In re Schexnayder

532 B.R. 667, 2015 WL 3799736
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Louisiana
DecidedJune 18, 2015
DocketCASE NO. 12-10407
StatusPublished

This text of 532 B.R. 667 (In re Schexnayder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Schexnayder, 532 B.R. 667, 2015 WL 3799736 (La. 2015).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

DOUGLAS D. DODD, UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY JUDGE

Chapter 7 debtor Martha Wood Schex-nayder owned a marital residence in St. Amant, Louisiana in community with her non-filing husband, Edgar. Samera L. Abide, the trustee, sold the estate’s interest in the property to Edgar. The debtor now claims a share of the sales proceeds as exempt under Louisiana law. The debtor is not entitled to any part of the remaining sales proceeds.

Facts

The debtor properly scheduled the couple’s community-owned marital residence as property of the bankruptcy estate, valuing it at $190,000 and subject to encumbrances of $76,400.1 See 11 U.S.C. § 541(a)(2). Schexnayder’s schedules also reflected an additional $121,325.29 encumbrance for an unpaid judgment.2 Schedule C claimed a homestead exemption on the property, citing La. R.S. 20:1.

The debtor and trustee stipulated that the property was worth $225,000 and on the trustee’s motion, the court approved sale of the estate’s interest to the debtor’s husband for $61,000.3 The trustee arrived at the sale price by subtracting the $35,000 Louisiana homestead exemption and secured debt of $68,000 from $225,000, the home’s agreed value, and dividing it in half. The debtor’s husband paid one half of the $122,000 net value, or $61,000, to acquire the estate’s interest in the property-

The debtor contends on two grounds that she is entitled to $17,500 from the sales proceeds, representing half of the $35,000 homestead exemption. First, Schexnayder maintains that the $35,000 [669]*669homestead exemption applies to her undivided one-half interest in the property. She reasons that applying the exemption to the total value of the. property shorted her of half the dollar amount of the exemption. Second (perhaps in the alternative), the debtor argues that 11 U.S.C. § 363© bars the trustee from deducting the $35,000 exemption from the price Mr. Schexnayder paid and so wrongfully deprived the debtor of half of the total exemption. The debtor is incorrect on both counts.

Law and Analysis

1. The Louisiana Homestead Exemption Applies to the Marital Community’s Complete Interest in the Immovable Property, and Not to One Spouse’s Undivided One-Half Interest

Bankruptcy Code section 541(a)(2) brings into a debtor’s estate “[a]ll property interests of the debtor and the debtor’s spouse in community property as of the commencement of the case that is — (A) under the sole, equal, or joint management and control of the debtor.” 11 U.S.C. § 541(a)(2). Neither the trustee nor debt- or dispute that Mr. and Mrs. Schexnayder own the St. Amant property in community or that the marital community’s interest belongs to the bankruptcy estate. They disagree only on application of the homestead exemption to the sales proceeds when a non-filing spouse buys the estate’s interest in the property.

Bankruptcy Code section 522 enables debtors to exempt property that became part of the estate when they filed bankruptcy petitions. Debtors cannot all claim the same exemptions, which vary among the States according to the law of the State in which a debtor files bankruptcy. Congress, in the Bankruptcy Code, left to the States the choice of allowing debtors to elect the federal exemption scheme under 11 U.S.C. § 522(d) or to substitute the States’ exemptions. See 11 U.S.C. § 522(b).4 Louisiana chose to “opt out” of the federal exemptions, La. R.S. 13:3881(B)(1); thus Louisiana debtors may exempt their homestead only because La. R.S. 20:1 permits it, and then only to the extent the statute allows. Thus, Louisiana law — and not federal law — governs a Louisiana debtor’s homestead exemption. In re Kim, 748 F.3d 647, 657 (5th Cir.2014) '(“[I]n the absence of controlling federal bankruptcy law, the substantive nature of the property rights held by a bankrupt and its creditors is defined by state law.” (Internal citation omitted.))

Title 20, section 1 of the Louisiana Revised Statutes in relevant part reads:

A. (1) The bona fide homestead consists of a residence occupied by the owner and the land on which the residence is located, including any building and appurtenances located thereon, and any contiguous tracts up to a total of five acres if the residence is within a municipality, or up to a total of two hundred acres of land if the residence is not located in a municipality.
[670]*670(2) The homestead is exempt from seizure and sale under any writ, mandate, or process whatsoever, except as provided by Subsections C and D of this Section. This exemption extends to thirty-five thousand dollars in value of the homestead....
B. The exemption provided in Subsection A shall extend to the surviving spouse or minor children of a deceased owner and shall apply when the homestead is occupied as such and title to it is in either the husband or wife but not to more than one homestead owned by the husband or the wife. The exemption shall continue to apply to a homestead otherwise eligible while owned in indivisión by the spouses, and occupied by either of them, when* the community property regime of which the homestead is a part is dissolved by judgment which so provides ....

' Louisiana R.S. 20:1 describes the property subject to the homestead exemption and identifies those who may claim it. “LSA-R.S. 20:1 provides for a homestead exemption from seizure in very limited and specific instances of co-ownership; that of a surviving spouse and children and that of spouses in a community regime .... ” Gulfco Finance Co. of Natchitoches v. Browder, 482 So.2d 1019, 1020 (La.App. 3d Cir.1986) (emphasis added). Thus, either a husband and wife or a surviving spouse and a minor child may exempt a residence they own and occupy.5

Spouses in a Louisiana community property regime own undivided one-half interests in community property, comprising most property they jointly acquire during the marriage. La. Civil Code art. 2336. “The community of acquets and gains is ... a patrimonial mass, that is, a universality of assets and liabilities. An undivided one-half of the mass forms part of the patrimony of each spouse during the existence of a community property regime .... ” Revision Comments — 1979(c) to Acts 1979, No. 709, § 1, eff. Jan. 1, 1980 (enacting La. Civil Code art. 2336). Accordingly, debtor Martha Schexnayder owned an undivided one-half interest in her marital home and not an interest in only one-half of the property. Her bankruptcy petition brought into the bankruptcy estate the community property, comprising both her undivided interest and also Mr. Schexnayder’s undivided interest, even though Edgar Schexnayder did not join in the bankruptcy filing. Mrs. Schex-. nayder’s homestead exemption claim under La. R.S. 20:1 applies to the entire

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Caminetti v. United States
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Kim v. Kim (In Re Kim)
405 B.R. 179 (N.D. Texas, 2009)
In Re Victor
341 B.R. 775 (D. New Mexico, 2006)
In Re Page
171 B.R. 349 (W.D. Wisconsin, 1994)
Odes Ho Kim v. Dome Entertainment Center, Inc.
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Gulfco Finance Co. of Natchitoches v. Browder
482 So. 2d 1019 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1986)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
532 B.R. 667, 2015 WL 3799736, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-schexnayder-lamb-2015.