Matter of Elliott

31 B.R. 33, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 6062
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedJune 8, 1983
DocketBankruptcy 3-82-00902
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 31 B.R. 33 (Matter of Elliott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Elliott, 31 B.R. 33, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 6062 (Ohio 1983).

Opinion

PRELIMINARY PROCEDURE

CHARLES A. ANDERSON, Bankruptcy Judge.

This matter is before the Court upon Motion filed by Debtor on 1 April 1983 “to set aside” this Court’s “Order for Payment of Dividends” dated 22 March 1983. On 15 April 1983, the Trustee filed a written “Memorandum Contra Motion of Debtor.” The Court heard the matter on 6 May 1983. The following decision is based upon the parties’ arguments presented at the hearing, and the record, inclusive of the parties’ memoranda.

FINDINGS OF FACT

As required by 11 U.S.C. § 521(1) and Rules 108 and 110 of the Bankruptcy Rules of Procedure, Debtor timely filed his Schedules with this Court on 30 March 1982 (simultaneously with his Chapter 7 Petition). In Schedule B-4, Debtor claimed an exemption in his homestead, and also listed a number of specific items of personal property as exempt under 11 U.S.C. § 522. Pertinent to the instant matter, Debtor also claimed $800.00 as exempt, as follows:

Ohio Revised $400.00 Code § 2329.66(A)(4)(a) other property - money in Petitioner’s possession
other property - mise, in Petitioner’s Ohio Revised $400.00 possession Code § 2329.66(A)(17)

No objections to Debtor’s exemptions as originally scheduled were pursued.

The instant matter involves disposition of money received from the surrender by the Trustee of four life insurance policies for which Debtor is the beneficiary. On 2 July 1982, the Chapter 7 Trustee filed an Application for authority to surrender the policies to the insurer in exchange for their “cash surrender value.” The Court, by Amended Order issued 6 August 1982, granted the Trustee’s Application. On 17 September 1982, the Trustee reported receipt of $1,966.18 from the insurer in exchange for the completed surrender of the policies. The Trustee further reported that the $1,966.18 constituted the total amount available for distribution to creditors, and that no distributions had been made as of that date. On 22 February 1983, the Court issued a Discharge Order “relieving Debtor from all dischargeable debts.” On 22 March 1983, the Court issued an “Order Authorizing Payment of Expenses, Compensation and Distribution of Funds,” wherein the Court essentially authorized payment of administrative expenses by authorizing distribution of $709.00 of the moneys received by the surrender of the policies. On the same date, the Court also issued an “Order for Payment of Dividends” essentially authorizing distribution of the balance of the moneys received pro rata to allowed unsecured claims.

*35 On 1 April 1983, Debtor filed the instant Motion requesting that the Court set aside the Order for Payment of Dividends, and also that the Court order the Trustee to distribute $800.00 of the moneys in his possession “pursuant to exemptions claimed on Schedule B^4 of $400.00 in other property pursuant to Ohio Revised Code Section 2329.66(A)(4a) and $400.00 in other property pursuant to Ohio Revised Section 2329.-66(A)(17).” Debtor essentially argues that the exemptions, “orally asserted” at a hearing on the allowance of certain claims held 11 March 1983, should be permitted as claimed in Schedule B — 4 attached to Debt- or’s Petition. Debtor emphasizes that exemption provisions should be liberally construed in favor of a petitioning debtor.

The Trustee responds that no portion of the cash surrender value of Debtor’s life insurance policies is claimed as exempt in Debtor’s Schedule B-4. Furthermore, the Trustee contends that “the exemption was never specifically claimed in said property until the final meeting, and, if allowed, would possibly affect the computation of the Trustee’s commission and would make it difficult to finalize cases, etc,”

The Court notes that, to date, Debtor has made no formal amendments to his Schedule B-4 as originally filed.

DECISION AND ORDER

I

In order to claim property of the estate as exempt, a debtor within his discretion, must affirmatively assert an alleged claim of exemption as a matter of record. 11 U.S.C. § 522(b); Rule 403(a) of the Bankruptcy Rules of Procedure (hereinafter B.R. P.); Bass v. Thacker, 5 B.R. 592 (B.C.W.D. Virg.1980). If a claim of exemption is not asserted, such property remains property of the estate regardless whether the property might otherwise have been successfully exempted. 11 U.S.C. §§ 522(b) and 541.

A claim by a debtor that certain property is exempt from distribution to creditors may only be accomplished as a matter of record by the assertion of such claim in Schedule B-4, either by an initial filing or by amendment thereto. See Form No. 6 of the Interim Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure; and B.R.P. 108 and 110. A claim that property is exempt may not be orally asserted.

The initial question before the Court therefore is whether Debtor has properly claimed an exemption in the subject life insurance policies’ cash surrender value by the filing with this Court of Debtor’s Schedule B-4, as described above. It is the determination of the Court that Debtor has not, as a matter of record, effectively accomplished the assertion of a claim of exemption in the subject monies.

In this case, Debtor, as a matter of record, claimed $800.00 of cash “in Petitioner’s possession” as exempt. For a claim of exemption to be successfully accomplished, such claim must be clearly asserted and the property claimed as exempt must be clearly described. It is not sufficient that an asserted claim put a trustee on notice that a claim may be assertable in property which may arguably be fungible with property actually claimed as exempt. The function of Schedule B-4 is to permit a trustee to ascertain, without any further substantial inquiry, those properties which a debtor believes to be exempt from distribution to creditors. If a debtor claims cash “in the debtor’s possession” as exempt, the record speaks for itself; and the trustee should not be expected to guess that a claim of an exemption in cash “in the debtor’s possession” was actually intended to be an exemption in cash to be obtained upon surrender of life insurance policies in the trustee’s possession. *

II

In this case, for Debtor to assert successfully a claim of exemption in a portion of *36 the cash surrender value of the subject policies, Debtor would have to amend Debtor’s Schedule B-4 accordingly. The basic question before the Court therefore is whether Debtor may timely amend his Schedules at this point in the administration of his case.

The pertinent rules regarding the timeliness of amendments to the list of property a debtor claims as exempt are B.R.P. 110 and 403. B.R.P.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 B.R. 33, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 6062, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-elliott-ohsb-1983.