In re O'Sullivan
In re O'Sullivan
Opinion of the Court
MEMORANDUM OPINION REGARDING DEBTOR’S MOTION TO AVOID JUDGMENT LIEN OF CRP HOLDINGS A-l, LLC UNDER § 522(F)(1)
This matter is before the court on remand from the Eighth Circuit. This court granted the motion of Casey D. O’Sullivan, a Chapter 7 debtor, to avoid a judgment lien of CRP Holdings A-l, LLC pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 522(f)(1), and CRP appealed.
Findings of Fact
The facts are not disputed, and are re- , stated only for purposes of background.
CRP obtained a default judgment against the Debtor in Platte County, Missouri Circuit Court. Three weeks later, CRP recorded the judgment in Barton County, Missouri, where the Debtor re
In its opinion, the Eighth Circuit noted that it, like the BAP, had serious doubts about whether CRP had a lien that affixed to the Debtor’s real property.
In sum, if under Missouri law CRP’s notice of foreign judgment failed to give rise to a lien on [the Debtor’s] exempt homestead property, the debt would have been dischargeable through the bankruptcy proceedings. [The Debtor] would then not need to resort to § 522(f) to avoid CRP’s judgment. Alternatively, [the Debtor] could move to avoid the lien under § 522(f)(1) if CRP’s notice of foreign judgment fastened an existent, but presently unenforceable, lien on his exempt property.9
Discussion
Notwithstanding the clear choice behind Door No. 1 or Door No. 2, CRP attempts to convince this Court that the Eighth Circuit left open a Door No. 3: a path to allow CRP to escape avoidance of its lien now, only to have that lien magically appear and attach to the Debtor’s “survivor-ship interest” in the home upon the Debt- or’s spouse’s death. CRP’s .argument is outside the scope of the remand and lacks all merit.
First, both of the higher courts in this case were correct to surmise that CRP’s judgment was not an enforceable lien against the Debtor’s TBE property under Missouri law when the- Debtor filed bankruptcy. In fact, Missouri courts have recognized continually since at least 1895 that a judgment does not create a lien against an entirely exempt homestead property based on Missouri’s definition of
Second, the reason this court assumed CRP had a cognizable and avoidable lien under § 522(f)(1) is that CRP treated its judgment as a lien. That is clear from CRP’s actions here, in recording the judgment lien as a foreign judgment in the county where the Debtor owned his exempt home and in challenging the lien avoidance on contradictory grounds.
CRP’s actions are also consistent with how other parties to a real estate transaction — buyers, sellers, lenders, and most importantly, title companies — treat judgments post-discharge, as liens to be cleared before a transaction may proceed. In the court’s experience, seasoned debtors’ counsel err on the side of caution by filing appropriate § 522(f)(1) lien avoidance motions. When they do so, they may avoid exactly what is happening in this case now — expensive and protracted arguments about whether or not the judgment is a lien.
CRP thus did not have a judgment lien against the Debtor under Missouri law when the Debtor filed his chapter 7 bankruptcy case. But that does not, however, end the inquiry. As the Eighth Circuit points out, the Bankruptcy Code in § 101(36) defines a judicial lien as “a lien obtained by judgment, levy, sequestration, or other legal or equitable process or proceeding.” Likewise, the Bankruptcy Code defines what is a “lien”: “[t]he term ‘lien’ means charge against or interest in property to secure payment of a debt or performance of an obligation.”
There is no question that a judgment, even against entirely exempt TBE property, may constitute a “cloud” against title. The question is whether a “cloud” may constitute an “interest in property” under Missouri law such that the “cloud” may be considered a “lien” and thus avoided as a “judicial lien” for purposes of overriding
The Mahen
The Missouri Supreme Court observed that it was true the husband’s conveyance and the wife’s judgment were void in that neither was effective as against the TBE property, such that they had an adequate remedy at law. Nonetheless, the Court said the question “is whether all these void instruments are a cloud upon the title which would warrant the interposition of a court of equity.”
Here the title was held by the entireties. To the ordinary abstracter, or to the lay mind, a distinction might not be discovered between a deed by the entireties and a joint tenancy or a tenancy in common. Certain words might change the entire effect of the instrument. Here was a conveyance, regular on its face, made by [husband], and purporting to convey his interest. Here was a deed, regular on its face, which purported to convey the interest of [wife]. Here was a sheriffs deed reciting a judgment and execution in due form. So far as the record shows, the casual observer would not penetrate the difference and ascertain that all these conveyances were void from the inability of the owners to convey .... We think the record sufficiently shows a cloud upon the title to warrant the interposition by a court of equity.17
The same practical difficulties observed by the Missouri Supreme Court in 1922 exist today. The clerk who accepted CRP’s judgment for recording in Barton County would not know if the judgment created a lien or not. An abstractor or title company would not know if the Debtor’s real estate was “liable to be sold on execution.” Perhaps, although the deed said “husband and wife,” they were not married at the time? Perhaps the four unities of
If a Missouri judgment is a “cloud” sufficient to give Missouri courts jurisdiction to remove it even though the judgment gives rise to no lien and all attempts to execute on it as against an exempt property are void; if a Missouri judgment has sufficient force to spring “in a moment” to become a lien, then it certainly must be said to give the judgment creditor “an interest in property.” The Eighth. Circuit expressly held that the Debtor “could move to avoid the lien under § 522(f)(1) if CRP’s notice of foreign judgment fastened an existent, but presently unenforceable, lien on his exempt property.
Given that CRP’s judgment could become a lien the moment the Debtor vacates the property or his spouse dies, this court concludes that CRP’s notice of foreign judgment “fastened an existent, but presently unenforceable lien” properly avoided under § 522(f)(1). In the alterná-tive, under Missouri law, the recording of CRP’s judgment in Barton County where the Debtor’s exempt real estate was located vested CRP with “an interest in property” as a result of the otherwise unenforceable judgment, such that its resulting “judicial lien” as defined by the Bankruptcy Code should likewise be avoided under § 522(f)(1).
CRP attempts to avoid this result by citing to a case applying Tennessee law, In re Arango.
Whether or not Arango reached the correct result under Tennessee law, the Debt- or here is correct that Arango does not apply. First, this argument is a “Door No. 3 argument” that is outside the scope of the remand.
Second, and more importantly, Missouri law does not recognize the “right of survivorship” as being a different title or right than the original TBE interest. Rather, Missouri law is clear that upon the death of one of the TBE tenants, the surviving tenant “does not acquire new title, but holds only the same title he or she took in the beginning ....
The Bankruptcy Code recognizes only three types of mutually exclusive liens — consensual, statutory, and judicial.
A separate order will issue. ■
. In re O'Sullivan, No. 15-30173, 2015 WL 3526996 (Bankr. W.D. Mo. June 4, 2015).
. In re O’Sullivan, 544 B.R. 407, 412 n.5 (8th Cir. BAP 2016).
. In re O'Sullivan, 841 F.3d 786 (8th Cir. 2016).
. Id. at 790.
. Mo. Rev. Stat. § 513.475 allows a $15,000 homestead exemption.
. O'Sullivan, 841 F.3d at 789.
. /d/citing Mo. Rev. Stat. § 511.010).
. Id.
. In re O'Sullivan, 841 F.3d at 790.
. See, e.g., Macke v. Byrd, 131 Mo. 682, 33 S.W. 448 (Mo. 1895); Smith v. Thompson, 169 Mo. 553, 69 S.W. 1040 (Mo. 1902); Mahen v. Ruhr, 293 Mo. 500, 240 S.W. 164 (Mo. 1922); Baker v. Lamar, 140 S.W.2d 31 (Mo. 1940). Mo. Rev. Stat. § 511.010 and its predecessors have contained the same language defining "real estate” since at least 1895.
. These lien avoidance motions are routinely filed even against judgments arising out of an associate circuit court, which by statute do not create liens in Missouri. The form for doing so is often part of the software package for filing the bankruptcy case, as was the form lien avoidance filed in this case.
. The filing fee to reopen a Chapter 7 bankruptcy case is currently $260. In this district, a motion to reopen requires a 21-day notice, unless expedited. L.R. 1017-l.E., L.R. 5010-1. A motion to avoid a judgment lien is typically granted withopt a hearing if properly served and no party objects within 14 days. Note that lien avoidance motions under § 522(f) are governed by Fed. R. Banlcr. P. 4003(d), which treats them as contested matters under Rule 9014, and not as adversary proceedings under Rule 7001. See Fed. R. Bankr. P. 7001(2).
. 11U.S.C. § 101(37) (emphasis added).
. Mahen v. Ruhr, 240 S.W. at 166.
. The suit was originally brought by the husband, then a child and his trustee were joined as co-plaintiffs. The suit is captioned in the name of the wife, however, and it is not clear in the opinion how or when she became a plaintiff.
. Mahen v. Ruhr, 240 S.W. at 166.
. Mahen v. Ruhr, 293 Mo. 500, 240 S.W. 164, 166 (Mo. 1922).
. In re Brewer, 544 B.R. 177, 181 (Bankr. W.D. Mo. 2015) (interest, title, time, and possession),
. Smith v. Thompson, 169 Mo, 553, 69 S.W. 1040, 1042 (Mo. 1902) .(emphasis added).
. O'Sullivan, 841 F.3d at 790 (emphasis added).
. 992 F.2d 611 (6th Cir. 1993).
. Frost v. Frost, 200 Mo. 474, 98 S.W. 527, 528 (Mo. 1906) (the title is held "freed of the contingency," the contingent prospect of "owning it all,”)
. E.g., Farrey v. Sanderfoot, 500 U.S. 291, 111 S.Ct. 1825, 114 L.Ed.2d 337 (1991); 11 U.S.C. § 101(36), (51), (53).
. Farrey v. Sanderfoot, 500 U.S. at 297-98, 111 S.Ct. 1825.
.A debtor in this Debtor’s situation — with an entirely exempt homestead — should be allowed to employ § 522(f)(1) to protect his exemption and fresh start the same as a debt- or with only a partial homestead exemption. To read § 522(f)(1) otherwise makes no sense.
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