Matter of Shipman

167 B.R. 527, 1994 Bankr. LEXIS 745, 1994 WL 199844
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Indiana
DecidedMay 4, 1994
Docket19-20367
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 167 B.R. 527 (Matter of Shipman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Indiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Shipman, 167 B.R. 527, 1994 Bankr. LEXIS 745, 1994 WL 199844 (Ind. 1994).

Opinion

DECISION

ROBERT E. GRANT, Bankruptcy Judge.

This matter is before the court on debtors’ motion to avoid the security interest of Hicksville Bank on their 1976 Chevrolet pickup truck. The truck has been claimed as exempt pursuant to I.C. 34-2-28-l(a)(2). Debtors contend that the truck is a tool of Mr. Shipman’s trade, entitling them to avoid the bank’s nonpossessory, nonpurchase-mon-ey security interest pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 522(f)(2)(B). The bank acknowledges that it holds a nonpossessory, nonpurchase-money security interest on the truck. It objects to the motion, however, arguing that the track does not qualify as a tool of the debtor’s trade. The parties have submitted this issue to the court based upon their stipulations of fact and the briefs of counsel.

Pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 522(f)(2):

[T]he debtor may avoid the fixing of a lien on an interest of the debtor in property to the extent that such lien impairs an exemption to which the debtor would have been entitled under subsection (b) of this section, if such lien is—
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(2) A nonpossessory, nonpurchase-mon-ey security interest in any—
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(B) implements, professional books, or tools, of the trade of the debtor[.] 11 U.S.C. § 522(f)(2)(B).

The debtor, Keath Allen Shipman, works as a product technician for the Wieland Furniture Company. His general duties require the regular use of a track for picking up various products for his employer and transporting them back to its place of business. The employer does not own a vehicle he could use for this purpose. Although it did not make owning a vehicle a specific prerequisite to debtor’s employment, the company requires him to have daily access to a vehicle in order to perform the duties of his job. While the employer states that the debtor will not be fired in the event he no longer has the use of the track, it will be his responsibility to find alternative transportation.

The present dispute arises out of the parties’ differing interpretations given to the term “tools of the trade” as used in § 522(f)(2)(B). The bank argues for a strict standard under which the property must be the sine qua non of debtor’s continued employment. Under this approach, an item does not qualify as a tool of the trade unless, in losing it, a debtor would lose its employment as well. Debtor advances a broader construction which examines the relationship between the property in question and the duties a debtor is expected to perform in the course of its employment.

Although the term “tools of the trade” appears twice in § 522, see 11 U.S.C. § 522(d)(6) & (f)(2)(B), it is not defined. The Seventh Circuit has had to grapple with the consequences of the absence of a definition on two separate occasions. See In re Thompson, 867 F.2d 416 (7th Cir.1989); Matter of Patterson, 825 F.2d 1140 (7th Cir. 1987). While observing that the difficulties presented by the lack of a definition and the obscure origins of § 522(f)(2)(B) created “such a mess as to call into question the skill of the Code’s draftsmen with regard to questions of exemptions ... ”, Thompson, 867 F.2d at 421, it specifically refused to “repair section 522(f)(2)(B) simply by adopting a uniform federal definition for tools of the trade.” Id. The court concluded that:

Section 522(f)(2)(B) explicitly names the tools of the trade exemption as one entitled to lien avoidance. It also makes no reference to section 522(d)(6) save as may be implicit in the identical wording of the two sections, and places no dollar limit (as in section 522(d)(6)) on the exemption. As a semantic matter, the reference in section 522(f)(2)(B) to the tools of the trade exemption is to both the federal exemption and the corresponding state exemption, de *529 pending on which the debtor has elected under section 522(b)(2)(A). Thompson, 867 F.2d at 420.

As a result, in the cases it confronted, the scope of a debtor’s ability to avoid a lien upon tools of the trade was governed by the scope of the tools of the trade exemption it had claimed. See In re Stallsworth, 133 B.R. 470, 474 (Bankr.S.D.Ind.1991). Thus, in Patterson, where debtors had claimed the federal exemptions of § 522(d), the concept of tools of the trade was limited, via § 522(d)(6), to items of modest value, such as rakes and other hand tools, and was not expanded through the “wildcard exemption” of § 522(d)(5). Patterson, 825 F.2d at 1146-48 (cows and a tractor not tools of the trade). Where more liberal state exemptions for tools of the trade were involved, however, Thompson permitted the avoidance of liens on the items subject to the exemption. Thompson, 867 F.2d at 421 (tractor, combine and other farm equipment were tools of the trade).

Although it has the anomaly of producing contrary results in seemingly identical situations, the approach to the avoidance of liens upon a debtor’s tools of the trade adopted by the Seventh Circuit is workable, as long as there is some type of underlying state or federal exemption for tools of the trade. Unfortunately, Indiana does not have and has not had anything remotely resembling a tools of the trade exemption for more than 140 years. At least as early as 1851, Indiana had abandoned the practice of granting exemptions in specific items of property in favor of the “modern innovation” of exempting a particular dollar amount of property generally, with the value of the available exemption being determined, not by the property’s. use, but by its classification as real, tangible or intangible. 1 See Spangler v. Bolinger, 216 Ind. 28, 22 N.E.2d 983, 984-85 (1939); Stallsworth, 133 B.R. at 474-75. Thus, Indiana has no exemption for or body of law concerning what may or may not be a tool of the trade. 2 Unless the term “tools of the trade” as used in § 522(f)(2)(B) has some type of uniform meaning, independent from the law creating the underlying exemption, Indiana debtors will not be able to take advantage of the opportunity to avoid liens upon this type of property. 3 This might be a legitimate conclusion but for the fact that Hen avoidance is a matter of federal, rather than state, law, In re Heape,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
167 B.R. 527, 1994 Bankr. LEXIS 745, 1994 WL 199844, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-shipman-innb-1994.