Marlyce E. Mueller v. Sheridan J. Buckley

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 28, 1998
Docket97-6059
StatusPublished

This text of Marlyce E. Mueller v. Sheridan J. Buckley (Marlyce E. Mueller v. Sheridan J. Buckley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marlyce E. Mueller v. Sheridan J. Buckley, (bap8 1998).

Opinion

United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT

_______________

No. 97-6059 _______________

In re: Marlyce Eilene Mueller * * Debtor * * Marlyce Eilene Mueller * * Appeal from the United States Appellant * Bankruptcy Court for the * District of Minnesota v. * * Sheridan J. Buckley * * Appellee *

Submitted: December 16, 1997 Filed: January 28, 1998 _______________

Before KOGER, Chief Judge, HILL, and SCOTT, Bankruptcy Judges. _______________

WILLIAM A. HILL, Bankruptcy Judge:

The debtor, Marlyce Eilene Mueller (“Marlyce”), appeals from the final order of the bankruptcy court1 sustaining the trustee’s objection to her claim of a homestead exemption in her lien against the marital residence which she once shared with her former husband,

1 The Honorable Gregory F. Kishel, United States Bankruptcy Judge for the District of Minnesota. Robert Mueller (“Robert”), and which he was awarded at the conclusion of their divorce proceedings. Marlyce’s appeal turns upon whether she retained a cognizable interest in the marital residence at the time she filed her petition in bankruptcy. We affirm the order of the bankruptcy court, but for reasons apart from those upon which the court relied.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Marlyce and Robert owned a residence in Northfield, Minnesota (“Northfield Residence”), in joint tenancy, and in which they both resided prior to February 27, 1994. On that date, Marlyce vacated the family home, and moved into a rented mobile home located in Kenyon, Minnesota. Later in 1994, she moved the mobile home to Farmington, Minnesota, where she resided until April 1, 1996.2 On that date, she purchased and moved into a residence in St. Paul, Minnesota. Marlyce’s bankruptcy case was filed on July 19, 1996.

During the course of their 17-year marriage, Marlyce and Robert experienced a contentious relationship which, at times, led them to temporarily separate. After the parties separated and Marlyce vacated the Northfield residence on February 27, 1994, and until the 1994 Christmas holidays, they frequently visited one another, both alone and in the company of their children; considered reconciliation; and occasionally stayed overnight together in the Northfield residence. However, after an antagonistic incident on Christmas Day, 1994, Marlyce resolved to formally end her marriage to Robert.

2 On January 30, 1997, during an evidentiary hearing before the bankruptcy court on the trustee’s objection to Marlyce’s claim of a homestead exemption in the Northfield residence, Marlyce testified that as of August 1995, she resided in a mobile home located in Farmington, Minnesota, which she subsequently purchased in September 1995, and for which she filed a homestead declaration for tax assessment purposes. The record before us does not indicate whether this mobile home is the same as that in Kenyon, Minnesota, which she originally rented upon vacating the Northfield residence in February 1994.

2 In January 1995, Marlyce commenced proceedings to dissolve their marriage. On April 5, 1995, the State District Court entered an Order for Temporary Relief (“temporary

3 order”) in the matter, awarding Robert “the sole temporary use and occupancy of [the Northfield residence].” Marlyce and Robert subsequently entered into a Marital Termination Agreement whereby Robert received title to and possession of the Northfield residence. This agreement was approved by the court and incorporated into its Judgment and Decree of Dissolution of Marriage (“dissolution decree”), entered on January 31, 1996. Concerning the parties’ residences, the dissolution decree provided as follows:

7. Homestead. [Robert] is awarded the entire right, title, interest and equity in and to the homestead of the parties, located in Rice County, Minnesota being legally described as: Lot 7, Block 2, Keya Paha Ranch, First Subdivision, Rice County, Minnesota, according to the recorded plat thereof on file and of record in the office of the County Recorder, Rice County, Minnesota[;] subject to the encumbrances thereon, which [Robert] shall pay according to their terms and hold [Marlyce] harmless therefrom, and subject to a non-interest bearing lien in favor of [Marlyce] on said real estate in the amount of $45,000. The lien shall be due and payable upon the occurrence of the first of the following events: a. [Robert] moving from the residence; b. The death of [Robert] or the parties’ daughter, Elizabeth; c. [Robert’s] remarriage; d. Elizabeth’s emancipation; e. October 31, 1998; f. Failure of [Robert] to timely pay all mortgage, tax, insurance and utility payments on the homestead. .... [Marlyce] shall execute a Quit Claim Deed in favor of [Robert]. At such time as [Marlyce’s] lien is satisfied, [Robert] shall execute a Satisfaction of Marital Lien in recordable form, releasing any further interest in the homestead.

9. Mobile Home. That [Marlyce] is awarded all right, title and interest in and to the mobile home in which she resides, free and clear of any claim on the part of [Robert] and shall assume any encumbrance thereon, and hold [Robert] harmless therefrom.

4 After Marlyce filed for bankruptcy protection on July 19, 1996, Robert continued to reside in the Northfield residence along with the parties’ minor daughter, who, at that time, was a high school student and was unemancipated. Although Robert did not make any payments to Marlyce on the $45,000.00 lien obligation before she filed her petition in bankruptcy, she ultimately expected the satisfaction of his indebtedness to her, per the terms of the dissolution decree, so as to aid in the purchase of her St. Paul residence.3

In her schedules, Marlyce listed the following property interests which are pertinent to this appeal: Schedule A, entitled “Real Property,” she listed her St. Paul residence, and named herself as “owner”; and Schedule B, at Item 16, entitled “Alimony, Maintenance, Support and Property Settlements to which the debtor is . . . entitled,” she listed her $45,000.00 lien on the Northfield residence. In Schedule C, pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 522(b)(2)(A), Marlyce elected to use the exemptions afforded to judgment debtors under Minnesota state law, and claimed her interest in the lien as exempt. The trustee timely objected to her claim of exemption in the lien.

The bankruptcy court sustained the trustee’s objection and disallowed Marlyce’s claim of exemption, holding that Marlyce “has no allowable exemption under Minnesota statute for her right to payment from Robert.”4 The court specifically concluded that Marlyce’s right to payment from Robert “is not protectible as ‘proceeds’ within the scope of [Section]

3 In the purchase agreement for the St. Paul residence, Marlyce agreed to pay $5,000.00 as a down payment and $45,000.00 to the seller on or before November 1998. Per the dissolution decree, the lien became “due and payable” by October 31, 1998 at the latest, and earlier upon the occurrence of any of the contingent events provided for in the decree. 4 In so doing, the court expressly overruled In re Joy, 5 B.R. 681 (Bankr. D. Minn. 1980), which held that a debtor “compelled by court order to leave and remain away [from his homestead] until such time as a determination was made in [his] marriage dissolution proceedings”--a period of more than two years--“never left his home,” and “sufficiently ‘owned and occupied’ his home to maintain his homestead exemption.” Id. at 683. By overruling of In re Joy, the bankruptcy court eliminated the exception it created to the strict language of Minnesota Statute 510.07.

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