In re Perez
In re Perez
Opinion of the Court
OPINION
The Debtor has asserted exemptions as to community property that state law makes available to his non-filing spouse. The Trustee has objected, asserting that both the Bankruptcy Code and state law only permit an individual to claim exemptions personal to him, and that nondebtors are not entitled to list their own exemptions in a bankruptcy case. The Court sustains the Debtor’s claimed exemptions because the Bankruptcy Code permits states to exempt community property from community debts, and Arizona law permits one spouse to assert the community exemptions on behalf of the community.
Facts
James Anthony Perez (“Debtor” or “Mr. Perez”) filed this Chapter 13 case individually. His wife, Bonnie Perez (“Mrs.Perez”), did not join in the petition, so this is
In his list of exemptions, the Debtor claimed as exempt both property that Arizona law would permit him to exempt individually, and that Arizona law would permit his spouse to exempt.
There being no material facts in dispute, the parties briefed the issues as a matter of law and the Court took the matter under advisement after oral argument.
Analysis
There is very little law on the precise point at issue here, although there is one bankruptcy court decision directly on point.
In Burman v. Homan (In re Homan), 112 B.R. 356 (9th Cir. BAP 1989), the BAP held that a non-filing wife could not claim an exemption because the Bankruptcy Code vested the right to claim exemptions solely in the filing spouse. For two reasons, that holding does not dictate the result here. First, it is factually distinguishable because it arose in a state that had not opted out of the option for federal exemptions, and the debtor husband had asserted the federal exemptions whereas the non-filing wife attempted to claim the state exemptions. Homan does not appear to have any application where the two exemption options are not available and the spouses do not disagree. Here, only the state exemptions are available, and the non-filing wife has joined the Debtor’s opposition to the Trustee’s objection. Second, Homan involved an attempt by a nondebtor to claim exemptions in a bankruptcy case. Here, the nondebtor wife has not attempted to claim her own exemptions; instead, the Debtor has sought to claim exemptions on behalf of the marital community or on behalf of his non-filing
The Idaho Bankruptcy Court has, however, addressed this precise question in In re DeHaan, 275 B.R. 375 (Bankr.D.Idaho 2002). That court concluded that the debt- or could not claim exemptions on behalf of his non-filing spouse. The opinion relied primarily on the language of the Code to reach that result. It noted that only an “individual debtor” may claim exemptions pursuant to § 522(b), and that a debtor’s dependent such as a non-filing spouse may assert exemptions pursuant to § 522© only if the debtor fails to claim any exemptions.
While those two conclusions are correct, as is the conclusion that “[t]here is nothing in the Code that allows non-debtors, dependents or otherwise, to assert in the bankruptcy an exemption personal to such non-debtors,” Id. at 381, they do not really answer the question whether the debtor can assert an exemption in community property that state law would permit him to assert on behalf of the community. Nonetheless, that is the conclusion the De-Haan court reached: “Nor is there anything in the Bankruptcy Code that allows the debtor to assert an exemption belonging not to him but, instead, to his non-debtor dependents.” Id.
In fact, the Code may permit a debtor to assert state law exemptions on behalf of a non-filing spouse. While only the debtor may claim the exemptions, in an opt out state the exemptions that the debt- or may claim are to “property that is exempt under ... State or local law .... ” 11 U.S.C. § 522(b)(2)(A). Thus the Bankruptcy Code itself does not limit the Debt- or to claiming exemptions that would be available under state law if he were a single person. Instead, the Code permits the Debtor to claim as exempt any property that “is exempt” under state law. Thus the proper question is whether, under state law, the Debtor could claim that the property “is exempt” from community debts by asserting not only his own, but also his wife’s exemptions.
Under Arizona law, the amount of personal property exemptions of the two spouses is generally double the amount that each spouse could claim as a single person. There is nothing in Arizona law that prohibits one spouse from asserting both exemptions. To the contrary, A.R.S. § 25-215Q) provides that “either spouse may contract debts and otherwise act for the benefit of the community.” Here, there can be no doubt that the filing spouse, in claiming his non-filing spouse’s exemptions, is acting for the benefit of the community. Moreover, this apparently unlimited ability of either spouse to “act for the benefit of the community” is in contrast to the list of just three specific instances when the joinder of both spouses is required to bind or burden the community.
This Court is not in a position to determine whether there is a sufficient difference in the Idaho community property laws to support the contrary conclusion reached by the DeHaan court.
The Trustee’s concern for potential abuse does not appear likely to occur. The Trustee hypothesizes that married persons could file separate bankruptcies and then each of them could claim a double set of exemptions. But if the spouses file separately, one of the two cases would have to be filed first. Pursuant to § 541(a)(2)(A), all of the community property would be vested in the estate of that first-filing spouse. The only property that would come into the estate of the second-filing spouse would be her separate property. There would probably be no duplication of exemptions, because the first-filing spouse could not have exempted any of the second spouse’s separate property, which was not property of that estate. It would take a strange and unique set of circumstances for there to be any duplication, although this is theoretically possible.
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the Court sustains the Debtor’s exemption claims and denies the Trustee’s objections.
. Unless otherwise noted, all statutory and rule references are to the United States Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C, §§ 101-1330, and the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure.
. The Bankruptcy Code provides, in pertinent part, that the bankruptcy "estate is comprised of all of the following property, wherever located and by whomever held: ... All interests of the debtor and the debtor's spouse in community property as of the commencement of the case that is — under the sole, equal, or joint management and control of the debtor ....” 11 U.S.C. § 541(a)(2)(A). Arizona community property satisfies this definition because Arizona Revised Statutes ("A.R.S.”) § 25-214(B) provides that the "spouses have equal management, control and disposition rights over their community property and have equal power to bind the community.”
.As permitted by Bankruptcy Code § 522(b)(1), Arizona has opted out of the federal exemptions. A.R.S. § 33-1133(B). Although "only one homestead exemption may be held by a married couple or a single person” pursuant to A.R.S. § 33-1101(B), all of Arizona’s exemptions of personal and intangible property may be claimed by each spouse. A.R.S. § 33-1121.01 provides: "In the case of married persons, each spouse is entitled to the exemptions provided in this article, which may be combined with the other spouse’s exemption in the same property or taken in different exempt property.” Thus, for example, because A.R.S. § 33-1125(8) permits the exemption of "one motor vehicle not in excess of a fair market value of $5,000,” the two spouses together can exempt two vehicles, provided the value of each is less than $5,000, or can exempt one vehicle up to a total value of $10,000.
. A.R.S. § 25-214(C) requires the joinder of both spouses in real property transactions, guarantees and indemnities, and to bind the community after service of a petition for dissolution.
. Such a difference seems unlikely, however, because § 541(a)(2) only brings community
. Matcha v. Winn, 131 Ariz. 115, 117, 638 P.2d 1361 (1981).
. For example, the spouses could own three automobiles, each of which is worth $5,000. If two of those automobiles were community property, the first-filing spouse could exempt both of them on behalf of the community. If the third vehicle was the separate property of the second-filing spouse, she might then also seek to claim an exemption as to her separate property.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- In re James Anthony PEREZ, Debtor
- Cited By
- 3 cases
- Status
- Published