Lancaster v. Easterly (In Re Easterly)

11 B.R. 206
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Tennessee
DecidedApril 24, 1981
DocketBankruptcy No. 3-80-00901, Adv. No. 3-81-0074
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 11 B.R. 206 (Lancaster v. Easterly (In Re Easterly)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lancaster v. Easterly (In Re Easterly), 11 B.R. 206 (Tenn. 1981).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

CLIVE W. BARE, Bankruptcy Judge.

The controversy in this adversary proceeding involves the ownership of ten guns (four Brownings, three Winchesters, one Stevens, one Ruger, one Remington) valued at some $2,000 to $2,500. Asserting ownership or rights in the guns are the debtors, the trustee, a son of the debtors, and Commercial Credit. The various contentions of the debtor in documents and pleadings signed or filed by him, frequently contradictory, make resolution of the issues more difficult than would be normally encountered.

In the petition filed by the debtor on July 7, 1980, the guns are not listed in Schedule B-2, Personal Property. However, in Schedule B-4, Property Claimed as Exempt, the following statement appears:

9 Guns located at debtors residence, value $2000.00 claimed as exempt under T.C.A. 26-202. “Equity in guns is claimed by William Mark Easterly [the debtor’s son] as his sole property.”

In Schedule A-3, Creditors Claiming Security, Commercial Credit Plan is listed in the amount of $4769.00, with security shown as various items of household furnishings of the value of $500.00. None of *207 the guns are listed as security, although "1 gun case” is shown.

On August 1, 1980, the debtor filed “Amendment to Petition”, inter alia, to change the market value of the household goods held by Commercial Credit as security for its debt from $500.00 to $900.00. The debtor also proposed to amend Schedule B-4, Property Claimed as Exempt, as follows:

Type of property: Guns
Location: At debtor’s residence
Statute: TCA 26-202
Value: $1500.00.

Also, on the same date the debtor filed adversary proceeding No. 3-80-0397, naming Commercial Credit as defendant. In this proceeding the debtor asserted that on May 25, 1978, he had obtained a loan from Commercial Credit in the amount of $3,792.70 and had pledged as security “household goods, including appliances and sports equipment.” Paragraph 4 of the complaint states as follows:

“The debtors’ interest in the property referred to in the preceding paragraph does not exceed $900.00, if certain guns in the home of the debtors are not included. The defendant’s (Commercial Credit’s) disclosure statement also specifies 6 Browning shotguns, which the debtors allege are the property of their son, William Mark Easterly, who is 19 years of age, and the value of the guns is approximately $1500.00.”

The debtor sought to avoid Commercial Credit’s security interest pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 522(f)(2). 1 Trial was held October 3,1980, at which time the court granted the debtor’s prayer for relief as to the household goods and furnishings but denied relief as to the Browning shotguns. Paragraph 2 of the judgment decrees that Commercial Credit’s lien “against six guns in the home of the debtor at the time of granting the lien is a valid lien as to the debtors.” 2

On September 8, 1980, the debtor filed “Second Amendment to Petition” adding some five secured and unsecured creditors, with claims totaling $54,485.24, none of which relate to the issue before the court.

On November 13, 1980, the debtor filed “Third Amendment to Petition” adding inter alia three additional unsecured creditors with claims in the amount of $10,000.00. Paragraph 2 of the amendment states as follows:

“2. To add under Schedule B-2 — Personal property
Gun: Sweet 16 Browning, 20 ga. Browning, 12 ga. Browning, pump 22 rifle, 308 rifle, 410 ga. shotgun, 12 ga. Browning, lever action 22, 220 Swift, 243 rifle. Market value, $2000.00.
Note: The debtor’s son, William Mark Easterly, claims these guns as gifts from his parents. These guns are added to the debtor’s property since it may be that these guns are the property of the debtors.”

Further, the debtors proposed to exempt under T.C.A. 26-202,

“Guns: at debtors’ residence
12 ga. Browning
lever action 22
220 Swift
243 rifle
with indicated value of $800.00.”

*208 The Third Amendment was apparently the result of a letter from the attorney for the trustee to the attorney for the debtors, dated November 11, 1980, advising that the trustee had taken into his possession 6 of the 10 guns involved in this controversy, and that the trustee intended to institute an adversary proceeding to sell those guns as assets of the estate, and to seek a determination of the rights of the debtors’ son to the remaining four guns which at that time were in the possession of the son as he had refused to surrender them to the trustee.

On January 26, 1981, the trustee instituted the present adversary proceeding, naming the debtor, the son, and Commercial Credit as defendants, seeking to determine the ownership of the ten guns. (Subsequent to the letter of November 11, 1980, the son, on November 20, 1980, turned the remaining guns over to the trustee). Trial was held on April 7, 1981. 3

II

The son, Mark Easterly, age 19, testified that nine of the guns belong to him (the exception is a Winchester 22 rifle); that seven of the guns were Christmas or birthday presents to him over the past eight years from his parents; one was a present from an older brother, Doug Easterly; and one was a present from an individual identified as Connie Sexton. Mark’s testimony is supported by the testimony of the debtor, Joe Bob Easterly; his brother, Doug Easterly; his grandfather, W. W. White; and to a lesser extent by a hunting companion and a seller of two of the guns. Another witness, Rev. Harry Thomas, also testified that at the request of the father, he constructed a gun cabinet some 6 years ago and was told that the cabinet was a gift for his son, Mark. Rev. Thomas further testified that Mark had told him many years ago that he intended to build a collection of “Brownings”.

There is no evidence in the record disputing the claim of Mark to the guns. The trustee correctly conceded that the proof is clear that Mark’s rights to the nine guns are superior to the rights of the trustee. It also appears that Mark’s rights to the four Brownings are superior to the rights of Commercial Credit. The guns belonged to Mark at the time his father granted a security interest in the guns to Commercial Credit. There is no proof that the father had authority to do so.

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11 B.R. 206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lancaster-v-easterly-in-re-easterly-tneb-1981.