In Re Regevig

389 B.R. 736, 2008 Bankr. LEXIS 1930, 2008 WL 2502981
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Arizona
DecidedJune 24, 2008
Docket2:08-BK-02547-RJH
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 389 B.R. 736 (In Re Regevig) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Regevig, 389 B.R. 736, 2008 Bankr. LEXIS 1930, 2008 WL 2502981 (Ark. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION RE CONSTITUTIONALITY OF CALIFORNIA’S BANKRUPTCY-SPECIFIC EXEMPTION STATUTE

RANDOLPH J. HAINES, Bankruptcy Judge.

This issue here is whether a State may adopt an exemption statute that becomes available only when the debtor files a bankruptcy case. The Court concludes this is impermissible under the Supremacy Clause.

Background Facts.

California statutes provide two sets of exemptions. One of them, California Code of Civil Procedure § 704, may be asserted by any judgment debtor to protect property from an attaching creditor. The other, C.C.P. § 703.140(b), may only be claimed by a debtor who has filed a bankruptcy petition. 1 California has opted out of the exemption scheme provided by the Bankruptcy Code, 2 as it is permitted to do so by Bankruptcy Code 3 § 522(b)(2), but the § 703.140(b) exemption scheme is virtually identical to the current bankruptcy exemptions.

The Debtors are currently Arizona residents but apparently were not Arizona residents for all of the 730 days preceding the filing of this case. They were California residents for the majority of the six months prior to that 730 day period, so Bankruptcy Code § 522(b)(3)(A) requires them to claim exemptions pursuant to California law.

The Debtors do not claim any homestead, and therefore have elected to claim *738 exemptions pursuant to C.C.P. § 703.140(b). They have claimed one motor vehicle (a 1995 Chevy Suburban, to the extent of the exempt value of $3,300) pursuant to C.C.P. § 703.140(b)(2), and they have claimed four motor vehicles (a Kawasaki, an inoperable 1970 Chevy Nova, and two quads) having a total value of less than $6,000 pursuant to the “wild card” exemption 4 provided by C.C.P. § 703.140(b)(5). If they had elected the other general set of exemptions the motor vehicle exemption would be limited to a value of $2,550, and there would be no “wild card” exemption available to exempt the other motor vehicles.

Analysis

The Trustee here objects to the Debtors’ election of the § 703.140 exemptions, contending that a State’s attempt to create exemptions that are applicable only in a bankruptcy case is an unconstitutional violation of either the Supremacy Clause 5 or the Uniformity Clause, 6 or both. The argument certainly has some merit and support because Bankruptcy Judge Jaros-lovsky of the Northern District of California expressly so concluded in Lennen. 7 And although several subsequent decisions by the Ninth Circuit and the Ninth Circuit BAP have considered the California exemption scheme and some have even upheld debtors’ claims of exemption under C.C.P. § 703.140(b), none of them seems to have expressly or directly rejected the analysis and holding of Lennen, 8

Lennen explains the history of the confusing California statutory scheme. When *739 the Bankruptcy Code was first enacted, it apparently permitted joint debtors in non-opt-out states to “stack” exemptions by having one of them claim the state exemptions and the other the Bankruptcy Code exemptions. California sought to prohibit that by a statute in 1981, but it was invalidated as violating the Supremacy Clause. 9 In 1983, California sought to achieve the same result by opting out of the bankruptcy exemptions but providing that debtors could select bankruptcy exemptions so long as they did not “stack” them with state exemptions. That effort was also declared unconstitutional. 10 Finally, in what the Lennen opinion aptly describes as a “comedy of errors,” in June of 1984 California adopted § 703.140, which provided a new set of state-law exemptions that were virtually identical to the bankruptcy exemptions, which could be selected only by a debtor in a bankruptcy case. It was a comedy of errors for two reasons. First, the principal aim of this legislation— to preclude debtors from “stacking” exemptions — was almost simultaneously eliminated by the Bankruptcy Amendments and Federal Judgeship Act of 1984, which was enacted just one month later on July 10, 1984. It amended Bankruptcy Code § 522(b) to eliminate stacking, thus rendering the difficult California statutory structure entirely unnecessary. But it also cut the federal wildcard exemption in half, creating a significant difference between the Bankruptcy Code exemptions and California’s new § 703.140, which otherwise tracked the Bankruptcy Code’s exemption amounts. It was apparently this divergence that caused the Lennen court to conclude that California’s § 703.140 violated both the Supremacy Clause and the Uniformity Clause.

Today, California’s bankruptcy-only wildcard exemption remains approximately double the amount of the Bankruptcy Code’s wildcard exemption for individual debtors. 11 Most of California’s other bankruptcy-only exemptions are virtually identical to the Bankruptcy Code’s exemptions. For example, California’s bankruptcy-only motor vehicle exemption is $3,300, whereas the Bankruptcy Code’s motor vehicle exemption is $3,225. Such minor differences may be a result of § 703.150, which adjusts the exemption amounts based upon the California cost of living, whereas Bankruptcy Code § 104(b) adjusts the Bankruptcy Code’s exemption amounts by changes in the national consumer price index.

This $10,000 difference between the California bankruptcy-only exemption and the Bankruptcy Code’s wildcard exemption, although not significant on these facts, is certainly not de minimis. More importantly, California does not provide such a wild-card exemption to debtors generally, outside of bankruptcy. The result is that for example, outside of bankruptcy a creditor could levy on a debtor’s boat worth $20,000. But if that debtor filed bankruptcy and did not claim a homestead, the debtor could exempt it from the bankruptcy estate through the California bankruptcy-only wildcard exemption. Such a result effectively discriminates against the trustee in bankruptcy as opposed to other creditors — the trustee cannot claim the boat for benefit or creditors, although creditors themselves could do so outside of bankruptcy.

*740 Under federal bankruptcy law, States were first permitted to define their own exemptions by one of the historic compromises between the northern and the southern states that permitted the adoption of the Bankruptcy Act of 1867. 12 That recognition of state exemption laws was continued in the Bankruptcy Act of 1898.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
389 B.R. 736, 2008 Bankr. LEXIS 1930, 2008 WL 2502981, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-regevig-arb-2008.