In Re Quillen

408 B.R. 601, 2009 WL 1851414
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Maryland
DecidedJuly 9, 2009
Docket19-12685
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 408 B.R. 601 (In Re Quillen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Quillen, 408 B.R. 601, 2009 WL 1851414 (Md. 2009).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

ROBERT A. GORDON, Bankruptcy Judge.

I. Preliminary Statement

The questions presented by James P. Quillen’s (Debtor) pro se, eve of conversion attempt to exempt literally all of the property interests he brought with him into his failed Chapter 11 bankruptcy case by way of his Amendment to Schedule C (Amended Exemption Schedule) (Dkt. No. 261) pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 522 are many. 1 Considerable effort is required to sift through the knotty tangle of claims, contentions, charges and countercharges leveled by the parties to get at the heart of the material facts. Then, after the factual wheat is separated from the rhetorical chaff, a significantly greater challenge arises in attempting to discern the correct interpretation of the governing law. In this subject area, the undeniable contradictions between the relevant statutes and rules have left the bankruptcy system with a tangled thicket of conflicting reported decisions.

The thorny, fundamental question presented is whether following conversion *604 from a Chapter 11 case to one under Chapter 7, the deadlines for objecting to exemptions set forth in Rule 4003(b) automatically re-set such that the trustee and creditors are granted two additional thirty day periods to object to amended exemptions previously listed by the Debtor. The Court has concluded that the answer to this question must be ‘no’. Nevertheless, the Court also concludes that while the Debtor’s interpretation of the law on that issue is correct, ultimately the Estate will not suffer due to the settled legal restrictions upon the Debtor’s ability to exempt tenants by the entirety property and, moreover, the self assigned exemption values that limit Debtor’s exemptions to the monetary amounts assigned.

Debtor’s argument on the question of timeliness unfolds as follows:

(a) In any bankruptcy case, there is one, and only one, Section 341(a) meeting of creditors;
(b) As there is only a single meeting of creditors under Section 341(a), the thirty day time periods for the filing of objections to exemptions set forth in Rule 4003(b) are only triggered by two events — once when the initial Section 341(a) meeting is concluded and thereafter when an amendment to the list of exemptions is filed;
(c) In this case, the deadline for objecting to the Debtor’s Amended Exemption Schedule expired thirty days after that list was filed and any objections filed thereafter were untimely; and,
(d)Accordingly, as the objections to at least a portion of his Amended Exemption Schedule were untimely, the subject property re-vested in him by operation of law and is now held by him free and clear of any claims of the Estate.

Because he battles them on the merits, Debtor seems to concede that even under his analysis timely objections were filed with respect to the alleged tenants by the entirety exemptions included in the Amended Exemption Schedule. However, as to all the other property claimed exempt, Debtor relies upon the holding of Bell v. Bell (In re Bell), 225 F.3d 203 (2nd Cir.2000) and contends that the deadline for filing any further objections expired thirty days after the filing of the Amended Exemption Schedule, that those exemptions are therefore conclusively established and the objectors are forever barred from contesting his non-tenants by the entirety exemptions. 2 By the Debtor’s reckoning, what this means is that all of that property, no matter how much of its value he claimed to exempt, is now his free and clear of any adverse claims.

The Court disagrees with the construction of the relevant law expressed in Bell pursuant to which the Second Circuit concluded that a Section 341(a) meeting of creditors only occurs once in a given bankruptcy case. To the contrary, a second, fully robust, meeting of creditors in a converted case is a statutory imperative. Nevertheless, while the Court disagrees with the Bell Court on that point, it must also be acknowledged as to the narrower question of timeliness that the better rea- *605 sonecl analysis of the relevant law leads to the conclusion that the Chapter 7 Trustee’s second objection to the Debtor’s Amended Exemption Schedule came too late. This is so because even in light of the Debtor’s obvious attempt at manipulating the Code and Rules to his advantage, and the apparent injustice created from a holistic policy standpoint, it is undeniable that at least a portion of the property sought to be declared exempt did re-vest in him by operation of law after he filed the Amended Exemption Schedule as no objection to the specific exemptions in question was filed in a timely fashion. 3 In the absence of any countervailing substantive law that would operate to bring the property back into the Estate, this Court is hard pressed to see how the Debtor can be divested of the same by an objection lodged well over thirty days after the Amended Schedule of Exemptions was filed. Therefore, the balance of the Debt- or’s arguments must also be dealt with. These are:

1. That as a matter of law, property owned by Debtor and his wife as tenants by the entireties is fully ex-emptible and therefore free from any claims of the Estate;
2. That to the extent the objecting parties seek, by way of allegations of fraud and the like, to deprive his wife of any presumed property rights she may have in claimed en-tireties property, an adversary proceeding, joining her as a defendant, must be filed;
3. That he may utilize the exemptions available in the state of Florida, instead of those provided in Maryland, as a result of his relocation to that state;
4. That notwithstanding his valuation of either the exemption or the subject property by a set figure (including one market valuation of ‘zero’), his exemptions are neither capped nor limited by any dollar value ceiling and he is entitled to exempt the full property interest, whatever that value might be once allowed. 4

The Court agrees that to the extent the objectors endeavor to attack the integrity and legitimacy of the asserted tenants by the entirety estate, and thus void the Debtor’s wife’s claimed interest in such property, they must file an adversary proceeding and join her as a defendant to afford her fundamental due process. That civil action was filed and the resulting Adversary Proceeding, No. 08-00711, is pending. As for the rest of the Debtor’s arguments the Court rules as follows for the reasons detailed below:

1. Applying the plain meaning of the ' relevant Code provisions, and the logical result that follows, a second Section 341(a) meeting of creditors *606 must occur following conversion from Chapter 11 to Chapter 7;

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
408 B.R. 601, 2009 WL 1851414, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-quillen-mdb-2009.