JOHN J. THARP, JR., District Judge.
This is an appeal from a bankruptcy court order denying the debtor's motion to avoid a creditor's judgment lien on property that the debtor held with his wife on the petition date in tenancy by the entirety. Sections 522(b) and (f) of the bankruptcy code (11 U.S.C. § 522), in combination, permit a debtor to avoid a judgment lien for property held in tenancy by the entirety to the extent that that the tenancy interest is exempt from legal process under state law. In Illinois, tenants by the entirety also hold, in addition to their entirety interests, individual contingent future interests in the tenancy property. This case presents the questions of whether a judgment lien attaches to those contingent future interests and, if so, whether that lien may be avoided. The bankruptcy court denied the debtor's motion to avoid the creditor's lien, holding that—unlike the tenancy interest—contingent future interests are not exempt under § 522(b) and a lien on those interests may therefore not be avoided under § 522(f). This Court agrees with the bankruptcy court that the creditor's judgment lien attached to the debtor's contingent future interests in the property, but concludes that those contingent future interests—like the tenancy interests—are exempt under § 522(b)(3). The bankruptcy court's denial of the debtor's motion to avoid the creditor's judgment lien is therefore reversed.
The facts are undisputed and are set forth in the bankruptcy court's order. Briefly, Appellant Scott Jaffe and his wife owned, as tenants by the entirety,
Jaffe filed a chapter 7 bankruptcy petition in 2015. His wife died about a year later, in November 2016. Jaffe subsequently moved to avoid Williams' judgment lien on the ground that the property was exempt from satisfaction of the judgment and the lien impaired that exemption. Conceding that the property was exempt when Jaffe filed his petition, Williams contested the motion by arguing that when he filed his petition, Jaffe also possessed contingent future interests in the property that were not subject to the tenancy by the entirety exemption. Williams maintained that her lien attached to those interests which, after Jaffe's wife died and the tenancy by the entirety ended, were no longer contingent.
The bankruptcy court agreed and denied Jaffe's motion to avoid Williams' judgment lien. Jaffe then filed a timely appeal. This Court has jurisdiction over the appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 158(a)(1).
This case presents two interrelated questions of law: (1) whether a judgment lien attaches to contingent future interests in real property held in tenancy by the entirety when a bankruptcy petition is filed; and (2) if so, whether such a lien may be avoided. The parties agree about everything of relevance to these questions except the answers.
Section 522 of the bankruptcy code permits debtors to exempt from the bankruptcy estate administration
Section 522 also provides that a debtor "may avoid the fixing of a lien on an interest of the debtor in property to the extent that such lien impairs
The parties agree that Williams' judgment, properly recorded, gave rise to a lien; they disagree, however, about the extent of that lien. Jaffe maintains that Williams' lien attached only to his interest in the property as a tenant by the entirety and that the express terms of § 522(b)(3) and § 12-112 exempt that property interest from the bankruptcy estate and allow him to avoid that lien under § 522(f). Williams is agnostic on whether she had a lien on Jaffe's interest in the property as a tenant by the entirety because she acknowledges, lien or no, she could not force a sale of the property itself while it was held in tenancy by the entirety.
In Illinois, a tenancy in the entirety exists "only if, and as long as, the tenants are and remain married to each other," and only for as long as the married couple use the property as their "homestead." 765 ILCS 1005/1c. And because a tenancy by the entirety will inevitably terminate at some point, whether by reason of death, dissolution of the marriage, or some mutual decision of the tenants (such as changing their homestead), the statute creating tenancy by the entirety also describes the interests that the tenants will hold when the tenancy by the entirety ends, such as "(a) an interest as a tenant in common in the event of divorce, (b) an interest as a joint tenant in the event that another homestead is established, and (c) a survivorship interest in the entire property in the event of the other tenant's death." In re Chinosorn, 243 B.R. 688, 695 (Bankr. N.D. Ill.), rev'd on other grounds, 248 B.R. 324 (2000); 765 ILCS 1005/1c. In this case, the survivorship interest is front and center, because Jaffe's tenancy by the entirety interest terminated with his wife's passing. The statute providing for tenancy by the entirety expressly holds that "upon the death of either such tenant the survivor shall retain the entire estate." Id. That is to say that upon the death of one of the tenants by the entirety, the fee simple interest in the property passes from the entirety to the surviving spouse.
"The contingent right of survivorship of each entireties tenant is a present property right to which a judgment lien extends." In re Tolson, 338 B.R. 359, 367 (Bankr. C.D. Ill. 2005). Judge Wedoff provided the foundation for this conclusion in Chinosorn:
Chinosorn, 243 B.R. at 695. Judge Wedoff's analysis on this point was, strictly speaking, dicta,
Jaffe maintains that a judgment lien does not attach to future contingent interests in property held by tenancy in the entirety. To support this contention, he offers no substantive argument but points principally to three cases in which bankruptcy courts permitted debtors who held property by tenancy in the entirety to avoid judgment liens on the property. See In re Allard, 196 B.R. 402 (Bankr. N.D. Ill. 1996); In re Mukhi, 246 B.R. 859 (Bankr. N.D. Ill. 2000); and In re Moreno, 352 B.R. 455 (Bankr. N.D. Ill. 2006). None of these cases, however, held that a judgment lien does not attach to future contingent interests of tenants by the entirety, much less offers any rationale to reject that proposition.
Concluding that Williams' judgment gave rise to a lien against Jaffe's contingent future interests in the property brings us to the second question presented by this appeal: whether those contingent future interests are exempt under § 522(b)(3)(B) and § 12-112, and therefore avoidable under § 511(f). This question can, in the Court's view, be answered by straightforward application of the text of § 522(b)(3)(B).
Section 522(b)(3)(B) applies, as relevant here, to "any interest in property in which the debtor had, immediately before the commencement of the case, an interest as a tenant by the entirety . . . to the extent that such interest as a tenant by the entirety . . . is exempt from process under applicable nonbankruptcy law." Unpacking this provision, § 522(b)(3)(B) exempts:
Applying these statutory criteria leads directly to the conclusion that Jaffe's contingent future interests in the property, like his interest as a tenant by the entirety, are exempt from bankruptcy administration. Immediately before the bankruptcy case was commenced by the filing of Jaffe's chapter 7 petition, Jaffe had "an interest as a tenant by the entirety" in the Highland Park property and, as discussed above, at that time he also had contingent future interests in that property. Jaffe thus had: (i) "an interest (i.e., his contingent future interest) in property"; (ii) in which he had an interest as a tenant by the entirety [i.e., the Highland Park property]; (iii) on the petition date; and (iv) that contingent future interest is therefore exempt "to the extent that such interest as a tenant by the entirety . . . is exempt from process under applicable nonbankruptcy law." As discussed above, there is no dispute that Jaffe's interest as a tenant by the entirety is exempt from process under § 12-112, and so Jaffe's contingent future interests were therefore exempt at petition filing to the same extent—that is, completely.
Relying on Chinosorn and Yotis, the bankruptcy court reached a contrary result, holding that § 12-112 "does not protect from execution the tenant's contingent future interests." Opinion, ECF No. 10-1, at 6. The bankruptcy court's opinion, however, did not parse the language of § 522(b)(3), focusing instead only on the state law exemption provided by § 12-112. With that narrow perspective, the bankruptcy court concluded that because § 12-112 exempts only property "held in tenancy by the entirety," the debtor's contingent future rights were not exempt under § 522(b)(3) and could not therefore be avoided pursuant to § 511(f). See Opinion at 6 ("Because a tenant's contingent future interests are not exempt under section 12-112, a judicial lien against them cannot be avoided."). Yotis and Chinosorn similarly glossed over the text of § 522(b)(3), interpreting the statute to say nothing more than that property held in tenancy by the entirety is exempt to the same extent that it is immune from process under state law. See Yotis, 518 B.R. at 489 ("§ 522(b)(2)(B) exempts entireties property `to the extent' state law presently exempts that property from process"); Chinosorn, 243 B.R. at 700 ("§ 522(b)(2)(B) of the Bankruptcy Code allows a bankruptcy exemption for property held in tenancy by the entirety, "to the extent' that state law makes such property `exempt from process'").
Respectfully, and contrary to the implication of these summary restatements, § 12-112 does not stand alone. Bankruptcy exemptions are defined, in the first instance, by § 522 and the terms of that provision determine what state law—here, § 12-112—has to say about the degree of the property exemption. Section 12-112 tells us that the property included within the § 522(b)(3) is as exempt from sale as is the interest of a tenant by the entirety under state law. But it does not identify the property that is subject to that exemption.
The preceding elements of § 522(b)(3)—"any interest in property in which the debtor had. . . an interest as a tenant by the entirety"—do that. But in focusing only on § 12-112, the bankruptcy court effectively excised the first element—"any interest in property"—from the statute and consequently misconstrued § 522(b)(3). As did the Chinosorn and Yotis courts before it, the bankruptcy court read the bankruptcy exemption statute to extend only to "property in which the debtor had an interest as a tenant"; as construed by the bankruptcy court, § 522(b)(3) would read: "Property in which the debtor had an interest as a tenant by the entirety is exempt to extent that such interest as a tenant by the entirety is exempt from process under applicable nonbankruptcy law." But that is not what the statute says; it expressly applies not only to the tenancy interest but also to "
As written, the statute plainly includes within the exemption "
In the context of this case, then, the statute provides that contingent future interests in property held in tenancy by the entirety are exempt from the bankruptcy estate to the same extent that the tenancy by the entirety is immune from forced sale under state law. Accordingly, the bankruptcy court should not have denied Jaffe's motion to avoid the lien on the basis that his contingent future interests in the Highland Park property were not exempt under § 522(b)(3).
For the foregoing reasons, the bankruptcy court's order of June 7, 2017, is reversed and this proceeding is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Persky is similarly irrelevant. In that case, the Second Circuit held that the property at issue, held in tenancy by the entirety, could be sold because—unlike Illinois—New York did not preclude the sale of tenancy interests as a matter of state law. See In re Persky, 893 F.2d at 19 (citing state law authorities to show that "the interest of a tenant by the entirety is not exempt from sale and enforcement by execution" under state law). The case does not address whether contingent future interests are exempt in states, like Illinois, where tenancy by the entirety interests are