Packer v. General Motors Acceptance Corp. (In Re Packer)

101 B.R. 651, 6 Colo. Bankr. Ct. Rep. 230, 1989 Bankr. LEXIS 1159, 1989 WL 81206
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Colorado
DecidedJanuary 11, 1989
Docket16-14884
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 101 B.R. 651 (Packer v. General Motors Acceptance Corp. (In Re Packer)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Packer v. General Motors Acceptance Corp. (In Re Packer), 101 B.R. 651, 6 Colo. Bankr. Ct. Rep. 230, 1989 Bankr. LEXIS 1159, 1989 WL 81206 (Colo. 1989).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

SIDNEY B. BROOKS, Bankruptcy Judge.

THIS MATTER comes before the Court upon Katherine Lee Packer’s (“Debtor” herein) Motion to Void Lien Pursuant to Section 522(f) and General Motors Acceptance Corporation’s (“Creditor” herein) Objection thereto. A hearing was scheduled before this Court on October 13, 1988 wherein both parties agreed that the salient facts were not in dispute. This Motion can be decided as a matter of law. Both parties filed proposed Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law with regard to their respective positions.

The facts which are not in dispute are as follows:

1. The Creditor obtained a judgment against the Debtor in the Adams County District Court on or about April 4, 1988 for approximately $5,583.76.

2. Thereafter, the Creditor filed a transcript of judgment in the county where the. Debtor’s real property and principal place of residence was located, thereby placing a judgment lien on the property.

3. The Debtor filed for protection under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code on or about May 25, 1988.

4. The fair market value of the property is $70,000.00. Against that value are first and second consensual liens, or deeds of trust, securing obligations of $56,474.00 and $7,900.00, respectively, followed by this Creditor’s judicial lien, a third non-consensual encumbrance, of $5,583.00.

5. All agree that the Debtor is entitled to the $20,000.00 exemption on her residence under state law. But for the third encumbrance, Debtor would have equity in the home of about $5,626.00.

Opinion

The Debtor filed a Motion to Void Lien Pursuant to Section 522(f) to void the entire $5,583.76 judicial lien of the Creditor, because the judgment lien “impairs” the exemption on her residence to which she is entitled. Debtor relies, essentially, on the case In re Hermansen, 84 B.R. 729 (Bankr.D.Colo.1988).

The Creditor argues that, pursuant to In re Fry, 83 B.R. 778 (Bankr.D.Colo.1988), a judgment lien never attaches to that portion of real property exempt under state law, that such lien can thus never impair a debtor’s homestead exemption and, therefore, a debtor cannot use Section 522(f) to void a judicial lien on real property in Colorado. Creditor further maintains that since the judgment lien does not attach and since the Debtor cannot use Section 522(f) to void the judgment lien, the lien should remain a *652 valid and enforceable lien against the Debt- or’s property.

The issue regarding the use of 11 U.S.C. § 522(f) to void a judicial lien on a debtor’s residence is a problem in this District. One source of the problem is the inconsistent, indeed conflicting, opinions in the Fry and Hermansen decisions as to whether or not debtors can use Section 522(f) to avoid judicial liens on real property in Colorado. In In re Fry, Judge Brumbaugh said that debtors cannot do so under any circumstances. Conversely, in In re Hermansen, I have previously said that debtors can use Section 522(f), and may do so if they elect to do so. In accord with my previous decision in In re Hermansen, I shall allow, in the instant case, the Debtor to invoke Section 522(f) of the Bankruptcy Code and to avoid, in its entirety, the Creditor’s judicial lien on the real property. This judgment is based on, and hereby adopts, the reasoning and rationale set forth in In re Hermansen and, particularly, that reference wherein the Court states as follows:

Section 522(f) is not necessarily superfluous with respect to real property liens in this District and debtors should not be unconditionally deprived of an available tool provided under the Bankruptcy Code. Debtors may, for a variety of different reasons, desire or need to invoke the provisions of Section 522(f). They may, for example, choose to proceed under Section 522(f) to effect, or to memorialize, or to confirm and legally document the avoidance of a judicial lien which impairs, or appears to impair, a debtor’s homestead exemption (a) for title purposes, (b) for title insurance purposes, (c) because of ancillary or state court litigation, or (d) for use in future foreclosures or disputes.
In re Hermansen, supra at 733.

Beyond the views and opinion set forth in In re Hermansen, the instant case gives me an opportunity to explain further some of the disparate reasons, which taken collectively, lead me to conclude that it is proper, perhaps necessary, to allow debtors the opportunity to use Section 522(f) to avoid judicial liens on real property. Those reasons include the following.

1. Fresh start concept reinforced. Debtors are interested in and entitled to a fresh start after bankruptcy. Section 522(f), as well as for example Sections 502 and 506, are tools designed to fix the relative rights, interests, and secured claims of creditors and debtors. Section 522(f) is intended, in part, to free assets from certain secured claims and to extricate exempt assets from particular encumbrances which cloud title and impair ownership rights. If a judicial lien is not avoided under Section 522(f), it would survive to continue to cloud title and impair ownership rights. If title to assets remains clouded and/or ownership rights remain impaired on specific exempt assets that the Code intends to spring free after bankruptcy, then the fresh start is thwarted.

2. Lien will survive absent avoidance. Liens, including judicial liens, if not avoided generally survive after bankruptcy and are enforceable, in an in rem action, against a debtor’s property pursuant to Section 506(d). Chandler Bank of Lyons v. Ray, 804 F.2d 577 (10th Cir.1986).

[Tjhat for sections in the Code which relate to automatic stays and to lien avoidance to have any substance at all necessarily leads to the conclusion that unavoided liens pass through § 506(d) without action by the lien holder. Thus the injunction on discharge under § 524 of the Code does not preclude in rem actions by secured creditors.
Chandler Bank of Lyons v. Ray, supra at 579.

I read that language in Chandler coupled with other important language in that case, 1 to conclude that use of avoidance *653 powers available to the debtor ought to be undertaken in bankruptcy to fix the relative rights of a debtor and a secured creditor at the time of bankruptcy, or the lien rights will properly survive the bankruptcy. The burden is on the debtor to properly and timely exercise a debtor’s bankruptcy rights and to fix, to establish, the relative rights of debtor and creditor under the Code.

3.

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Bluebook (online)
101 B.R. 651, 6 Colo. Bankr. Ct. Rep. 230, 1989 Bankr. LEXIS 1159, 1989 WL 81206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/packer-v-general-motors-acceptance-corp-in-re-packer-cob-1989.