Peoples' State Bank v. Quentin B. Stenzel

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMarch 2, 2001
Docket00-6097
StatusPublished

This text of Peoples' State Bank v. Quentin B. Stenzel (Peoples' State Bank v. Quentin B. Stenzel) 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
Peoples' State Bank v. Quentin B. Stenzel, (bap8 2001).

Opinion

United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT

No. 00-6097MN

In re: * * Quentin B. Stenzel, * * Debtor. * * Peoples’ State Bank of Wells, * Appeal from the United States * Bankruptcy Court for the Appellant, * District of Minnesota * v. * * Quentin B. Stenzel, * * Appellee. *

Submitted: January 24, 2001 Filed: March 2, 2001

Before KOGER, Chief Judge, SCHERMER and SCOTT, Bankruptcy Judges

SCHERMER, Bankruptcy Judge

Peoples’ State Bank of Wells, (the “Bank”) appeals the bankruptcy court order allowing Quentin B. Stenzel (the “Debtor”) to claim his mother’s, Elsie M. Stenzel, (the “Mother”) house and the acreage on which the house is situated (collectively the “Property”) as his homestead. We have jurisdiction over this appeal from the final order of the bankruptcy court. See 28 U.S.C. § 158(b). For the reasons set forth below, we reverse. ISSUE

The issue on appeal is whether the Debtor “occupied” the Property, entitling him to exempt it as his homestead pursuant to M.S.A. §§ 501.01 and 510.02, when he did not reside on the Property and did not farm the land, but raised hogs in a barn prior to filing for bankruptcy relief. We conclude that the Debtor did not “occupy” the Property and therefore cannot claim it as his exempt homestead pursuant to Minnesota law.

BACKGROUND

For thirty-seven years, the Debtor and his wife (the “Wife”) have lived on a five acre parcel they own in the City of Wells in rural Freeborn County, Minnesota (the “Domiciled Parcel”). They originally received their interest in the Domiciled Parcel from the Debtor’s grandparent. The Debtors claim of a homestead exemption in the Domiciled Parcel is not contested.

The Mother has lived on the Property since she acquired it with her late husband sixty-two years ago. After owning the Property for fifty-one years, the Debtor’s parents signed a warranty deed conveying a life estate to themselves and remainder interests to each of their three children. This deed was recorded four years later, and two years after the Debtor’s father’s death. A county highway separates the Property and the Domiciled Parcel. The Property consists of approximately 148 acres of tillable land, and a five to six acre building site which includes: a hog house; the Mother’s house; a machine shed; a granary; two farrowing barns; a large barn; a corn crib; and a couple of storage houses.

For approximately twenty-three years, the Debtor farmed the tillable land on the Property with his father. The Debtor then farmed this land alone for an additional three years. After the Debtor ceased farming the land on the Property, the Mother rented the tillable land to J.L. Miller, a third-party, for three years. For the next five years, the Mother rented the tillable land to Albert Schuster, another third-party. The Mother then rented the land again to J.L. Miller for three years. On occasion, the Debtor worked for J.L. Miller, farming the land.

The Debtor has engaged in raising hogs on the Property since he was nine or ten years of age. His hog operation involved use of the Domiciled Parcel and the barns on the Property. The Debtor used the

2 barns with the Mother’s permission. He paid for water, supplies, electricity and paid insurance for the hogs on the Property.

On September, 20, 1999, the Debtor filed for chapter 7 bankruptcy relief. Within the year preceding his filing date, the Debtor liquidated the balance of his livestock. On the filing date, the Debtor was not engaged in any type of farming activity or hog operations on the Property. At the meeting of creditors, the Debtor testified that he did not have an interest in any real estate except for the Domiciled Parcel. He stated that his homestead was on the Domiciled Parcel and that his farming operation took place mostly on the Domiciled Parcel with some operations on the Property. The Debtor received a discharge two months after his bankruptcy filing.

After the discharge, the Bank and the trustee (the “Trustee”) notified the Debtor of their discovery of the Debtor’s one-third remainder interest in the Property. The Debtor then amended his bankruptcy schedules and claimed homestead exemptions for both the Domiciled Parcel and the Property. The Bank and the Trustee objected to the Debtor’s claimed exemptions.

The Debtor filed a response stating that he intended to engage in hog operations and farm the tillable land on the Property in the future. In his deposition of July 2000, the Debtor stated that he was cleaning and disinfecting the hog barns on the Property at the time of filing. Since the deposition, the Debtor has been conducting the hog operation on the Property and not on the Domiciled Parcel. The Debtor claimed that he thought that he would continue to farm the Property after his father’s death and that he would inherit the Property with his two sisters. In her deposition, the Mother stated that she thought that the Debtor would go back to farming the land on the Property and that her three children would share full ownership of the Property when she passed away.

All parties submitted motions for summary judgment. In affidavits of the Debtor and the Mother submitted in support of the Debtor’s motion for summary judgment, each stated that the Debtor and the Wife routinely assist the Mother in cleaning and maintaining her house and getting her to doctors’ appointments.

The bankruptcy court found that the Debtor “owned” the Property under the meaning of that term in M.S.A. § 510.01. Further, the court held that the Debtor established that the Domiciled Parcel and the Property were contiguous under Minnesota Law and therefore constituted a single unit for purposes of the

3 homestead exemption. The court then held that occupancy was a fact issue and that the Debtor met his burden of proving occupancy because he had a longstanding presence on the Property. According to the court, whether the Debtor had a right to possession that was legally enforceable against a life tenant was irrelevant because, as a matter of fact, the Debtor used the Property. All 155 acres of the Property were exempt as the Debtor’s homestead pursuant to M.S.A. §§ 510.01 and 510.02.1

STANDARD OF REVIEW

The facts are not in dispute. This Court reviewsde novo the bankruptcy court’s legal conclusions, and reviews for clear error its findings of fact. Fed. R. Bankr. P. 8013. Martin v. Cox (In re Martin), 140 F.3d 806, 807 (8th Cir. 1998); Gourley v. Usery (In re Usery), 123 F.3d 1089, 1093 (8th Cir. 1997). A federal court is bound by decisions of the highest state court when deciding a question of substantive law. Bass v. General Motors Corp., 150 F.3d 842, 847 (8th Cir. 1998). The Bankruptcy Appellate Panel reviews the bankruptcy court’s determinations of state law de novo. In re Simmonds, 240 B.R. 897 ( B.A.P. 8th Cir. 1999).

DISCUSSION

According to 11 U.S.C. § 522(b)(2)(A), a debtor may exempt from the bankruptcy estate any property which is exempt under applicable state or local law on the date of filing of the petition. The party objecting to the debtor’s claimed exemption has the burden of proving that the debtor is not entitled to the exemption. In re Curry, 160 B.R. 813, 817 (Bankr. D. Minn. 1993).

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Kelly v. Baker
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