In re Vaughn

558 B.R. 897, 2016 Bankr. LEXIS 3710, 2016 WL 5763058
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Alaska
DecidedSeptember 29, 2016
DocketCase No. A16-00076-GS
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 558 B.R. 897 (In re Vaughn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Vaughn, 558 B.R. 897, 2016 Bankr. LEXIS 3710, 2016 WL 5763058 (Alaska 2016).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM ON OBJECTION TO HOMESTEAD EXEMPTION

GARY SPRAKER, United States Bankruptcy Judge

An evidentiary hearing on creditor Karen Montague’s Objection to Homestead Exemption (ECF No. 15) was held on July 21, 2016. The court has considered the record herein and the testimony at the hearing. For the reasons stated below, the court will sustain the Objection, and disallow the debtor’s homestead exemption.

I. Case Background.

Debtor Keith Vaughn filed his chapter 7 petition on March 30, 2016. On his Sched[899]*899ule A/B, he listed an interest in property located at 51329 Inland Avenue, Kasilof, Alaska (“the Property”), with a value of $69,300.00.1 Schedule A/B reflects that the debtor is the sole owner of this realty. It is described as a single family home, “gutted and in disrepair; $10,000 to clean and rehabilitate property.” The debtor claims a homestead exemption in the Property under AS 09.38.010, which provides for a maximum homestead exemption of $72,900.00.

The debtor has very little in the way of personal property. However, Schedule A/B reflects that he receives “PERS monthly payments” of $2,941.00, and anticipates receipt of both a $2,500.00 tax refund and the 2016 Alaska PFD,2 With the exception of the tax refund, these assets are also claimed exempt. According to the debtor’s Statement of Financial Affairs, he receives SSI benefits totaling $25,642.00 annually, in addition to his monthly pension benefit.3 The SSI benefit breaks down to $2,137.00 monthly. When combined with his PERS payment, the debtor receives $5,000.00 monthly.

The debtor has scheduled no priority or secured debt,4 He listed his sister, Karen Montague, as a general unsecured creditor, holding a judgment for $60,000.00. The total of his scheduled, general unsecured claims is $161,216.00; this sum includes several credit card accounts, many “unsecured” auto loans and mortgages, and some medical debt.

Ms. Montague timely filed her Objection to Homestead Exemption (“Objection”) on May 13, 2016. She argues that the debtor cannot claim a homestead exemption for the Property because he has not used it as his principal residence since July 11, 2014, when he deeded it to Wallace Hansen. The Property was deeded back to the debtor on July 31, 2015 after Ms. Montague posted a notice of foreclosure. She also asserts that the debtor filed his bankruptcy petition on the eve of a scheduled state court evidentiary hearing to determine whether the Property qualified as his homestead. She argues the transfers were made, and the bankruptcy petition was filed, to frustrate her foreclosure rights, and raise issues of “shenanigans” and fraudulent behavior on the debtor’s part. Ms. Montague contends the homestead exemption should be disallowed so the chapter 7 trustee can sell the Property for the benefit of creditors of the estate.

II. Alaska Homestead Exemption.

The debtor claims a homestead exemption under applicable state law. The Alaska exemption laws “should be liberally construed in favor of the debtor.”5 Under AS 09.38.010(a), an individual may exempt as a homestead “the individual’s interest in property in this state used as the principal residence of the individual or the dependents of the individual,” up to a value of $72,900.00.6 It is undisputed that the debt- or is an Alaska resident, and has an interest in the Property, Determination of his claimed homestead exemption hinges on whether the Property has been used as his principal residence.

[900]*900"Principal residence" is defined as "the actual dwelling place of an individual or dependents of the individual and includes real and personal property."7 The phrase "actual dwelling place" is the debt- or's actual residence, meaning "no more than residence-true, substantial, and real; not fictitious, nominal, or pretended."8 It requires "actual occupancy on a regular basis; thus a distinction can be made between a home that is regularly occupied and property [that the debtor usesj only as a vacation or weekend home."9 However, a debtor's temporary absences from a claimed homestead, even if "of substantial length, will not categorically result in residency forfeiture."10 While absence from a property does not necessarily preclude a finding of homestead, the Alaska Supreme Court has instructed that:

The facts and circumstances of the absences should be considered in determining whether the exemption is lost. The facts must show that no other residence of the debtor or the debtor's dependents is used or lived in with such regularity and consistency that the claimed residence cannot be found to be the debtor's primary residence or family home.11

When considering these circumstances, a debtor's conduct is weighted more heavily than his declarations of intent regarding the claimed homestead.12 Generally, a debtor's declarations that are advantageous to the issue are "viewed with suspicion and accorded little weight."13

Because the debtor has filed bankruptcy, his entitlement to the homestead exemption is determined as of the date of the petition, under 11 U.s.c. § 541(a)(1).14 The debtor has the burden of proving his entitlement to this exemption, by a preponderance of the evidence.15

III. The Debtor's Conduct with Respect to the Property.

A. Coincidental Timing of Property Transfers and Bankruptcy Filing.

Ms. Montague emphasized the coincidental timing of the debtor's transfers of the Property to, and from, Mr. Hansen, and the filing of his bankruptcy petition, with certain events pertaining to her pre-[901]*901petition collection efforts, as significant to the determination of the validity of the debtor’s homestead exemption. The evidence reflects that a final judgment in the sum of $58,585.94 was entered against the debtor in a Washington state court probate proceeding on July 1, 2013 (“Judgment”), which was assigned to Ms. Montague on August 12, 2013.16 The Judgment was recorded in the Kenai Recording District, where the Property is located, on August 27, 2013.

The following summer, the debtor quit-claimed his interest in the Property to Wallace Hansen on July 10, 2014.17 The quitclaim deed was recorded the next day. As discussed in more detail below, the debtor asserts the Property was transferred in exchange for some financial assistance that Mr. Hansen had provided him. The debtor “moved off’ the Property three months later, in October 2014, and has not stayed on the Property since.18

The next year, on July 16, 2015, a Notice of Judgment Execution Sale of Real Property was recorded in the Kenai Recording District, indicating that the Property would be sold at public auction on September 10, 2015 to satisfy the Judgment.19 The Notice was posted on the Property on July 18, 2015. Thirteen days after the posting, a quitclaim deed transferring the Property from Mr. Hansen back to the debtor was recorded, but the debtor did not move back to the Property.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
558 B.R. 897, 2016 Bankr. LEXIS 3710, 2016 WL 5763058, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-vaughn-akb-2016.