12‐1603‐bk
1256 Hertel Avenue Associates v. Calloway
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
August Term, 2013
(Submitted: April 29, 2014 Decided: August 1, 2014)
Docket No. 12‐1603‐bk
1256 HERTEL AVENUE ASSOCIATES, LLC,
Claimant‐Appellant,
HAROLD P. BULAN,
Trustee,
‐v.‐
TANYA R. CALLOWAY, dba MINIATURE MOMENTS DAYCARE,
Debtor‐Appellee.
Before:
WESLEY AND DRONEY, Circuit Judges, AND BRICCETTI, District Judge.*
The Honorable Vincent L. Briccetti, of the United States District Court for the Southern
*
District of New York, sitting by designation.
Appeal from the March 16, 2012 order of the United States District Court
for the Western District of New York (Skretny, C.J.) affirming the February 16,
2010 order of the Bankruptcy Court (Bucki, C.U.S.B.J.) holding that the 2005
amendment to N.Y. C.P.L.R. 5206, 2005 N.Y. Laws ch. 623, which increased New
York’s homestead exemption from $10,000 to $50,000, applied to a judgment lien
obtained prior to the amendment’s effective date.
EDWARD Y. CROSSMORE, The Crossmore Law Office, Ithaca, NY, for
Claimant‐Appellant.
JOSHUA D. LISTON, Beys Stein Mobargha & Berland LLP, New York,
NY, for Debtor‐Appellee.
WESLEY, Circuit Judge:
The New York State Legislature amended N.Y. C.P.L.R. 5206 in August
2005, increasing the state’s homestead exemption from $10,000 to $50,000. See
2005 N.Y. Laws ch. 623. The homestead exemption entitles New York debtors to
exempt their homes “from application to the satisfaction of a money judgment,”
id., and is also available to debtors in bankruptcy proceedings, see N.Y. Debt. &
Cred. Law § 282; 11 U.S.C. § 522(b)(3)(A). This appeal requires us to determine
whether the 2005 Amendment’s increased homestead exemption applies to
judgment liens perfected prior to the amendment’s effective date and, if so,
whether application of the law to pre‐enactment judgment liens violates the
2
Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment. We hold that the 2005 Amendment
applies to debts incurred prior to the amendment’s effective date and does not
violate the Fifth Amendment’s Takings Clause.
BACKGROUND
In July 2003, 1256 Hertel Avenue Associates, LLC (“Hertel”) secured a
$4,682 judgment lien against Tanya R. Calloway’s (“Calloway”) home in Buffalo,
New York. Hertel docketed the judgment in the Erie County Clerk’s office on
July 11, 2003. Five years later, another creditor obtained a $5,973 judgment lien
against the same property, which it docketed in December 2008. Calloway
estimates the current value of her property to be $110,000. The property is
encumbered by a mortgage with a remaining balance of approximately $85,000,
leaving her around $25,000 in equity.
On May 12, 2009, Calloway filed a voluntary petition for relief under
Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code. In that proceeding, Calloway moved to avoid
the judgment liens against her residence pursuant to New York’s homestead
exemption, N.Y. C.P.L.R. 5206. The exemption protects a debtor’s principal
residence from being used to satisfy a creditor’s judgment up to a statutorily
defined maximum value. After standing at $10,000 from 1977 to 2005, see 1977
3
N.Y. Laws ch. 181, the homestead exemption limit has been modified twice in
recent years: In 2005, New York’s Legislature raised the limit to $50,000, 2005
N.Y. Laws ch. 623, and in 2010 the Legislature again modified the exemption,
bringing it to its present form, which provides a baseline exemption of $75,000
that is adjusted upward for certain high‐property‐value counties, see 2010 N.Y.
Laws ch. 568.
In the bankruptcy court, Hertel acknowledged that Calloway was entitled
to claim the homestead exemption, but disputed which version of the exemption
should apply: Calloway claimed the $50,000 exemption in effect when she filed
for bankruptcy in 2009, while Hertel contended that the bankruptcy court should
apply the lower, $10,000 exemption in effect when it perfected its judgment lien
in 2003. Specifically, Hertel argued that the 2005 Amendment should be
interpreted to apply only to judgment liens perfected after its effective date
because retroactive interpretations are disfavored and the amendment did not
explicitly provide that it should be applied to pre‐existing judgment liens.
Further, Hertel also argued that were the amendment interpreted to apply to
judgment liens perfected prior to its effective date, this limitation on Hertel’s
ability to collect on its judgment lien would constitute an unconstitutional taking
4
of its property in violation of the Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment to the
United States Constitution.
The bankruptcy court (Bucki, C.U.S.B.J.) rejected Hertel’s contentions and
concluded that Calloway was entitled to the $50,000 homestead exemption in
effect at the time of her bankruptcy filing. In re Calloway, 423 B.R. 627 (Bankr.
W.D.N.Y. 2010). In so holding, the bankruptcy court relied on CFCU Community
Credit Union v. Hayward, 552 F.3d 253 (2d Cir. 2009), in which this Court
determined that the 2005 Amendment applies retroactively even to contract‐
based debts that preceded its enactment. Although, unlike the creditor in
Hayward, Hertel reduced the debt to a perfected judgment lien prior to the 2005
Amendment, the bankruptcy court concluded that this made no difference. In its
view, the amendment immediately increased the exemption to $50,000 as to all
creditors and all obligations, regardless of whether the creditor had reduced the
debt to judgment prior to its enactment. In re Calloway, 423 B.R. at 629. As to
Hertel’s Takings Clause challenge, the bankruptcy court concluded that there
had been no taking of Hertel’s property because, under New York law, judgment
liens are not vested property interests. Id. at 629–30 (citing Watson v. N.Y. Cent.
R.R. Co., 47 N.Y. 157 (1872)). The district court (Skretny, C.J.) affirmed on
5
substantially the same grounds, adding that even were a judgment lien a
property interest protected by the Takings Clause, the 2005 Amendment’s effect
on Hertel’s lien did not constitute a taking. 1256 Hertel Ave. Assocs., LLC v.
Calloway, No. 10‐CV‐250S, slip op. at 8–9 (W.D.N.Y. Mar. 16, 2012).
On appeal to this Court, Hertel reiterates its arguments that (1) the 2005
Amendment should be interpreted to apply only to judgment liens perfected
after its enactment; and (2) if the 2005 Amendment does apply to pre‐enactment
judgmenent liens, the result is an unconstitutional taking of its property in
violation of the Fifth Amendment. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the
order of the district court.1
DISCUSSION2
New York has provided a homestead exemption for more than 150 years.
See 1850 N.Y. Laws ch. 260. The exemption “protect[s] a homeowner against
1 In light of this case’s significance, we appointed Joshua D. Liston as pro bono counsel
to represent Calloway’s interest in the appeal. We thank counsel for his efforts.
2 “An order of a district court functioning in its capacity as an appellate court in a
bankruptcy case is subject to plenary review.” Momentum Mfg. Corp. v. Emp. Creditors
Comm. (In re Momentum Mfg. Corp.), 25 F.3d 1132, 1136 (2d Cir. 1994). This Court
“independently review[s] the factual determinations and legal conclusions of the
bankruptcy court.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted). Its legal conclusions are
evaluated de novo, and its factual findings are reviewed for clear error. Id. The issues
Hertel raises in this appeal are pure questions of law subject to this Court’s de novo
review.
6
seizure of his or her dwelling to satisfy a money judgment,” Gen. Elec. Capital
Bus. Asset Funding Corp. v. Hakakian, 300 A.D.2d 486, 487 (2d Dep’t 2002), and
reflects a long‐standing legislative decision to “provide an honest debtor with a
fresh start” and avoid “leaving the debtor and his family homeless and on the
brink of financial ruin,” Westinghouse Credit Corp. v. Cent. Trust Co. Rochester,
N.Y., (In re Leonardo), 11 B.R. 453, 455 (Bankr. W.D.N.Y. 1981); accord Robinson v.
Wiley, 15 N.Y. 489, 494 (1857) (opinion of Johnson, J.).
Consistent with the statute’s purpose, New York’s Legislature has
amended the homestead exemption from time to time to ensure that its
protections keep pace with homeowners’ changing needs. The exemption was
amended in 1977, for example, to protect “condominium apartments,” 1977 N.Y.
Laws ch. 181, and again in 1980 to add “mobile home[s]” to the list of protectable
homesteads, 1980 N.Y. Laws ch. 717. To account for rising home values, the
Legislature has also periodically increased the exemption limit—from $1,000 to
$2,000 in 1969; to $10,000 in 1977; to $50,000 in 2005; and to $75,000 (with upward
adjustments for high‐property‐value counties) in 2010.3 See 1969 N.Y. Laws ch.
961; 1977 N.Y. Laws ch. 181; 2005 N.Y. Laws ch. 623; 2010 N.Y. Laws ch. 568.
On January 31, 2013, New York State Senator Kevin S. Parker introduced a bill that
3
would increase the exemption yet again, from $150,000 to $250,000 in ten high‐property‐
7
At issue in this case is the 2005 Amendment, which increased the
homestead exemption limit from $10,000 to $50,000 and provided as follows:
Exemption of homestead. Property of one of the following types,
not exceeding fifty thousand dollars in value above liens and
encumbrances, owned and occupied as a principal residence, is
exempt from application to the satisfaction of a money judgment,
unless the judgment was recovered wholly for the purchase price
thereof:
1. a lot of land with a dwelling thereon,
2. shares of stock in a cooperative apartment corporation,
3. units of a condominium apartment, or
4. a mobile home.
2005 N.Y. Laws ch. 623, § 1. Although the 2005 Amendment included language
directing that “[t]his act shall take effect immediately,” 2005 N.Y. Laws ch. 623,
§ 2, the amendment did not specify whether its immediate effect was to protect a
debtor’s homestead from all obligations, even those incurred before the
amendment was passed, or only obligations postdating its enactment.
This Court has once before addressed the 2005 Amendment’s interaction
with pre‐existing obligations, in CFCU Community Credit Union v. Hayward, 552
F.3d 253 (2d. Cir. 2009). In that case, CFCU held a $11,291 claim against the
debtor based on a car loan secured by an automobile valued at only $7,185,
value counties. S. 3198, 236th Leg. (N.Y. 2013). The bill was referred to the Senate
Judiciary Committee on January 8, 2014.
8
which left CFCU a general unsecured creditor for the remaining $4,106.
Hayward, 552 F.3d at 257. CFCU argued that because the homestead exemption
in effect at the time of the 2003 car loan provided only $10,000 of protection, the
debtor was entitled only to that exemption and not the higher $50,000 exemption
set forth in the 2005 Amendment. Id.
Following an analysis of the 2005 Amendment’s legislative history, the
Hayward Court concluded that “a New York debtor’s ability to invoke the
increased homestead exemption is determined not by the date the debtor’s
unsecured contract debt was incurred, but rather, by the date upon which the
debtor files his or her bankruptcy petition.” Id. at 265. Noting that retroactive
interpretations are generally disfavored, the Court nonetheless applied the
increased exemption to an existing obligation because the clear purpose of the
legislation was to provide immediate relief to homeowners and because the
Legislature had evinced its intent that the statute apply to pre‐enactment liens by
choosing not to carry over into the 2005 Amendment language from the prior
homestead exemption that had specifically included an anti‐retroactivity
provision:
In light of the legislative finding that the increased exemption
amount was long overdue and that the old amount was unrealistic
9
in today’s economy, it would defeat the intent of the Legislature to
judicially engraft an anti‐retroactivity provision (similar to that
found in the 1977 Amendment) onto the statute where none
exists. . . . If the Legislature intended the Amendment to be
prospective only . . . it could easily have carried over the language
from the 1977 Amendment.
Id. at 265.
A. Whether the 2005 Amendment Applies to Pre‐enactment Judgment Liens
Although Hayward clarified that the 2005 Amendment’s increased
homestead exemption applies even to contract‐based debts that predate the
amendment, the Court did not address whether the amendment applies where,
prior to the amendment’s enactment, a creditor has reduced a debt to judgment
and perfected a judgment lien on the debtor’s residential property. Because
CFCU had not reduced the debt to a judgment, the Hayward Court had no reason
to reach the issue. See id. at 262 n.9, 264–65 n.12.
This case places the issue squarely before us. Hertel obtained a judgment
against Calloway and secured a judgment lien against her home in July 2003,
when the homestead exemption limit still stood at $10,000. We must therefore
determine whether, when Calloway filed for bankruptcy on May 12, 2009, she
was entitled to the full $50,000 homestead protection of the 2005 Amendment
even as to a debt reduced to judgment prior to the statute’s enactment. Hertel
10
argues that the statute should be interpreted not to apply to judgment liens
obtained prior to the 2005 Amendment (1) because interpretations that
retroactively affect vested interests are generally disfavored; and (2) to avoid the
constitutional question of whether the legislation’s effect on pre‐existing
judgment liens constitutes an unconstitutional taking of its property in violation
of the Fifth Amendment.
“It is a fundamental canon of statutory construction that retroactive
operation is not favored by courts and statutes will not be given such
construction unless the language expressly or by necessary implication requires
it.”4 Majewski v. Broadalbin‐Perth Cent. Sch. Dist., 91 N.Y.2d 577, 584 (1998).
However, it is also “fundamental that a court, in interpreting a statute, should
attempt to effectuate the intent of the Legislature.” Id. at 583 (internal quotation
4 A statute can be retroactive in two ways, both of which courts have traditionally
disfavored because they impair an individual’s ability to plan his conduct with
reasonable certainty of its legal consequences. First, and most obviously, a statute is
said to be retroactive if it is directed at past events and gives pre‐enactment conduct a
different effect from that it would have had before the passage of the statute. Second, a
statute is also said to be retroactive if, although it is not directed at conduct that
occurred prior to its enactment, it diminishes rights or increases obligations established
prior to the legislation’s effective date. See N.Y. Stat. Law § 51 (defining a retroactive
statute as one that “takes away or impairs vested rights” or “looks backward affecting
acts occurring or rights accruing before it came into force”); see generally Landgraf v. USI
Film Prods., 511 U.S. 244, 263–80 (1994). As interpreted by the bankruptcy and district
courts, the 2005 Amendment would be retroactive in this second sense because,
although it applies to the satisfaction of judgments only after its effective date, it affects
judgment liens perfected prior to its enactment.
11
marks omitted). The presumption against retroactivity and other principles of
construction “are merely navigational tools to discern legislative intent.” Id. at
584. “[M]axims of statutory construction provide helpful guideposts, [but] the
reach of [a] statute ultimately becomes a matter of judgment made upon review
of the legislative goal.” Duell v. Condon, 84 N.Y.2d 773, 783 (1995). Where a
statute is unclear as to its retroactive effect, factors relevant to the retroactivity
analysis include “whether the Legislature has made a specific pronouncement
about retroactive effect or conveyed a sense of urgency; whether the statute was
designed to rewrite an unintended judicial interpretation; and whether the
enactment itself reaffirms a legislative judgment about what the law in question
should be.” In re Gleason (Michael Vee, Ltd.), 96 N.Y.2d 117, 122 (2001).
Although the Legislature made no specific pronouncement as to the 2005
Amendment’s effect on pre‐enactment debts, the statute’s legislative history
reflects a clear sense of urgency that the homestead exemption limit be
immediately adjusted to bring it in line with modern home values. The
memoranda submitted by the 2005 Amendment’s sponsors in the Senate and
Assembly noted that the $10,000 exemption limit had not been updated since
1977 and was “not at all realistic in today’s economy.” N.Y. Spons. Memo., 2005
12
S.B. S4582; N.Y. Spons. Memo., 2005 A.B. A8479. The memoranda further
explained that “hav[ing] the figure so low is tantamount to having no exemption
at all” and proposed a $50,000 exemption as “a much more realistic figure.” Id.
To provide immediate relief to debtors whose homesteads were
underprotected by the outdated exemption limit, the 2005 Amendment explicitly
provided that “[t]his act shall take effect immediately.” 2005 N.Y. Laws ch. 623,
§ 2. The statute’s directive that it take effect immediately is not itself enough to
require retroactive application, but it does evince a sense of urgency on the part
of the Legislature that the benefit of the increased homestead exemption be
available to debtors as soon as possible. See Majewski, 91 N.Y.2d at 583. The 2005
Amendment’s specification that it take effect “immediately” is particularly
striking given that the effective date of statute it replaced, the 1977 Amendment,
had been intentionally crafted to avoid any effect on pre‐enactment debts.
Section 2 of the 1977 Amendment provided that “[t]his act shall take effect ninety
days after it shall have become a law, but shall not affect the application of property
to the satisfaction of a money judgment for a debt contracted before it takes effect.” 1977
N.Y. Laws ch. 181, § 2 (emphasis added). The Legislature chose not to carry over
13
the anti‐retroactivity provision of the 1977 Amendment to the 2005 Amendment
and instead replaced it with an instruction that the statute have immediate effect.
Hayward relied on these indicia of legislative purpose to conclude that a
debtor may invoke the 2005 Amendment’s increased homestead exemption even
as to pre‐enactment unsecured contract‐based debts. Nothing in the legislative
history suggests that the Legislature intended a different rule to apply where the
creditor has reduced the debt to a judgment and obtained a judgment lien. In
fact, the statute’s legislative history post‐Hayward further evinces the
Legislature’s intent to apply the 2005 Amendment to pre‐enactment judgment
liens. As noted above, in 2010 the Legislature increased the homestead
exemption limit to $75,000 (or higher for certain high‐property‐value counties).
2010 N.Y. Law ch. 568. The 2010 Amendment provided that “[t]his act shall take
effect on the thirtieth day [Jan. 21, 2011] after it shall become a law and shall
apply to the satisfaction of judgments on or after such date.” § 7 (emphasis
added). By expressly stating the amendment would apply to the satisfaction of
judgments on or after its effective date, the Legislature made clear that the
increased exemption limits would apply to judgments obtained prior to the
14
effective date, since a party necessarily must have a judgment before seeking to
satisfy it.
The fact that the Legislature, presumably aware of Hayward and alerted to
the retroactivity question, Arbegast v. Bd. of Educ. of S. New Berlin Cent. Sch., 65
N.Y.2d 161, 169 (1985), resolved any lingering ambiguity as to the homestead
exemption’s retroactive effect by expressly applying the 2010 Amendment to pre‐
enactment judgments supports our conclusion that the 2005 Amendment is best
read as making the increased homestead exemption available to all debtors who
file for bankruptcy after the statute’s effective date, regardless of the date on
which the debt was incurred or reduced to judgment or the date on which any
judgment lien was perfected.
Anticipating our reaffirmation of Hayward, Hertel argues that even if the
2005 Amendment is most naturally read to apply to pre‐enactment obligations,
the canon of constitutional doubt requires the Court to adopt a different
interpretation as to judgment lien debts to avoid the question of whether the
2005 Amendment has effected a taking of its property in violation of the Fifth
Amendment. Under the federal and New York State canons of constitutional
15
doubt,5 “[a] statute must be construed, if fairly possible, so as to avoid not only
the conclusion that it is unconstitutional, but also grave doubts upon that score.”
Tauza v. Susquehana Coal Co., 220 N.Y. 259, 267 (1917) (Cardozo, J.), and
Almendarez‐Torres v. United States, 523 U.S. 224, 237 (1998) (both quoting United
States v. Jin Fuey Moy, 241 U.S. 394, 401 (1916) (Holmes, J.)); accord In re Jacob, 86
N.Y.2d 651, 667 (1995); see also N.Y. Stat. Law § 150. The constitutional‐doubt
canon is justified partly by a presumption that legislatures are cognizant and
respectful of constitutional limitations and partly by a judicial policy of
5 In the absence of a final decision by a state’s highest court as to the proper
interpretation of a state statute, a federal court must determine how the state’s highest
court would decide the issue if presented with it. 19 Charles Alan Wright & Arthur R.
Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 4507 (2d ed. 1996). This Court has not
previously addressed whether that predictive inquiry should be guided primarily by
federal or state interpretive principles, in this case, the federal or New York State
constitutional avoidance canon. The Erie doctrine would seem to require federal courts
to interpret a state’s law just as would the courts of that state in order to ensure
consistent outcomes in federal and state courts. See generally Abbe R. Gluck,
Intersystemic Statutory Interpretation: Methodology as “Law” and the Erie Doctrine, 120 Yale
L.J. 1898 (2011). And in past cases we have naturally relied on state courts’ statutory
construction case law. See, e.g., Beason v. United Techs. Corp., 337 F.3d 271, 275 (2d Cir.
2003) (relying on Connecticut precedent on statutory construction to interpret
Connecticut statute). Other of our decisions, however, suggest that federal and state
courts apply distinct interpretive methodologies by virtue of a “broader interpretive
power” that state courts exercise in interpreting state law and that those approaches
could sometimes result in different interpretations of identical statutory language in
state versus federal courts. See, e.g., Sealed v. Sealed, 332 F.3d 51, 59 (2d Cir. 2003). We
note this issue but need not resolve it, because both New York and the federal courts
recognize the constitutional avoidance canon, and, whichever governs, the result is the
same.
16
minimizing confrontations between the legislative and judicial branches. See
Almendarez‐Torres, 523 U.S. at 238. Application of the canon requires that the
statute in question be genuinely susceptible to at least two interpretations and
that there be a serious likelihood that the statute will be held unconstitutional
absent application of the canon.
These conditions are not met in this case. Even assuming that the 2005
Amendment is susceptible to two plausible interpretations, there is no serious
likelihood that interpreting the statute to apply to Hertel’s pre‐enactment
judgment lien will result in the statute being held unconstitutional. For the
reasons discussed above, the statute is best interpreted as applying the increased
exemption limit even to pre‐enactment judgment liens, and, although that
interpretation requires the Court to address a constitutional question, the
Takings Clause issue that Hertel raises does not lead us to doubt the statute’s
constitutionality.
B. Takings Clause
Hertel argues that if the 2005 Amendment is read to apply to its pre‐
enactment judgment lien, the statute effects an unconstitutional taking of its
judgment lien in violation of the Fifth Amendment. The Takings Clause
17
provides that no “private property [shall] be taken for public use, without just
compensation.” U.S. Const. amend. V. The clause applies to the states through
the Fourteenth Amendment. Kelo v. City of New London, Conn., 545 U.S. 469, 472
n.1 (2005).
1. Whether a Judgment Lien is a Protected Property Interest
Before addressing Hertel’s Takings Clause challenge, we must first address
the threshold question of whether Hertel even held a protected property interest
in its judgment lien. If Hertel held no property interest, the 2005 Amendment
can have taken none from it.
This Court has never previously addressed whether a judgment lien
against a judgment debtor’s real property constitutes a property interest
protected by the Fifth Amendment. The bankruptcy court below, following the
decisions of other bankruptcy courts in this Circuit, concluded that under New
York law a judgment lien against a debtor’s real property is not a constitutionally
protected property interest. See In re Calloway, 423 B.R. 627, 629–30 (Bankr.
W.D.N.Y. 2010).
In an 1872 decision, Watson v. New York Central Railroad Co., 47 N.Y. 157
(1872), the New York Court of Appeals addressed whether a judgment
18
lienholder was entitled to be a party to, and receive compensation from, a
property seizure initiated by a railroad company pursuant to a state statute
delegating to the railroad limited eminent domain power to secure its right‐of‐
way should it be unable to obtain the land it required by private contract. The
Court of Appeals understood the statute to give a right to compensation only to
property holders and reasoned that because a lienholder’s rights are created by
statute, the lienholder holds no property interest in the land underlying the lien,
and its statutory rights can be superseded at will by the Legislature. Id. at 162.
Watson is an old case, but its holding has never been repudiated by New York’s
Court of Appeals. Finding no more recent decision to the contrary, a number of
bankruptcy courts in this Circuit have relied on Watson in recent years to reject
Takings Clause challenges to the homestead exemption on the ground that New
York law does not recognize judgment liens as protected property interests. See
In re Calloway, 423 B.R. at 629–30; see also In re Trudell, 381 B.R. 441, 442–44 (Bankr.
W.D.N.Y. 2008); Lattimore v. Walt’s Tree Serv., Inc. (In re Lattimore), 12 B.R. 111
(Bankr. W.D.N.Y. 1981).
The crucial question in this case, however, is not whether Hertel’s
judgment lien is categorized as a property interest by New York law, but
19
whether it constitutes a property interest for purposes of the Fifth and
Fourteenth Amendments. “That determination, despite its state‐law
underpinnings, is ultimately one of federal constitutional law. Although the
underlying substantive interest is created by an independent source such as state
law, federal constitutional law determines whether that interest rises to the level of
a legitimate claim of entitlement protected by the Due Process Clause.” Town of
Castle Rock, Colo. v. Gonzales, 545 U.S. 748, 756–57 (2005) (internal quotation marks
omitted). Accordingly, we look first to state law to define the contours of the
purported property interest, and then to federal constitutional law to determine
whether that interest merits constitutional protection as a property interest.
Under New York law, after a plaintiff has won a judgment against a
defendant, obtaining a judgment lien against his real property is simple. The
judgment creditor need only file the judgment with the county clerk of the
county where the property is located.6 N.Y. C.P.L.R. § 5018(a). The lien secures
the judgment creditor’s ability to collect the judgment, by forced sale of the
property if need be, N.Y. C.P.L.R. § 5236, by ensuring that, apart from a few
6 The process is simpler still if the judgment is rendered by a supreme or county court
and the debtor’s property is located in the county where the judgment is entered. A
judgment entered in a supreme or county court automatically becomes a judgment lien
against the debtor’s local real property. See N.Y. C.P.L.R. § 5018(a); David D. Siegel,
New York Practice § 517 (5th ed. 2011).
20
statutory exceptions, no transfer by the judgment debtor of any interest in the
liened property is effective against the judgment creditor. N.Y. C.P.L.R. § 5203.
In Ford Motor Credit Co. v. NYC Police Department this Court held that a
lienholder with a security interest in a motor vehicle seized by the New York
City Police Department possesses a constitutionally protected property interest
in the seized vehicle and may not be excluded from participation in the civil
forfeiture process. 503 F.3d 186, 190–92 (2d Cir. 2007). The Court relied in part
on Armstrong v. United States, in which the Supreme Court similarly concluded
that a mechanic’s lien obtained pursuant to Maine law constituted a
constitutionally protected property interest. 364 U.S. 40, 44–45 (1960). Like the
mechanic’s lien at issue in Armstrong, a judgment lien entitles the lienholder to
force a sale of the liened property and to obtain payment in priority over other
creditors. See N.Y. C.P.L.R. § 5236(a); see also N.Y. C.P.L.R. § 5235 prac. cmt.
C5235:1 (McKinney 2014) (explaining that N.Y. C.P.L.R. § 5236(a) “ordinarily
bars sale of the realty on execution if the judgment is not . . . a lien”). And like
other common property interests, a judgment lien can be freely bought, sold, and
assigned. There is no reason that a judgment lien should not be entitled to
similar protection. The legal rights of a judgment lienholder are obviously far
21
fewer than those of an owner in fee simple, but a judgment lien, like other
security interests, “is indisputably a property interest protected by the
Fourteenth Amendment.” Ford Motor Credit Co., 503 F.3d at 191.
2. Regulatory Taking Analysis
The Supreme Court has recognized two branches of Takings Clause cases:
physical takings and regulatory takings.7 See Tahoe‐Sierra Pres. Council, Inc. v.
Tahoe Reg’l Planning Agency, 535 U.S. 302, 322 (2002). A physical taking occurs
when there is either a condemnation or a physical appropriation of property. Id.
A regulatory taking, by contrast, occurs where even absent a direct physical
appropriation, governmental regulation of private property “goes too far” and is
7 Citing the Supreme Court’s observation in United States v. Security Industrial Bank, 459
U.S. 70, 75–76 (1982) that the traditional regulatory takings framework employed in
Penn Central Transportation Co. v. City of New York, 438 U.S. 104 (1978), fits awkwardly
with governmental regulations, like this one, that affect a party’s entire property
interest rather than “some but not all of the ‘bundle or rights,’” Hertel urges recognition
of a new branch of Takings Clause doctrine to assess the destruction of liens. This we
decline to do. In only two cases has the Supreme Court held that the government’s
destruction of a lien constituted a taking, see Armstrong v. United States, 364 U.S. 40
(1960); Louisville Joint Stock Land Bank v. Radford, 295 U.S. 555 (1935), both of which
predated Penn Central Transportation, the Supreme Court’s seminal case on regulatory
takings. Penn Central Transportation, however, cited Armstrong as an example of a case
in which a regulatory taking occurred given the government’s frustration of property‐
holders’ investment‐backed expectations, see 438 U.S. at 127, one of the principal
considerations when considering whether a regulatory taking occurred. Thus, it is far
from clear that the Supreme Court would analyze the government’s destruction of liens
using a framework other than the regulatory takings frameworks set forth in Penn
Central Transportation and Lucas v. S.C. Coastal Council, 505 U.S. 1003 (1992), both of
which we address herein.
22
“tantamount to a direct appropriation or ouster.” Lingle v. Chevron U.S.A. Inc.,
544 U.S. 528, 537 (2005) (quoting Pa. Coal Co. v. Mahon, 260 U.S. 393, 415 (1922)
(Holmes, J.)). Because application of the 2005 Amendment to pre‐existing liens
“does not present the ‘classi[c] taking’ in which the government directly
appropriates private property for its own use,” E. Enters. v. Apfel, 524 U.S. 498,
522 (1998) (alteration in original), any taking in this case would be regulatory in
nature.
The Supreme Court has “generally eschewed any set formula” for
identifying regulatory takings, instead “preferring to engage in essentially ad
hoc, factual inquiries” to determine in each case whether the challenged property
restriction rises to the level of a taking. Lucas v. S.C. Coastal Council, 505 U.S.
1003, 1015 (1992) (alterations omitted) (internal quotation marks omitted).
Paramount to the inquiry are the familiar factors set forth in Penn Central
Transportation Co. v. City of New York, 438 U.S. 104, 124 (1978). “Primary among
those factors are ‘[t]he economic impact of the regulation on the claimant and,
particularly, the extent to which the regulation has interfered with distinct
investment‐backed expectations.’” Lingle, 544 U.S. at 538–39 (alteration in
original) (quoting Penn Central, 438 U.S. at 124). Also telling, is the “character of
23
the governmental action,” particularly “whether it amounts to a physical
invasion” or appropriation of property or instead merely affects property
interests through “some public program adjusting the benefits and burdens of
economic life to promote the common good.” Id. at 539 (internal quotation
marks omitted).
Although these factors govern most regulatory takings challenges, the
Supreme Court has also identified two types of regulatory action that are treated
as per se takings for Fifth Amendment purposes and therefore require no case‐
specific weighing of the Penn Central factors. A categorical taking occurs (1)
where a regulation “compel[s] the property owner to suffer a physical ‘invasion’
of his property”; or (2) “where regulation denies all economically beneficial or
productive use of land.” Lucas, 505 U.S. at 1015.
Hertel argues that this case falls into the second of these two per se takings
categories. It reasons that the 2005 Amendment has deprived it of all economic
use of its judgment lien against Calloway and that the Court should simply find
a per se taking under Lucas and forgo a detailed analysis of the Penn Central
factors. In the alternative, Hertel argues that even were we to apply Penn Central,
those factors would weigh in favor of its takings claim.
24
The cases in which the Supreme Court has applied Lucas’s total takings
rule have involved real property, and it is unclear whether that case’s per se rule
should be applied to purported takings of other types of property, such as
intellectual property, personal property, or a security interest like that at issue
here. The Lucas Court repeatedly referred to regulation that deprives “land” (not
“property”) of all economically beneficial use,8 and subsequent decisions of the
circuit courts have not reached a clear consensus on how broadly to apply Lucas’s
per se rule. See A & D Auto Sales, Inc. v. United States, 748 F.3d 1142, 1151–52
(Fed. Cir. 2014) (noting the question and collecting cases). The parties have not
briefed the issue, however, and its resolution is unnecessary to our decision
because there has been no taking under either standard. Because Hertel’s takings
claim fails for similar reasons under both tests, Lucas and the Penn Central factors
can be addressed together.
First, the nature of the challenged governmental action in this case is not
that of a regulatory taking. The government has not physically invaded or
appropriated Hertel’s judgment lien for its own use; it has merely adjusted its
8 The Lucas Court also specifically distinguished regulation of land from regulation of
personal property, which, it explained, might even face regulation that would render it
economically worthless “by reason of the State’s traditionally high degree of control
over commercial dealings.” Lucas, 505 U.S. at 1027–28.
25
long‐standing statutory protection of debtors’ homesteads to account for modern
home values. Legislative tinkering of this sort inevitably creates individual
winners and losers, for one man’s defense is another’s obstacle. But “it cannot be
said that the Taking Clause is violated whenever legislation requires one person
to use his or her assets for the benefit of another.” Connolly v. Pension Benefit
Guar. Corp., 475 U.S. 211, 223 (1986). The 2005 Amendment’s interference with
judgment lienholders’ property rights is of the sort that inevitably follows when
the Legislature adjusts the benefits and burdens of economic life to promote the
common good.
Second, the economic impact of the 2005 Amendment and its effects on
Hertel’s investment‐backed expectations establish that no taking occurred here.
Hertel obtained a judgment lien on Calloway’s property in 2003. At the time of
the bankruptcy court proceeding, the property was valued at approximately
$110,000, but was encumbered by a mortgage with a remaining balance of
approximately $85,000, leaving Calloway around $25,000 in home equity. If the
2005 Amendment had never been enacted and the homestead exemption limit
had been left at $10,000, a portion of Calloway’s home equity would now be
available to satisfy Hertel’s judgment against her. However, because the 2005
26
Amendment raised the homestead exemption limit to $50,000, Calloway’s equity
in her home is completely shielded.9 Hertel reasons as follows: But for the 2005
Amendment, Calloway’s home equity would be available to satisfy the
judgment; a comparison of Hertel’s economic position before and after the
statute’s effective date shows a change for the worse; therefore Hertel’s property
has been taken in violation of the Fifth Amendment.
Hertel’s reasoning, however, rests on the factually unsupported
assumption that its judgment lien had value before the passage of the 2005
Amendment. The record contains no evidence as to Calloway’s equity in her
home on August 29, 2005, the day before the amendment took effect. If on that
date she held $10,000 or less in home equity, Hertel’s judgment lien would have
been worthless, since Calloway could have protected all of her home equity
under the then‐applicable $10,000 exemption. Hertel therefore has not shown the
2005 Amendment, in fact, affected its economic interests.
9 11 U.S.C. § 522(f) allows a debtor to avoid a judgment lien in bankruptcy to the extent
that the lien impairs an exemption to which the debtor would be entitled in the absence
of the lien. Because the $25,000 equity that Calloway holds in her home is less than the
$50,000 homestead exemption, subjecting the property to a judicial lien of any amount
would impair the value of that exemption. See 11 U.S.C. § 522(f)(2)(A). Section 522(f)
thus entitles Calloway to completely avoid the lien and prevents any portion of the lien
from passing through the bankruptcy and remaining on her property.
27
In any event, however, even assuming the 2005 Amendment did have
some effect on Hertel’s economic interests, that alone is not enough to support its
claim. In assessing a takings claim, the relevant question is not whether
governmental action has affected a party’s interests in some way but, rather, the
extent to which the challenged governmental action has upset the claimant’s
investment‐backed economic expectations by altering its rights as to a
constitutionally protected property interest.
To argue that the 2005 Amendment impermissibly affected its property
interest, Hertel relies primarily on United States v. Security Industrial Bank, 459
U.S. 70 (1982). That case considered the retroactive application of lien‐avoidance
provisions contained in the then newly enacted Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1978,
92 Stat. 2549 (1978). Federal bankruptcy law had remained largely unchanged
since the Depression‐era Chandler Act, ch. 575, 52 Stat. 840 (1938), and, by the
1970s, Congress recognized the need for major reform. Consumer bankruptcies
had come to account for nearly ninety percent of all bankruptcy cases, 123 Cong.
Rec. 35444 (1977) (statement of Rep. Rodino), but the federal bankruptcy laws
had not been readjusted since 1938 and were aimed primarily at business
bankruptcies. H.R. Rep. No. 95‐595 at 3–5 (1977), reprinted in 1978 U.S.C.C.A.N.
28
5963, 5965–66. The Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1978 radically readjusted U.S.
bankruptcy law by “redesign[ing] traditional bankruptcy protections to make
them more effective for non‐business debtors.” 123 Cong. Rec. 35444 (1977)
(statement of Rep. Rodino).
One particular concern of the Act was creditors’ increasing use of liens on
personal property. The traditional right under state law to exempt certain
property from the bankruptcy estate did not protect debtors from creditors who
had forced them into contracts waiving the exemptions or who held security
interests in their household goods, apparel, and similar personal property. See
H.R. Doc. No. 93‐137, at 169–74 (1973); 123 Cong. Rec. 35446 (1977) (statement of
Rep. Edwards). Congress addressed these problems with the Bankruptcy
Reform Act of 1978, which, among other things, made waivers of exemptions
unenforceable and included a lien‐avoidance provision entitling individual
debtors to avoid judicial liens and nonpossessory, nonpurchase‐money liens on
certain types of property. Faced with the question whether Congress’s dramatic
alteration of bankruptcy law to permit debtors for the first time to avoid even
secured debts should apply retroactively to existing liens, the Supreme Court in
Security Industrial Bank noted “substantial doubt whether the retroactive
29
destruction of the appellees’ liens . . . [would] comport[] with the Fifth
Amendment,” 459 U.S. at 78, and ultimately concluded that Congress must not
have intended § 522(f) to apply to existing liens.
Unlike the newly crafted lien‐avoidance provision at issue in Security
Industrial Bank, however, New York’s homestead exemption is of a much earlier
vintage—from a time if not quite immemorial, then at least nearly so. Hertel
obtained its judgment lien against a backdrop of New York law that has
continuously provided a homestead exemption for more than 150 years. Dating
from 1850, New York’s homestead exemption has now become a “background
principle[] of the State’s law of property,” Lucas, 505 U.S. at 1029, that serves both
to define the scope of a judgment lienholder’s property interest and its
reasonable investment‐backed expectations.10 So pedigreed a principle of state
10 Neither Lucas nor subsequent decisions have clarified how long a legislative
enactment must remain in force before it becomes a “background principle” of property
law that is sufficiently embedded in a state’s legal tradition that it defines property
holders’ rights and investment‐backed expectations. A background principle cannot be
a “newly legislated” one, but it is unclear just how old is old enough. Lucas, 505 U.S. at
1028–29; accord Palazzolo v. Rhode Island, 533 U.S. 606, 630 (2001). Although we do not
here attempt to delineate a precise division between “background” and “foreground”
laws, after more than 150 years, New York’s homestead exemption qualifies as part of
“those common, shared understandings of permissible limitations derived from a
State’s legal tradition.” Palazzolo, 533 U.S. 606, 630 (2001); accord Tahoe‐Sierra, 535 U.S. at
352–53 (Rehnquist, C.J., dissenting) (relying on New York City’s enactment of a
comprehensive zoning ordinance in 1916 and the existence of zoning regulations in
30
law “inhere[s] in the title itself,” and the property owner can claim no taking
when he feels the effects of that restriction, for the implied limitation has been
there all along. Lucas, 505 U.S. at 1029.
When Hertel obtained its judgment lien in 2003, inherent in the property
interest was the implied limitation that collection on the judgment might be
impeded by New York’s long‐standing protection of judgment debtors’
homesteads. Like New York’s other exemption laws, the homestead exemption
has changed to keep pace with the times. The exemption for “[a]ll spinning‐
wheels [and] weaving‐looms” has come to encompass instead “one sewing
machine with its appurtenances.” The exemption for “[t]he family bible, family
pictures and school books” now includes all “religious texts” and caps the
exemption for other books at $500 instead of $50. And the homestead exemption
has been expanded to include condominiums, has become available to women,
and now has been updated to provide an exemption limit commensurate with
ever‐increasing home values. Compare 2 Revised Statutes of New York, pt. III, ch.
VI, tit. 5, art. 2, § 22 (1st ed. 1829), and 1850 N.Y. Laws ch. 260, with N.Y. C.P.L.R.
5205, and N.Y. C.P.L.R. 5206.
colonial Boston to conclude that zoning law is an implied limitation on real property
and part of an owner’s investment‐backed expectations).
31
Inherent in Hertel’s judgment lien was the implied limitation of a
homestead exemption that predictably and necessarily must be adjusted from
time to time to account for the changing values of the homes it protects. This
limitation having been part of Hertel’s judgment lien from the start, the 2005
Amendment neither effected a total taking of Hertel’s property nor upset its
reasonable investment‐backed expectations. Thus, we conclude that the 2005
Amendment’s application to pre‐enactment judgment liens does not violate the
Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment.
CONCLUSION
In sum, we hold (1) that the 2005 Amendment applies to all creditors and
all obligations, including pre‐existing obligations, regardless of whether the debt
was reduced to a judgment lien prior to the statute’s enactment; and (2) that
retroactive application of the exemption does not constitute an uncompensated
taking of pre‐enactment judgment liens in violation of the Takings Clause.
Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
32