The Bankruptcy Code allows States to define what property is
exempt from the estate that will be distributed among the debtor's
creditors. The Florida Constitution provides a homestead exemption,
which the state courts have held inapplicable to liens that attach
before the property in question acquires its homestead status.
Petitioner purchased his Florida condominium in 1984 subject to
respondent's preexisting judgment lien, and the property first
qualified as a homestead under a 1985 amendment to the State's
homestead law. After petitioner filed a chapter 7 petition for
bankruptcy in 1986, the Bankruptcy Court,
inter alia,
sustained his claimed homestead exemption in the condominium, but
subsequently denied his postdischarge motion to avoid respondent's
lien pursuant to Code § 522(f). The District Court and the
Court of Appeals affirmed, finding that, since the lien had
attached before the condominium qualified for the homestead
exemption, the property was not exempt under state law.
Held:
1. Judicial liens can be eliminated under § 522(f) even
though the State has defined the exempt property in such a way as
specifically to exclude property encumbered by such liens. The
section provides,
inter alia, that
"the debtor may avoid the fixing of a [judicial] lien on an
interest of the debtor in property to the extent that such lien
impairs an exemption to which the debtor would have been entitled
under,"
in effect, § 522(d), which lists federal exemptions, or
under state law. At first blush, respondent's argument seems
entirely reasonable that her lien does not "impair" petitioner's
Florida homestead exemption within the meaning of § 522(f)
because the exemption is not assertable against preexisting
judicial liens, and that permitting avoidance of the lien would not
preserve the exemption, but
expand it. However,
this result has been widely and uniformly rejected by federal
bankruptcy courts with respect to
federal exemptions under
§ 522(d). To determine the application of § 522(f), those
courts ask not whether the lien impairs an exemption to which the
debtor is in fact entitled, but whether it impairs an exemption to
which he
would have been entitled but for the lien itself.
This approach, which gives meaning to the phrase "would have been
entitled" in the applicable text, is correct. A different approach
cannot be adopted
Page 500 U. S. 306
for state exemptions, in light of the equivalency of treatment
accorded to federal and state exemptions by § 522(f). Pp.
500 U. S.
308-314.
2. This Court expresses no opinion on, and leaves for the Court
of Appeals to resolve in the first instance, the questions whether
respondent's lien can be said to have "impair[ed] an exemption to
which [petitioner] would have been entitled" at the time the lien
was fixed, in light of the fact that petitioner did not yet have a
homestead interest; whether the lien in fact fixed "on an interest
of the debtor" if, under state law, it attached simultaneously with
petitioner's acquisition of his property interest; and whether the
Florida statute extending the homestead exemption was retroactive.
P.
500 U. S.
314.
877 F.2d 44, (CA 11 1989), reversed and remanded.
SCALIA, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
REHNQUIST, C.J., and WHITE, MARSHALL, BLACKMUN, O'CONNOR, KENNEDY,
and SOUTER, JJ., joined. STEVENS, J., filed a dissenting opinion,
post, p.
500 U. S.
314.
JUSTICE SCALIA delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Bankruptcy Code allows the States to define what property a
debtor may exempt from the bankruptcy estate that will be
distributed among his creditors. 11 U.S.C. § 522(b). The Code
also provides that judicial liens encumbering exempt property can
be eliminated. 11 U.S.C. § 522(f). The question in this case
is whether that elimination can operate when the State has defined
the exempt property in such a way as specifically to exclude
property encumbered by judicial liens.
I
In 1975, Helen Owen, the respondent, obtained a judgment against
petitioner Dwight Owen, her former husband, for approximately
$160,000. The judgment was recorded in Sarasota County, Florida, in
July, 1976. Petitioner did not at that time own any property in
Sarasota County, but, under
Page 500 U. S. 307
Florida law, the judgment would attach to any after-acquired
property recorded in the county.
B.A. Lott, Inc. v.
Padgett, 153 Fla. 304, 14 So. 2d 667 (1943). In 1984,
petitioner purchased a condominium in Sarasota County; upon
acquisition of title, the property became subject to respondent's
judgment lien.
Porter-Mallard Co. v. Dugger, 117 Fla. 137,
157 So. 429 (1934).
One year later, Florida amended its homestead law so that
petitioner's condominium, which previously had not qualified as a
homestead, thereafter did. Under the Florida Constitution,
homestead property is "exempt from forced sale . . . and no
judgment, decree or execution [can] be a lien thereon . . . ," Fla.
Const., Art. 10, § 4(a). The Florida courts have interpreted
this provision, however, as being inapplicable to preexisting
liens,
i.e., liens that attached before the property
acquired its homestead status.
Bessemer v.
Gersten, 381 So. 2d
1344, 1347, n. 1 (Fla.1980);
Aetna Ins. Co. v.
LaGasse, 223 So. 2d
727, 728 (Fla.1969);
Pasco v. Harley, 73 Fla. 819,
824-825, 75 So. 30, 32-33 (1917);
Volpitta v. Fields, 369
So. 2d 367, 369 (Fla. App.1979);
Lyon v. Arnold, 46 F.2d
451, 452 (CA5 1931). Preexisting liens, then, are in effect an
exception to the Florida homestead exemption.
In January, 1986, petitioner filed for bankruptcy under chapter
7 of the Code, and claimed a homestead exemption in his Sarasota
condominium. The condominium, valued at approximately $135,000, was
his primary asset; his liabilities included approximately $350,000
owed to the respondent. The bankruptcy court discharged
petitioner's personal liability for these debts, and sustained,
over respondent's objections, his claimed exemption.
The condominium, however, remained subject to respondent's
preexisting lien, and after discharge, petitioner moved to reopen
his case to avoid the lien pursuant to § 522(f)(1). The
Bankruptcy Court refused to decree the avoidance; the District
Court affirmed, finding that the lien had attached
Page 500 U. S. 308
before the property qualified for the exemption, and that
Florida law therefore did not exempt the lien encumbered property.
86 B.R. 691
(MD Fla.1988). The Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
affirmed on the same ground. 877 F.2d 44 (1989). We granted
certiorari. 495 U.S. 929 (1990).
II
An estate in bankruptcy consists of all the interests in
property, legal and equitable, possessed by the debtor at the time
of filing, as well as those interests recovered or recoverable
through transfer and lien avoidance provisions. An exemption is an
interest withdrawn from the estate (and hence from the creditors)
for the benefit of the debtor. Section 522 determines what property
a debtor may exempt. Under § 522(b), he must select between a
list of federal exemptions (set forth in § 522(d)) and the
exemptions provided by his State, "unless the State law that is
applicable to the debtor . . . specifically does not so authorize,"
11 U.S.C. § 522(b)(1) -- that is, unless the State "opts out"
of the federal list. If a State opts out, then its debtors are
limited to the exemptions provided by state law. Nothing in
subsection (b) (or elsewhere in the Code) limits a State's power to
restrict the scope of its exemptions; indeed, it could
theoretically accord no exemptions at all.
Property that is properly exempted under § 522 is (with
some exceptions) immunized against liability for prebankruptcy
debts. § 522(c). No property can be exempted (and thereby
immunized), however, unless it first falls
within the
bankruptcy estate. Section 522(b) provides that the debtor may
exempt certain property "from property of the estate"; obviously,
then, an interest that is not possessed by the estate cannot be
exempted. Thus, if a debtor holds only bare legal title to his
house -- if, for example, the house is subject to a purchase-money
mortgage for its full value -- then only that legal interest passes
to the estate; the equitable interest remains with the mortgage
holder, 11 U.S.C. § 541(d). And since the
Page 500 U. S. 309
equitable interest does not pass to the estate, neither can it
pass to the debtor as an exempt interest in property. Legal title
will pass, and can be the subject of an exemption; but the property
will remain subject to the lien interest of the mortgage holder.
This was the rule of
Long v. Bullard, 117 U.
S. 617 (1886), codified in § 522. Only where the
Code empowers the court to avoid liens or transfers can an interest
originally not within the estate be passed to the estate, and
subsequently (through the claim of an exemption) to the debtor.
It is such an avoidance provision that is at issue here, to
which we now turn. Section 522(f) reads as follows:
"(f) Notwithstanding any waiver of exemptions, the debtor may
avoid the fixing of a lien on an interest of the debtor in property
to the extent that such lien impairs an exemption to which the
debtor would have been entitled under subsection (b) of this
section, if such lien is -- "
"(1) a judicial lien; or"
"(2) a nonpossessory, nonpurchase-money security interest. . .
."
The lien in the present case is a judicial lien, and we assume
without deciding that it fixed "on an interest of the debtor in
property."
See Farrey v. Sanderfoot, ante, p.
500 U. S. 291. The
question presented by this case is whether it "impairs an exemption
to which [petitioner] would have been entitled under subsection
(b)." Since Florida has chosen to opt out of the listed federal
exemptions,
see Fla.Stat. § 222.20 (1989), the only
subsection (b) exemption at issue is the Florida homestead
exemption described above. Respondent suggests that, to resolve
this case, we need only ask whether the judicial lien impairs that
exemption. It obviously does not, since the Florida homestead
exemption is not assertable against preexisting judicial liens. To
permit avoidance of the lien, respondent urges, would not
preserve the exemption, but would
expand it.
Page 500 U. S. 310
At first blush, this seems entirely reasonable. Several Courts
of Appeals in addition to the Eleventh Circuit here have reached
this result with respect to built-in limitations on state
exemptions, [
Footnote 1] though
others have rejected it. [
Footnote
2] What must give us pause, however, is that this result has
been widely
and uniformly rejected with respect to
built-in limitations on the
federal exemptions. Most of
the federally listed exemptions (set forth in § 522(d)) are
explicitly restricted to the "debtor's aggregate interest" or the
"debtor's interest" up to a maximum amount.
See
§§ 522(d)(1)-(6), (8). If respondent's approach to §
522(f) were applied, all of these exemptions (and perhaps others as
well) [
Footnote 3] would be
limited by unavoided encumbering liens,
see § 522(c).
The federal homestead exemption, for example, allows the debtor to
exempt from the property of the estate "the debtor's aggregate
interest, not to exceed $7,500 in value, in . . . a residence."
§ 522(d)(1). If respondent's interpretation of § 522(f)
were applied to this exemption, a debtor who owned a house worth
$10,000 that was subject to a judicial lien for $9,000 would not be
entitled to the full homestead exemption of $7,500. The judicial
lien would not be avoidable under § 522(f), since it does not
"impair" the exemption, which is limited to the debtor's "aggregate
interest" of $1,000. The uniform practice of bankruptcy courts,
however, is to the contrary. To determine the application of §
522(f), they ask not whether the lien impairs an exemption to which
the debtor is in fact entitled, but whether it impairs an
exemption
Page 500 U. S. 311
to which he
would have been entitled but for the lien
itself. [
Footnote 4]
As the preceding italicized words suggest, this reading is more
consonant with the text of § 522(f) -- which establishes as
the baseline, against which impairment is to be measured, not an
exemption to which the debtor "is entitled," but one to which he
"
would have been entitled." The latter phrase denotes a
state of affairs that is conceived or hypothetical, rather than
actual, and requires the reader to disregard some element of
reality. "Would have been" but for what? The answer given, with
respect to the federal exemptions, has been
but for the lien at
issue, and that seems to us correct.
The only other conceivable possibility is
but for a
waiver -- harking back to the beginning phrase of §
522(f), "Notwithstanding any waiver of exemptions. . . ." The use
of contrary-to-fact construction after a "notwithstanding" phrase
is not, however, common usage, if even permissible. Moreover,
though one might employ it when the "notwithstanding" phrase is the
main point of the provision in question
Page 500 U. S. 312
("Notwithstanding any waiver, a debtor shall retain those
exemptions to which he would have been entitled under subsection
(b)"), it would be most strange to employ it where the
"notwithstanding" phrase, as here, is an aside. The point of §
522(f) is not to exclude waivers (though that is done in passing,
waivers are addressed directly in § 522(e)), but to provide
that the debtor may avoid the fixing of a lien. In that context,
for every instance in which "would have been entitled" may be
accurate (because the incidentally mentioned waiver occurred),
there will be thousands of instances in which "is entitled" should
have been used. It seems to us that "would have been entitled" must
refer to the generality, if not indeed the universality, of cases
covered by the provision; and on that premise, the only conceivable
fact we are invited to disregard is the existence of the lien.
This reading must also be accepted, at least with respect to the
federal exemptions, if § 522(f) is not to become an
irrelevancy with respect to the most venerable, most common and
most important exemptions. The federal exemptions for homestead
(§ 522(d)(1)), for motor vehicles (§ 522(d)(2)), for
household goods and wearing apparel (§ 522(d)(3)), and for
tools of the trade (§ 522(d)(6)), are all defined by reference
to the debtor's "interest" or "aggregate interest," so that, if
respondent's interpretation is accepted, no encumbrances of these
could be avoided. Surely § 522(f) promises more than that --
and surely it would be bizarre for the federal scheme to prevent
the avoidance of liens on those items, but to permit it for the
less crucial items (for example, an "unmatured life insurance
contract owned by the debtor," § 522(d)(7)) that are not
described in such fashion as unquestionably to exclude liens.
We have no doubt, then, that the lower courts' unanimously
agreed-upon manner of applying § 522(f) to federal exemptions
-- ask first whether avoiding the lien would entitle the debtor to
an exemption, and if it would, then avoid
Page 500 U. S. 313
and recover the lien -- is correct. [
Footnote 5] The question then becomes whether a different
interpretation should be adopted for State exemptions. We do not
see how that could be possible. Nothing in the text of §
522(f) remotely justifies treating the two categories of exemptions
differently. The provision refers to the impairment of
"exemption[s] to which the debtor would have been entitled under
subsection (b)," and that includes federal exemptions and state
exemptions alike. Nor is there any overwhelmingly clear policy
impelling us, if we possessed the power, to create a distinction
that the words of the statute do not contain. Respondent asserts
that it is inconsistent with the Bankruptcy Code's "opt-out"
policy, whereby the States may define their own exemptions, to
refuse to take those exemptions with all their built-in
limitations. That is plainly not true, however, since there is no
doubt that a state exemption which purports to be available "unless
waived" will be given full effect,
even if it has been
waived, for purposes of § 522(f) -- the first phrase of
which, as we have noted, recites that it applies "[n]otwithstanding
any waiver of exemptions."
See Dominion Bank of Cumberlands, NA
v. Nuckolls, 780 F.2d 408, 412 (CA4 1985). Just as it is not
inconsistent with the policy of permitting state-defined exemptions
to have another policy disfavoring waiver of exemptions, whether
federal- or state-created, so also it is not inconsistent to have a
policy disfavoring the impingement of certain types of liens upon
exemptions, whether federal- or state-created. We have no basis for
pronouncing the opt-out policy absolute, but must apply it along
with whatever other competing or limiting policies the statute
contains.
On the basis of the analysis we have set forth above with
respect to federal exemptions, and in light of the equivalency of
treatment accorded to federal and State exemptions by §
522(f), we conclude that Florida's exclusion of certain liens from
the scope of its homestead protection does not achieve a
Page 500 U. S. 314
similar exclusion from the Bankruptcy Code's lien avoidance
provision. [
Footnote 6]
III
The foregoing conclusion does not necessarily resolve this case.
Section 522(f) permits the avoidance of the "fixing of a lien on an
interest of the debtor." Some courts have held it inapplicable to a
lien that was already attached to property when the debtor acquired
it, since in such a case there never was a "fixing of a lien" on
the debtor's interest.
See In re McCormick, 18 B.R. 911,
914 (Bkrtcy.Ct.WD Pa.),
aff'd, 22 B.R. 997
(WD Pa.1982);
In re Scott, 12 B.R. 613, 615 (Bkrtcy.Ct.WD
Okla.1981). Under Florida law, the lien may have attached
simultaneously with the acquisition of the property interest. If
so, it could be argued that the lien did not fix "on an interest of
the debtor."
See Farrey v. Sanderfoot, ante, p.
500 U. S. 291. The
Court of Appeals did not pass on this issue, nor on the subsidiary
question of whether the Florida statute extending the homestead
exemption was a taking,
cf. United States v. Security
Industrial Bank, 459 U. S. 70
(1982). We express no opinion on these points, and leave them to be
considered by the Court of Appeals on remand.
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is reversed, and the case
remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
[
Footnote 1]
See In re Pine, 717 F.2d 281 (CA6 1983);
In re
McManus, 681 F.2d 353 (CA5 1982).
[
Footnote 2]
See In re Brown, 734 F.2d 119 (CA2 1984);
Dominion
Bank of Cumberlands, NA v. Nuckolls, 780 F.2d 408 (CA4 1985);
In re Thompson, 750 F.2d 628 (CA8 1984);
In re
Leonard, 866 F.2d 335 (CA10 1989).
[
Footnote 3]
Exemption (7) refers to a life insurance contract "owned" by the
debtor, and exemptions (10) and (11) refer to various benefits,
awards and payments that the debtor has a "right to receive."
§ 522(d)(7), (10), (11). Only exemption (9), § 522(d)(9),
contains no language arguably excluding property subject to
lien.
[
Footnote 4]
See, e.g., In re Simonson, 758 F.2d 103, 105 (CA3
1985),
In re Brantz , 106 B.R. 62, 68 (Bkrtcy.Ct.ED
Pa.1989);
In re Carney, 47 B.R. 296, 299
(Bkrtcy.Ct.Mass.1985),
In re Losieniecki, 17 B.R. 136, 138
(Bkrtcy.Ct.WD Pa.1981).
See also 3 Collier on Bankruptcy
� 522.29 (15th ed.1990); B. Weintraub & A. Resnick,
Bankruptcy Law Manual � 4.08[2] (1986), Bowmar, Avoidance of
Judicial Liens that Impair Exemptions in Bankruptcy: The Workings
of 11 U.S.C. § 522(f)(1), 63 Am.Bankr.L.J. 375, 387-388, and
n. 85 (1989) (hereinafter Bowmar). Some courts have held that
§ 522(f) allows the avoidance of liens even when, after the
avoidance, there would be no debtor's interest in the property to
which a § 522(d) exemption could attach.
See, e.g., In re
Richardson, 55 B.R. 526 (Bkrtcy.Ct.ND Ohio 1985);
In re
Chesanow, 25 B.R. 228, 231 (Bkrtcy.Ct.Conn.1982).
But see,
e.g., In re Hooper, 60 B.R. 640 at 641 (Bkrtcy.Ct.WD Pa.1986);
In re Barone, 31 B.R. 540 (Bkrtcy.Ct.ED Pa.1983). Today's
opinion does not speak to this issue. Finally, at least one court
has suggested that equity excluding the liens is required for there
to be an "interest" within the scope of § 522(f),
In re
Miller, 8 B.R. 43 (Bkrtcy.Ct.WD Mo.1980), but that position
has been rejected.
In re Cole, 15 B.R. 322, 323, n. 1
(Bkrtcy.Ct.WD Mo.1981).
[
Footnote 5]
For a more precise formulation,
see In re Brantz, 106
B.R. at 68;
In re Carney, 47 B.R. at 299; Bowmar
388-392.
[
Footnote 6]
In the dissent's view, the question is whether the lien impairs
an "exemption to which the debtor would have been entitled at the
time the lien
fixed'." Post at 500 U. S. 317.
Under the Code, however, the question is whether the lien impairs
an "exemption to which the debtor would have been entitled under
subsection (b)," and under subsection (b), exempt property is
determined "on the date of the filing of the petition," not when
the lien fixed. 11 U.S.C. §§ 522(f), (b)(2)(A). We follow
the language of the Code.
JUSTICE STEVENS, dissenting.
The Court's analysis puts the cart before the horse. As I read
the statute at issue, it is not necessary to reach the issue
Page 500 U. S. 315
the majority addresses. In construing the lien avoidance
provisions of the Bankruptcy Code, it is important to recognize a
distinction between two classes of cases: those in which the lien
attached to the exempt property
before the debtor had any
right to claim an exemption and those in which the lien attached
after the debtor acquired that right. This case falls in
the former category. As I shall explain, I believe it was correctly
decided by the Bankruptcy Court, the District Court, and the Court
of Appeals, and that the judgment should be affirmed.
I
The facts raise a straight forward issue: whether the lien
avoidance provisions in § 522(f) of the Bankruptcy Code, 11
U.S.C. § 522(f) [
Footnote 2/1]
apply to a judicial lien that attached before the debtor had any
claim to an exemption. It is undisputed that respondent's judicial
lien attached to petitioner's Sarasota condominium when he acquired
title to the property in November, 1984. It is also undisputed that
the petitioner was not entitled to a homestead exemption when he
acquired title because he was single. At that time, the exemption
was available only to a "head of a household" under Article 10,
§ 4 of the Florida Constitution. An amendment that became
effective in 1985 broadened the exemption to extend to "a natural
person." Fla. Const., Art. 10, § 4. On the effective date of
this amendment, petitioner became entitled to the homestead
exemption at issue in this case. [
Footnote 2/2] Thus, it is undisputed that the petitioner
had an exemption on his condominium when he filed his bankruptcy
petition in 1986, but did not
Page 500 U. S. 316
have a right to that exemption in 1984, when respondent's
judicial lien attached.
As I read the text of § 522(f), it does not authorize the
avoidance of liens that were perfected at a time when the debtor
could not claim an exemption in the secured property. The
Bankruptcy Code deals with the subject of exemptions in two
separate provisions that are relevant to this case. The first of
these provisions, § 522(b), identifies property that is exempt
from the claims of general creditors. [
Footnote 2/3] Focusing on the legal interests in the
property at the time of the bankruptcy, this section identifies
property that is exempt from the bankrupt estate, and therefore
cannot be sold by the trustee to satisfy the claims of general
creditors.
See H.R.Rep. No. 95-595, pp. 360-361 (1977);
S.Rep. No. 95-989, pp. 75-76 (1978), U.S.Code Cong. &
Admin.News 1978, p. 5787. In this case, petitioner's condominium in
Sarasota, Florida was entitled to a homestead exemption as a matter
of Florida law when he filed for bankruptcy and therefore was
properly excluded from the estate.
See 877 F.2d 44, 45
(CA11 1989). The property was fully protected from the claims of
general creditors by the operation of § 522(b).
The second provision that is relevant to this suit, §
522(f), is concerned with the priority of secured creditors, not
the
Page 500 U. S. 317
claims of general creditors. Section 522(f) establishes a rule
of priority between the debtor's legal interest and creditors'
security interests in exempt property as opposed to the property of
the estate. The statute establishes the priority by allowing the
debtor to avoid the fixing of judicial liens and certain
nonpossessory, nonpurchase-money security interests under the right
circumstances to the extent that they encumber the exemption.
As it applies to judicial liens, § 522(f) raises two
questions: (1) whether the exemption provides a basis for avoidance
of the lien; and (2) if so, to what extent should the lien be
avoided? The first question concerns the relative priority of
conflicting claims on the same asset; on such issues, the timing of
the claims is often decisive. The second question -- I shall call
it the "impairment question" -- concerns the distribution of the
proceeds of sale after the issue of priority has been resolved.
This second question need not be reached unless the first question
has been answered positively.
In determining whether the exemption provides a basis for
avoiding the lien, § 522(f) turns our attention towards the
exemption to which the debtor would have been entitled at the time
the lien "fixed." In
United States v. Security Industrial
Bank, 459 U. S. 70
(1982), this Court was presented with the question whether applying
§ 522(f)(2) to avoid nonpossessory liens perfected before the
enactment of the Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1978 would be a taking of
property without compensation in violation of the Fifth Amendment
of the Constitution. The Court avoided deciding that precise
question by holding that § 522(f) did not apply retroactively
to liens that had been perfected before the Bankruptcy Reform Act
was enacted. Although there is no such constitutional question
presented here,
Security Industrial Bank, establishes that
the critical date for determining whether a lien may be avoided
under the statute is the date of the fixing of that lien.
Page 500 U. S. 318
The date of the fixing of the respondent's lien on petitioner's
condominium is therefore controlling in this case. Because it is
undisputed that petitioner was not entitled to an exemption when
the lien attached, the subsequently acquired exemption does not
provide a basis for avoidance of the respondent's lien. [
Footnote 2/4] Thus, the priority question
in this case was correctly decided by the Court of Appeals, and its
judgment should be affirmed.
II
The Court frames the question it decides as whether the lien
avoidance provisions in § 522(f) "can operate when the State
has defined the exempt property in such a way as specifically to
exclude property encumbered by judicial liens."
Ante at
500 U. S. 306.
That is an accurate description of the issue that has arisen in
cases concerning the avoidability of nonpossessory,
nonpurchase-money liens on household goods.
See cases
cited
ante at
500 U. S. 310,
nn.
500
U.S. 305fn2/1|>1 and
500
U.S. 305fn2/2|>2. [
Footnote
2/5] In each of those cases, the state's definition of the
exemption purported to
Page 500 U. S. 319
exclude property interests that were subject to otherwise
avoidable liens under § 522(f). Thus, the state's definition
of the exemption itself defeated the purpose of the federal lien
avoidance provisions by narrowing the category of exempt property.
[
Footnote 2/6]
The majority and dissenting opinions in
In re McManus,
681 F.2d 353 (CA5 1982), adequately identify the issue to which the
Court's opinion today is addressed. In that case, a finance company
(AVCO) held a promissory note secured by a nonpossessory,
nonpurchase-money security interest in the form of a chattel
mortgage on some of the debtor's household goods and furnishings.
The debtors sought to avoid AVCO's lien under § 522(f) on the
ground that their household goods and furniture were exempted under
§ 522(b). The Bankruptcy Court and the District Court refused
to avoid the lien. The Court of Appeals, following the reasoning of
the Bankruptcy Court, affirmed. [
Footnote 2/7] Louisiana had established a homestead
exemption for certain household goods and furniture. Yet it had
also explicitly established in a separate code provision that,
notwithstanding its definitions of homestead exemptions, any
household goods or furniture encumbered by a mortgage are not
exempt property. The majority of the Court of Appeals held that the
liens were not avoidable, because the State of Louisiana had
utilized its authority under § 522(b) to define its exemptions
to exclude household goods
Page 500 U. S. 320
subject to mortgages; hence, the liens did not impair an
exemption to which the debtors would have been entitled under
§ 522(b).
Under my reading of § 522(f), the Court of Appeals erred
because it focused its attention entirely on the situation at the
time of the bankruptcy. If it had analyzed the case by noting that
at the time AVCO's lien attached, the debtors were already entitled
to an exemption, it should have concluded that the lien was
avoidable. The dissenting judge came to that conclusion by
correctly recognizing that the statutory text evidences an intent
to consider the situation at the time of attachment. He wrote:
"The opening phrase of § 522(f), '[n]otwithstanding any
waiver of exemptions,' indicates that the subsection's import is to
return the situation to the
status quo ante i.e., prior to
any improvident waiver of any exemption by the debtor. When the
debtors entered the creditors' office, they enjoyed an exemption
under Louisiana law from seizure and sale of their household goods;
and when they left the office, they could no longer claim an
exemption for those goods solely because they had improvidently
granted a security interest to the creditors covering such goods. I
fail to see how this could be characterized as anything but a
waiver of exemptions, subject to the avoiding power found in §
522(f)."
Id. at 358. [
Footnote
2/8]
Page 500 U. S. 321
Although the Court's opinion today resolves the question that
was presented in
McManus by adopting the position of the
dissent in
McManus, I disagree with the Court's reasoning.
The Court simply overlooks the fact that, for purposes of
determining whether a lien is avoidable -- rather than for the
purpose of determining the extent to which the lien should be
avoided -- the question whether the debtor "would have been
entitled" to an exemption is addressed to the state of affairs that
existed at the time the lien attached.
Finally, I must comment on the Court's conclusion
"that Florida's exclusion of certain liens from the scope of its
homestead protection does not achieve a similar exclusion from the
Bankruptcy Code's lien avoidance provision."
Ante at
500 U. S.
313-314. This statement treats Florida's refusal to
apply its broadened homestead exemption retroactively as the
equivalent of Louisiana's narrowing definition of its household
goods exemption to exclude properties subject to a chattel
mortgage. The conclusion is flawed. Petitioner would not have been
entitled to a homestead exemption at the time respondent's judicial
lien attached; for that reason, the lien avoidance provisions in
§ 522(f) of the Bankruptcy Code are not applicable. I would
therefore affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeals.
[
Footnote 2/1]
Section 522(f) provides:
"(f) Notwithstanding any waiver of exemptions, the debtor may
avoid the fixing of a lien on an interest of the debtor in property
to the extent that such lien impairs an exemption to which the
debtor would have been entitled under subsection (b) of this
section, if such lien is -- "
"(1) a judicial lien; or"
"(2) a nonpossessory, nonpurchase-money security interest. . .
."
[
Footnote 2/2]
The amendment was adopted in November, 1984, but became
effective on January 8, 1985.
See Fla. Const., Art. 11,
§ 5.
[
Footnote 2/3]
Section 522(b) provides, in relevant part:
"Notwithstanding section 541 of this title, an individual debtor
may exempt from property of the estate the property listed in
either paragraph (1) or, in the alternative, paragraph (2) of this
subsection."
* * * *
"Such property is -- "
"(1) property that is specified under subsection (d) of this
section, unless the State law that is applicable to the debtor
under paragraph (2)(A) of this subsection specifically does not so
authorize; or, in the alternative."
"(2)(A) any property that is exempt under Federal law, other
than subsection (d) of this section, or State or local law that is
applicable on the date of the filing of the petition at the place
in which the debtor's domicile has been located for the 180 days
immediately preceding the date of the filing of the petition, or
for a longer portion of such 180-day period than in any other
place;. . . ."
[
Footnote 2/4]
I recognize that, in reading the text of § 522(f), it is
possible to find ambiguity in the timing issue from the placement
of the phrase "under subsection (b) of this section." As I
understand the interaction between § 522(b) and § 522(f),
however, those words merely define the exempt property for the
purposes of determining the priorities between the debtor and
secured creditors -- namely the
kinds of exemptions that
may justify an avoidance. The fact that § 522(b) itself refers
to the status of the lien at the time of bankruptcy for the purpose
of identifying the property as exempt from the claims of general
creditors is simply irrelevant to the priority question posed under
§ 522(f). The Court's statement,
ante at
500 U. S. 314,
n. 6, that "[w]e follow the language of the Code" ignores this
point, ignores our holding in
United States v. Security
Industrial Bank, 459 U. S. 70
(1982), and ignores our holding in
Farrey v. Sanderfoot,
ante, p.
500 U. S. 291.
[
Footnote 2/5]
Two of these cases, however, do address different issues.
In
re Brown, 734 F.2d 119 (CA2 1984) involved a judicial lien. In
that case, the issue was whether the debtor could avoid a judicial
lien on his homestead after a foreclosure sale where New York law
did not allow an exemption on the proceeds of a foreclosure sale.
In re Thompson, 750 F.2d 628 (CA8 1984), was concerned
with the issue of whether a debtor could avoid a lien on a Nebraska
exemption on livestock under § 522(f)(2).
[
Footnote 2/6]
In this case, in contrast, Florida's definition of its household
exemption excluded petitioner's property because it was not used as
a family residence at the time his former spouse's lien attached.
The subsequent broadening of Florida's homestead exemption was not
even arguably intended to protect the interest of lien holders or
to defeat the purposes of the federal lien avoidance
provisions.
[
Footnote 2/7]
Another case with similar facts,
Blazer Financial Services
v. Gipson, was consolidated with
In re McManus before
the Court of Appeals.
In re McManus, 681 F.2d 353 (CA5
1982). The debtors were a married couple who had filed a petition
in bankruptcy and sought to avoid a finance company's
nonpossessory, nonpurchase-money security interest in their
household goods.
See id. at 355.
[
Footnote 2/8]
Judge Dyer buttressed his conclusion by reference to the
legislative history:
"This is clearly indicated in S.Rep. No. 95-989 95th Cong., 2d
Sess. 76, U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 1978, pp. 5787,
5862:"
"[To] protect the debtors' exemptions, his discharge, and thus
his fresh start, . . . [t]he debtor may avoid . . . to the extent
that the property could have been exempted in the absence of the
lien . . . a nonpossessory, nonpurchase-money security interest in
certain household and personal goods."
"Thus, it was Congress's clear intent that a debtor benefit to
the fullest extent possible exemptions granted to him by applicable
state laws, even when he may have improvidently waived such
exemptions. It is equally clear that Congress was particularly
concerned with eradicating certain unconscionable creditor
practices in the consumer loan industry."
In re McManus, 681 F.2d at 358.