Walsh v. Hendrickson (In Re Hendrickson)

274 B.R. 138, 2002 Bankr. LEXIS 149, 2002 WL 337725
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 26, 2002
Docket19-10154
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 274 B.R. 138 (Walsh v. Hendrickson (In Re Hendrickson)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walsh v. Hendrickson (In Re Hendrickson), 274 B.R. 138, 2002 Bankr. LEXIS 149, 2002 WL 337725 (Pa. 2002).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

BERNARD MARKOVITZ, Bankruptcy Judge.

The chapter 7 trustee has objected to an exemption debtor Kathi Hendrickson has claimed by reason of 11 U.S.C. § 522(d)(11)(B) in the proceeds of a settlement she had reached in a lawsuit for the “wrongful death” of her father and half-sisters. The chapter 7 trustee asserts that the requirements for taking such an exemption in accordance with § 522(d)(11)(B) are not satisfied.

Debtors have responded by bringing a “motion to dismiss” the chapter 7 trustee’s objection. They assert that the claimed must be allowed because the objection of the chapter 7 trustee was not timely and because the proceeds of the settlement are excluded from the bankruptcy estate by virtue of § 541(c)(2) of the Bankruptcy Code.

We will deny debtors’ “motion to dismiss” the chapter 7 trustee’s objection to the claimed exemption and will sustain his objection.

FACTS

Debtor Kathi Hendrickson, nee Kathi Thomas, was born on August 17,1959. On July 20, 1979, approximately one month before her eighteenth birthday, her father, Allen Thomas, and her half-sisters, Sandra and Pamela Thomas, perished in a catastrophic flood in Johnstown, Pennsylvania, when a dam suddenly collapsed.

*143 Debtor Kathi Hendrickson’s parents had divorced before the deaths of her father and half-sisters. He had provided child support for debtor, who resided with her mother, until the time of his death. After his death, debtor applied for and received social security survivor’s benefits until she no longer was eligible.

Debtor’s half-sisters, who resided with someone other than debtor and her mother, were ten and twelve years of age, respectively, when they died and had not provided any support for debtor prior to their deaths.

At some undetermined time after July 20, 1977, debtor brought a lawsuit against various defendants in connection with the deaths of her father and half-sisters. Continental Casualty Company was the insurer of some of the defendants named in the lawsuit.

On July 20, 1989, twelve years to the day after the flood and less than a month before her thirtieth birthday, debtor Kathi Hendrickson and Continental Casualty arrived at a settlement of her lawsuit. Debt- or executed the settlement agreement and release of claims “individually and as surviving child of Allan Thomas, deceased and as half-sister of Sandra Thomas and Pamela Thomas.”

The settlement agreement provided in part as follows:

The proceeds of this claim settlement, all of which are intended as compensation for personal injury and pain and suffering, are to be paid as follows:
1. Annual Payments. — The Company will pay to Kathi Thomas the sum of One Hundred Seventy-five Thousand Five Hundred Eighty-eight and 60/100 Dollars ($175,588.60) to be paid in twenty (20) consecutive annual payments of Eight Thousand Seven Hundred Seventy-nine and 43/100 Dollars ($8,779.43) each, the first such annual payment to be made one (1) month after the date of this Agreement....
The aforesaid annual payments shall not be subject to assignment, transfer, commutation or encumbrance.

Continental Casualty made the initial annual payment in the amount of $8,779.43 in August of 1989 and made succeeding annual payments in the same amount in August of each year thereafter until debtors filed their bankruptcy petition. Eleven annual payments totaling $96,573.73 were made prior to the filing. Nine annual payments totaling $79,014.87 remain. Continental Casualty withheld the annual payment due in August of 2001 due to the competing claims of the chapter 7 trustee and debtor Kathi Hendrickson. It has agreed to make the annual payment due in August of 2001 and - all remaining annual payments to the proper person once the present dispute between the chapter 7 trustee and debtors is resolved.

Debtor Kathi Hendrickson and her husband, George G. Hendrickson, Jr., filed a voluntary joint chapter 7 petition on December 22, 2000. A chapter 7 trustee was appointed shortly thereafter.

The schedules accompanying the petition listed assets with a total declared value of $52,285.00 and liabilities totaling $78,164.23. In the place reserved for “Annuities” on Schedule B, Personal Property, debtors listed a “wrongful death lawsuit” belonging to debtor Kathi Hendrickson. Debtors claimed no exemption in this asset on original Schedule C, Property Claimed As Exempt.

The § 341 meeting of creditors took place on January 31, 2001. Approximately two weeks later, the chapter 7 trustee wrote to debtors’ bankruptcy counsel at the time requesting a copy of the annuity and settlement agreement and a narrative concerning debtors’ status at the time of *144 her father’s death. In the event debtors believed the “wrongful death lawsuit” was exemptible and debtors intended to amend Schedule accordingly, the chapter 7 trustee further requested an explanation of the basis for the exemption.

On March 5, 2001, debtors’ bankruptcy counsel at the time provided the chapter 7 trustee with information concerning debtor Kathi Hendrickson’s status at the time of her father’s death and remitted copies of the above settlement agreement and release of claims she had executed.

Three days later, on March 8, 2001, debtors filed with the court an amended Schedule C wherein they claimed an exemption in the amount of $8,700 in a “wrongful death lawsuit.” The asserted basis for the exemption was § 522(d)(11)(B) of the Bankruptcy Code. The affidavit of service accompanying the filing asserted that the amendment had been served on the chapter 7 trustee by first class mail at his mailing address.

After receiving amended Schedule C, the chapter 7 trustee once again contacted debtors’ bankruptcy counsel on or about March 15, 2001, requesting clarification of the amendment. The chapter 7 trustee inquired whether debtors intended to claim an exemption in the annual payments arising out of the above settlement agreement or in some other as yet undisclosed pending wrongful death lawsuit. If debtors intended the former, the chapter 7 trustee also wanted to know whether debtors intended to exempt only $8,700 of the remaining annual payments or the entire amount.

Debtors’ bankruptcy counsel responded to the chapter 7 trustee’s inquiry on March 20, 2001, or shortly thereafter. He advised that the exemption debtors had claimed pertained to the above annual settlement payments, not to some as yet undisclosed pending wrongful death lawsuit. He also advised that debtors intended to exempt only one of the remaining annual payments, not all of them.

Debtors were granted a discharge from their pre-petition debts on April 6, 2001.

On April 17, 2001, more than thirty days since the filing of amended Schedule C but less than thirty days since debtors’ bankruptcy counsel had clarified the amended exemption taken in a “wrongful death lawsuit”, the chapter 7 trustee filed an objection to the claimed exemption.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
274 B.R. 138, 2002 Bankr. LEXIS 149, 2002 WL 337725, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walsh-v-hendrickson-in-re-hendrickson-pawb-2002.