Mercer v. Monzack ( 1995 )


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  • May 1, 1995       UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    No. 94-1346
    ROBERT A. MERCER, JR.,
    Debtor, Appellant,
    v.
    JASON MONZACK, ESQUIRE,
    Appellee.
    The  opinion of  this  Court issued  on  April 25,  1995  is
    amended as follows:
    On page 4, between lines  5-6:  begin new   with  "The bank-
    ruptcy court took the position that a Rule ..."
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    No. 94-1346
    ROBERT A. MERCER, JR.,
    Debtor, Appellant,
    v.
    JASON MONZACK, ESQUIRE,
    Appellee.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND
    [Hon. Raymond J. Pettine, Senior U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Cyr, Boudin and Stahl,
    Circuit Judges.
    Robert A. Mercer, Jr. on brief pro se.
    Christopher L. Russo and  Kirshenbaum & Kirshenbaum on brief
    for appellee.
    April 25, 1995
    CYR, Circuit Judge.   Robert A. Mercer, Jr., challenges
    CYR, Circuit Judge.
    a  district court  judgment  affirming a  bankruptcy court  order
    disallowing  most  of  Mercer's  exemption claim  relating  to  a
    $50,000 settlement fund in a personal injury action.  We affirm.
    I
    I
    BACKGROUND
    BACKGROUND
    After Mercer  was injured in an  automobile accident in
    January  1990, he  sued for  compensatory damages,  then  filed a
    chapter  7 petition  while the  lawsuit was  still pending.   His
    amended schedules of assets  valued the personal injury claim  at
    $40,000,  and Schedule  B-4  asserted related  exemptions in  the
    manner set  out in the margin.1  The chapter 7 trustee interposed
    no  Rule 4003(b)  objection to  the list  of property  claimed as
    exempt.   See Fed. R. Bankr. P. 4003(b) (fixing 30-day limitation
    period for filing objection); see  also Bankruptcy Code   522(l),
    1The pertinent entries in Schedule B-4 were as follows:
    Type of Property:
    Location, Description,                                    Exempt
    Use                               Statute                 Amount
    Possible personal injury                                  DEBTOR
    Settlement
    Disability                    11 USC   522(d)(10)(C)      100%
    Payment on account of         11 USC   522(d)(11)(D)      $7,500
    personal bodily injury
    Payment in compensation for   11 USC   522(d)(11)(E)      100%
    loss of future earnings
    Any property selected by      11 USC   522(d)(5)          $3,750
    debtor
    2
    11  U.S.C.    522(l).    The  personal injury  action  eventually
    generated a $50,000 settlement fund,  with no specification as to
    what,   if   any,   portion   represented  compensation   for   a
    "disability,"  "personal  bodily  injury"  or  "loss   of  future
    earnings."2
    Mercer nevertheless  contended that the  entire $50,000
    was  exempt  because he  had claimed  the  entire fund  exempt as
    compensation   for   a   "disability"   under   Bankruptcy   Code
    522(d)(10)(C) or  compensation for  lost future  earnings under
    Bankruptcy Code   522(d)(11)(E).   See  supra note 1.   Since  no
    Rule 4003(b) objection was submitted within the 30-day limitation
    period,   Mercer  argued   that   the  bankruptcy   court  lacked
    jurisdiction to  entertain the  motion to disallow  his exemption
    claim.  He relied  on Taylor v. Freeland & Kronz, 
    112 S. Ct. 1644
    (1992),  which held  that a  bankruptcy court  could not  order a
    chapter  7 debtor's  attorney  to turn  over proceeds  ultimately
    recovered in a  prepetition lawsuit brought by the  debtor, where
    the trustee had decided to  file no Rule 4003(b) objection  to an
    exemption claim in the  lawsuit proceeds notwithstanding the fact
    that there was no colorable legal basis for claiming an exemption
    in the total amount recovered.
    The  chapter 7  trustee in  the instant  case responded
    2Unlike the unlimited exemptions for  "disability" and "lost
    earnings,"   the   exemption   for   "personal   bodily   injury"
    compensation  had been capped at  $7,500.  See  Bankruptcy Code
    522(d)(11)(D), 11 U.S.C.    522(d)(11)(D) (subsequently increased
    to $15,000).  The  trustee did not contest the  $7,500 exemption.
    Thus, $42,500 remains in dispute on appeal.
    3
    that  he had filed no  Rule 4003(b) objection  because Mercer had
    claimed  allowable   exemptions   in  the   settlement   proceeds
    representing  compensation   for  "disability"  or   lost  future
    earnings.  Consequently,  it remained for the bankruptcy court to
    determine whether the $42,500 in dispute did, in fact, constitute
    compensation for disability and/or lost future earnings.
    The  bankruptcy court  took  the position  that a  Rule
    4003(b) objection is  not required unless the exemption  claim
    as was the  case in Taylor, 
    112 S. Ct. at
    1646     raises a "red
    flag"; that  is, unless the exemption  claim includes unambiguous
    language  indicating that  the debtor  is asserting  an exemption
    claim which would exceed the maximum statutory allowance.  Mercer
    v.  Monzack, 
    158 B.R. 886
    ,  888  (Bankr.  D.R.I.  1993).    The
    bankruptcy court  hypothesized, for example, that  a Rule 4003(b)
    objection might  have been  necessary if  Mercer  had listed  the
    exemption claim simply as  "Disability" and the exempt  amount as
    "100%,"  instead of breaking  down the settlement  fund into four
    alternative components.  But since the Mercer exemption claim was
    framed in  four alternative parts, each  asserting facially valid
    statutory exemptions under section 522(d),  see supra note 1, the
    bankruptcy  court   concluded  that  it  raised   no  "red  flag"
    sufficient to trigger the limitation period in Rule 4003(b).
    The bankruptcy  court therefore  ruled that  Taylor did
    not preclude  its assertion of jurisdiction  to determine whether
    the  settlement fund represented  compensation for  disability or
    lost future  earnings.  Mercer, 
    158 B.R. at 888
    .   It then found
    4
    that the settlement fund  included no compensation for disability
    or  lost future  earnings.   
    Id. at 888-89
    .   Accordingly,  the
    bankruptcy  court ordered Mercer to  turn over all  but $7,350 to
    the  chapter  7   trustee.3    The  district  court  affirmed  on
    intermediate  appeal.  Mercer  v. Monzack,  
    170 B.R. 759
     (D.R.I.
    1994).
    II
    II
    DISCUSSION
    DISCUSSION
    Although  in complete agreement with the result reached
    below,  we write to illustrate  that Taylor in  no sense suggests
    that the bankruptcy court is divested of jurisdiction to hear and
    determine the issue  presented on appeal:  whether  the "property
    of  the estate"  actually  in dispute  was  listed as  exempt  on
    Schedule B-4, thereby triggering the 30-day limitation under Rule
    4003(b).    See  Bankruptcy  Code    522(l),  542(a),  11  U.S.C.
    522(l), 542(a); Fed.  R. Bankr.  P. 4003(c).   In  the end,  we
    reject Mercer's  implicit assumption that Taylor licenses debtors
    unilaterally to transform property of the estate into property of
    the description appearing on Schedule B-4.
    We  begin  with  the  procedural mechanism  in  section
    522(l):        The debtor  shall  file a  list  of
    property that the debtor  claims as
    exempt under subsection (b) of this
    section. .  . .  Unless  a party in
    interest   objects,   the  property
    claimed as exempt on such a list is
    3The  $7,350 figure  reflects certain  other adjustments  to
    Mercer's exemption claim not material to the present appeal.  See
    supra note 2.
    5
    exempt.
    Bankruptcy Code    522(l), 11  U.S.C.   522(l)  (emphasis added).
    That is, absent inclusion on "a list of  property that the debtor
    claims  as exempt," "property of  the estate" is  not exempted by
    operation of law under section 522(l), regardless  whether a Rule
    4003(b) objection was filed.  Id.; see, e.g., Seror  v. Kahan (In
    re  Kahan), 
    28 F.3d 79
    , 81 (9th  Cir. 1994), cert. denied, 
    115 S. Ct. 1100
      (1995).   Indeed, the 30-day  limitation on  objections
    under Rule  4003(b) does not begin to  run until the debtor lists
    the "property claimed as exempt."  See Fed. R. Bankr. P. 4003(b).
    The "property  of the estate" plainly  listed as exempt
    in Taylor, 
    112 S. Ct. at
    1647-49    though not of a kind entitled
    to exemption under Bankruptcy Code   522(d)    nonetheless became
    exempt  by operation  of law,  as explicitly provided  in section
    522(l), in the absence of a  timely Rule 4003(b) objection to the
    unambiguous exemption claim  in Schedule B-4.  Nothing  in Taylor
    intimates that  "property of  the estate"  not plainly  listed in
    Schedule B-4 nonetheless becomes exempt by operation of law under
    section 522(l).  See, e.g., Addison v. Reavis, 
    158 B.R. 53
    , 59-60
    (E.D. Va. 1993),  aff'd, 
    32 F.3d 562
      (4th Cir. 1994);  Seror, 
    28 F.3d at 82
    ;  In re Sherbahn,  
    170 B.R. 137
    , 139-40 (Bankr.  N.D.
    Ind.  1994); Ainslie v.  Grablowsky (In re  Grablowsky), 
    149 B.R. 402
    , 405-06 (Bankr. E.D.  Va. 1993).  Thus,  it remained for  the
    bankruptcy  court  to  determine  whether the  "property  of  the
    estate"  actually in dispute became exempt by operation of law as
    6
    Mercer maintained, or remained  subject to administration for the
    benefit of creditors as the chapter 7 trustee contended.
    The  threshold  question  is  whether the  property  in
    dispute is in fact  the property of the estate  listed as exempt.
    In  stark contrast to Taylor,  the bankruptcy court  found    and
    Mercer does not contest on appeal    that no part of the disputed
    $42,500  listed  on Schedule  B-4  is either  compensation  for a
    disability        522(d)(10)(C)     or  lost  future earnings
    522(d)(11)(E)       as  distinguished  from   compensation  for
    personal  bodily  injury  (the  maximum  $7,500  exemption  under
    522(d)(11)(D) as compensation for personal bodily injury is not
    at issue).  Rather,  in a giant interpretive leap  beyond Taylor,
    Mercer asks us to assume that the amount in dispute became exempt
    by  operation of  law  under section  522(l) notwithstanding  the
    uncontested finding  that it is not compensation for a disability
    or lost future earnings.
    True,  Taylor  requires  that  we interpret  and  apply
    section  522(l) and  Bankruptcy Rule  4003(b) according  to their
    literal  intendment.    But  section 522(l)  neither  states  nor
    implies  that property of the estate becomes property of the kind
    the  debtor  describes on  Schedule B-4.    Rather, as  the Court
    recognized in Taylor,  
    112 S. Ct. at 1646
    , absent a timely  Rule
    4003(b)  exemption,  property of  the  estate  plainly listed  on
    Schedule   B-4  becomes   exempt  by   operation  of   law  under
    section 522(l) without regard  to whether it  is property of  the
    kind entitled to exemption under section 522(d).
    7
    Notwithstanding Mercer's argument  that he intended  to
    exempt the  entire settlement  fund, Schedule B-4  plainly listed
    discrete  statutory citations  supporting  the various  exemption
    claims,  thereby restricting  both  the focus  of the  exemptions
    claimed and the description of  the particular right or  interest
    in  property  of  the   estate  to  which  the  claims   applied.
    Consequently,  pursuant  to its  exclusive  summary jurisdiction,
    see, e.g., In re Stumpff, 
    109 B.R. 1014
    , 1017 (Bankr. E.D. Okla.
    1989), it remained for the  bankruptcy court to determine whether
    the  disputed right  or interest  in property  of the  estate was
    listed on Schedule B-4.
    Neither Taylor,  the Code, nor the  Rules of Bankruptcy
    Procedure require  parties in interest to  interpose Rule 4003(b)
    objections to Schedule B-4 exemption claims in  order to preserve
    their right  to invoke the summary jurisdiction of the bankruptcy
    court to determine whether  property of the estate  became exempt
    by  operation of  law.   What  parties  in interest  may not  do,
    however, is let  the limitation period for  objections under Rule
    4003(b) expire, then enlist  the jurisdiction of the court  in an
    effort to  set aside an exemption allowed  by operation of law in
    property of  the estate under  section 522(l) simply  because the
    property  listed  as exempt  would  not  have  been  entitled  to
    exemption  under section 522(d)  but for their  failure to object
    pursuant to Rule 4003(b).4
    4The  Supreme Court  has not  excluded the  possibility that
    Bankruptcy  Code   105(a),  11  U.S.C.   105(a),  might enable  a
    bankruptcy  court to  set aside  exemptions not  claimed  in good
    8
    III
    III
    CONCLUSION
    CONCLUSION
    In  sum, we affirm on  the ground that  the property of
    the estate  at issue on  appeal was  neither listed as  exempt on
    Schedule  B-4, nor  became  exempt  by  operation  of  law  under
    Bankruptcy Code   522(l).
    The  district  court  judgment is  affirmed;  costs  to
    The  district  court  judgment is  affirmed;  costs  to
    appellee.
    appellee.
    faith.  See Taylor, 
    112 S. Ct. at 1649
    .
    9