Shepard v. Morris (In Re Morris)

30 B.R. 392, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 6037
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Alabama
DecidedJune 10, 1983
Docket16-00138
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 30 B.R. 392 (Shepard v. Morris (In Re Morris)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shepard v. Morris (In Re Morris), 30 B.R. 392, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 6037 (Ala. 1983).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

EDWIN D. BRELAND, Bankruptcy Judge.

The debtor, Amos T. Morris, Sr., filed a petition in bankruptcy on February 2, 1983, requesting relief under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code. At the time of the filing of the petition, the debtor was the owner of six Equitable Life Assurance policies, listing his two sons as beneficiaries. The six policies have a combined cash surrender value of $3,950.08. The debtor listed the policies as assets in his petition and claimed the cash value as exempt property pursuant to Section 6-10-8, Code of Alabama 1975.

On March 1,1983 the debtor assigned the policies and the cash surrender value to the First American Bank as collateral on a loan for $5,000.00. The debtor claims the loan was necessary to begin his “fresh start” after bankruptcy. Subsequent to the assignment the trustee filed this adversary *393 proceeding to declare the assignment null and void and order the turnover of the cash surrender values as an asset of the estate.

The sole issue presented to the Court is whether the insurance exemption contained in Section 6-10-8 is subject to the $3,000.00 limitation on personal property exemption contained in Section 6-10-6, Code of Alabama 1975, as amended in 1980. In support of his position, the trustee has cited the Court’s opinion in the Matter of Sanders, 30 B.R. 80 (Bkrtcy.N.D.Ala.1983). In that case the Court held that the debtor’s rights under Section 6-10-126, Code of Alabama 1975 were limited by the $3,000.00 ceiling found in Section 6-10-6. Further compounding the confusion among the local bar as to the extent of property exemptions available to a debtor in bankruptcy is the recent decision by the Bankruptcy Court of the Middle District of Alabama, In re Satterwhite, 28 B.R. 178 (Bkrtcy.M.D.Ala.1983). In In re Satterwhite, Judge Steele held that Section 6-10-126 creates an additional set of exemptions in specified property unlimited by the $3,000.00 limitation contained in Section 6-10-6. Until such time as the Alabama Supreme Court or the United States District Court rules further on the extent of a debtor’s exemptions under State Law, this Court feels compelled to further define the scope of the property exemptions available to the debtor in bankruptcy.

Alabama Statutes which set out the property exempt from levy and execution are set out in Division 1, Article 1, entitled “Exemptions from levy and sale under process” of Chapter 10, Title 6 of the Code of Alabama 1975. As applicable to the individual debtor, Division 1 sets out six separate exemptions, which as amended in 1980 are as follows: $5,000 homestead exemption for every resident, Section 6-10-2; family burial plots, Section 6-10-5; $3,000.00 personalty for every resident, family clothing, library, portraits and photographs, Section 6-10-6; 75 percent of the wages of each resident, Section 6-10-7; and life insurance policies where the beneficiary is other than the debtor, Section 6-10-8.

Each of these statutory exemptions have been the law in the State of Alabama since 1876, with the exception of the life insurance exemption, which was first adopted by the legislature in 1867. To further complicate the present state of property exemptions, the legislature adopted Section 6-10-126 in 1907. Section 6-10-126 is set out in Article 3, entitled “Waiver of Right to Exemptions” of Chapter 10, Title 6 of the Code of Alabama 1975. The statutes set out in Article 3 establish that any exemption in any property may be waived, the methods by which an exemption is to be waived, and the effect a waiver has on the enforcement and attachment of a lien. Section 6-10-126, entitled “Exceptions”, sets out specific personalty which cannot be attached or levied upon even where a waiver has been executed.

Section 6-10-126 states:

(a) No waiver of exemption in any written instrument shall be held to apply to or include or authorize the levy of an execution or attachment on any of the following property for any debt contracted:
(1) Cooking utensils, cooking stove, table, tableware, chairs, bed and bed clothing in actual use by the family;
(2) Wearing apparel;
(3) A vehicle used by and essential to the debtor’s business;
(4) Tools used personally by and essential to the debtor’s business;
(5) The library of the debtor
(b) Any levy upon such property is absolutely void.

To understand the scope of Section 6-10-126, it is necessary to compare it with the language contained in Section 6-10-6, which states:

“The personal property of such resident to the extent of the resident’s interest therein, to the amount of $3,000.00 in value, to be selected by him or her, and in addition thereto, all necessary and proper wearing apparel for himself or herself and family, all family portraits or pictures, and all books used in the family shall also be exempt from levy and sale *394 under execution or other process for the collection of debts.”

Viewed in relationship to 6-10-6, the legislative intent in the passage of Section 6-10-126 becomes clear. As this Court ruled in the Matter of Sanders, supra., the purpose of 6-10-126 is to protect certain personal property necessary for the family’s livelihood from waiver of exemption, within the confines of Section 6-10-6, and not to allow the exemption of these items of personalty, regardless of value. This interpretation is supported by the fact that both sections list wearing apparel and the family library as property affected by each statute. If 6-10-126 were intended as an additional statutory exemption of personalty, the inclusion of these two items of property would be redundant. In addition, the Supreme Court of Alabama has held that exemptions of personalty included within the classes of the predecessor of Section 6-10-126 did not have to be accomplished by a formally filed written instrument. Coffman v. Folds, 216 Ala. 133, 112 So. 911 (1927). The Supreme Court went on to state that the policy behind the statute was to protect citizens from being reduced to beggardom, by excepting necessary household articles from seizure for debt, despite the debtor’s own improvident waiver.

The limitation of Section 6-10-126 by Section 6-10-6 is further supported by two State Court opinions dealing with the wage exemption contained in Section 6-10-6. See Holley v. Crow, 355 So.2d 1123 (Ala.Civ.App.1978) and Walker v. Williams & Bouler Construction Company, 46 Ala.App. 337, 241 So.2d 896 (Ala.Civ.App.1970). Both of these cases stand for the proposition that once the 75% wage exemption is claimed, the remaining 25% cannot be exempted if there exists other personal property of the debtor which satisfies the $3,000.00 limit contained in Section 6-10-6. The debtor does not have to make a formal claim as to the property set out in Section 6-10-126. As a result, if that section were to be viewed as an independent exemption statute, it would greatly affect the valuation of a debtor’s personalty by setting out personalty which could not be utilized to compute the $3,000.00 limitation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 B.R. 392, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 6037, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shepard-v-morris-in-re-morris-alnb-1983.