Johnson v. Ford Motor Credit Co. (In Re Johnson)

57 B.R. 635, 1986 Bankr. LEXIS 6744
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedFebruary 6, 1986
Docket19-05475
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 57 B.R. 635 (Johnson v. Ford Motor Credit Co. (In Re Johnson)) 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
Johnson v. Ford Motor Credit Co. (In Re Johnson), 57 B.R. 635, 1986 Bankr. LEXIS 6744 (Ill. 1986).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

ROBERT E. GINSBERG, Bankruptcy Judge.

The adversary defendant, Ford Motor Credit Co. (“FMC”), has filed a motion requesting the Court to reconsider its Memorandum and Order of October 18, 1985, In re Johnson, 53 B.R. 919 (Bankr.N.D.Ill.1985). This dispute centers around the debtor’s attempt to recover $203.68 in wages held by his employer pursuant to a wage garnishment in favor of FMC by using 11 U.S.C. §§ 522(f)(1) and 522(g). In the earlier decision, this Court denied FMC’s motion for summary judgment on the grounds that FMC failed to prove that the debtor lacked an interest in the garnished wages as required by §§ 522(f)(1), (g), and (h). FMC now asks the Court to reconsider that conclusion. 1

*637 The motion for reconsideration focuses strictly on § 522(f)(1). 2 FMC questions whether the Court properly interpreted Illinois law in concluding that the debtor might be able to recover the garnished wages under § 522(f)(1). Section 522(f)(1) permits a debtor to avoid a lien if four requirements are met: (1) the lien the debt- or seeks to avoid is a judicial lien; (2) the debtor claims an exemption in the property to which the debtor is entitled under § 522(b); (3) the creditor’s lien impairs the debtor’s exemption; and (4) the debtor has an interest in the property. 11 U.S.C. § 522(f)(1). See also In re Webb, 49 B.R. 646, 650 (Bankr.E.D.Va.1984).

In its prior decision, the Court found that the debtor satisfied the first three elements and that genuine issues of fact regarding the fourth element, the debtor’s interest in the property, precluded summary judgment for either party. In its motion to reconsider, FMC does not challenge the Court’s findings as to the first, third, and fourth requirements of § 522(f)(1). FMC argues only that this Court erroneously held that the debtor satisfied the second requirement, the debtor’s right to assert an exemption in the property in question, and FMC’s summary judgment motion should thus have been granted. Simply stated, FMC contends that a debtor may not assert an exemption in garnished wages under Illinois law.

In the earlier decision, the Court, after analyzing the relevant Illinois statutes and case law, held that the debtor could assert an exemption in garnished wages, at least until such wages had actually been turned over to the garnishing creditor. 3 Specifically, the Court held that the debtor could claim the garnished wages in the hands of his employer as exempt by using the Illinois personal property “wild card” exemption, § 12-1001(b), 4 under which a debtor can claim as exempt “[t]he debtor’s equity interest, not to exceed $2,000 in value, in any other property.” (Emphasis added). The Court interpreted the language “any other property” as allowing a debtor to claim garnished wages as exempt. In re Johnson, 53 B.R. at 923. The Court found support for this conclusion in In re Barker, 768 F.2d 191 (7th Cir.1985). In Barker, the Seventh Circuit held that the phrase “any other property” in § 12-1001(b) must be interpreted broadly to favor debtors. Id. at 196. Consequently, the Barker court allowed a debtor to stack his exemptions, i.e. to use the $2,000 wild card exemption to exempt the equity remaining in his car after he had used the $1,200 automobile exemption set out in § 12-1001(c). Id.

FMC now contends that this Court misinterpreted the wild card exemption and Barker. A debtor, according to FMC, may only use § 12-1001(b) to exempt up to $2,000 of the debtor’s equity interest in any other property specifically allowed to be claimed as exempt under the Illinois exemption statute alone. 5 In FMC’s view, *638 because wages are not specifically exempt under § 12-1001, but rather can be claimed as exempt under § 12-803 6 of the Illinois Code of Civil Procedure, in the portion of that Code dealing with wage deductions rather than the portion dealing with exemptions, the debtor cannot use the wild card exemption for garnished wages. The argument continues that since § 12-803 exempts only 85% of a debtor's gross wages (in most cases), that percentage is the most the Illinois legislature intended a debtor to be able to shield from a garnishing creditor like FMC. FMC argues that to allow a debtor like Johnson to use the $2,000 wild card exemption to exempt the 15% of wages not exempt under § 12-803 effectively wipes out FMC’s ability to ever garnish any of a debtor’s wages.

As support for its position, FMC refers to the fact that Barker permitted the debt- or to stack the wild card exemption on top of the automobile exemption provided for in § 12-1001(c). FMC argues that Barker should not be extended to allow a debtor to stack the wild card exemption on top of an exemption provided for in another statutory section, like § 12-803 of the wage deduction statute.

The problem with accepting FMC’s argument is that it runs contrary to the plain meaning of the statute. The only reasonable interpretation of the phrase “any other property” is that it means just that, any other property, i.e., that a debtor may claim the wild card exemption in any other property without limitation. 7 If the legislature had intended to limit the wild card exemption to operate only within § 12-1001, it could have stated so simply enough by providing that the debtor could exempt up to $2,000 in “any other such property.” The Illinois wild card exemption contains no such restriction, and this Court refuses to read one into the statute, particularly in light of Barker’s directive to interpret § 12-1001 in a broad fashion to favor debtors. It is true Barker adjudicated the stacking of a wild card exemption upon an exemption listed in § 12-1001. However, the Barker court gave no weight to that fact. The Seventh Circuit did not limit its holding to such a situation, as FMC suggests. To the contrary, Barker mandates our conclusion that § 12-1001(b) may be used to claim any nonbusiness personal property as exempt, whether or not that property appears in the list of specific personalty exempted in § 12-1001 or in any other Illinois exemption provision. 8

Barker’s interpretation of Illinois exemption law is nothing new. The Seventh Circuit in In re Feilchenfeld,

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Bluebook (online)
57 B.R. 635, 1986 Bankr. LEXIS 6744, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-ford-motor-credit-co-in-re-johnson-ilnb-1986.