O'MALLEY v. Rapidan River Farm

24 B.R. 900, 1982 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15829
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedNovember 4, 1982
DocketCiv. A. 82-574-N
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 24 B.R. 900 (O'MALLEY v. Rapidan River Farm) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'MALLEY v. Rapidan River Farm, 24 B.R. 900, 1982 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15829 (E.D. Va. 1982).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM ORDER

KELLAM, Senior District Judge.

This case came on appeal to the United States District Court from an Order of the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Virginia entered on July 14, 1982, ordering Appellant Rapidan River Farm (Rapidan) to release into the possession of Appellee Orange O’Malley three horses in which Rapidan claimed a statutory liveryman’s lien. The facts are summarized here. Appellee is the owner of two horses and lessee of a third horse. On June 27, 1981, O’Malley placed all three horses in the possession of Appellant Rapidan, a farm engaged in the business of keeping, raising and training horses. The horses remained in Rapidan’s possession until Appellant’s motion for stay of judgment order of July 14, 1982 was denied by the Bankruptcy Court on July 27, 1982. Appellee’s livery accounts with Rapidan totalled $8,324.00 by the end of March, 1982, at which time Rapi-dan made demand for payment. Having received no payment from O’Malley, Rapi-dan sought to enforce its livery stable keeper’s lien upon the horses for payment due as provided by Va.Code §§ 43-32 and 43-34. On April 21, 1982, O’Malley filed her homestead deed in the Circuit Court for the city of Suffolk pursuant to Virginia Code § 34-4, thereby purporting to exempt all three horses in Rapidan’s possession and valuing each at $1,000.00. On April 22,1982, O’Mal-ley filed her petition for relief under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code in the United States Bankruptcy Court for this district. On May 12,1982, O’Malley filed a complaint against Rapidan in the Bankruptcy Court to recover possession of the horses. Rapidan responded by denying O’Malley’s right to recover possession and counterclaimed for payment under its asserted stable keeper’s *902 lien while praying for relief from O’Mal-ley’s automatic stay instituted pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 362. The Bankruptcy Court issued its Judgment Order adverse to Rapi-dan on July 14, 1982, whereupon Rapidan filed notice of appeal and moved for stay of judgment. By Order of August 10, 1982, the Bankruptcy Court denied Rapidan’s motion for stay of judgment and ordered Rapi-dan to release the horses into O’Malley’s possession. The final amount owing to Ra-pidan for the care of the three horses to-talled $10,597.00, none of which has been paid.

Appellant assigns as error and presents for review here the Bankruptcy Court’s ruling that, in keeping with Congressional intent to provide sufficient protection for the bankrupt, Rapidan’s posses-sory lien does not arise solely by operation of law but is more properly characterized, on these facts, as being judicially created and therefore subordinate to O’Malley’s homestead exemption. With this ruling we cannot agree.

In its brief on appeal, Appellee argues that O’Malley’s homestead exemption rights in the horses in question are paramount to any lien interest in the horses asserted by Rapidan. Specifically, Appellee maintains that where Virginia law permits a householder to claim a homestead exemption in real and personal property to be selected by him upon filing his homestead deed, the General Assembly of Virginia has nevertheless definitively set forth those limited categories of debts to which the aforementioned exemption shall not apply. Because Rapi-dan, according to Appellee, does not claim relief under any category of debt which § 34-5 protects from homestead exemption, Rapidan’s asserted interest in Appellee’s horses must fall. In the same vein, Appel-lee urges the Court to conclude that, because § 34-5 enumerates those forms of debts not subject to homestead exemption and Rapidan’s asserted livery stable keeper’s lien claimed under Va.Code § 43-32 is not among them, Appellee’s homestead exemption regarding the three horses is not subject to the lien and must therefore prevail. Appellee’s premise that § 34-5 exhaustively sets forth creditors’ rights in the context of homestead exemption is flawed; Appellant Rapidan’s right to protection as a possessory lienholder arises separately and distinctly from the provisions of § 34-5 but cannot be viewed as any less valid in the absence of specific statutory guidance to the contrary.

Both parties draw upon the case of In re Epperley, 4 B.R. 124 (Bkrtcy.W.D.Va.1980) in order to enlighten the Court regarding the disposition of a conflict, such as ours, arising between the rights of a homestead-debtor and a possessory lienholder. In Epperley, the debtor sought an order from the Bankruptcy Court holding that debtor’s homestead deed was paramount to defendant garageman’s possessory lien for repairs of an auto. The Epperley Court initially noted that Va.Code § 34-5(2) excludes “services rendered by a laboring person or mechanic” from the force and effect of debtor’s § 34 — 4 homestead exemption rights but refused to so characterize defendant’s claim because of the “serious dispute as to whether or not the defendant t/a ‘Woodyard Auto Repair Shop’ is a ‘laboring person or mechanic’ within the intent and purview of § 34-5.” Epperley, supra, at 126. Instead, the Epperley Court went on to consider the independent source and nature of protection afforded various Virginia businesses by virtue of the possessory lien provisions found throughout Va.Code §§ 43-31 to 43-33. The legislative purpose underlying these statutorily-granted posses-sory liens, according to the Court, was to protect the interests of one “who adds his services and materials to the property of another, thus enhancing its value.” Id. at 127. Framing the conflict as one between the unrelated statutory schemes of homestead exemption and possessory liens, the Epperley Court fixed the status of each of the foregoing measures as each relates, respectively, to a title lien upon a motor vehicle as a means of determining which interest, in this case, shall prevail. Observing that such a title lien enjoys superiority over a homestead exemption and that § 43-32 explicitly provides a garageman with an *903 interest superior to a title lien, albeit to the extent limited therein, the Court concluded that the possessory lien at issue likewise prevails over any asserted homestead exemption. Id. at 127. As final support for its conclusion, the Court noted that the reach of the lien thus declared superior was properly limited to the recovery for that enhanced value which, but for the lienholder’s efforts, would not have enured to the debtor’s benefit, and thus “.. . in equity, does not diminish the value of the exemption otherwise claimed.” Id. at 127.

On our set of facts, we find no reason to depart from the result set out in Epperley. Appellee adduces no authority to counter, as it purports to do, the Epperley Court’s ruling regarding the superiority of a stable keeper’s possessory lien over a debtor’s homestead exemption. Instead, Appellee argues that the Epperley Court should have reached the same result but upon grounds that defendant garageman made out a good claim for relief from § 34-4 exemptions as specifically provided in § 34-5(2).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 B.R. 900, 1982 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15829, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/omalley-v-rapidan-river-farm-vaed-1982.