In re: Thomas A. Perez ( 2021 )


Menu:
  •                                                                                  FILED
    JUN 17 2021
    ORDERED PUBLISHED                                SUSAN M. SPRAUL, CLERK
    U.S. BKCY. APP. PANEL
    OF THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY APPELLATE PANEL
    OF THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    In re:                                                BAP No. CC-20-1280-LFT
    THOMAS A. PEREZ,
    Debtor.                                  Bk. No. 1:20-bk-10910-VK
    NANCY J. ZAMORA, Esquire, Chapter 7
    Trustee,
    Appellant,
    v.                                                    OPINION
    THOMAS A. PEREZ,
    Appellee.
    Appeal from the United States Bankruptcy Court
    for the Central District of California
    Victoria S. Kaufman, Bankruptcy Judge, Presiding
    APPEARANCES:
    Toan B. Chung of Roquemore, Pringle & Moore, Inc. argued for appellant;
    Stephen Parry of Law Offices of Stephen Parry argued for appellee.
    Before: LAFFERTY, FARIS, and TAYLOR, Bankruptcy Judges.
    LAFFERTY, Bankruptcy Judge:
    INTRODUCTION
    Chapter 7 1 trustee Nancy J. Zamora (“Trustee”) appeals the
    bankruptcy court’s order overruling her objection to debtor Thomas
    1
    Unless specified otherwise, all chapter and section references are to the
    1
    Perez’s homestead exemption. Pre-petition, on the advice of counsel,
    Debtor granted his sister, Maria Perez, a third position lien (“Perez DOT”)
    on his residence. At the § 341(a) meeting, Trustee questioned Debtor about
    the Perez DOT and informed him that she intended to have a realtor look
    at his house, but she did not mention the Perez DOT’s potential
    avoidability. Debtor then hired new counsel and promptly took steps to
    have the Perez DOT reconveyed. He also amended his exemptions to claim
    a $175,000 homestead exemption.
    Trustee objected on the ground that, under § 522(g), Debtor was not
    entitled to a homestead exemption because the Perez DOT had been
    avoided and recovered for the estate due to Trustee’s efforts. While it was
    not necessary that Trustee commence a preference action to bar Debtor
    from asserting an exemption, we agree with the bankruptcy court’s
    determination that the limited Trustee action in this case falls below the
    level required to invoke § 522(g).
    We AFFIRM.
    FACTS
    A.    Pre-Petition Events
    In 2010, Debtor and his wife recorded a Declaration of Homestead on
    their residence in North Hills, California (“Residence”). At some point, the
    couple experienced financial difficulty, and, by early 2019, Debtor was
    Bankruptcy Code, 
    11 U.S.C. §§ 101
    –1532, and all “Rule” references are to the Federal
    Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure.
    2
    receiving threatening calls from collection agencies. He consulted with a
    company called “Legal Experts” for advice on obtaining a reverse
    mortgage on the Residence but was advised he would not qualify because
    of his low credit scores.
    An individual named Moshe at Legal Experts then discussed
    bankruptcy with Debtor, but he advised Debtor he did not “qualify” for
    bankruptcy because there was too much equity in the Residence.2 Moshe
    suggested that because Debtor’s sister Maria had loaned Debtor money in
    the past, they could create a third mortgage on the Residence in favor of
    Maria and wait a year before filing the case. Debtor and Maria executed the
    necessary paperwork; the Perez DOT, which stated that it secured a debt of
    $200,000, was recorded on May 30, 2019.
    In March 2020, Debtor signed his bankruptcy petition and supporting
    documents at Legal Experts’ office. The documents were to be held by
    Legal Experts and not filed until a year after the recording of the Perez
    DOT. Legal Experts, however, filed the petition early, on May 14, 2020.
    B.    Post-Petition Events
    On Debtor’s initial schedules, he listed the Residence with a value of
    $625,000 and encumbrances totaling $597,503, including the $200,000 Perez
    2
    There is no evidence in the record that “Moshe” is an attorney. Legal Experts’
    business card references “Law Offices of Steven L. Kimmel” and shows Moshe
    Bibiyan’s title as “Executive Director.” Debtor did not speak to Mr. Kimmel before his
    bankruptcy was filed, but Mr. Kimmel appeared telephonically at the § 341(a) meeting
    of creditors.
    3
    DOT. Despite having recorded a homestead exemption ten years earlier, he
    did not claim any homestead exemption on Schedule C. Instead, he
    claimed a “wild card” exemption of $27,497 on the Residence pursuant to
    California Code of Civil Procedure § 703.140(b)(5) and § 522(b)(3).
    At Debtor’s § 341(a) meeting on June 19, 2020, Trustee asked
    questions about the Perez DOT and requested copies of pertinent
    documents. Specifically, she asked for information regarding when Maria
    funded the loan, why Debtor recorded the deed of trust when he did, and
    whether Debtor had made any payments to Maria. Trustee also told Debtor
    that she intended to have a realtor view the Residence. That same day,
    Trustee filed a Notice of Assets; a week later, she filed an application to
    employ a real estate broker to market the Residence. Neither document
    referenced the Perez DOT or its potential avoidability.
    After the § 341(a) meeting, Debtor realized that he was in “trouble”
    and consulted Legal Experts for advice. He was told to hire another
    attorney. Less than two weeks after the § 341(a) meeting, Debtor hired
    attorney Stephen Parry, who advised Debtor to have Maria reconvey the
    Perez DOT immediately. On the same date, Mr. Parry filed amended
    schedules on Debtor’s behalf. The amended Schedule A valued the
    Residence at $599,000 (based on the value established by Trustee’s broker)
    and included a notation that the Perez DOT was an avoidable preference.
    4
    On amended Schedule C, Debtor claimed a homestead exemption of
    $175,000.3
    A few days later, on July 2, 2020, Mr. Parry emailed Trustee to inform
    her that he had substituted into the case and that amended schedules had
    been filed. He also asked whether Trustee needed any additional
    documents. Later that day, Trustee responded, stating, among other things,
    that the Perez DOT was an avoidable transfer, to which Mr. Parry
    responded that he expected to have the Perez DOT reconveyed within a
    week to ten days. Mr. Parry emailed Trustee the next day advising her of
    the status of the reconveyance: 4
    We expect that Mr. Perez’s sister will be meeting with a title
    company today to execute a Declaration of Lost Original Note
    for the filing of a Full Reconveyance of the 3rd Trust Deed Lien.
    The title company will record the document and will be
    requested to provide a Certified Copy [of] the Reconveyance.
    We will provide that to you as soon as we receive it. She is not
    fighting the fact that it constitutes an avoidable transfer.
    Maria executed the reconveyance deed on July 8, 2020, and it was
    recorded July 15, 2020.
    3
    Debtor claimed the enhanced homestead exemption based on: (1) his wife’s age
    as of the petition date; and (2) his disability.
    4 All relevant emails were not included in the parties’ excerpts. Accordingly, we
    have exercised our discretion to take judicial notice of the dockets and imaged papers
    filed in Debtor’s bankruptcy case. See Atwood v. Chase Manhattan Mortg. Co. (In re
    Atwood), 
    293 B.R. 227
    , 233 n.9 (9th Cir. BAP 2003).
    5
    In the meantime, on July 6, Trustee filed an adversary proceeding
    against Maria seeking avoidance of the Perez DOT. She also filed an
    application to employ counsel to represent her in the adversary
    proceeding.
    A few days later, Debtor filed a motion to convert his case to chapter
    13, along with another set of amended schedules. The bankruptcy court
    denied the motion to convert. It also tentatively addressed the issue of
    Debtor’s homestead exemption, which had been raised in the parties’
    conversion briefing: “[B]ecause Ms. Perez voluntarily reconveyed her deed
    of trust, obviating the need for legal action by the Trustee, the Court
    questions whether there are sufficient grounds to deny Debtor his
    homestead exemption.” The bankruptcy court then ordered the parties to
    mediation regarding the exemption.
    Mediation proved unsuccessful, and Debtor thereafter filed a motion
    for declaratory relief that Trustee was precluded from objecting to the
    exemption. Alternatively, Debtor requested dismissal of the case and/or the
    filing of a no-asset report. A few days later, Trustee filed an objection to
    Debtor’s homestead exemption, asserting that, under § 522(g)(1), Debtor
    was barred from claiming any homestead exemption because the
    avoidance and recovery of the Perez DOT resulted from Trustee’s efforts.
    After hearing argument on both motions, the bankruptcy court
    denied Debtor’s motion and overruled Trustee’s objection to Debtor’s
    homestead exemption.
    6
    Trustee timely appealed.
    JURISDICTION
    The bankruptcy court had jurisdiction under 
    28 U.S.C. §§ 1334
     and
    157(b)(2)(B). We have jurisdiction under 
    28 U.S.C. § 158
    .
    ISSUE
    Did the bankruptcy court err in overruling Trustee’s objection to
    Debtor’s homestead exemption?
    STANDARDS OF REVIEW
    Whether the debtor has the right to claim an exemption is a question
    of law that we review de novo. Elliott v. Weil (In re Elliott), 
    544 B.R. 421
    , 430
    (9th Cir. BAP 2016). When we conduct a de novo review, “we look at the
    matter anew, the same as if it had not been heard before, and as if no
    decision previously had been rendered, giving no deference to the
    bankruptcy court’s determinations.” Charlie Y., Inc. v. Carey (In re Carey),
    
    446 B.R. 384
    , 389 (9th Cir. BAP 2011).
    The bankruptcy court’s factual findings underlying the court’s legal
    conclusions are reviewed for clear error. 
    Id.
     A factual finding is clearly
    erroneous if illogical, implausible, or without support in inferences that
    may be drawn from the facts in the record. See TrafficSchool.com, Inc. v.
    Edriver Inc., 
    653 F.3d 820
    , 832 (9th Cir. 2011) (citing United States v. Hinkson,
    
    585 F.3d 1247
    , 1262 (9th Cir. 2009) (en banc)).
    7
    DISCUSSION
    The Bankruptcy Code permits a debtor to claim an exemption in
    property “that the trustee recovers” under §§ 510(c)(2), 542, 543, 550, 551, or
    553, if certain conditions are met. § 522(g)(1).5 Specifically, the property
    recovered must have been involuntarily transferred by the debtor, and the
    transfer must not have been concealed by the debtor. See id.
    Accordingly, to prevail on an objection to an exemption under
    § 522(g)(1), the trustee must present evidence that (1) the debtor transferred
    property in such a manner as to invoke the trustee’s avoidance powers; (2)
    either the transfer was voluntary or the debtor knowingly concealed the
    transfer; and (3) the property was returned to the estate as the result of the
    trustee’s efforts. Hitt v. Glass (In re Glass), 
    164 B.R. 759
    , 765 (9th Cir. BAP
    1994), aff’d, 
    60 F.3d 565
     (9th Cir. 1995). In this appeal, the parties do not
    dispute that the transfer was voluntary. And although Trustee takes the
    position that Debtor concealed the Perez DOT because he did not disclose
    it on his Statement of Financial Affairs, he did disclose it in his schedules.6
    5
    Section 522(g)(1) of the Bankruptcy Code provides that a debtor may claim an
    exemption in property
    that the trustee recovers under section 510(c)(2), 542, 543, 550, 551, or 553
    of this title, to the extent that the debtor could have exempted such
    property under subsection (b) of this section if such property had not been
    transferred, if--
    (1)(A) such transfer was not a voluntary transfer of such property
    by the debtor; and
    (B) the debtor did not conceal such property[.]
    6 Cf. Stevens v. Whitmore (In re Stevens), 
    617 B.R. 328
     (9th Cir. BAP 2020), appeal
    docketed, No. 20-60044 (9th Cir. Sept. 11, 2020) (assets listed in statement of financial
    8
    In any event, because the transfer was voluntary, Debtor would not be
    entitled to an exemption in the Residence if the Perez DOT was reconveyed
    as a result of Trustee’s efforts.
    Few cases address exactly what efforts by the trustee are sufficient to
    constitute “recovery” of the property under the specified code sections.
    Courts examining the issue have stopped short of requiring that the trustee
    obtain a final judgment avoiding and/or recovering the subject transfer.
    This Panel has held that the trustee’s efforts need not include obtaining a
    final judgment; nor must the trustee even file an adversary proceeding. In
    re Glass, 
    164 B.R. at 765
    . Instead,
    where a debtor voluntarily transfers property in a manner that
    triggers the trustee’s avoidance powers or the debtor
    knowingly conceals a prepetition transfer or an interest in
    property, and such property is returned to the estate as a result
    of the trustee’s actions directed toward either the debtor or the
    transferee, the debtor is not entitled to claim an exemption
    under § 522(g)(1).
    Id. at 764-65.
    In Glass, the debtor had quitclaimed his residence to his son “for love
    and affection” shortly before filing his chapter 7 case, and he failed to
    disclose the transfer on his schedules. Id. at 760. At the § 341(a) meeting, a
    creditor informed the trustee of the transfer, and the trustee instructed the
    debtor to amend his schedules to disclose the transfer. Id. A few weeks
    affairs are not “scheduled” for purposes of technical abandonment unless they are also
    9
    later, the trustee filed an objection to the debtor’s homestead exemption,
    stating that he intended to seek avoidance of the transfer under § 548. Id. at
    760-61. Three days later, the debtor’s son quitclaimed the residence back to
    his father. Id. at 761. The BAP held that the trustee’s actions resulted in the
    recovery of the property:
    We further conclude that the Trustee’s actions toward the
    Debtor directly, and the Debtor’s son indirectly, were
    instrumental in the return of the property to the estate. . . . Since
    the Debtor and the transferee are father and son and the
    transfer occurred on the heels of the Objection, the only
    reasonable inference to be drawn is that the Trustee’s promise
    of legal action had a coercive effect on father and son, directly
    resulting in the return of the property to the estate.
    Id. at 765.
    And we recently held in an unpublished decision that a trustee’s
    filing of an application to employ counsel, which stated that counsel was
    being hired to pursue avoidance claims to regain estate assets--after which
    certain transferred property was returned to the debtor--was sufficient
    action to warrant sustaining the trustee’s § 522(g)(1) objection to debtor’s
    claimed exemption. Guthrie v. Stadtmueller (In re Guthrie), BAP No. SC-15-
    1390-FYJu, 
    2017 WL 431398
    , at *7 (9th Cir. BAP Jan. 31, 2017).
    These cases stand for the proposition that a trustee’s threat or
    indication that she intends to invoke her avoidance powers to recover
    included on the schedules).
    10
    property for the estate, which results in the recovery of the property, is
    sufficient to constitute recovery by the trustee under § 522(g).
    On the other hand, where a trustee’s action is not the cause of the
    recovery, § 522(g) does not bar an exemption in the recovered property. See
    In re Leach, 
    595 B.R. 841
     (Bankr. D. Idaho 2018). In Leach, the debtors
    purchased a 2008 Subaru Impreza for their daughter to take to college. The
    daughter later got married, kept the vehicle, and began paying the
    insurance and registration, but the debtors never transferred title to her.
    Upon filing a chapter 7 bankruptcy, they listed the vehicle on their
    schedules, noting that their daughter had possession, and they claimed an
    exemption in the vehicle under Idaho law. But they erroneously described
    the vehicle as a 2000 model. When the error came to light at the § 341(a)
    meeting, the trustee asked the debtors to amend their schedules. Shortly
    thereafter, and unbeknownst to the trustee, the daughter returned the car
    to the debtors. But the debtors did not amend their schedules until nearly
    two months later, after the trustee had made a written demand for
    turnover. The trustee then filed an objection to the debtors’ claim of
    exemption pursuant to § 522(g).
    Under these circumstances, the bankruptcy court overruled the
    trustee’s objection to the debtors’ exemption in the vehicle. The court
    interpreted the term “recovers” in § 522(g) to “not include this instance,
    where Trustee’s actions did not result in the transferred interest being
    returned to the estate, and in fact occurred subsequent thereto.” Id. at 846.
    11
    Trustee directs us to several cases from outside the Ninth Circuit in
    support of her argument that the legal standard focuses less on the extent
    of the trustee’s actions and more on what the trustee’s actions
    accomplished; i.e., property was recovered and the trustee had something
    to do with it: In re Mickens, 
    575 B.R. 797
     (Bankr. W.D. Mich. 2017), aff’d sub
    nom. Hagan v. Mickens, 
    589 B.R. 594
     (W.D. Mich. 2018); Russell v. Kuhnel (In
    re Kuhnel), 
    495 F.3d 1177
     (10th Cir. 2007); In re Hicks, 
    342 B.R. 596
     (Bankr.
    W.D. Mo. 2006); and In re Ulrich, 
    203 B.R. 691
     (Bankr. C.D. Ill. 1997). We
    have no quarrel with this premise, as it is consistent with the language of
    § 522(g), but we decline to read these cases as supporting a different result
    in the appeal before us. Although some of these cases contain language
    suggesting a relatively loose standard in interpreting what constitutes a
    trustee’s recovery of a property interest, none are factually analogous nor
    are they binding on this Panel.
    In Mickens, three days before filing their chapter 7 case, the debtors--
    on the advice of their bankruptcy counsel--executed and recorded a
    quitclaim deed transferring their residence, which they owned as joint
    tenants with rights of survivorship, to themselves as tenants by the
    entireties. In the bankruptcy, they claimed a homestead exemption under
    Michigan law. The trustee obtained a judgment avoiding the pre-petition
    transfer as constructively fraudulent. The trustee then objected to the
    homestead exemption under § 522(g). In determining whether to sustain
    the objection, the bankruptcy court analyzed the relevant case law
    12
    (including Glass), and concluded, “[a]s these cases make clear, the extent of
    the actions taken by the trustee are not the most important focus of the
    § 522(g) analysis; the more significant question is what those actions
    accomplished.” In re Mickens, 575 B.R. at 810. But the bankruptcy court
    ultimately overruled the trustee’s objection because it found that in the case
    before it, the debtors retained ownership and possession of the property
    both before and after the transfer, and there was nothing to “get back” for
    the estate through a § 550 recovery. Id.7
    In Hicks, the bankruptcy court sustained the chapter 7 trustee’s
    § 522(g) objection to debtors’ claimed exemption in a vehicle where the
    creditor had conceded its lien was unperfected, without any significant
    action on the part of the trustee. The court noted that under the Bankruptcy
    Code, the trustee automatically steps into a position having priority over a
    creditor, and that this was sufficient to constitute recovery under § 522(g):
    [I]n some cases, where the lien is patently unperfected, the
    creditor will yield to the trustee without much effort on the part
    7
    Mickens suggests another problem with Trustee’s argument. Because Debtor
    recorded a pre-petition declaration of homestead, there was no equity available to a
    judgment creditor when he executed the Perez DOT. In this sense, Trustee was not
    recovering an otherwise available source of payment for creditors. Instead, she
    attempted to bar Debtor from using a pre-petition homestead declaration. Even if we
    assume her limited actions constituted a recovery, we cannot say that she got back
    anything. And the plain language of § 522(g) is not supportive either. It speaks in terms
    of an exemption that could have been made “had the property not been transferred.”
    But the recordation of the Perez DOT did not negate the legal effect of the recorded
    homestead. In a typical case, we deal with California’s automatic homestead, which
    arises on the petition date. In such a case, a pre-petition trust deed invades equity
    available to a foreclosing creditor. Not so here.
    13
    of the trustee. I agree with those courts that have held that such
    property comes into the estate pursuant to the trustee’s powers,
    even if the trustee seems relatively passive in causing that to
    happen. In effect, so long as the trustee asserts the estate’s
    interest in the property when faced with an unperfected or
    otherwise avoidable lien, the property has been recovered by
    the trustee, and the debtor may not claim such property as
    exempt.
    In re Hicks, 
    342 B.R. at 600
    . But this analysis seems to be limited to the
    situation where a creditor failed to perfect a security interest:
    [W]here the debtor did grant a security interest in property, the
    debtor’s rights are not determined by whether the trustee
    actually was forced to bring an action to “recover” the property
    for the benefit of the estate. Otherwise, in a case such as this
    one, the trustee would always be required to file an adversary
    action against the creditor to do so. Requiring trustees to do so,
    when the creditor concedes that it has an unperfected lien,
    would result in unnecessary litigation and serve no useful
    purpose. Therefore, the trustee need only take such steps as are
    necessary to either have the creditor concede its lien is
    unperfected or otherwise avoidable, or to obtain a judgment so
    finding.
    
    Id. at 601
    .8
    8
    The other two cases cited by Trustee have limited applicability to the issue
    before us. In Ulrich, the court stated that in the context of objections under § 522(g),
    “[t]he important point is that the Trustee must be instrumental in the recovery of the
    property.” 
    203 B.R. at 693
    . And Kuhnel primarily involved the question of whether Rule
    4003’s time limit for filing objections to exemptions applies to objections brought under
    § 522(g). The Tenth Circuit concluded that it does not. 
    495 F.3d at 1181-82
    .
    14
    These cases do not persuade us that the standard for what constitutes
    a recovery by a trustee should be whittled down to a sequencing exercise,
    with little to no regard for whether the trustee’s actions caused the
    recovery. We hold that our decision in Glass established a floor for
    determining what constitutes a recovery by the trustee: an explicit
    statement by the trustee to the debtor that the trustee intends to recover the
    property interest for the estate. In other words, the debtor must be put on
    notice by an affirmative act or statement of the trustee that the transfer is
    avoidable and/or recoverable under the Bankruptcy Code and that the
    trustee intends to take action to recover the property interest. Whether the
    trustee’s conduct meets this standard is a question of fact. This standard is
    consistent with the plain language of § 522(g), which references recovery
    under specific code sections.9 It is also consistent with the bankruptcy
    policy of construing exemptions liberally. See In re Glass, 
    164 B.R. at 764
    .
    Under this standard, the record supports the bankruptcy court’s
    finding that Trustee’s actions did not result in the recovery of the property
    interest, i.e., the reconveyance of the Perez DOT. Although the § 341(a)
    meeting transcript contains only Trustee’s questions and not Debtor’s
    9
    The statute specifies that the property interest must be recovered under
    § 510(c)(2) (lien securing a subordinated claim); § 542 (turnover of property of the estate
    other than that held by a custodian); § 543 (turnover of property of the estate from a
    custodian); § 550 (recovery of avoided transfer of property interest); § 551 (automatic
    preservation of transfer avoided under section 522, 544, 545, 547, 548, 549, or 724(a) or
    lien void under section 506(d)); and § 553 (recovery of offset from creditor).
    15
    answers, it indicates that Trustee simply asked about the Perez DOT, as
    demonstrated by the following verbatim excerpt from the transcript:
    Has she loaned you money?
    How much?
    Ok, when did she loan you the money?
    Ok, so five to six years ago. Was it over more than one year or
    was it all in a lump sum?
    Ok, and do you have a promissory note that you signed that
    you owe her money? Alright [sic], I need a copy of that
    promissory note, Mr. Kimmel.
    Ok, do you know when that note, that promissory note, is
    dated Mr. Perez? Ok, and you do have a copy of the note,
    correct?
    Ok, I have a record that you then agreed and signed a 3rd deed
    of trust and it’s recorded against the property and that was
    done less than a year ago, is that correct?
    Why did you agree to the deed of trust to secure the loan with
    the real property?
    Ok, but originally when she loaned it to you, you didn't sign a
    deed of trust, correct? Ok, what changed that you recorded it
    last May?
    Is that when it was recorded in May of 2019?
    Ok, why was that done at that time? Ok, ok alright.
    Have you made any payments on the loan to your sister?
    Ok alright. According to the public records I have that the deed
    of trust was recorded on May 30, 2019.
    Trustee also asked for copies of the promissory notes and deeds of
    trust on the Residence, and she indicated she wanted to schedule a time for
    a realtor to “come and look at the house.” Shortly after the meeting, Debtor
    contacted Legal Experts, and he hired Mr. Parry less than two weeks later.
    16
    As noted, Mr. Parry immediately advised Debtor to get the Perez DOT
    reconveyed. He also filed amended schedules that omitted the Perez DOT
    and claimed the enhanced homestead exemption. It was not until two days
    later that Trustee mentioned to Mr. Parry her intent to avoid the Perez
    DOT, to which he replied that he expected the Perez DOT to be reconveyed
    within the next week to ten days.
    A bankruptcy court may find that simply questioning a debtor
    regarding a particular transfer, without any mention of its possible
    recoverability, is not sufficient action by a trustee to constitute recovery of
    an asset. Here, Trustee’s questions were investigatory only. She did not
    state at the § 341(a) meeting that she thought the Perez DOT was avoidable
    or that she intended to take action to recover it. Debtor initiated the
    reconveyance of the Perez DOT before Trustee mentioned its possible
    recoverability. Accordingly, the bankruptcy court did not err in finding
    that Trustee did not recover the property for the estate within the meaning
    of § 522(g).
    Trustee argues that her questioning of Debtor at the § 341(a) meeting
    put him on notice of the “undisclosed transfer” and the “fabricated deed”
    and resulted in his taking steps to unwind the transfer. As such, she
    contends that her actions were sufficient for us to conclude that she
    recovered the transferred interest for the estate. But, as discussed above,
    Trustee did not tell Debtor that the Perez DOT was potentially avoidable or
    recoverable for the estate. She simply asked questions about the Residence
    17
    and stated her intent to have a realtor come and look at it. Debtor’s reaction
    that he thought he was in “trouble” plausibly could have referred to his
    concern that he might lose his house; it is not a foregone conclusion that he
    knew at the time that the Perez DOT was an avoidable transfer. The
    bankruptcy court’s findings thus were not clearly erroneous.
    To the extent possible, debtors should be encouraged to voluntarily
    correct errors before the trustee has to expend estate resources to force
    them to do so. That is exactly what happened here. Although Trustee did
    file an adversary proceeding seeking to avoid and recover the Perez DOT,
    it was arguably unnecessary given that Debtor’s counsel had informed her
    just days earlier that the Perez DOT was in the process of being
    reconveyed. And it is clear from the record that Debtor had received bad
    advice from Legal Experts. He had a recorded homestead declaration and
    was eligible for the enhanced homestead, which would have protected his
    Residence even without the Perez DOT.
    One last point: in her reply brief, Trustee argues that Debtor’s
    “unclean hands” preclude him from obtaining any equitable relief, citing
    the Ninth Circuit opinion in Glass, in which the court of appeals observed
    that a debtor has a duty to do equity before he can claim his right to
    exemptions. 
    60 F.3d at 570
    . Trustee did not make this argument to the
    bankruptcy court; thus, we need not consider it. See In re Mercury Interactive
    Corp. Sec. Litig., 
    618 F.3d 988
    , 992 (9th Cir. 2010). Moreover, the Supreme
    Court’s intervening decision in Law v. Siegel, 
    571 U.S. 415
     (2014)
    18
    (bankruptcy court’s equitable powers may not override specific Code
    sections), appears to cast doubt on the viability of this argument.
    CONCLUSION
    For these reasons, we AFFIRM.
    19