In Re Wendt

320 B.R. 904, 34 Employee Benefits Cas. (BNA) 2921, 2005 Bankr. LEXIS 307, 2005 WL 491484
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedMarch 3, 2005
Docket19-50158
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 320 B.R. 904 (In Re Wendt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Wendt, 320 B.R. 904, 34 Employee Benefits Cas. (BNA) 2921, 2005 Bankr. LEXIS 307, 2005 WL 491484 (Minn. 2005).

Opinion

ORDER RE: STATUS OF ASSET UNDER 11 U.S.C. § 541(c)(2)

GREGORY F. KISHEL, Chief Judge.

This Chapter 7 case came on before the Court for hearing on the Trustee’s objec *906 tion to the Debtor’s claim of exemption in certain funds held in a “403(b) Thrift” account. Trustee Patti J. Sullivan appeared as objector and counsel for the bankruptcy estate. The Debtor appeared by his attorney, Robert J. Everhart. The Court received counsel’s argument on a threshold issue: whether the Debtor’s interest in the asset in question was excluded from the bankruptcy estate by operation of 11 U.S.C. § 541(c)(2). Upon the record made for that issue, the Court makes the following order.

The Debtor filed a voluntary petition under Chapter 7 on June 4, 2004. On his Schedule C, he included an entry for an asset that he valued at $19,000.00. He described the asset as follows:

403B through employer approximately— $19,000.00 (not part of the estate for information purposes only).

This asset is an account maintained at the Mutual of America Life Insurance Company for the Debtor’s benefit. It is distributed among four different investment funds. 1 The Debtor’s entitlement to this asset is an incident of his employment by the Board of Social Ministry, an entity that is associated with the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. The “Specifications” of this employee benefit call it a “Pension Plan.” 2 A group called the “Board of Social Ministry Pension Plan Committee” is the “Plan Sponsor” that established it and maintains it. As a participant in the plan, the Debtor may authorize the Board of Social Ministry to “make Salary Reduction Contributions to Mutual on his behalf.” The Board of Social Ministry is obligated to make “Employer Contributions to Mutual on behalf of each Participant.” At the end of the “Specifications,” the Sponsor “represents”:

The Plan is established with the intention that it be a church plan and, as such, exempt from the requirements of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), the Retirement Equity Act and other federal laws and regulations governing qualified retirement plans. The fact that certain provisions of this plan may comply with some requirements of such federal laws should not be interpreted as an attempt to come within the provisions of those laws or comply with them.

The issue at bar is whether the Debtor’s interest in this asset passed into his bankruptcy estate in the first place, by operation of 11 U.S.C. § 541(a). In making the recitation “not part of the estate” in his Schedule C, the Debtor was relying on 11 U.S.C. § 541(c)(2). 3 This provision takes its effect against the broad scope of the bankruptcy estate under 11 U.S.C. § 541(a), as a second-level qualification to *907 that inclusiveness. 4 The trustee challenged the Debtor’s assertion in tandem with her objection to the Debtor’s claim of exemption. 5

The parties’ arguments could best be summarized as follows.

The Trustee notes that the asset in question is an employee’s interest in a “403(b) plan,” a tax-sheltered annuity pension plan under which the liability for and payment of income tax can be deferred under 26 U.S.C. § 403(b). To be more precise, the form of the Board of Social Ministry’s program is a so-called “church plan” under 26 U.S.C. § 403(b)(9). 6 All information given to the Trustee indicates that the Debtor’s interest in the plan was funded by deposits that he or his employer made with Mutual of America, there placed into one of the several investment fund accounts that the Debtor holds under his own name and in his own right. Under all of these circumstances, the Trustee maintains, the plan does not rest on a “trust” relationship, and the Debtor has no “beneficial interest” in the funds as such is understood under the general law of trusts. 7 Thus, she argues, because § 541(c)(2) requires by its terms a trust relationship, that section’s exclusion simply did not apply. For legal authority, the Trustee relies on In re Adams, 302 B.R. 535 (6th Cir. BAP 2003).

The Debtor’s response is somewhat elliptical. His counsel never quite addresses the Trustee’s text-based analysis on its own terms. Instead, he argues that, in Patterson v. Shumate, 504 U.S. 753, 112 5.Ct. 2242, 119 L.Ed.2d 519 (1992), the Supreme Court “definitively ruled that if a plan is qualified for treatment under ERISA, it is excluded from the bankruptcy estate under 11 U.S.C. § 541(c).” He then argues, at least by negative implication, that “a 403(b) church plan [like the asset in question here] is ... qualified for treatment under ERISA and excluded from the bankruptcy estate.” He makes only one nod to the Trustee’s argument, and a dismissive one at that: in Adams, “the Sixth Circuit Bankruptcy Appellate Panel was *908 mistaken in not following [Patterson v. Shumate] by adding additional requirements to exclude ERISA plans.” 8

The Debtor’s argument ignores the trees for a forest that is not there anyway. The holding in Patterson v. Shumate was not at all as conclusory or categorical as counsel would have it — because, among other reasons, “the plain language of the Bankruptcy Code and ERISA are determinant,” Patterson v. Shumate, 504 U.S. at 757, 112 S.Ct. 2242, and the language of § 541(c)(2) is the first avenue of inquiry. Patterson v. Shumate did not hold in so many words that being “ERISA-qualified” brings about the exclusion from the bankruptcy estate in se. That proposition is tantamount to a syllogism, because the analysis has to start with the language of the governing statute, United States v. Ron Pair Enterprises, Inc., 489 U.S. 235, 241, 109 S.Ct. 1026, 103 L.Ed.2d 290 (1989), and here the language that creates the exclusion is § 541(c)(2).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
320 B.R. 904, 34 Employee Benefits Cas. (BNA) 2921, 2005 Bankr. LEXIS 307, 2005 WL 491484, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-wendt-mnb-2005.