Key Bank of Maine v. Jost , 136 F.3d 1455 ( 1998 )


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  •                                                                               PUBLISH
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
    ________________________
    No. 96-5514
    ________________________
    D. C. Docket No. 95-6042-CV-SMA
    Bkcy. C. Docket No. 94-21320
    IN RE: BARBARA J. JOST,
    Debtor.
    KEY BANK OF MAINE,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    versus
    BARBARA J. JOST,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    ________________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Florida
    _________________________
    (March 18, 1998)
    Before ANDERSON and CARNES, Circuit Judges, and O’KELLEY*, Senior District
    Judge.
    ANDERSON, Circuit Judge:
    ________________________
    * Honorable William C. O’Kelley, Senior U.S. District Judge for the Northern District
    of Georgia, sitting by designation.
    In this case, a creditor objected, pursuant to Bankruptcy Rule 4003(b), to a
    debtor’s claimed Florida homestead exemption. In making its objection, the creditor
    contended that the debtor converted non-exempt assets from the sale of a Missouri
    home into an exempt Florida homestead with an intent to hinder, delay, or defraud her
    creditors. The bankruptcy court denied the creditor’s objection and the district court
    affirmed. We vacate and remand the case with instructions for the district court to
    remand the case to the bankruptcy court for further proceedings consistent with this
    opinion.
    I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    In 1986, Barbara J. Jost (“Jost”), her husband, and their family moved to
    Missouri where Jost and her husband purchased a home and a business (“Jostco”).
    Jostco experienced financial difficulties in 1990 and the business filed for bankruptcy.
    Consequently, on June 22, 1990, Jost and her husband sold their Missouri home and
    received net proceeds of approximately $163,000. Jost and her husband divided the
    proceeds equally, each receiving $81,500. In July 1991, Jost used most of the net
    proceeds received from the sale of the Missouri home to purchase a home in Florida
    and to pay for moving costs to Florida.1 This Florida home is titled only in Jost’s
    name. In October 1991, Jost satisfied the $138,000 mortgage on the home using
    primarily payments she received from her brother-in-law under a promissory note.2
    1
    Jost made an approximately $54,500 cash down-
    payment towards the purchase of the Florida home and
    obtained an approximately $138,000 mortgage on the
    home.
    2
    Jost used the approximately $130,000 from the pay
    off of the promissory note to satisfy most of her
    2
    Meanwhile, in April 1991, Key Bank had received an assignment of certain
    obligations owed by Jost and her husband on a boat loan. Key Bank received an
    assignment from the Resolution Trust Corporation (“RTC”) of a marine financing
    agreement, a marine security agreement, and a first preferred ship mortgage with
    respect to a boat loan obtained in 1985 by Wavemakers, Inc. (“Wavemakers”), a
    company owned by Jost and her husband. Jost personally guaranteed the loan.3
    During 1991, after the assignment, Key Bank made demand on Wavemakers for
    payment of the obligations on the boat loan.
    On April 6, 1994, Jost filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy under Chapter 7
    of the Bankruptcy Code. Jost claimed a homestead exemption for the Florida home
    titled in her name and valued at $184,000.4 Key Bank filed an objection, pursuant to
    mortgage on the Florida home. The remaining balance of
    the mortgage was paid from Jost’s personal funds.
    3
    Wavemakers was the primary obligor on the loan,
    and Jost personally guaranteed the loan to
    Manufacturers Hanover Financial Services of Florida,
    Inc. (“Manufacturers Hanover”). Manufacturers Hanover
    assigned Jost’s promissory note to Horizon Financial,
    F.A., and in April 1991, this note and the rights under
    the boat loan were assigned to Key Bank by the RTC
    acting as Receiver for Horizon Financial.
    4
    Article X, § 4(a) of the Florida Constitution
    provides for an unlimited homestead exemption as
    follows:
    Homesteads–exemptions
    (a) There shall be exempt from forced sale
    under process of any court, and no judgment,
    decree or execution shall be a lien thereon,
    except for the payment of taxes and assessments
    3
    Bankruptcy Rule 4003(b), to Jost’s claimed exemption alleging that Jost purchased her
    Florida home, an exempt asset, with non-exempt assets5 with the intent to hinder,
    delay, or defraud her creditors.6 In overruling Key Bank’s objection to Jost’s
    homestead exemption, the bankruptcy court concluded that Key Bank failed to
    establish a prima facie case for disallowing Jost’s homestead exemption because the
    record was “devoid of any evidence of eminent [sic] threat of levy, attachment,
    garnishment, or execution on a judgment just prior to the debtor’s purchase of the
    Florida homestead.” Bankruptcy Court Order, September 27, 1994, at 5. The
    bankruptcy court stated that “[a]lthough Key Bank produced a copy of the 1991
    Judgment [obtained by Maple Park Real Estate Company Employees Pension Plan and
    Trust (“Maple Park judgment”)] against the Debtor’s husband, there was no credible
    thereon, obligations contracted for the
    purchase, improvement or repair thereof, or
    obligations contracted for house, field or
    other labor performed on the realty, the
    following property owned by a natural person:
    (1) a homestead . . .
    Fla. Const. art. X, § 4(a)(1).
    5
    Key Bank asserts, and Jost concedes, that,
    because Missouri’s homestead exemption is limited to
    only $8,000, the proceeds in excess of $8,000 from the
    sale of Jost’s Missouri home should be considered non-
    exempt assets.
    6
    Key Bank also raised other objections that are
    not relevant to this appeal.
    4
    evidence produced to indicate that the Debtor was being pursued by creditors at the
    time of the purchase of the disputed homestead property.” Id. at 4.7
    Thereafter, Key Bank moved for rehearing. In this motion, Key Bank reiterated
    its argument that Jost’s testimony at the first meeting of creditors (“§ 341 meeting”)
    and at Jost’s Bankruptcy Rule 2004 examination (“2004 examination”) should have
    been allowed as substantive evidence at the evidentiary hearing to support Key Bank’s
    objection.8 Key Bank contended that the bankruptcy court erred in concluding that the
    1991 Maple Park Judgment was only against Jost’s husband and thus “there was no
    credible evidence produced” indicating that Jost was being pursued by creditors at the
    time she purchased the Florida homestead. In the creditors’ § 341 meeting, Jost
    testified that all of the liabilities listed in her bankruptcy schedule, including the Maple
    Park judgment, were joint debts on which she was liable with her husband.9 Finally,
    7
    Part of the confusion regarding the 1991 Maple
    Park judgment arose because, on its face, the judgment
    was against “Frank Jost, et al.,” and the judgment
    failed to indicate who was designated by the term “et
    al.”
    8
    The bankruptcy court only allowed the transcripts
    from the § 341 meeting and 2004 examination to be
    introduced for the purpose of impeaching Jost’s
    testimony at the bankruptcy hearing and not as
    substantive evidence because Jost was present and
    testified at the bankruptcy hearing.
    9
    In her 2004 examination, Jost testified that the
    Maple Park judgment arose from a second loan on the
    Missouri home that she owned jointly with her husband,
    and strongly implied that the 1991 Maple Park judgment
    was against both her and her husband.
    5
    Key Bank also pointed to other evidence indicating that Jost was being pursued by
    creditors, and was aware thereof, at the time of her conversion of non-exempt assets
    into the exempt Florida homestead. However, the bankruptcy court denied the motion
    for rehearing and Key Bank appealed.
    Key Bank appealed the bankruptcy court’s order arguing, inter alia, that (1) an
    imminent threat of levy, attachment or execution is not essential to the prima facie
    showing necessary to defeat a claimed homestead exemption, and (2) even if an
    imminent threat of levy, attachment, or execution is necessary to defeat a homestead
    exemption, the bankruptcy court erred by disallowing such evidence (i.e., Jost’s
    admissions at the § 341 meeting and her 2004 examination). The parties were granted
    oral argument before the district court, and on October 28, 1996, the district court
    entered an order affirming the ruling of the bankruptcy court. Relying on Bank Leumi
    Trust Co. v. Lang, 
    898 F.Supp. 883
     (S.D.Fla. 1995), the district court found that Jost
    was entitled to her homestead exemption even if she acquired the Florida homestead for
    6
    the sole purpose of hindering, delaying, or defrauding her creditors.10 Key Bank
    appeals the district court’s order.
    II. DISCUSSION
    The following legal issue was the primary focus of the parties’ briefs on appeal:
    whether a claimed Florida homestead exemption can be successfully challenged if the
    home is purchased with non-exempt assets with the actual intent to hinder, delay, or
    defraud creditors in violation of 
    Fla. Stat. § 726.105.11
     In Bank Leumi Trust Co. v.
    Lang, 
    898 F. Supp. 883
     (S.D. Fla. 1995), the district court answered that question in the
    10
    In an alternative holding, the district court
    construed the bankruptcy court’s order as a finding of
    fact that Jost had no intent to hinder, delay, or
    defraud creditors, conducted a de novo review of the
    evidence including the erroneously excluded evidence
    (Jost’s testimony at the § 341 meeting and 2004
    examination), and affirmed the bankruptcy court’s
    finding. We construe this alternative holding as a
    conclusion that the exclusion of evidence was harmless.
    As indicated below, we disagree.
    11
    Section 726.105 provides that
    (1) A transfer made or obligation incurred by a
    debtor is fraudulent as to a creditor, whether
    the creditor’s claim arose before or after the
    transfer was made or the obligation was
    incurred, if the debtor made the transfer or
    incurred the obligation:
    (a) With actual intent to hinder, delay, or
    defraud any creditor of the debtor; . . .
    7
    negative.12 Our research leads us to believe that this question is a significant issue of
    Florida law with respect to which the Florida precedent is not clear. See Butterworth v.
    Caggiano, 
    605 So. 2d 56
    , 60 (Fla. 1992) (holding that a homestead was exempt from
    civil or criminal forfeiture under Florida’s RICO Act because forfeitures are not
    mentioned “either expressly or by reasonable implication,” in the three enumerated
    exceptions to Florida’s homestead exemption);13 Palm Beach Savings & Loan Ass’n v.
    Fishbein, 
    619 So. 2d 267
    , 270 (Fla. 1993) (reasoning that the equitable circumstances of
    the case fell within “the sprit of the exceptions” to the constitutional exemption of
    homestead property, and thus allowing a creditor to enforce a lien against a debtor’s
    homestead under the doctrine of equitable subrogation);14 
    Fla. Stat. § 220.30
     (providing
    12
    We refer to this issue as the Bank Leumi issue.
    13
    Article X, § 4 of the Florida Constitution
    provides for three exceptions to the homestead
    exemption in which homesteads may be used to satisfy
    court judgments: “(1) the payment of taxes and
    assessments thereon; (2) obligations contracted for the
    purchase, improvement or repair thereof; or (3)
    obligations contracted for house, field or other labor
    performed on the realty.”
    14
    In Common Law Equity Defeats Florida’s Homestead
    Exemption, 
    68 Fla. B.J. 54
    , 56-57 (1994), Greta K.
    Kolcon recognizes that Fishbein may be a limited
    holding because the creditor “stood in the shoes” of
    prior lienors who could have foreclosed on the debtor’s
    homestead under one of the constitutional exceptions to
    the homestead exemption. However, Kolcon suggests that
    the “greater impact of Fishbein” may lie in its
    potential to invite “creditors to develop the use of
    equitable concepts as a means of limiting homestead
    protection.” 
    Id.
    8
    that a conversion of nonexempt assets to exempt assets is a fraudulent conversion if
    made with intent to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors); In re Thomas, 
    172 B.R. 673
    ,
    674 (Bankr. M.D. Fla. 1994) (applying § 222.30 in a creditor’s successful objection to a
    claimed homestead exemption). See also David E. Peterson, Robert F. Higgins, &
    Matthew E. Beal, Is the Homestead Subject to the Statute on Fraudulent Assets
    Conversions?, 
    68 Fla. B.J. 12
     (1994); R. Wade Wetherington, Eleventh-Hour
    Conversions: A Journey into the Labyrinth of Prebankruptcy Planning, 
    69 Fla. B.J. 18
    (1995); Greta K. Kolcon, Common Law Equity Defeats Florida’s Homestead
    Exemption, 
    68 Fla. B.J. 54
     (1994). If the Bank Leumi issue were necessarily presented
    in this case, we would certify the question to the Florida Supreme Court, believing as
    we do that a legal issue of such significance should be settled by that Court.
    However, we are not persuaded that the Bank Leumi issue must necessarily be
    decided in this case, and we are reluctant to certify the question and impose on the good
    graces of the Florida Supreme Court in such a context. The legal question would have
    to be decided only if the bankruptcy court had made a finding of fact (which we could
    affirm) that Jost’s purchase of her home and/or her prepayment of the home mortgage
    Jost argues that because there are only three
    specifically enumerated constitutional exceptions to
    the homestead exemption, see supra note 13, a debtor’s
    intent to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors is not
    relevant to a claimed homestead exemption. Key Bank
    counters that the transfers which resulted in Jost’s
    ownership of the unencumbered homestead were void ab
    initio under § 726.105, and thus a homestead exemption
    was never recognized in law.
    9
    were transfers with intent to hinder, delay, or defraud any creditor.15 For the reasons set
    out below, we cannot conclude that the bankruptcy court made such a finding of fact.
    For the same reasons, we conclude that the appropriate resolution is to remand this case.
    Even if the bankruptcy court had made such a finding of fact,16 we could not
    affirm because the bankruptcy court declined to consider admissible evidence. Jost has
    conceded that it was error for the bankruptcy court to decline to consider as substantive
    evidence Jost’s testimony at the § 341 meeting and during her Rule 2004 examination.17
    We have reviewed the record, and unlike the district court, we cannot conclude that this
    error was harmless.
    15
    In other words, if the transfers were not with
    intent to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors, then
    Jost would prevail and there would be no need to
    address the Bank Leumi issue. If the bankruptcy court
    finds that Jost’s transfers were with intent to hinder,
    delay, or defraud her creditors, then the bankruptcy
    court should attempt to resolve the Bank Leumi issue.
    If this decision were then appealed to the district
    court and subsequently to this court, then we would be
    inclined to certify the Bank Leumi issue to the Florida
    Supreme Court.
    16
    The parties disagree as to whether the bankruptcy
    court actually made such a finding of fact.
    17
    Jost conceded this evidentiary error in the
    district court and then acknowledged this concession at
    oral argument before us.
    10
    Moreover, it is unclear whether the bankruptcy court applied the appropriate
    legal principles in addressing the issue of whether Jost made the transfers with intent to
    hinder, delay, or defraud creditors. In the district court, the parties agreed that the
    appropriate legal analysis would take into consideration the “badges of fraud”
    enumerated in 
    Fla. Stat. § 726.105
    (2). Although the bankruptcy court’s order is
    unclear, it is doubtful that the bankruptcy court employed this analysis.
    We remand this case to the district court with instructions to remand to the
    bankruptcy court. The bankruptcy court shall hold such further proceedings as it may
    deem appropriate, and shall make detailed findings including the ultimate finding of
    fact as to whether Jost’s purchase of her Florida home and/or her prepayment of the
    home mortgage were transfers made with intent to hinder, delay, or defraud any creditor
    in violation of 
    Fla. Stat. § 726.105
    . If the bankruptcy court finds that the transfers were
    with intent to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors, then the court should address the Bank
    Leumi issue and decide whether Jost should nevertheless prevail.
    VACATED and REMANDED.
    11