Melvin S. Hoffman, U.S. Bankruptcy Judge
The following constitutes my findings of fact and conclusions of law after trial in this adversary proceeding in accordance with Fed. R. Bankr.P. 7052.
Robert A. Mateer, Jr., filed a voluntary chapter 13 petition commencing the main case on July 25, 2012. In schedule A (real property) of the schedules of assets and liabilities filed by Mr. Mateer in support of his petition, he identified as his only real property asset his residence in Douglas, Massachusetts. He listed its then current value as $499,712 and the amount of any claims secured by that asset as $380,425. The secured claim referred to on schedule A is identified by Mr. Mateer on schedule D (secured creditors) as his home mortgage obligation to PNC Bank.
Mr. Mateer did not disclose anywhere in his bankruptcy schedules or in the statement of financial affairs ("SOFA") also filed in support of his petition that on January 20, 2011, his home had been severely damaged by a storm. In fairness, neither the schedules nor the SOFA calls for such a disclosure explicitly. SOFA item 8 requires disclosure of casualty losses but only within one year prior to bankruptcy. Mr. Mateer apparently took the form literally and since the storm damage occurred in January 2011, answered "none." At the same time, however, Mr. Mateer did not reflect the storm damage in the value he ascribed to his home on schedule A, instead listing its full value in an undamaged state.
Mr. Mateer also did not disclose in his bankruptcy papers that on the date of his bankruptcy petition he held outstanding insurance coverage claims for the storm
On August 31, 2012, Mr. Mateer attended the meeting of creditors pursuant to Bankruptcy Code § 341 in his chapter 13 case. He was placed under oath and examined by the chapter 13 trustee about his assets and liabilities. The trustee asked Mr. Mateer to verify that he had reviewed his bankruptcy petition, schedules and SOFA before he signed them, which Mr. Mateer confirmed. She then asked Mr. Mateer if he wished to make any changes to those documents and he said he did not. Mr. Mateer did not tell the chapter 13 trustee about the storm damage to his home, his claims against Chubb or the money PNC was holding to which he laid claim.
In December, 2012, Mr. Mateer was finally successful in extracting the $115,813.69 from PNC. A few months later he received $10,248.90 from Chubb. Thus, subsequent to the filing of his bankruptcy petition, Mr. Mateer was able to convert his pre-petition claims against Chubb and PNC into cash totaling $126,062.59.
Mr. Mateer's chapter 13 case was converted to chapter 7 on April 10, 2013. In the course of his due diligence, David Ostrander, the chapter 7 trustee appointed in the case, reviewed Mr. Mateer's bank statements and noticed some fairly sizable deposits. It was in response to Mr. Ostrander's inquiries about those deposits that Mr. Mateer finally disclosed the facts surrounding the storm damage to his home and his insurance claims and recoveries. This prompted Mr. Ostrander to file a motion to compel Mr. Mateer to turn over to him the funds he had received from PNC, which in turn caused Mr. Mateer to initiate this adversary proceeding seeking a declaratory judgment that the money he received from PNC and Chubb was exempt property under Bankruptcy Code § 522. Mr. Ostrander's turnover motion was consolidated with this adversary proceeding.
On July 19, 2013, after the trustee had filed his turnover motion in the main case and after Mr. Mateer had commenced this adversary proceeding, Mr. Mateer filed a motion to amend schedule B (personal property) to add in item 18 (other liquidated debts) $1,062.59, which he described as "insurance proceeds over and above $125,000 afforded under Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 188," and which in his motion he indicated he would be forwarding to Mr. Ostrander. On July 24, 2013, Mr. Mateer filed a motion to amend schedule A (real property) to reduce the value he ascribed to his home as of the petition date from $499,712 to $373,649.41, and adding the description that this value reflected the "substantive [sic] damage to the real estate at the time of the filing estimated at $126,062.59." On July 31, 2013, he withdrew his motion to amend schedule A. Action on Mr. Mateer's motion to amend schedule B has been held in abeyance pending the conclusion of this adversary proceeding.
Mr. Mateer asserts that the value he listed for his home on the original schedule A was in reality a composite of its reduced value due to the storm damage plus the
Section 11(a) provides in relevant part:
I conducted a trial of this matter on August 26, 2014. The parties devoted most of their attention and evidence to trying to establish what Mr. Mateer's home was worth on July 25, 2012, the date of his bankruptcy filing. Mr. Mateer introduced valuation testimony to prove it was worth $400,000. This more or less dovetailed with his explanation that the value he listed in schedule A, $499,712, was a combination of the home value plus the insurance proceeds and thus supported his position that he had properly exempted both the home and the insurance money. Mr. Ostrander, on the other hand, introduced evidence that the home would have a listing price on the bankruptcy petition date of between $489,000 and $499,000 and sell for between $450,000 and $475,000.
Mr. Ostrander acknowledges that any equity in Mr. Mateer's home, that is, its value on the petition date less the mortgage balance of $366,677.84
Mr. Mateer's testimony at trial was devoted mostly to answering questions about the storm damage, the repairs made or not made to his home and his efforts to recover payment from Chubb and PNC. When asked by Mr. Ostrander why he had not disclosed to the chapter 13 trustee the existence of his claims against Chubb and PNC or the storm damage to his home, Mr. Mateer's response was that she never asked. When questioned about why he hadn't listed these items on his bankruptcy schedules, Mr. Mateer testified to the effect that after consulting with his attorney he believed that they had been disclosed because the "online documents," which I take to mean the electronically filed schedules, aggregated the insurance proceeds into the reduced value of his home and presented a home value which combined both these components into a single entry.
I find Mr. Mateer's testimony on these points unsatisfactory and lacking credibility. A failure to disclose cannot be excused by the fact that a trustee lacks clairvoyance and so does not ask about the undisclosed matter. Also, no reasonable person looking at Mr. Mateer's bankruptcy schedules could possibly have interpreted the entries valuing his home at $499,712 to represent a composite of a value-reduced storm damaged property plus insurance proceeds to replace that lost value.
Based on the evidence presented at trial, I find that Mr. Mateer intentionally failed to disclose to the court, the trustees and his creditors the existence of his insurance claim and the cash payments he received from PNC and Chubb. Mr. Mateer's excuse for his lack of disclosure is that the Massachusetts homestead statute includes insurance proceeds in its definition of "home" and so wherever Mr. Mateer identified his home on the his bankruptcy schedules he intended both the physical property and the insurance proceeds. Mr. Mateer's justification rings hollow and cannot excuse his conduct. A debtor's obligation to list his assets — real property on schedule A and personal property on schedule B — has nothing whatsoever
A principled and honest effort by Mr. Mateer to invoke the Massachusetts homestead statute's expansive definition of home would have entailed his filing a schedule A which reflected the value of his home reduced by the storm damage, the inclusion of the insurance claims as an asset on schedule B and the listing of the two amounts on schedule C as a consolidated exemption claim in the home and insurance proceeds. This would have put everyone on notice of the true state of his financial affairs as of the petition date.
Up until March 4, 2014, I would have stood on solid ground in denying Mr. Mateer's claim of exemption in the insurance proceeds based on his attempt to conceal their existence. See, e.g., Matter of Yonikus, 996 F.2d 866, 868 (7th Cir.1993); Doan v. Hudgins (In re Doan), 672 F.2d 831, 833 (11th Cir.1982); In re Morgan, 10-40497, 2011 WL 5025333, *7 (Bankr. D.Mass. Oct. 21, 2011); In re St. Angelo, 189 B.R. 24, 26 (Bankr.D.R.I.1995). On that date, the ground shifted dramatically as a result of the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in Law v. Siegel, ___ U.S. ___, 134 S.Ct. 1188, 188 L.Ed.2d 146 (2014).
In writing for a unanimous Court in Siegel, Justice Scalia articulated the question before the Court as follows: "In this case, we consider whether a bankruptcy court ... may order that a debtor's exempt assets be used to pay administrative expenses incurred as a result of the debtor's misconduct." 134 S.Ct. at 1192. The answer given by the Court was an emphatic "no." Uncharacteristically, however, rather than conclude its decision after ruling on the question presented, the Court kept going, changing course and ending up on the subject of whether a bankruptcy court may disallow an exemption claim based on a debtor's fraudulent conduct, a question not before it. The Court took note of the existing case authority disallowing an exemption based on a debtor's fraudulent concealment of the asset claimed as exempt and then observed that the Bankruptcy Code "admits no such power" to the bankruptcy court. Id. at 1196. The Court's declaration, while not essential to its holding, has begun to affect a sea-change among lower courts facing this issue. As the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit recently recognized:
U.S. v. Ledee, 772 F.3d 21, 29 n. 10 (1st Cir.2014). See also In re Baker, 514 B.R. 860, 863-64 (E.D.Mich.2014) ("There is no doubt that Siegel curbs the power that bankruptcy courts formerly exercised under Lucius to disallow amendments to remedy debtors' bad faith, reckless, or dilatory conduct."), appeal docketed, 14-2149 (6th Cir. Sept. 5, 2014); In re Pipkins, No. BR 13-0087DM, 2014 WL 2756552, at *7 (Bankr.N.D.Cal. June 16, 2014) ("In Law v. Siegel, however, the Supreme Court held that the court cannot disallow an exemption or prevent the amendment of an exemption on equitable grounds if the exemption satisfies the statutory requisites. Therefore, the court will not disallow Debtor's exemptions [under California law], or preclude their amendment, on bad faith grounds.") (footnote omitted); In re Franklin, 506 B.R. 765, 771 (Bankr.C.D.Ill. 2014) ("The Court [in Law v. Siegel] disavowed the long-standing non-statutory basis for disallowing an exemption where a debtor fraudulently conceals an exempt asset, determining that courts do not have a general equitable power to deny exemptions based on a debtor's bad faith conduct.").
The Supreme Court attempted to circumscribe the impact of its pronouncement in Law v. Siegel by applying it to federal exemption cases only, leaving undisturbed a bankruptcy court's power to consider a debtor's misconduct when dealing with state law exemption claims such as the homestead claim being asserted by Mr. Mateer here. This limitation is, however, far less meaningful than it sounds, at least in the First Circuit. Even if Massachusetts law recognizes a court's equitable power to deny homestead protection to a debtor engaged in fraudulent conduct with respect the homestead property
Mr. Ostrander offers a fallback argument as to why Mr. Mateer should not be permitted to exempt the insurance proceeds. He points to the wording of § 11(a) of the homestead statute which exempts proceeds that are "received" and argues that here the insurance proceeds were actually in the possession of PNC, as loss payee, on the petition date and thus had not been "received" by Mr. Mateer as of that date and could not be exempted. As support for his argument, Mr. Ostrander cites In re Canto, 476 B.R. 370 (Bankr. D.Mass.2012), a case involving a lender's pre-petition foreclosure sale of a debtor's home, which generated a surplus after payment in full of the lender's debt. As contemplated by Massachusetts law and custom in such circumstances, the lender commenced an interpleader action in state court, naming as defendants parties holding claims to some or all of the surplus, including but by no means limited to, the debtor. Before the interpleader action could be adjudicated, the debtor filed his bankruptcy petition and claimed the state homestead exemption in the surplus foreclosure sale proceeds based on the state statute under consideration here, Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 188, § 11(a).
In denying the debtor's homestead exemption claim, the court focused on the word "received" in the statute which as noted earlier states: "If a home that is subject to an estate of homestead is sold, whether voluntarily or involuntarily, taken or damaged by fire or other casualty, then the proceeds received on account of any such sale, taking or damage shall be entitled to the protection of this chapter...." (Emphasis added). The Canto court concluded that the surplus foreclosure proceeds had never been received by the debtor and therefore could not be subject to the state homestead exemption. The court defined "received" as "to come into possession of."
In this case, unlike Canto, the evidence established that Mr. Mateer actually did receive checks totaling $115,813.69 from Chubb prior to his bankruptcy filing but
Because the facts in Canto are different than the facts here, the Canto court's ruling does not directly address the situation where a debtor receives proceeds pre-petition but relinquishes possession before he files his bankruptcy petition. Mr. Ostrander suggests that the reasoning in Canto compels the conclusion that proceeds received by a debtor must remain in his possession as of the petition date in order to qualify for exemption.
Even assuming Mr. Ostrander's interpretation of Canto is correct, I decline his invitation to adopt its reasoning. While I agree with the Canto court's definition of the word "received" in § 11(a), I respectfully disagree with the court's application of the statute. The question is not what constitutes receipt but rather receipt by whom and receipt when. Canto assumes without discussion that the answer to the first question is "the debtor" and Mr. Ostrander suggests the answer to the second question is "as of the bankruptcy petition date." But the statute is silent on both these critical points. If the purpose of the Massachusetts statute is to extend homestead protection beyond the home itself to sale or insurance proceeds derived from the home, then who receives the proceeds or when they are received should be of no relevance as long as the debtor ultimately has rights in those proceeds. Proceeds received by a foreclosing mortgagee, a real estate broker or for that matter a bank as insurance loss payee are all received by someone and that is all the statute requires. If the legislature intended to restrict receipt to a particular person within a specific timeframe, the statute would have said so.
Furthermore, as long as the exemption claim is properly asserted by a debtor as of the bankruptcy petition date, it should not matter when the proceeds of the exempt asset are ultimately received. Requiring both the assertion of the exemption and the receipt and retention of the proceeds as of the petition date is inconsistent with the policy, both federal and state, to construe exemption entitlements liberally in favor of debtors.
Having dispatched Mr. Ostrander's two objections to Mr. Mateer's effort to exempt the insurance proceeds, it remains only to determine what amount may be exempted. Based on the evidence presented at trial, I find that the valuation of the Douglas property presented by Mr. Mateer in the form of the appraisal of Michael Horrigan, a state-certified appraiser, and Mr. Horrigan's testimony, was more credible and accurate than the valuation evidence offered by Mr. Ostrander.
I, therefore, find that the value of the Douglas property on the date of Mr. Mateer's bankruptcy petition was, in accordance with Mr. Mateer's evidence, $400,000. Since the property was subject to a mortgage loan with a balance of $366,677.84, Mr. Mateer's exempt equity in the property on the petition date was $33,322.16. Based on a maximum state homestead exemption of $125,000, there remains available $91,677.84 to apply towards exempting the insurance proceeds. Accordingly, $34,384.75 of the insurance proceeds are not exempt and must be turned over to the trustee, Mr. Ostrander.
Mr. Mateer's amended complaint has been dismissed by agreement as to PNC. Although the amended complaint names Robert Mateer, Sr., as an "interested party," no relief is requested as to him and thus the amended complaint will be dismissed as to Robert Mateer, Sr.
Judgment consistent with this memorandum shall enter forthwith.
In re Dickey, 517 B.R. 5, 22-23 (Bankr. D.Mass.2014) (Internal footnotes omitted).