Kenneth Wayne Wright

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Kansas
DecidedDecember 7, 2022
Docket19-21544
StatusUnknown

This text of Kenneth Wayne Wright (Kenneth Wayne Wright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kenneth Wayne Wright, (Kan. 2022).

Opinion

Bank axes □□□ WY Te! ee SA C S| □□ SO ORDERED. YY Sat □□ eS SIGNED this 7th day of December, 2022. Yo OS a □□ District SE

Dale L. Somers ie States Cine Barikrupicy TUGEe

Designated for online use only IN THE UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF KANSAS

In re: Kenneth Wayne Wright and Case No. 19-21544 Terri Lynn Wright, Chapter 13 Debtors. Memorandum Opinion and Order Denying Debtors’ Motion for Retention of a Distribution from a Trust and Granting the Chapter 13 Trustee’s Motion for Postconfirmation Amendment of Confirmed Plan In 1986, long before Debtors Kenneth and Terri Wright filed a Chapter 13 case on July 25, 2019, the parents of Debtor Terri Wright created a revocable trust. Upon their deaths before the case was filed, the trust became irrevocable, and Ms. Wright, together with her siblings, became a beneficiary of the remaining trust assets, subject to a life interest of one of the siblings, Ronnie True. Ms. Wright’s contingent interest in the trust was not included

in Debtors’ schedules at filing. In December 2019, afer confirmation of Debtors’ thirty-six month plan, Mr. True died. On April 27, 2022, Debtors

moved to retain any distribution from the trust.1 The Chapter 13 Trustee objected and also filed a motion to modify the Chapter 13 plan to account for the value of Ms. Wright’s interest in the trust.2 Debtors objected to the proposed amendment. The parties agreed to submit the motions to the Court

based upon a joint stipulation of facts. The linchpin for resolving these competing motions is determination of the estate’s interest in Ms. Wright’s beneficial interest in the trust both before and after the death of Mr. True. The Court concludes the contingent

interest was property of the estate when the case was filed, and when the death of Mr. True removed the contingency, the value of the estate’s interest was increased. The Court therefore denies Debtors’ motion to retain the trust distribution and grants the Trustee’s motion to amend the confirmed plan.

I. Stipulated Facts The Chapter 13 Trustee (“Trustee”) and Debtors Kenneth and Terri Wright (“Debtors”) filed a stipulation of facts as follows.3

1 Debtors appear by Kristina S. Zhilkina-Crump. 2 W. H. Griffin, the Chapter 13 Trustee, appears by W. H. Griffin. 3 Doc. 52. A copy of the Revocable Inter Vivos Trust of R.N. True and Ruth G. True is attached and incorporated into the stipulation. 2 Debtors filed for relief under Chapter 13 on July 25, 2019. Their proposed three year plan was confirmed on October 15, 2019. It provided for

little or no distribution to general unsecured creditors, whose claims total $14,196.53. Debtors’ plan provides, “[a]ll property of the estate will vest in the debtor at discharge or dismissal of the case.”4 The order of confirmation states: “[a]fter approval of the Trustee’s Final Report and Account by the

Court, all property of the bankruptcy estate that is not proposed or reasonably contemplated to be distributable under the Plan, shall re-vest in Debtor[s] as Debtor[s’] property following dismissal or discharge, unless the property earlier vested by terms of the confirmed plan.”5

When this case was filed, Debtor Terri Wright (“Ms. Wright”) was a beneficiary of a trust established on November 26, 1986, by her parents, who resided in Oklahoma (the “Trust”). The Trust does not contain any spendthrift provisions. Although initially revocable, since both parents were

deceased when the bankruptcy case was filed, the Trust had become irrevocable. At that time, the Trust owned forty acres of real property in Mayes County, Oklahoma. The Trust provides if the settlers’ son Ronnie N. True (“Mr. True”) survived the death of his parents, for the remainder of his

4 Id. p. 2. 5 Id. p. 3. 3 life, he was to receive Trust income and continue to reside in a home on the forty acres. Upon Mr. True’s death, if he left no descendants, the Trust

provides the forty acres “shall in the sole discretion of the Trustee be sold or deeded to his brothers and sisters.”6 When this case was filed, “the value of [Ms. Wright’s] interest in the Trust was unknown, contingent, and/or unliquidated.”7

Mr. True died on December 20, 2019, five months after Debtors’ Chapter 13 case was filed. A portion of the forty acres was sold in January 2022 for an amount in excess of $100,000, and the remaining real estate in the Trust has been valued at $250,000. The value of Ms. Wright’s interest in

the Trust is currently estimated to be approximately $49,442.8 Ms. Wright’s interest in the Trust was not disclosed in the original schedules, statement of affairs, or the Chapter 13 plan. On April 27, 2022, after the sale of a portion of the forty acres, Debtors filed their motion for

retention of a distribution from a trust,9 thereby revealing Ms. Wright’s interest. In the motion, Debtors state they believe that the funds from the

6 Doc. 52-2 p. 5. (Trust, Art. V, § (3)(D)). 7 Doc. 52 p. 2. 8 Id. 9 Doc. 36. 4 sale of Trust assets will be disbursed after they have completed the Chapter 13 plan payments and allege the funds should not be considered property of

the estate. On May 17, 2022, the Trustee objected to Debtors’ motion10 and on June 10, 2022, moved to modify Debtors’ Chapter 13 plan.11 The Trustee contends the Trust interest is property of the estate and the Chapter 13 plan

should be amended to increase payments enough to pay general unsecured creditors in full from Ms. Wright’s interest in the Trust. The motion to amend was filed before Debtors had completed all payments under the original plan. II. Analysis

A. The issues in controversy. Debtors’ and the Trustee’s motions both pose the same question: does property of the Chapter 13 estate include Ms. Wright’s interest in the Trust? Debtors assert that the interest was not included in the estate on the date of

filing and any distribution to which Ms. Wright became entitled after the death of Mr. True likewise is not property of the estate. When moving to amend the Chapter 13 plan, the Trustee contends after the death of Mr. True,

10 Doc. 40. 11 Doc. 43. 5 Ms. Wright’s interest in the Trust was property of the estate and should be devoted to the payment of unsecured creditors.

B. Ms. Wright’s interest in the Trust is property of the estate. 1. Ms. Wright’s interest in the Trust was included in the estate under § 541(a) when the case was filed. The joint stipulation of facts states, “At the time the case was filed, debtor Terri Wright was a contingent beneficiary of ”12 her parents’ trust. Review of the Trust clarifies that Ms. Wright’s interest became irrevocable upon the prepetition death of both her parents. The contingency is the delay

of distribution to Ms. Wright until after the lifetime of Ronnie True, one of Terri’s brothers, who was entitled to Trust income and to reside on Trust property until his death.13 Describing the interest as contingent has reference to the delay in enjoyment, not to a possibility of divestment by amendment of

the Trust or the happening of a disqualifying event, other than the death of Ms. Wright before her brother.

12 Doc. 52 p. 1. 13 If Mr. True left natural and not adopted lineal issue, the trustee was empowered in his discretion to administer the forty acres for such children’s benefit until the youngest is eighteen. 6 Section 54114 defines property of the estate broadly as comprised of all legal or equitable interests of the debtor in property, wherever located and by

whomever held, as of the commencement of the case.15 “[C]ontingent interests are property of the bankruptcy estate even if the rights do not accrue or are uncertain until a date after the bankruptcy filing.”16 In a case similar to this, the Eighth Circuit BAP held that a debtor’s interest as a contingent

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