Michael G. Williamson, Chief United States Bankruptcy Judge.
This case turns on a familiar baseball adage: a tie goes to the runner. The Chapter 7 Trustee in this case has objected to the Debtor's attempt to claim a house she acquired as a beneficiary under her mother's living trust as homestead. According to the Trustee, the homestead exemption cannot be used to extinguish a preexisting lien. Here, the Trustee holds the rights of a hypothetical judgment lien creditor as of the petition date. But the property could not have become homestead until the Debtor's mother passed away two weeks after the petition date. Although the hypothetical lien existed on the petition date, it could not have attached to the house until the Debtor acquired an interest in it. At best, the Trustee's hypothetical judgment lien attached to the property at the same time the property acquired its homestead status. Where, like here, a judgment lien and homestead status attach to property at the same time, the homestead exemption defeats the hypothetical judgment lien.
For the three years before the petition date, the Debtor lived in a home located at 1955 Brookhaven Drive, Sarasota, Florida.
When the Debtor filed this case, she listed her interest in the living trust on Schedule B (at $0).
It is worth noting, as a threshold matter, that the Debtor claims the Brookhaven
The Court is inclined to agree that neither the Debtor's interest in the trust nor the house became property of the estate in the first place. The § 541(c)(2) exception does apply since the Debtor did not settle the trust, nor did she did have any dominion or control over the trust assets as of the petition date.
That being said, the Court need not decide whether the house is property of the estate because, even if it is, it is exempt homestead.
Article X, section 4(b) of the Florida Constitution provides that the homestead exemption shall inure to the benefit of an owner's heirs. There is no question that the Brookhaven Drive property was the mother's homestead and that her homestead exemption inures to the Debtor's benefit. But that only means the Debtor takes the house protected from forced sale by her mother's creditors.
If the Brookhaven Drive property is protected from forced sale, then it is protected by the Debtor's homestead exemption — not her mother's homestead exemption. The Trustee does not dispute that the Debtor has an ownership interest in the Brookhaven Drive property, that she has lived there for the past three years, and that she intends to live there permanently. In other words, the Trustee does not really dispute that the Brookhaven Drive property is homestead. The Trustee's sole objection is that the Debtor cannot use the homestead exemption to extinguish her preexisting lien.
Under Bankruptcy Code § 544(a), the Trustee has the status of a hypothetical judgment lien creditor as of the petition date. Although the Debtor lived in the Brookhaven Drive property as of the petition date, the Trustee argues the Debtor could not claim it as homestead since she had no ownership interest in the property at that time. After all, the Debtor did not acquire an interest in the Brookhaven Drive property until her mother passed away, and her mother was still alive as of the petition date. So the Trustee contends the Debtor is attempting to use the homestead exemption, which did not ripen, in her view, until after the petition date, to extinguish a lien that existed on the petition date.
To be sure, the Florida Supreme Court has previously held that the homestead exemption must give way to a judgment lien where the judgment lien went into effect before the homeowner became eligible to claim the homestead as exempt.
Similarly, in First National Bank of Chipley v. Peel, the Florida Supreme Court rejected a homestead claim where a bank filed suit and obtained a judgment against the judgment debtor before the judgment debtor and his wife occupied — or took any steps toward occupying — the property at issue as their homestead.
There is one fatal flaw with that argument as applied to this case. In Harley and Peel, the creditor's judgment lien attached to the property at issue before the judgment debtor was eligible to claim the homestead. That is not so here. While the Trustee's hypothetical judgment lien existed as of the petition date, it could not attach to the Brookhaven Drive property until the Debtor acquired an interest in it — i.e., when her mother passed away two weeks after the petition date. So the Trustee's hypothetical lien on the Brookhaven Drive property is not a preexisting lien. Here, the Trustee's hypothetical lien and the Debtor's homestead exemption attached to the property at the same time.
Those were the facts in Milton v. Milton — albeit not in the bankruptcy context — where the Florida Supreme Court held that an heir who took title to property upon his mother's death was able to assert the homestead exemption as to judgments entered against him before his mother's death.
In short, Milton stands for the proposition that the usual rule that the homestead exemption cannot be used to extinguish preexisting liens does not apply where an heir, who has existing judgment creditors, inherits homestead property.
By virtue of Bankruptcy Code § 544(a), the Trustee had all of the rights of a hypothetical judgment lien creditor as of the petition date. When the Debtor acquired the Brookhaven Drive property under her mother's living trust, the Trustee's hypothetical judgment lien attached to the property. But the homestead exemption also attached at the same time. In essence, it was a tie. Under the Florida Supreme Court's decision in Milton, a tie goes to the heir. Accordingly, the Court will enter a separate order overruling the Trustee's objection to the Debtor's homestead exemption as a matter of law.
ORDERED.