In the Matter of Joelanne Wikes, Bankrupt and v. James A. A. Smith, Trustee And

465 F.2d 1142
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedOctober 19, 1972
Docket26362
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 465 F.2d 1142 (In the Matter of Joelanne Wikes, Bankrupt and v. James A. A. Smith, Trustee And) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In the Matter of Joelanne Wikes, Bankrupt and v. James A. A. Smith, Trustee And, 465 F.2d 1142 (9th Cir. 1972).

Opinion

LINDBERG, WILLIAM J., District Judge.

Appellant Joelanne Wikes and her husband Gerald each filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy on November 13, 1968. The two proceedings were consolidated by the District Court on its own motion, and the same trustee was appointed to administer each estate.

For some years prior to bankruptcy, Gerald and Joelanne worked together as husband and wife to operate a small, unincorporated family business. In October of 1966, they used funds generated by that business to purchase an automobile. The record does not indicate pre-

*1144 cisely how title and registration were taken; it reveals only that they contained the names of both Gerald and Joelanne. The automobile was sold in the latter part of October, 1968, for approximately $2,000.00. Gerald and Joe-lanne each deposited $1,000.00 of the proceeds in a separate federal savings and loan account on October 31, 1968, approximately two weeks before the petitions were filed.

The trustee permitted Gerald to claim the $1,000 exemption provided for savings and loan accounts by California Code of Civil Procedure § 690.21 1 and California Financial Code §§ 7611 2 and 11,000, 3 as incorporated into the Bankruptcy Act by 11 U.S.C. § 24 (§ 6 of the Act), but refused to allow the same exemption for Joelanne. The Referee and the District Court affirmed the action of the trustee on the ground that the deposit of one-half of the proceeds of the automobile in the separate account of Joelanne constituted a fraudulent transfer by Gerald which was void against the trustee under § 67d and § 70e of the Bankruptcy Act. Since we have concluded that the deposit was a transfer voidable by creditors under California law, and therefore was void against the trustee under § 70e, we do not consider its status under § 67d.

Both § 70e and § 70a provide a foundation for appellee’s right to administer the funds in Joelanne’s account for the benefit of Gerald’s creditors, 4 though, as indicated, the ultimate propriety of his action depends upon California law. Subsection (5) of § 70a 5 automatically vested title in appellee, as trustee of Gerald, to two different kinds of property ; that which Gerald himself could have transferred prior to the filing of the petition and that upon which Gerald’s creditors could have levied prior to the petition. Appellee here can claim no title to the savings and loan account through any right of Gerald to transfer the funds since any such right which Gerald may otherwise have possessed was eliminated by California Financial Code § 11,200. 6 Appellee, therefore, *1145 falls heir to title over the account only if Gerald’s creditors could have levied on the account. Section 70e makes such title meaningful by giving appellee the power to avoid any transfer which the creditors could have avoided under California law.

As appellant points out, one of the prerequisites of appellee’s power under § 70e is that there have been a transfer. Appellant argues that the one-half of the proceeds which she deposited in the savings and loan account was her separate property and, consequently, there could have been no transfer.

In support of her conclusion, appellant cites California Civil Code § 164, 7 which provided in pertinent part:

whenever any real or personal property, or any interest therein or encumbrances thereon, is acquired by a married woman by an instrument in writing, the presumption is that the same is her separate property.

Since the automobile was titled and registered in the names of both Gerald and Joelanne, the argument goes, she acquired her interest through an instrument in writing and can take advantage of the statutory presumption. We cannot agree. Appellant did not necessarily acquire the automobile through the act of having it titled or registered.

Neither Mears v. Mears, 180 Cal.App. 2d 484, 4 Cal.Rptr. 618 (1960), nor Sib-erell v. Siberell, 214 Cal. 767, 7 P.2d 1003 (1932), cited by appellant, compels the conclusion she urges. Mears, in fact, implicitly holds otherwise. The court there was concerned with the respective property interests of a husband and wife in two automobiles. One, a 1951 Studebaker which had been purchased with joint funds derived from their respective earnings, was found to be community property. No consideration was given to the fact that title had been taken as joint tenants. The second automobile, a 1955 Buick, had been bought partially with a trade-in automobile which was the separate property of the wife and partially with community funds. Title was taken in the “joint names” of the husband and wife. The court found that the Buick was the separate property of the wife in the proportion which the value of the trade-in *1146 automobile bore to the total purchase price. The remainder, i. e., that portion purchased with community funds, remained community property. The court apparently did not deem the fact that title had been placed in the joint names of the husband and wife to be of any significance.

Even if we could conclude that appellant acquired her interest through the act of having it titled or registered, the statutory presumption which she attempts to invoke would apply only if the written instrument did not describe the owners as husband and wife. California Civil Code § 164; Mears, supra, 4 Cal. Rptr. at 627. Since the record is silent on this point, appellant cannot invoke the presumption of separate property.

Aside from the written instrument exception and certain others not relevant here, § 164 provided that all property acquired by a husband and wife during marriage was presumed to be community property. A mere change in form will not change the status of property from community to separate. A husband and wife, of course, may change the status by agreement and persuasive evidence of such an agreement will rebut the presumption arising from the form in which the property was previously held. Mears, supra; Kenney v. Kenney, 128 Cal.App.2d 128, 274 P.2d 951 (1954).

The uncontradicted evidence indicated that the automobile here was purchased with funds derived from a community business. The automobile and its proceeds, consequently, were community property unless there was an agreement to the contrary. Prior to the deposits in the savings and loan accounts, there was no indication of any such agreement. The intent of the bankrupts in titling and registering the automobile in both names was ambiguous at best. We conclude, therefore, that appellant’s contention, i.

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