Birney v. Smith (In Re Birney) , 200 F.3d 225 ( 1999 )


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  • PUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    In Re: BENJAMIN W. BIRNEY,
    Debtor.
    BENJAMIN W. BIRNEY,
    No. 98-2479
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    LAWRENCE K. SMITH,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of Maryland, at Baltimore.
    Frederic N. Smalkin, District Judge.
    (CA-98-1445-S, BK-95-53505-JS, AP-96-5182)
    Argued: October 27, 1999
    Decided: December 29, 1999
    Before MURNAGHAN, NIEMEYER, and TRAXLER,
    Circuit Judges.
    _________________________________________________________________
    Affirmed by published opinion. Judge Murnaghan wrote the opinion,
    in which Judge Niemeyer and Judge Traxler joined.
    _________________________________________________________________
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: David Foxwell Albright, Sr., ALBRIGHT, BROWN &
    GOERTEMILLER, L.L.C., Baltimore, Maryland, for Appellant.
    Andrea Goodwin Green, UAW LEGAL SERVICES PLAN, Newark,
    Delaware, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Edward D.E. Rollins, III, Elk-
    ton, Maryland, for Appellant.
    _________________________________________________________________
    OPINION
    MURNAGHAN, Circuit Judge:
    This case concerns the bankruptcy proceedings of Benjamin Birney
    and the attempt by Lawrence Smith, a judgment creditor, to exercise
    a lien on real property owned by Birney originally as tenants by the
    entireties with his now deceased wife in Cecil County, Maryland. The
    Bankruptcy Court and the District Court found that Smith could not
    reach the property either directly through Birney or indirectly through
    Birney's bankruptcy estate. For the reasons discussed below, we
    affirm.
    I.
    Birney and his wife owned real property located in Cecil County,
    Maryland as tenants by the entireties. In 1984, Smith obtained a judg-
    ment solely against Birney in Maryland state court. Although gener-
    ally a money judgment arising out of a Circuit Court proceeding will
    constitute a lien on the judgment debtor's land located in the county
    in which the judgment was rendered, Md. Code Ann. Cts. & Jud.
    Proc. § 11-402(b)(1998), property held as tenants by the entireties
    cannot be taken by creditors to satisfy the individual debts of either
    the husband or the wife. Watterson v. Edgerly , 
    388 A.2d 934
    , 938
    (Md. App. 1978).
    In May of 1995, Birney filed a voluntary Chapter 7 bankruptcy
    petition. Mrs. Birney did not file for bankruptcy. Birney listed the
    Cecil County property as exempt because it was jointly owned as ten-
    ants by the entireties by the debtor and his non-filing spouse. In June
    of 1995, the trustee sent notification to creditors that the case was a
    no-asset case, and in August of 1995, he filed a report of no distribu-
    tion.
    2
    In October of 1995, Mrs. Birney died. The trustee investigated the
    possibility that the estate would acquire assets, but in December of
    1995 he filed a second report of no distribution. In January of 1996,
    Birney received a discharge and the case was closed. No objections
    were filed to Birney's claimed exemptions or the trustee's reports.
    Smith subsequently attempted to foreclose on the Cecil County
    property, claiming that he acquired a lien on the property upon Mrs.
    Birney's death. In April of 1996, Birney reopened the bankruptcy
    case and sought a declaration from the court that Smith held no lien
    on the property and that Smith's claim against Birney had been dis-
    charged in the bankruptcy proceedings.
    In March of 1998, the Bankruptcy Court granted Birney's motion
    for summary judgment, finding that Mrs. Birney's death did not nul-
    lify the property exemption. In September of 1998, the District Court
    affirmed the Bankruptcy Court's order, finding that the basis for the
    exemption did in fact lapse, but also that the property was never cap-
    tured by the bankruptcy estate and therefore could not be reached by
    Smith. Smith then filed the instant appeal.
    II.
    Smith cannot reach the Cecil County property directly through
    Birney. During the period prior to Birney's bankruptcy petition,
    Smith's lien could not attach to the property because Mrs. Birney was
    still alive. Because Smith held no claim against Mrs. Birney, and
    because Mrs. Birney owned an undivided interest in the property as
    tenants by the entireties with her husband, Smith's judgment against
    Birney could not ripen into a lien on the property so long as Mrs.
    Birney was alive. See 
    Watterson, 388 A.2d at 938
    .
    During the period between Birney's bankruptcy filing and the dis-
    charge of his case, no lien could attach because of the automatic stay
    imposed by 11 U.S.C. § 362(a)(5), which prohibits
    any act to create, perfect, or enforce against property of the
    debtor any lien to the extent that such lien secures a claim
    that arose before the commencement of the case under this
    title.
    3
    Smith contends that his lien on the Cecil County property arose by
    operation of law upon Mrs. Birney's death. He concludes, therefore,
    that attachment of the lien did not fall under the§ 362(a) prohibition
    since it did not involve an "act" to create or perfect the lien. Smith's
    contention, however, is incorrect under our recent holding in In re
    Avis v. Trustee, 
    178 F.3d 718
    (4th Cir. 1999).
    In Avis, we held that the attachment of a tax lien, arising by opera-
    tion of law to property acquired post-petition, is an "act" within the
    meaning of § 362(a) and is therefore prohibited during the time that
    the automatic stay is in effect. 
    Id. at 723-24.
    We rejected a narrow
    interpretation of the term "act" and concluded that the attachment of
    a lien is itself an "act" that is prohibited by § 362(a)(5), even when
    the attachment occurs automatically by operation of law. 
    Id. at 722-
    23.
    The automatic stay imposed by § 362(a)(5), therefore, prohibits the
    attachment of Smith's post-petition lien in the instant case. Even
    though Smith's lien arose by operation of law upon Mrs. Birney's
    death, attachment of the lien is still an "act" that is prohibited by the
    automatic stay under § 362(a)(5). The automatic stay remained in
    effect until January of 1996, when Birney was granted a discharge.
    See 11 U.S.C. § 362(c)(2)(C). Therefore, Smith's lien could not attach
    from the time Birney filed his bankruptcy petition until the time he
    was granted a discharge.
    During the period following Birney's discharge in January of 1996,
    no lien could attach to the property because the discharge extin-
    guished the debt upon which the lien was based. See 11 U.S.C.
    § 524(a)(1). Once Birney was granted a discharge, he was no longer
    liable for the judgment debt owed to Smith.
    In summary, Smith's judgment debt could not ripen into a lien
    prior to Birney's bankruptcy petition because during that time Mrs.
    Birney was alive. It could not ripen into a lien between the filing of
    the bankruptcy petition and the discharge because 11 U.S.C.
    § 362(a)(5) imposed an automatic stay which prohibits any lien on a
    pre-petition debt from attaching. And finally, it could not ripen into
    a lien following Birney's discharge because the discharge extin-
    4
    guished his liability for the underlying debt. Smith, therefore, cannot
    reach the Cecil County property directly through Birney.
    III.
    Smith also cannot reach the Cecil County property through the
    bankruptcy estate. Smith contends that upon Mrs. Birney's death, the
    basis for exempting the Cecil County property from the bankruptcy
    estate lapsed, and that therefore the property should become part of
    the estate and made available to satisfy Birney's creditors.
    The basis for Birney's exemption of the property was extinguished
    upon Mrs. Birney's death. In In re Cordova, 
    73 F.3d 38
    (4th Cir.
    1996), this court held that an exemption for property held as tenants
    by the entireties lapsed when the joint tenancy was extinguished by
    operation of law following a divorce which occurred post-petition.
    As the district court correctly pointed out, however, a determina-
    tion that the basis for the property exemption has lapsed does not end
    the inquiry. Termination of the exemption post-petition does not, by
    itself, bring the property into the bankruptcy estate. See 
    Cordova, 73 F.3d at 41
    ; In re Alderton, 
    179 B.R. 63
    (Bankr. E.D. Mich. 1995).
    There must also be some applicable statutory mechanism by which
    the estate "captures" the post-petition property.*
    Section 541(a) provides the only potentially applicable statutory
    basis for bringing the Cecil County property into the bankruptcy
    estate. Section 541(a)(5) defines as part of the estate
    Any interest in property that would have been property of
    the estate if such interest had been an interest of the debtor
    on the date of the filing of the petition, and that the debtor
    _________________________________________________________________
    *In the aftermath of Mrs. Birney's death, Smith could have filed an
    objection to the property Birney claimed as exempt from the bankruptcy
    estate, pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 522(l) and Bankruptcy Rule 4003(b).
    Because Smith did not file any such objection, we need not consider
    whether it would have been warranted by the circumstances of Birney's
    situation.
    5
    acquires or becomes entitled to acquire within 180 days
    after such date --
    (A) by bequest, devise, or inheritance;
    (B) as a result of a property settlement agree-
    ment with the debtor's spouse, or of an inter-
    locutory or final divorce decree; or
    (C) as a beneficiary of a life insurance policy or
    of a death benefit plan.
    Simply put, in limited circumstances the statute allows the estate
    to "capture" property acquired by a debtor within 180 days after filing
    the bankruptcy petition. Such property becomes part of the bank-
    ruptcy estate if the property was obtained as a result of an inheritance,
    a divorce settlement, or insurance proceeds. Only property which falls
    into the descriptions contained in subsections (A) through (C) is "cap-
    tured" by the bankruptcy estate post-petition.
    Less than 180 days after filing his bankruptcy petition, upon Mrs.
    Birney's death, Birney obtained a fee simple interest in the Cecil
    County property by operation of law. He was a joint owner as tenants
    by the entireties with his wife, and thus he held a survivorship interest
    in the property. See Cooper v. Bikle, 
    640 A.2d 1120
    , 1127 (Md.
    1994). Upon Mrs. Birney's death, Birney became the sole owner of
    the property. A tenant by the entireties, however, does not "inherit"
    his co-tenant's interest in the property. See, e.g., Bonczkowski v.
    Kucharski, 
    150 N.E.2d 144
    , 149 (Ill. 1958). Rather, he continues his
    full ownership of the property alone. Consequently, Birney did not
    become entitled to a fee simple interest in the Cecil County property
    by "bequest, devise, or inheritance." Nor, obviously, did Birney
    obtain the property in a divorce settlement or as an insurance benefi-
    ciary. Section 541(a)(5), therefore, is inapplicable and does not pro-
    vide a statutory mechanism for bringing the Cecil County property
    into Birney's bankruptcy estate. The property, therefore, belongs to
    Birney, not to Birney's bankruptcy estate. As a result, Smith could not
    reach the property through the estate.
    6
    IV.
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the order of the district court.
    AFFIRMED
    7