DECISION AND ORDER
MICHAEL J. KAPLAN, Chief Judge.
This Motion appears to present an issue of first impression: whether a debtor’s interest in a foreign retirement savings plan (valued at over $80,000) and a foreign pension plan (valued at over $100,000) are exempt under New York Debtor and Creditor Law § 282(iii)(2)(d)
or 11 U.S.C. § 541(c)(2), respectively.
After due deliberation, the
Debtor’s claim of exemption as to the pension plan is granted, and as to the retirement savings plan is hereby denied.
FACTS
The facts in this case, are largely uncontested. Gary Ondrey (hereinafter the “Debt- or”) is a United States citizen who has been a New York resident since 1993. The Debtor has been continuously employed by Air Canada since 1974. When he was employed by Air Canada, the Debtor enrolled in two retirement programs provided by his employer: the Air Canada Pension Plan (the “Pension Plan”) and the Pilots Retirement Equity Plan (the “Equity Plan”).
The Pension Plan was established by Air Canada prior to the Debtor’s employment, and participation in the Plan by Air Canada employees appears to be mandatory. The Pension Plan is funded through a trust which consists of mandatory contributions by both employer and employee. The" Debtor made mandatory contributions as required by the terms of his employment, but claims that he made no voluntary contributions to the Pension Plan. The Pension Plan contributions are currently being held in trust by R-M Trust Company pursuant to an agreement between R-M and Air Canada. The terms of the Pension Plan include an antialienation provision. [Exhibit A of Affidavit in Support of Motion to Reconsider Order.]
The Equity Plan, also established by Air Canada prior to the Debtor’s employment, was funded through a trust which consisted (the past tense is important) of contributions from the employer and voluntary contributions by employees. Pursuant to the terms of the Equity Fund Agreement between Air Canada and its employees, Air Canada contributed an amount equal to 5% of the employee’s earnings to the Equity Fund on the employee’s behalf. Air Canada contributed such amounts to the Equity Fund on this Debtor’s behalf between February, 1974 and December, 1984, when Air Canada terminated the Equity Plan. The Debtor apparently never made any personal contributions to the Equity Plan.
It is unclear how the funds in the Equity Plan were held after notice of the termination of the Equity Plan until 1996. In July, 1996, the Debtor established a Registered Retirement Savings Fund administered by the O’Donnell Group of Funds (the RRSP), and transferred his interest in the funds that had once been in the Equity Plan, to the new account. Since transferring the funds to the RRSP, the Debtor has not made any contribution to the RRSP. The Debtor asserts (and there is no indication to the contrary) that he has not withdrawn any money from this account. The Debtor further asserts that his interest in the RRSP “may be” subject to certain prohibitions against alienation and assignment enforceable under Canada’s Benefit Standards Act. It appears to the Court from the Debtor’s testimony at deposition that he could have done whatever he wished with the funds in July of 1996, but tax penalties, foreign exchange rates, and other financial considerations might have placed substantial premiums on some decisions rather than others.
DISCUSSION
When New York “opted out” of the federal exemption statute (see 11 U.S.C.
§ 522(b)(1)), it enacted N.Y. Debt, and Cred. Law § 281
et seq.
In particular, N.Y. D & C § 282 specifies and limits the exemptions which a debtor may claim under the Bankruptcy Code, and it incorporates also another provision of New York Law — Rule 5205 of the N.Y. Civil Practice Law and Rules. See
Dubroff v. First National Bank of Glens Falls (In re Dubroff),
119 F.3d 75, 76 (2d Cir.1997). A debtor may claim the exemptions contained within N.Y. D & C § 282 and the burden rests on any objecting party to prove that the exemption was incorrectly claimed. See Rule 4003 F.B.R.P.
A. The Pension Plan
The objection to the Debtor’s claim of exemption as to the Pension Plan is overruled. The Court is satisfied that the Plan is a “pension plan” exempted by N.Y. D & C § 282(2)(e). The fact that the Debtor made mandatory contributions is irrelevant here where the Plan was established by Air Canada. See,
e.g., In re Enfield,
133 B.R. 515, 522 (Bankr.W.D.Mo.1991) (holding that Debt- or’s mandatory contributions to retirement systems were exempt under federal law).
B. The Registered Retirement Savings Plan
(i).
The argument under N.Y. D & C § 282(2)(e) is rejected.
The Debtor has claimed that his interest in the RRSP is exempt under N.Y. D & C § 282 because it is analogous to an IRA.
The Debtor argues that the RRSP is as “similar” to a pension fund or retirement plan as IRAs were found to be in
Dubroff.
See 119 F.3d 75.
In
Dubroff
the Chapter 7 debtor claimed that his interest in an IRA was exempt under N.Y. D & C § 282(2)(e). See
id.
at 76. A creditor and the trustee objected to the debt- or’s claimed exemption. The court found it “plain” that N.Y. D & C § 282(2)(e) generally exempts retirement plans which will make payments on account of age so long as they do not fall within the restrictions contained within subsections (i),(ii), and (iii) of that section.
See
id.
at 77. After carefully analyzing the language of N.Y. D & C § 282(2)(e), the court allowed the debtor’s claimed exemption. See
id.
at 80.
The rationale of
Dubroff is
this: an IRA is “similar” to a pension plan because, and only because, IRAs are governed by § 408 of the I.R.C. Section 408 of the I.R.C. was specifically mentioned in one of the restrictions to allow a debtor to exempt an account which fits within the requirements of § 408. The statute made sense according to the court, only if one began with the premise that an IRA is “similar” to a pension for purposes of the statute. Otherwise, there was no need to refer to the IRAs governing statute (26 U.S.C. § 408), in the restrictions.
But the retirement plan which the Debtor here has claimed as exempt is (1) not an IRA, and (2) not expressly addressed in either New York exemption law or in the Internal Revenue Code. Thus, the
Dubroff
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DECISION AND ORDER
MICHAEL J. KAPLAN, Chief Judge.
This Motion appears to present an issue of first impression: whether a debtor’s interest in a foreign retirement savings plan (valued at over $80,000) and a foreign pension plan (valued at over $100,000) are exempt under New York Debtor and Creditor Law § 282(iii)(2)(d)
or 11 U.S.C. § 541(c)(2), respectively.
After due deliberation, the
Debtor’s claim of exemption as to the pension plan is granted, and as to the retirement savings plan is hereby denied.
FACTS
The facts in this case, are largely uncontested. Gary Ondrey (hereinafter the “Debt- or”) is a United States citizen who has been a New York resident since 1993. The Debtor has been continuously employed by Air Canada since 1974. When he was employed by Air Canada, the Debtor enrolled in two retirement programs provided by his employer: the Air Canada Pension Plan (the “Pension Plan”) and the Pilots Retirement Equity Plan (the “Equity Plan”).
The Pension Plan was established by Air Canada prior to the Debtor’s employment, and participation in the Plan by Air Canada employees appears to be mandatory. The Pension Plan is funded through a trust which consists of mandatory contributions by both employer and employee. The" Debtor made mandatory contributions as required by the terms of his employment, but claims that he made no voluntary contributions to the Pension Plan. The Pension Plan contributions are currently being held in trust by R-M Trust Company pursuant to an agreement between R-M and Air Canada. The terms of the Pension Plan include an antialienation provision. [Exhibit A of Affidavit in Support of Motion to Reconsider Order.]
The Equity Plan, also established by Air Canada prior to the Debtor’s employment, was funded through a trust which consisted (the past tense is important) of contributions from the employer and voluntary contributions by employees. Pursuant to the terms of the Equity Fund Agreement between Air Canada and its employees, Air Canada contributed an amount equal to 5% of the employee’s earnings to the Equity Fund on the employee’s behalf. Air Canada contributed such amounts to the Equity Fund on this Debtor’s behalf between February, 1974 and December, 1984, when Air Canada terminated the Equity Plan. The Debtor apparently never made any personal contributions to the Equity Plan.
It is unclear how the funds in the Equity Plan were held after notice of the termination of the Equity Plan until 1996. In July, 1996, the Debtor established a Registered Retirement Savings Fund administered by the O’Donnell Group of Funds (the RRSP), and transferred his interest in the funds that had once been in the Equity Plan, to the new account. Since transferring the funds to the RRSP, the Debtor has not made any contribution to the RRSP. The Debtor asserts (and there is no indication to the contrary) that he has not withdrawn any money from this account. The Debtor further asserts that his interest in the RRSP “may be” subject to certain prohibitions against alienation and assignment enforceable under Canada’s Benefit Standards Act. It appears to the Court from the Debtor’s testimony at deposition that he could have done whatever he wished with the funds in July of 1996, but tax penalties, foreign exchange rates, and other financial considerations might have placed substantial premiums on some decisions rather than others.
DISCUSSION
When New York “opted out” of the federal exemption statute (see 11 U.S.C.
§ 522(b)(1)), it enacted N.Y. Debt, and Cred. Law § 281
et seq.
In particular, N.Y. D & C § 282 specifies and limits the exemptions which a debtor may claim under the Bankruptcy Code, and it incorporates also another provision of New York Law — Rule 5205 of the N.Y. Civil Practice Law and Rules. See
Dubroff v. First National Bank of Glens Falls (In re Dubroff),
119 F.3d 75, 76 (2d Cir.1997). A debtor may claim the exemptions contained within N.Y. D & C § 282 and the burden rests on any objecting party to prove that the exemption was incorrectly claimed. See Rule 4003 F.B.R.P.
A. The Pension Plan
The objection to the Debtor’s claim of exemption as to the Pension Plan is overruled. The Court is satisfied that the Plan is a “pension plan” exempted by N.Y. D & C § 282(2)(e). The fact that the Debtor made mandatory contributions is irrelevant here where the Plan was established by Air Canada. See,
e.g., In re Enfield,
133 B.R. 515, 522 (Bankr.W.D.Mo.1991) (holding that Debt- or’s mandatory contributions to retirement systems were exempt under federal law).
B. The Registered Retirement Savings Plan
(i).
The argument under N.Y. D & C § 282(2)(e) is rejected.
The Debtor has claimed that his interest in the RRSP is exempt under N.Y. D & C § 282 because it is analogous to an IRA.
The Debtor argues that the RRSP is as “similar” to a pension fund or retirement plan as IRAs were found to be in
Dubroff.
See 119 F.3d 75.
In
Dubroff
the Chapter 7 debtor claimed that his interest in an IRA was exempt under N.Y. D & C § 282(2)(e). See
id.
at 76. A creditor and the trustee objected to the debt- or’s claimed exemption. The court found it “plain” that N.Y. D & C § 282(2)(e) generally exempts retirement plans which will make payments on account of age so long as they do not fall within the restrictions contained within subsections (i),(ii), and (iii) of that section.
See
id.
at 77. After carefully analyzing the language of N.Y. D & C § 282(2)(e), the court allowed the debtor’s claimed exemption. See
id.
at 80.
The rationale of
Dubroff is
this: an IRA is “similar” to a pension plan because, and only because, IRAs are governed by § 408 of the I.R.C. Section 408 of the I.R.C. was specifically mentioned in one of the restrictions to allow a debtor to exempt an account which fits within the requirements of § 408. The statute made sense according to the court, only if one began with the premise that an IRA is “similar” to a pension for purposes of the statute. Otherwise, there was no need to refer to the IRAs governing statute (26 U.S.C. § 408), in the restrictions.
But the retirement plan which the Debtor here has claimed as exempt is (1) not an IRA, and (2) not expressly addressed in either New York exemption law or in the Internal Revenue Code. Thus, the
Dubroff
reasoning does not apply.
The RRSP is, however, addressed in a treaty. The “Convention Between the United States of America and Canada with Respect to Taxes on Income and Capital” (hereinafter the “Can-U.S. Treaty”), at Article
XVIII, subsection seven, as amended, provides:
A natural person who is a citizen or resident of a Contracting State and a beneficiary of a trust, company, organization or other arrangement that is a resident of the other Contracting State, generally exempt from income taxation in that other State and operated exclusively to provide pension retirement or employee benefits may elect to defer taxation in the first-mentioned State, under rules established by the competent authority of that State with respect to any income approved in the Plan but not distributed by the Plan, until such time as and to the extent that a distribution is made from the Plan or any plan substituted therefor.
While this section of the Can-U.S. Treaty is important for its tax deferral provisions, it does not analogize an RRSP to an IRA or an ERISA qualified retirement plan for any other purpose. Indeed, this Court finds that the Can-U.S. Treaty grants reciprocity between the respective nations for tax purposes only. The Treaty does not grant recognition of any other kind of status (e.g., leviability, alienability, or exemptability). In fact, Article II of the Can-U.S. Treaty (signed 1980, as amended 1997) purported to define the treaty’s scope by reciting that “this Convention applies to taxes on income and capital.” The Can-U.S. Treaty itself does not seem to be of any assistance as to the present issue, one way or the other.
Nor do the administrative pronouncements by the I.R.S. cited by the Debtor avail either side. I.R.S. Rule 96-31 merely clarifies that RRSPs are examples of plans which are qualified for tax deferral status under the terms of the Can-U.S. Treaty.
It does not equate an RRSP with an IRA. And possibly more to the point, it was earlier announced in IRS Revenue Ruling 89-95 that “... an RRSP is not a ‘qualified’ plan for U.S. tax purposes.”
In asking this Court to analogize his RRSP to an IRA for exemption purposes, Debtor would have this Court treat compliance with the I.R.C. as irrelevant. Compliance with the I.R.C. is often complex and difficult. And the Court of Appeals in
Dubroff
instructed that “it is not the court’s task to compare and contrast the characteristics of various plans when [§ 282] explicitly endorses the tax provisions governing IRAs. [26 U.S.C. § 408]” 119 F.3d at 80. Of course, in
Dubroff
the court was refusing to look behind the fact that the state legislature had granted an exemption for what “qualifies” as an IRA under the I.R.C. Here, this Court accepts the
Dubroff
teaching as a command that this Court not substitute itself for the legislature in determining, after making detailed comparisons, whether a foreign plan too should be exempt. In
Dubroff
the court found that Congress and the State had treated IRAs like a pension. Here, the most that can be said of the RRSP is that Congress ratified a treaty that defers taxes on income and capital.
In other words, this Court must not treat an RRSP as an IRA. This Court has said on a number of occasions that a party will not be found to have successfully attained a status, as against creditors, which he or she, without compelling reason, did not even seek.
This Court ought not give him
the same status that he would have if he (or his employer, or his depository institution) had done whatever was necessary to assure that his retirement funds were held in a plan that qualified for exemption under N.Y. D & C § 282. Otherwise, the Court must become an expert by comparing and contrasting all of the attributes of RRSPs and IRAs, would ignore the plain text of the exemption statute, would impinge upon the statutory authority of the Internal Revenue Service, the Congress, the State of New York, et al. to make such decisions, and would demean the efforts that countless other employers, employees, and financial institutions undertake every day to assure that their devices are “similar” to pension funds (as defined in
Du-broff).
The Debtor put forth several other arguments as to the RRSP. After giving consideration to all of these arguments, each in turn is rejected. First, the Debtor argues that the RRSP should be exempt because of this Court’s duty to construe exemptions liberally. This is rejected because even the most liberal construction does not extend to creating an exemption out of whole cloth and against the weight of authority.
See
In re Howerton,
21 B.R. 621, 623 (Bankr.N.D.Tex.1982). Second, the Debtor cites
Matter of Carmichael
in which the Court of Appeals for the 8th Circuit allowed Debtor’s exemption of a qualified IRA. See 100 F.3d 375 (5th Cir.1996). This too must fail as
Carmichael
adds nothing to the
Dubroff
analysis, and
Dubroff
applies only to IRA’s, not RRSP’s, as explained above. Third, the Debtor as-serfs that the Trustee failed to meet his burden under Rule 4003 FRBP. This is rejected because the Trustee’s burden is met by pointing out that the claimed exemption does not exist. No provision of law exempts these funds or leaves them outside the bankruptcy estate. Finally, the Debtor argues that the RRSP should be exempt because the funds originated in a plan (the Equity Plan) “established,” and later terminated by Air Canada. This writer finds this also to be of no consequence. It appears from his deposition testimony that moving his interests from the Equity Plan into the RRSP rather than a qualified American IRA was the Debtor’s enlightened, business choice.
(ii).
The 11 U.S.C. § 541(c)(2) argument is rejected.
Because 11 U.S.C. § 541(c)(1) nullifies antialienation provisions to the extent that they might be viewed as a limitation on a debtor’s § 541(a)(1) estate, the Debtor may look only to § 542(c)(2) or an exemption statute for salvation. But he has offered no suggestion that his RRSP is any more protected by § 541(c)(2) than an IRA would be. Assuming only for the sake of argument that Canadian law is the “applicable law” for § 541(c)(2) purposes, the Debtor has not cited any restriction on transfer relative to an RRSP. To the contrary, the Trustee has cited
Royal Bank of Canada v. North American Leasing Co.,
a Canadian high court decision, which repeatedly asserts that RRSPs are not exempt from creditor claims. See 1 S.C.R. 325 (1996).
Again, the fact that the RRSP funds originated in a fund established by Air Canada is irrelevant. It is what the Debtor did with the funds when the Equity Plan was terminated that is important, and he eventually chose to put them in an RRSP rather than an American IRA or a duly recognized (under N.Y. or federal exemption law) exempt plan or contract.
CONCLUSION
The RRSP is not exempt and the Debtor is directed to take all steps necessary to turn the funds in it over to the Trustee forthwith.
The pension is exempt except to the extent that it might exceed the reasonable needs of the Debtor or his dependents, as contemplated by N.Y. D & C § 282(2)(e). The Trustee’s arguments in that regard lack specificity; moreover, it is not clear whether the Trustee will still object in that regard, now that only the pension fund has been allowed as exempt.
Counsel shall report back in that regard on November 25, 1998 at 10:00 a.m. in Part I, 310 U.S. Courthouse, 68 Court Street, Buffalo, New York.
SO ORDERED.