In Re Shethi

389 B.R. 588, 2008 Bankr. LEXIS 1339, 2008 WL 1923168
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedApril 30, 2008
Docket19-01209
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 389 B.R. 588 (In Re Shethi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Shethi, 389 B.R. 588, 2008 Bankr. LEXIS 1339, 2008 WL 1923168 (Ill. 2008).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

SUSAN PIERSON SONDERBY, Bankruptcy Judge.

This matter is before the Court on the “Objections of Chapter 7 Trustee to Debtors’ Claimed Exemptions in Certain Insurance Policies and Request for Related Relief’ (the “Objections”).

Background.

Debtors filed their voluntary petition under chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code on April 2, 2007. Along with their petition, they filed, inter alia, their Schedules B and C, i.e., “Personal Property” and “Property Claimed as Exempt,” respectively. Schedule B calls, in item no. 9, for disclosure of interests in insurance policies. Specifically, it states (under the column “Type of Property”): “Interests in insurance policies. Name insurance company of each policy and itemize surrender or refund value of each.” Debtors listed the following in response to item no. 9:

New York Life (approximate value) H 110,000.00
Equitable life (approximate value) H 112,000.00
New York Mutual Life (approximate value) H 80,000.00
Northwest Mutual Life H 50,000.00
Equitable Life (approximate value) W 40,000.00
Northwest Mutual (approximate value) W 25,000.00

*592 The designation “H” or “W” indicates ownership by either husband or wife. The values were listed in the column labeled “Current Value of Debtor’s Interest in Property, without Deducting any Secured Claim or Exemption.” In Schedule C, Debtors claimed the foregoing “Interests in Insurance Policies” as exempt under 215 ILCS 5/238, listing each one with the same values listed above in both the column labeled “Value of Claimed Exemption” and the column labeled “Current Value of Property Without Deducting Exemption.”

On July 2, 2007, Debtors filed an amended Schedule B, which did not in any respect change the listing, in item no. 9, of their interests in insurance policies. However, on July 16, 2007, Debtors filed a further amended Schedule B (“Second Amended Schedule B”), which revised Debtors’ response to item no. 9 to read as follows:

AXA Equitable Life Insurance for insured Eliza M. Shethi, Policy No. 48229682 Beneficiaries: 50% to Satish Shethi and 50% to Son, Graeme R. Shethi. W 120,270.90
AXA Equitable Life Insurance for owner and insured, Eliza M. Shethi, Policy No. 37238527, Beneficiaries: 25% to Grandson, W 53,069.91
Satish G.G. Shethi and 75% to Son, Graeme R. Shethi. Northwest Mutual Life for owner and insured, Satish Shethi, H 200,113.17
Policy No. 13-080-577. Beneficiary: Wife, Eliza Shethi. AXA Equitable Life Insurance for owner and insured, Satish H 11,325.54
Shethi, Policy No. 37217988, Beneficiary: wife, Eliza M. Shethi. AXA Equitable Life Insurance for owner and insured, Satish Shethi, Policy No. 37217988, Beneficiary: wife, Eliza M. Shethi. H 11,851.31

The policy number for the last policy listed above, which is the same as the policy number for the policy directly above it, appears to be incorrect. According to documents submitted by the trustee, the correct policy number appears to be 44236856.

On August 8, 2007, several weeks after the filing of Second Amended Schedule B, the trustee filed his objections to the Debtors’ claimed exemptions in their insurance policies. In the Objections, the trustee— by comparing Second Amended Schedule B to the prior version of Schedule B — was able to ascertain that the Debtors had dropped from their schedules the New York Life, New York Mutual Life, and Northwest Mutual policies.

The remaining three policies, i.e., the two listed as “Equitable Life” and one listed as “Northwest Mutual Life,” appear to remain on Second Amended Schedule B, but with different values (and with the “Equitable Life” policies now listed as “AXA Equitable Life”). Debtors also added two more “AXA Equitable Life” policies to Second Amended Schedule B, as listed above. Because Debtors did not contemporaneously amend their exemption schedule, it was not entirely clear which of the policies they claimed as exempt. Obviously, they would not be claiming any exemption in the New York Life, New York Mutual Life, and Northwest Mutual policies, which had been deleted from Schedule B. The trustee, in his Objections, assumed: (1) that the $50,000 exemption listed on Schedule C for a “Northwest Mutual Life” policy had reference to the Northwest Mutual Life policy shown on Second Amended Schedule B as Policy No. 13-080-577, with a value of $200,113.17; (2) that the $112,000 exemption listed on Schedule C for an “Equitable Life” policy had reference to the AXA Equitable Life policy shown on Second Amended Schedule B as Policy No. 48229682, with a value of $120,270.90; and *593 (3) that the $40,000 exemption listed on Schedule C for an “Equitable Life” policy had reference to the AXA Equitable Life policy shown on Second Amended Schedule B as Policy No. 37238527, with a value of $53,069.91. (See Objections, at 4.) While these were reasonable assumptions, given the names of the insurers and the values involved, it was not entirely clear which of the Equitable policies were being claimed as exempt, since there were now four Equitable policies (on Second Amended Schedule B) rather than two (as shown on Schedule C).

The trustee was nonetheless able to formulate his Objections, which are based on five separate grounds. First, he objects to all the exemptions because they lack the requisite specificity called for under the Bankruptcy Code, Rules, and Official Forms; i.e., they fail to identify their claimed exemptions in insurance policies by policy number or type of insurance.

In the trustee’s second objection, he contends that 215 ILCS 5/238 excludes from protection any policy loans, cash surrender, or other value payable to the insured. (Objections, at 6.) Section 5/238 provides as follows:

§ 238. Exemption.
(a) All proceeds payable because of the death of the insured and the aggregate net cash value of any or all life and endowment policies and annuity contracts payable to a wife or husband of the insured, or to a child, parent or other person dependent upon the insured, whether the power to change the beneficiary is reserved to the insured or not, and whether the insured or his estate is a contingent beneficiary or not, shall be exempt from execution, attachment, garnishment or other process, for the debts or liabilities of the insured incurred subsequent to the effective date of this Code, except as to premiums paid in fraud of creditors within the period limited by law for the recovery thereof.

In essence, the trustee is contending that the phrase “payable to a wife or husband of the insured, or to a child, parent or other person dependent upon the insured” modifies “aggregate net cash value,” and not “life and endowment policies and annuity contracts.”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In re Hamilton
461 B.R. 878 (D. New Mexico, 2011)
In Re OBrien
443 B.R. 117 (W.D. Michigan, 2011)
In Re Dzielak
435 B.R. 538 (N.D. Illinois, 2010)
In Re Meyers
431 B.R. 823 (E.D. Wisconsin, 2010)
In Re Patel
431 B.R. 682 (D. South Carolina, 2010)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
389 B.R. 588, 2008 Bankr. LEXIS 1339, 2008 WL 1923168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-shethi-ilnb-2008.