In Re Shumaker

124 B.R. 820, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 285, 1991 WL 31171
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Montana
DecidedMarch 6, 1991
Docket19-60247
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 124 B.R. 820 (In Re Shumaker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Montana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Shumaker, 124 B.R. 820, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 285, 1991 WL 31171 (Mont. 1991).

Opinion

ORDER

JOHN L. PETERSON, Bankruptcy Judge.

In this Chapter 7 case, United Food and Commercial Workers Union (Union), an unsecured creditor, has filed timely objections to claims of exemption sought by the Debtor. 1 The matter has been submitted on stipulated facts and Briefs by the parties have been filed in support of their respective positions.

The stipulated facts are:

1. That the Debtor, Thomas Lee Shu-maker, is 47 years old, and filed his Chapter 7 bankruptcy on July 28, 1990.

2. That the Debtor, Thomas Lee Shu-maker, is holding an individual retirement account having a net value of $33,247.85, not including penalties or cost of early withdrawal, consisting of securities valued at $29,011.25, and cash in the amount of $4,236.60 at the time of filing as demonstrated by Exhibit “A”.

3. That the Debtor opened his individual retirement account on November 3, 1987. The Debtor completed the Account Information Form and Application (Exhibit “B”) to open the account. (Exhibit “C”).

4. A copy of the D.A. Davidson & Co. IRA Disclosure Statement (Exhibit “D”) controls the account of the Debtor.

5. That the Debtor rolled over $10,-358.39 into his individual retirement account on November 3, 1987. The proceeds from this figure represented funds held in the Debtor’s Oscar Mayer Pension and two other IRAs. (Exhibit “E”).

6. That upon discontinuation of the business of Rocky Mountain Packing Company, the Debtor rolled over his 401K plan into the IRA. That rollover was of $3,350.89 on June 16, 1990. (Exhibit “F”). That no other contributions have been made to the IRA other than the contributions referred to above.

7. That subsequent to the filing of the Petition, believing the IRA to be exempt property, the Debtor cashed a portion of his IRA totaling $16,135.37 and used it to finance the purchase of a new vehicle. (Exhibit “G”).

8. That at the time of filing the Petition in bankruptcy, the Debtor was a ranch hand employed by Phalen Ranch. On the 24th of July, the Debtor had surgery on his shoulder and has been unemployed ever since, earning $124.50 per week on workers’ compensation. The Debtor intends to return to employment as a ranch hand.

9. That the Debtor has testified at the First Meeting of Creditors that he used a personal computer in the business to keep production records of livestock on the ranch he was employed on, even though such record keeping is not a requirement of *822 the Debtor’s employment. Additionally, all of the former Rocky Mountain Packing Company records are kept on his computer.

10. The parties stipulate that in the event that the Montana exemption statute is found unconstitutional, leave shall be granted the Debtor to amend his schedules to claim the IRA as exempt under federal exemptions laws, and the creditor reserves all right applicable thereto.

In the bankruptcy Schedules filed by the Debtor, under Schedule B-4, Debtor claimed the following exemptions:

Type of Property Value Claimed Exempt
Household goods $1,710.00
Automobile-
1988 Chevrolet Pickup 8,867.86
Boat-
Duraeraft Canoe 2,500.00
Office equipment-
computer 2,000.00
Tangible personal property-
D.A. Davidson Account (120
shares General Electric) 5,400.00
Tangible personal property-
Oscar Mayer Pension 5,000.00
Stock and company interest-
401K Rocky Mountain
Packing Company Plan 2,039.76
Stock and company interest-
D.A. Davidson Account 6,600.00

By Order dated October 25, 1990, the Debtor was allowed to amend his Schedules to reflect, among other things, that the various IRA and pension accounts listed above had been combined into one IRA account by the Debtor pre-Petition, and that said single IRA was now being claimed as exempt by the Debtor under Schedule B-4.

Additionally, the Debtor amended Schedule B-4 to claim various items of household furnishings as exempt. In his Brief in Support of Declarations of Exemptions filed herein on November 2, 1990, the Debt- or acknowledged that the creditor’s objections to the exemptions in the household furnishings were well taken to the extent that the value of the exemption exceeded $600.00 worth of household furnishings as exempt, and accordingly, those items of personal property listed in Schedule B-3 which are not claimed as exempt in Schedule B-4 must be turned over to the Trustee for liquidation and distribution to the creditors herein. Those items of property are as follows:

Item Value
Bar Stools (4) $ 50.00
Coffee Table 10.00
Dining Room Chairs (2) 20.00
Dresser 10.00
Dresser (water damaged) 25.00
Dresser and Cabinet 50.00
End Table 10.00
Gun Vault (homemade) 80.00
Ladder Back Chairs (2) 100.00
Recliner (plastic) 20.00
Recliner 25.00
Rocker (wood) 25.00
Sofa 25.00
Stuffed Chair 10.00
Stuffed Chair 25.00
Waterbed 50.00

The Debtor’s original Schedules also sought to exempt a Duracraft canoe. In his amendments and subsequent Brief, the Debtor also conceded the validity of the Union’s objection to this exemption. The Duracraft canoe is no longer claimed exempt on the Debtor’s amended Schedule B-4 and therefore must also be turned over to the Trustee for liquidation.

The Debtor has also amended his Schedule B-4 to reflect a $1,200.00 vehicle exemption. However, said vehicle was purchased post-petition with proceeds from the Debtor’s IRA account. (Stipulation of Fact, paragraph 7). Accordingly, this exemption is tied directly to challenge against the IRA account and need not be addressed by the Court. The remaining issues raised by the Union’s objection deal with the claim of exemption of a computer under Section 25-13-609(3), Mont.Code Ann., as a tool of the trade and the exemption of the Debt- or’s IRA account.

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Bluebook (online)
124 B.R. 820, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 285, 1991 WL 31171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-shumaker-mtb-1991.