 7 trustee’s efforts would actually be a burden to the estate, rather than a benefit.86
This line of cases, however, again does not help the Debtors here. These cases do not change this Court’s analysis that the per capita payments are in fact property of the estate. And as property of the estate, they must be accounted for in the best interest of the creditors analysis. Obviously, the parties in interest will need to negotiate the correct value of these admittedly contingent interests, and litigate that value if no agreement can be reached. But no party has yet raised the valuation issue with any specificity, and there is nothing in the record that would allow this Court to find that these property interests have no value. That is an issue for another day if the parties are unable to agree on the value.
3. Exemption Arguments
Finally, the McDonalds argue that if the per capita payments are property of the estate, then under § 522(b)(3)(A) they are exempt as a “local law ... that is applicable ... to the place in which the debtor’s domicile has been located for the 730 days immediately preceding the date of filing of the petition ...”87 Counsel’s convoluted argument in this respect appears to be that because the Tribal Code extends its jurisdiction to “all Tribal Members, wherever located,”88 the Tribe therefore “retains authority and jurisdiction over per capita payments and to its recipients living off the reservation.”89 As a result, counsel argues that the Bankruptcy Code’s exemption for local laws applicable to the place of a debtor’s domicile somehow requires that the Tribal Code’s anti-alienation provisions for the per capita share exempt the McDonalds’ per capita payments from the bankruptcy estate.90
The McDonald’s exemption argument is unpersuasive. First, as Judge Somers held in In re Howley, even if the Tribal Code could be considered a “local law” under the Bankruptcy Code, the Bankruptcy Code additionally requires the “use of state or local law applicable at the place [340]*340in which the debtor’s domicile has been located for a specific period.”91 Because the Howley debtor was not domiciled on the Tribe’s reservation, the Tribe’s exemption did not apply.92
Second, domicile is a defined term. “Generally, the words and phrases contained in a federal statute are defined by reference to federal law.”93 When the Supreme Court defined the term “domicile” in reference to the Indian Child Welfare Act, it concluded that domicile is “established by physical presence in a place in connection with a certain state of mind concerning one’s intent to remain there.”94 A person can have only one domicile at a time, even if that person has multiple residences.95
The McDonalds specifically stipulated that they lived in Topeka on the date they filed their bankruptcy petition, and that they have lived in Topeka at the same address for the 730 days prior to filing their petition. In other words, Debtors stipulated that they were not at filing, and had not been for the last 730 days, living on Tribal land. If that were not already crystal clear, Debtors additionally stipulated that their Topeka residence is not located on the Tribe’s reservation. As a result, the McDonalds are not domiciled on Prairie Band land but instead in Topeka, Kansas. The state or local law applicable at the place of Debtor’s domicile is the law of Kansas.96
The McDonalds additionally argue that because Bonnie has a joint tenancy interest in approximately 86 acres of Tribal trust agricultural land managed by the Secretary of the Interior (pursuant to 25 U.S.C. § 3701-3715) — land upon which she does not reside — that she should nevertheless be treated as being domiciled on the Prairie Band land or that the Tribe somehow has jurisdiction over the funds in her hands. As stated above, however, owning land, in trust or otherwise, does not equate to a domicile. None of the stipulated facts even suggest that the McDonalds live or have ever lived on Prairie Band land; the only facts before this Court are that they lived in Topeka at filing and have lived at the same address therein for the 730 days prior to filing. In addition, the Tribal Code itself states that once a per capita payment is made to a Tribal member, it is a personal benefit to that member and is no longer property of the Tribe. Accordingly, the fact that Debtor Bonnie McDonald holds an unrelated joint tenancy interest in Prairie Band land held in trust is simply irrelevant to the analysis under § 522(b)(3)(A).
And finally, although again not clear, the McDonalds may be arguing that because Debtor Bonnie McDonald receives Social Security disability payments, her per capita payments are somehow transformed into, and exempt as, “a local public [341]*341assistance benefit” under § 522(d)(10)(A). Citing In re Hutchinson,97 which defined “public assistance benefit” as “government aid to needy, blind, aged, or disabled persons and to dependent children,”98 the McDonald Debtors argue that “[n]one can deny that Bonnie McDonald is disabled and that what she receives constitutes a de facto public assistance benefit from her tribe.”99 But again, as stated repeatedly herein and as this Court noted in In re Hutchinson, because the Tribe’s per capita payments are not based on need, but are distributed simply on a per capita basis, they are not an exempt public assistance benefit.100 Although Debtor Bonnie McDonald receives Social Security disability income, her per capita payments are distributed to her by the Tribe without regard to any disability.
III. Conclusion
The Trustee’s objections to confirmation and objections to exemption are sustained, for the reasons stated more fully above. Debtors shall file amended plans that comply with this opinion within 21 days. If Debtors choose not to amend their plans within this time frame, the Trustee should submit orders granting his motions to dismiss each case.
It is so ordered.