In Re Montanaro

398 B.R. 688, 2008 Bankr. LEXIS 3263, 2008 WL 5191418
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Missouri
DecidedDecember 10, 2008
Docket19-40649
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 398 B.R. 688 (In Re Montanaro) 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 Montanaro, 398 B.R. 688, 2008 Bankr. LEXIS 3263, 2008 WL 5191418 (Mo. 2008).

Opinion

ORDER SUSTAINING, IN PART, AND OVERRULING, IN PART, TRUSTEE’S OBJECTION TO DEBTORS’ AMENDED CLAIM OF EXEMPTIONS

ARTHUR B. FEDERMAN, Bankruptcy Judge.

The Chapter 7 Trustee objects to the Debtors’ claimed exemptions in Roth IRAs which the Debtors purchased within two months prior to filing their bankruptcy case. This is a core proceeding under 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(B) over which the Court has jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1334(b), 157(a), and 157(b)(1). For the reasons that follow, the Trustee’s Objec *689 tion to Debtors’ Amended Claim of Exemptions will be SUSTAINED, IN PART, AND OVERRULED, IN PART.

The Debtors filed a voluntary Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition on April 21, 2008. As of February 2008, Debtor Carl Montanaro owned several mutual funds. A few weeks before filing the bankruptcy petition, on the advice of his financial planner at LPL Financial Services, he cashed out the mutual funds, totaling approximately $9,000, and invested them into Roth IRAs for himself and his wife, Debtor Annette Mon-tanaro. Initially, he intended to use all of the mutual fund money to fund an IRA for himself, but that would have put him over the annual limit for Roth IRAs. As a result, on March 4, 2008, he invested $5,500 into a Roth IRA for himself 1 and, on March 5, 2008, he invested $3,500 in a Roth IRA for Annette.

The Debtors did not list either of these IRAs on their initial bankruptcy schedules filed on April 21. However, they brought the paperwork relating to the IRAs to their initial § 341 Meeting of Creditors and produced those papers to the Trustee. The Trustee then filed a motion to compel turnover of, inter alia, the IRAs as unscheduled assets pursuant to § 521(a)(4). On July 28, 2008, the Trustee filed a notice of intent to transfer Annette’s equity interest as to her IRA. After the Court approved the equity transfer, the Debtors then paid the Trustee $3,500 for that equity interest. Subsequently, the Debtors filed amended Schedules B and C, listing the two IRAs and claiming them both exempt under § 513.430.1(10)(f) of the Missouri Statutes. The Trustee objects to the claimed exemptions on the ground that the Debtors had committed fraud by using nonexempt assets to purchase exempt IRAs shortly before filing bankruptcy. The Debtors do not seek the return of the equity transfer for Annette’s IRA from the Trustee.

Because the State of Missouri has opted out of the federal exemption scheme, 2 Missouri exemption laws apply. Section 513.430.1(10)(f) of the Missouri Statutes provides, in relevant part, that a debtor is permitted to claim an exemption in such person’s right to receive:

(f) Any money or assets, payable to a participant or beneficiary from, of any interest of any participant or beneficiary in, a retirement plan or profit-sharing plan that is qualified under Section 401(a), 403(a), 403(b), 408, 408A or 409 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, or except as provided in this paragraph....
If proceedings under Title 11 of the United States Code are commenced by or against such person, no amount of funds shall be exempt in such proceedings under any such plan, contract, or trust which is fraudulent as defined in section 456.630, RSMo, and for the period such person participated within three years prior to the commencement of such proceedings. For the purposes of this section, when the fraudulently conveyed funds are recovered and after, such funds shall be deducted and then treated as though the funds had never been contributed to the plan, contract, or trust. 3

In other words, in a bankruptcy case, a Missouri debtor is not entitled to claim an exemption in funds deposited into an otherwise exempt retirement account if the *690 debtor’s deposit of such funds into the account was made within three years prior to the filing of the case and was “fraudulent.”

The Eighth Circuit recently interpreted the term “fraudulent” in the context of exemption planning in In re Addison. 4 In that case, the debtor used nonexempt assets to purchase $4,000 Roth IRAs for himself and his wife in the months before filing bankruptcy and, on the very day he filed his bankruptcy petition, he used nonexempt assets to pay down the principal on his home mortgage by $11,500. He then attempted to claim exemptions in the homestead’s equity and his Roth IRA under Minnesota’s exemption laws. The trustee objected, asserting that Minnesota’s Uniform Fraudulent Transfers Act (UFTA) and Bankruptcy Code § 522(o) prohibited the exemptions as being fraudulent. Specifically, the UFTA prohibits debtors from claiming exemptions in assets if they were obtained by transfers made “with actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud any creditor.” 5 Similarly, § 522(o) provides that the amount of a state homestead exemption is to be reduced to the extent that the value of the exemption is attributable to nonexempt property that the debtor converted into the homestead within ten years of filing for bankruptcy, if the conversion was made “with the intent to hinder, delay, or defraud a creditor.” 6

In deciding that the bankruptcy court clearly erred in finding that Addison had the requisite intent to hinder, delay, or defraud his creditors, the Eighth Circuit made clear that, in order to deny a debtor an exemption in a homestead due to pre-bankruptcy exemption planning, there must generally be “extrinsic evidence” of intent to defraud other than the conversion of non-exempt assets to exempt assets, even if the debtor expressly admits that the purpose of doing so was to place assets beyond the reach of creditors. 7 The Eighth Circuit enunciated four indicia of such extrinsic evidence of fraud, including (1) conduct intentionally designed to materially mislead or deceive creditors about the conversion of assets; (2) use of credit to buy exempt property; (3) converting a “very great amount” of nonexempt property to exempt property; and (4) conveyances by the debtor for less than adequate consideration. 8 And, in Addison, the Eighth Circuit applied this analysis not only to the debtor’s homestead exemption, but also to his Roth IRA. 9

In the case at bar, as mentioned above, the Debtors do not seek the return of the equity transfer as to Annette’s IRA, so her claimed exemption is not at issue. As to Carl’s IRA, he did not use credit to buy it; rather, he took money out of his mutual fund to do so.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
398 B.R. 688, 2008 Bankr. LEXIS 3263, 2008 WL 5191418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-montanaro-mowb-2008.