Roberts v. John Deere Co. (In Re Roberts)

40 B.R. 629, 1984 Bankr. LEXIS 5824
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Missouri
DecidedApril 23, 1984
Docket16-60724
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 40 B.R. 629 (Roberts v. John Deere Co. (In Re Roberts)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roberts v. John Deere Co. (In Re Roberts), 40 B.R. 629, 1984 Bankr. LEXIS 5824 (Mo. 1984).

Opinion

FINDINGS OF FACT, CONCLUSIONS OF LAW, AND ORDER DENYING MOTION FOR LIEN AVOIDANCE

DENNIS J. STEWART, Bankruptcy Judge.

In this case, the debtor seeks avoidance of liens on certain farm machinery which he characterizes as tools of his trade of a farmer and thus exempt to the extent of $4,000.00 under § 513.430(2) RSMo. He accordingly seeks to avoid under § 522(f)(2) of the Bankruptcy Code respondent John Deere’s lien on so much of the value of these chattels as can be claimed as exempt. The respondent initially defended the motion for lien avoidance on the grounds that the security interest sought to be avoided was a purchase money security interest and thus, under the plain terms of § 522(f)(2), supra, not subject to avoidance. But the movant initially denied this allegation, thus seeming to the court to require a hearing of this matter. 1

Accordingly, the court initially convened a hearing in the matter on January 20, 1984, in St. Joseph, Missouri. Counsel for the parties then appeared before the court and stated that the issue of the nonpur-chase money character of the security interest was no longer before the court; that the issue to be resolved was that of the value of the chattels; and that they would propose to the court in writing a schedule for offering documentary evidence on this issue. Counsel, however, never made such a proposal, with the result that the court reset a hearing, by order entered on February 28, 1984, for March 9, 1984, in St. Joseph, Missouri.

Evidence was then adduced to the principal material effect that the debtor has some little equity currently in one of the chattels which is the subject of his motion; 2 that the debtor, however, made a substantial down payment at the time of their purchase, but otherwise the value for the remainder of the purchase price came from the respondent creditor; and that the chattels are tools of the debtor’s trade within the meaning of the Missouri exemption statute.

It is the assertion of the movant, based upon these facts, that the respondent’s security interest cannot be regarded as a purchase money security interest to the extent that he gave trade-in value to the respondent or made a down payment when the sale and credit transaction took place; that, accordingly, in the ratio that this equity interest bore to the total purchase price, the lien avoidance statute, § 522(f)(2), should be utilized to protect the same ratio of equity interest in the present value of the collateral; that, accordingly, inasmuch as the total down payment and trade in value given by the movant to respondent was 30% of the total purchase price, the respondent’s security interest cannot be accorded effect as to more than the remaining 70% of the present value of the collateral; that any other rule would disproportionately place the risk of depreciation on the debtor; and that the issue thus presented

*631 is one of first impression which has not previously been decided by the court.

This court formerly, however, in the cases of Miller v. Peoples Bank of Miller, 8 B.R. 43 (Bkrtcy.W.D.Mo.1980), and Matter of Drummond, 17 B.R. 494 (Bkrtcy.E. D.Ark.1981), recognized the principle that lien avoidance should be coextensive with a debtor’s equity interest (in the sense of the amount by which value of the collateral exceeds the balance due to the creditor). The reasoning of the court in so holding was based on the unequivocal letter of the Bankruptcy Code and its legislative history, which this court analyzed to the following effect:

“[T]he precise letter of ... [§ 522(f) ] makes [lien] avoidance dependent upon the property’s being exempt under § 522(b). That section, in turn, at subsection (b)(1) thereof, provides for the exemption of ‘property that is specified under subsection (d) of this section.’ And, as applicable here, that section exempts only ‘[t]he debtor’s interest’ in the property there described.
“The court is aware that the debtor in the action at bar is claiming his exemptions pursuant to the applicable state law, rather than the provisions of §§ 522(b) and (d)(1), supra. See § 522(b)(2)(A), which permits him to make this election. But the state exemptions have not previously been regarded as effective under the bankruptcy law except insofar as the debtor had an equity in the property. See Karsznia v. Kelsey, 262 S.W.2d 844, 845 (Mo.1953), in which it was held that, with respect to the Missouri homestead exemption, a debtor might claim only his equity as exempt. ‘Defendants’ land being subject to a deed of trust, they were entitled to a homestead exemption in what remained of the total value after deducting the indebtedness secured by the deed of trust.’ Nor does this concept appear to have been at all changed by the provisions of the new Bankruptcy Code which conceive of the debtor’s owning an equity in the property as the prerequisite to his having a pro tanto exemption in that property. [It is to be noted that the letter of § 522(f) itself limits avoidance to an “interest of the debtor” in the property with respect to which the lien is avoided.] [The necessity for an equity interest as the precondition of lien avoidance] is made clear by the legislative history under § 722 of the Code, which section provides for a debtor’s redemption of certain personal property subject to a lien ‘by paying the holder the amount of the allowed secured claim of such holder that is secured by such lien.’ That legislative history, as here pertinent, states as follows:
‘The right to redeem extends to the whole of the property, not just the debtor’s exempt interest in it. Thus, for example, if a debtor owned a $2,000 car, subject to a $1,200 lien, the debtor could exempt his $800 interest in the car. The debtor is permitted a $1,500 exemption in a car ... 11 U.S.C. § 522(d)(2). This section permits him to pay the holder of the lien $1,200 and redeem the entire car, not just the remaining $700 of his exemption.’ (Emphasis added.)
“This explicative material makes it clear that the debtor entitles himself to exemption from a lienholder’s rights as a secured creditor ... only to the extent that he has paid for, and thus has an equity interest in, that property. Further this court has, sitting en banc, in its prior decision on the constitutionality of § 522(f), supra, intimated that any other interpretation of the section may run afoul of the Fifth Amendment’s prohibition of the taking of property without just compensation. [In re Baker, 5 B.R. 397 (W.D.Mo.Bkrtcy.1980).] ...”

These principles appeared at the time to be at once consonant with the manifested Congressional intent, the general law of the States, and considerations of equity and fairness. The debtor’s equity in the household goods or other chattels which constituted the collateral basis of a nonpurchase money security interest would thereby be preserved even after bankruptcy by means of pro tanto lien avoidance. This interpre

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Bluebook (online)
40 B.R. 629, 1984 Bankr. LEXIS 5824, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-john-deere-co-in-re-roberts-mowb-1984.