RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
Pursuant to Sixth Circuit Rule 206
File Name: 05a0141p.06
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
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Debtor. -
In re: STUART C. BRINLEY,
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Nos. 03-5607/5653
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STUART C. BRINLEY, >
Appellee/Cross-Appellant, -
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v.
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Appellant/Cross-Appellee. -
LPP MORTGAGE, LTD.,
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N
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Western District of Kentucky at Louisville.
No. 02-00378—Charles R. Simpson III, District Judge.
Argued: August 6, 2004
Decided and Filed: March 22, 2005
Before: BATCHELDER and DAUGHTREY, Circuit Judges; DOWD, District Judge.*
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COUNSEL
ARGUED: Rick D. DeBlasis, LERNER, SAMPSON & ROTHFUSS, Cincinnati, Ohio, for
Appellant. Richard A. Schwartz, KRUGER, SCHWARTZ & MORREAU, Louisville, Kentucky,
for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Rick D. DeBlasis, LERNER, SAMPSON & ROTHFUSS, Cincinnati,
Ohio, for Appellant. Richard A. Schwartz, KRUGER, SCHWARTZ & MORREAU, Louisville,
Kentucky, for Appellee.
DAUGHTREY, J., delivered the opinion of the court. DOWD, D. J. (p. 8), delivered a
separate concurring opinion, in which BATCHELDER, J., joined.
*
The Honorable David D. Dowd, United States District Judge for the Northern District of Ohio, sitting by
designation.
1
Nos. 03-5607/5653 In re Brinley Page 2
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OPINION
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MARTHA CRAIG DAUGHTREY, Circuit Judge. In this appeal, we are asked to determine
the extent to which a judgment lien impairs a debtor’s statutory exemption. Both the debtor, Stuart
C. Brinley, and the creditor, LPP Mortgage, Ltd., dispute portions of the district court’s ruling that
reversed the bankruptcy court’s ruling on the debtor’s motion to avoid the judgment lien of the
creditor. Specifically, LPP contends that the district court erred in concluding that Brinley’s
statutorily-based exemption from bankruptcy estate property was impaired by LPP’s entire judgment
lien on Brinley’s real estate.
Brinley, in turn, insists that the bankruptcy and district courts did not properly calculate the
value of his interest in the real property in question in this litigation. Although we conclude that the
district court and the bankruptcy court correctly valued the debtor’s interest in property he held as
a tenant by the entirety, we further conclude that the district court incorrectly determined the extent
to which LPP’s lien impaired Brinley’s statutory exemption. We therefore affirm the district court
judgment in part, reverse in part, and remand the case for further proceedings.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
The parties to this appeal have stipulated to all relevant facts underlying the litigation.
Pursuant to the stipulation, they agree that Stuart Brinley and his non-debtor spouse own $280,000
worth of property jointly with rights of survivorship (that is, as tenants by the entirety). The
property is secured by a first mortgage held by PHH US Mortgage Corporation in the amount of
$180,000. The parties further agree that approximately three months after the Brinleys executed that
initial mortgage, a judgment lien ultimately assigned to LPP in the amount of $112,418.35, plus
interest, was also placed against the property. Years later, the debtor and his wife executed a second
mortgage on the same property with Bank One, Kentucky, N.A. The amount presently due and
owing on that junior lien is $80,345.09.
Unfortunately, Stuart Brinley was ultimately forced to seek protection under Chapter 7 of
the United States Bankruptcy Code. Then, without complaint from LPP, Brinley claimed
entitlement to a statutory exemption in the amount of $6,000. Because the mortgages and judgment
lien on Brinley’s primary asset far exceeded the value of that land, however, the debtor’s right to
his claimed exemption was seriously impaired.
To preserve the $6,000 exemption, the bankruptcy court and the district court took different
analytical paths when this case was before them. The bankruptcy court examined relevant statutory
provisions and concluded that the most junior lien on the Brinleys’ property, the second residential
mortgage in the amount of $80,345.09, should first be avoided in its entirety before LPP’s judgment
lien was partially avoided to reduce Brinley’s indebtedness sufficiently to give effect to the
exemption. On appeal from that determination, the district court, interpreting the same statutory
provisions, ruled that LPP’s judgment lien, even though senior in priority to Bank One’s second
mortgage on the real property, should first be avoided in its entirety in order to allow the debtor to
take advantage of the claimed exemption.
LPP now appeals from that district court judgment. Although the creditor does not contest
the debtor’s right to avoid some of the judgment lien attached to the Brinleys’ property, LPP
advocates adoption of the bankruptcy court’s analysis that would minimize the amount of the
judgment lien that would be avoided.
Nos. 03-5607/5653 In re Brinley Page 3
Despite reaping the benefit of avoiding the LPP judgment lien in full, Brinley also appeals
from the district court ruling, claiming that the court erred in considering the entire $280,000 value
of his property when calculating the amount of the lien avoidance. He contends that, because he
owned the property as a tenant by the entirety with his non-debtor wife, the court should have valued
his share of the subject property at only $140,000.
DISCUSSION
We review a district court’s conclusions of law in a bankruptcy appeal de novo. See Holland
v. Star Bank, N.A. (In re Holland), 151 F.3d 547, 548 (6th Cir. 1998). The bankruptcy court’s
initial factual findings, however, are reviewed by both the district court and by this court only for
clear error. See id.
I. Statutory Framework for Avoidance of Judicial Liens
One of the purposes of federal bankruptcy law is to accord to the debtor a “fresh start” from
past financial difficulties. See id. at 550 (citing In re Miller, 198 B.R. 500, 505 (Bankr. N.D. Ohio
1996)). To that end, 11 U.S.C. § 522(f)(1), in relevant part, provides:
[T]he debtor may avoid the fixing of a lien on an interest of the debtor in property
to the extent that such lien impairs an exemption to which the debtor would have
been entitled . . . if such lien is –
(A) a judicial lien . . . or
(B) a nonpossessory, nonpurchase-money security interest in any
(i) household furnishings, household goods, wearing
apparel, appliances, books, animals, crops, musical
instruments, or jewelry that are held primarily for the
personal, family, or household use of the debtor or a
dependent of the debtor;
(ii) implements, professional books, or tools, of the
trade of the debtor or the trade of a dependent of the
debtor; or
(iii) professionally prescribed health aids for the
debtor or a dependent of the debtor.
(Emphasis added.)
To aid in the determination of “the extent that such lien impairs an exemption,” Congress
amended the Bankruptcy Code in 1994 to add subsection (2)(A) to § 522(f) of title 11. That “new”
subsection states:
For the purposes of this subsection, a lien shall be considered to impair an exemption
to the extent that the sum of
(i) the lien;
(ii) all other liens on the property; and
Nos. 03-5607/5653 In re Brinley Page 4
(iii) the amount of the exemption that the debtor could claim if there
were no liens on the property;
exceeds the value that the debtor’s interest in the property would have in the absence
of any liens.
No one disputes that these provisions of 11 U.S.C. § 522(f) accurately describe the calculations to
be undertaken to determine what portion of a judicial lien may or must be avoided in order to give
effect to a debtor’s exemption. Although the courts and the parties concur in the actual decisional
framework to be utilized, they would arrive at different results based upon the application of the
framework to the facts of this case.
A. Bankruptcy Court Version
In applying the seemingly straight-forward provisions of 11 U.S.C. § 522(f) to this case, the
bankruptcy court concluded that only $18,418.35 of LPP’s judgment lien would be avoided by
giving effect to the debtor’s exemption, “leaving LPP with a judgment lien of $94,000 on the
Property.” To obtain those figures, the bankruptcy court did not aggregate the values of LPP’s
judicial lien ($112,418.35), the first mortgage on the property ($180,000.00), the second mortgage
on the property ($80,345.09), and the debtor’s claimed exemption ($6,000.00), as required by the
statute. Instead, in arriving at the figure by which the liens and the exemption exceeded the value
of the property without liens ($280,000.00), the bankruptcy court ignored the second mortgage on
the property that was junior to LPP’s judgment lien. By doing so, the court immediately reduced
the impairment of the exemption by the $80,345.09 value of the second mortgage and left a
difference between (a) the sum of the remaining liens and exemption amount ($298,418.35) and (b)
the value of the property without liens ($280,000.00) of $18,418.35, the amount by which LPP’s
judgment lien must be avoided. Subtracting that amount from the total $112,418.35 value of the
judgment lien, the bankruptcy court concluded that the creditor was still left with a $94,000
judgment lien on the property.
In reaching the result it did, the bankruptcy court openly admitted that it failed to follow the
explicit language of the bankruptcy statute. The court felt compelled to interpret the law as it did,
however, because adherence to the strict provisions of the code would produce an “unjust result . . .
without regard to state law priorities [of liens].” Not surprisingly, LPP endorses the bankruptcy
court’s analysis of the statute and its operation because initial application of the junior lien value to
the amount by which the debtor’s exemption is impaired reduces LPP’s “loss” by an equal amount.
B. District Court Version
Unlike the bankruptcy court, the district court felt obligated to adhere to the formulaic
calculations called for in the statute. By so adhering and including all liens and the debtor’s
exemption in the first totaling, the district court arrived at a figure of $378,763.44 ($180,000.00 +
112,418.35 + 80,345.09 + 6,000.00 = $378,763.44). Because that sum exceeded the $280,000.00
value of the debtor’s property, the district judge also concluded that the value of Brinley’s statutory
exemption was impaired. Rather than specify that the exemption was impaired only to the extent
that the sum exceeded the property value ($378.763.44 - 280,000.00 = $98,763.44), and offset the
judicial lien only by that amount, however, the court simply concluded that “[t]he judicial lien of
LPP in the amount of $112,418.35 will be avoided in its entirety.”
C. Brinley’s Version
The debtor agrees with the district court conclusion that the judicial lien may be avoided in
its entirety in the effort to give effect to the debtor’s statutory exemption. In so arguing, Brinley
nevertheless adds a new wrinkle to the analysis by contending that the value of his property should
Nos. 03-5607/5653 In re Brinley Page 5
be calculated at only one-half of the $280,000.00 figure used by the courts, because he owns the land
with his wife and, therefore, does not individually have access to the full value of the property. By
using the $140,000.00 figure that Brinley believes is appropriate, he arrives at the same ultimate
result as did the district court (complete avoidance of the judicial lien) because the difference
between the sum of the lien amounts, together with the exemption amount, and the value of the
property ($378,763.44 - 140,000.00 = $238,763.44) far exceeds the $112,418.35 value of LPP’s
judicial lien.
II. Value of Property Owned by Brinley
The value to be given the property owned by the debtor thus becomes a threshold issue to
be resolved in this appeal. As previously noted, both the bankruptcy court and the district court
assumed that Brinley’s property was valued at $280,000.00 and that the debtor, as a tenant by the
entirety, was charged with that entire value. Brinley insists, however, that he holds the property only
as a joint tenant with a right of survivorship and, therefore, that he personally owns only one-half
of that realty.
Under Kentucky law, a joint tenancy, by definition, “is an estate held by two or more people
who . . . are not husband and wife.” Sanderson v. Saxon, 834 S.W.2d 676, 678 (Ky. 1992)
(emphasis added). A tenancy by the entirety, on the other hand, “is an estate in land shared by
husband and wife, whereby at the death of either the survivor is entitled to full fee simple
ownership.” Id. “[T]he survivor takes the entire estate at the death of the deceased co-tenant not
by virtue of that death, but because, in law, each was viewed to own the entire estate from the time
of its creation.” Id. (emphasis in original). Because Brinley and his wife shared the property in
question as spouses, their interests in the realty were as tenants by the entirety. Consequently,
Brinley and his wife each owned the entire estate and the debtor was properly charged with the full
$280,000.00 value of that property.
III. Determination of Extent to Which Judicial Lien Impaired Exemption
The more difficult issue in this appeal requires us to choose between faithfulness to the
explicit language of a controlling statute, with the resulting upset of the state law of lien priorities,
and adherence to established lien priorities in the face of an evident Congressional intent to modify
such treatment of creditors. As the learned Judge Richard Stair of the United States Bankruptcy
Court for the Eastern District of Tennessee has recognized, this court has already “expressly stated
that § 522(f)(2)(A) is a ‘federal definition of impairment . . . and, in light of [its] explicit language,
we no longer look to state law to define impairment.’” In re Northern, 294 B.R. 821, 830-31 (Bankr.
E.D. Tenn. 2003) (quoting Holland, 151 F.3d at 550). Indeed:
[T]he plain language of the statute provides for inclusion of all liens . . . . There is
nothing in § 522(f)(2) that authorizes the court to pick and choose which liens to
include in the impairment analysis, depending upon any state law priority scheme.
To the contrary, § 522(f)(2) expressly instructs the court to include any and all liens
in making any impairment analysis. Accordingly, the court is unable to deviate from
this express instruction by Congress.
Id. at 831.
But even adopting the viewpoint espoused in In re Northern does not require us to affirm the
decision of the district court in this matter. After adding together the values of all liens on the
debtor’s property and the value of the exemption sought in bankruptcy, and then subtracting the
agreed-upon value of the Brinley’s land ($378,763.44 - 280,000.00 = $98,763.44), the district court
held in conclusory fashion that “[t]he judicial lien of LPP in the amount of $112,418.35 will be
avoided in its entirety.” The language of the relevant statute, however, authorizes avoidance of
Nos. 03-5607/5653 In re Brinley Page 6
judicial liens only to the extent that those liens impair an exemption. An exemption is impaired,
moreover, “to the extent that the sum of [the liens and the exemption] exceeds the value the debtor’s
interest in the property” absent the liens. 11 U.S.C. § 522(f)(2)(A). Because the amount of the
impairment in this case is $98,763.44, LPP’s lien may be avoided only by that amount, thus allowing
Brinley to take advantage of the statutory exemption afforded him. Consequently, LPP retains a lien
on the debtor’s property in the amount of $13,654.91 ($112,418.35 - 98,763.44 = $13,654.91). See
In re Northern, 294 B.R. at 830.
LPP insists, however, that anything less than complete adoption of the analysis of the
bankruptcy court decision in this matter will not only impinge upon the state law of lien priorities
but will unjustly penalize senior lienholders and provide windfalls for debtors and junior lienholders.
The United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit recently addressed these same arguments
in a case with facts remarkably similar to those presented in this appeal. In Kolich v. Antioch Laurel
Veterinary Hospital (In re Kolich), 328 F.3d 406, 410 (8th Cir. 2003), our sister circuit, after
applying the express language of 11 U.S.C. § 522(f)(2)(A), stated:
[W]e find no sufficient basis for concluding that the statutory formula produces, in
this situation, a result “demonstrably at odds with the intentions of the drafters.” To
be sure, the Bankruptcy Code usually looks to state law to define the property rights
and priorities of creditors, including secured creditors. But § 522(f) is an exception
to that policy. It was enacted to permit the avoidance of judicial liens that can
interfere with the debtor’s post-petition fresh start. This selective avoidance gives
an advantage under federal law to secured creditors holding consensual liens,
typically, residential mortgage lenders. But Congress intended to treat consensual
lienholders more favorably, because their contractual relationships with the
bankruptcy debtor typically allow the debtor to acquire equity in the exempt property
by making post-petition mortgage payments. The 1994 amendment creating the
statutory formula here at issue was expressly aimed at overruling prior judicial
decisions compromising that intent.
We are not entirely comfortable with the equities of literally applying the
statutory formula in this situation. It may give a debtor contemplating bankruptcy
the ability to wipe out judicial liens by persuading a lender to take an otherwise
junior consensual lien that renders the exempt property over-encumbered and
therefore ripe for impairment. One would expect lenders to refuse to make such
high-risk loans, but there may be times when self-interest or hard-to-detect collusion
will lead to an abuse of § 522(f). On the other hand, refusing to apply the statutory
formula as written may result in denying deserving debtors the fresh-start advantage
§ 522(f) was enacted to provide – for example, if a drop in market value has left
exempt property over-encumbered by a judicial lien and a junior consensual lien, and
the judicial lienholder insists upon foreclosure. With the competing equities both
hard to weigh and finely balanced, our task is simply to apply § 522(f)(2)(A) as
Congress wrote it.
(Citations omitted.)
In a final challenge to the application of the express language of 11 U.S.C. § 522(f) to the
situation presented in this litigation, LPP quotes from the reversed bankruptcy court decision and
argues that the “position espoused by the Debtor ignores the U.S. Constitution, specifically, the Fifth
Amendment takings clause by eliminating existing property rights.” The Takings Clause of the Fifth
Amendment provides simply, “[N]or shall private property be taken for public use, without just
compensation.” The Supreme Court has, however, “been unable to develop any ‘set formula’ for
determining when ‘justice and fairness’ require that economic injuries caused by public action be
Nos. 03-5607/5653 In re Brinley Page 7
compensated by the government, rather than remain disproportionately concentrated on a few
persons.” Penn Central Transp. Co. v. City of New York, 438 U.S. 104, 124 (1978). Instead,
engaging in ad hoc determinations, the Court has examined numerous factors of significance,
including “[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 . . . .” Id.
In this matter, although the application of the bankruptcy statutes does indeed have a
significant economic impact on the business of LPP, the creditor cannot legitimately claim that such
legislation unfairly interfered with any financial expectations. Because LPP’s lien was not
registered until after the enactment of the amendments to the Bankruptcy Code that became
§ 522(f)(2)(A), the creditor was on notice concerning the operation of this debtor protection
provision and its potential application to LPP’s business activities.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons set out above, we conclude that both the bankruptcy court and the district
court failed to apply the relevant provisions of the Bankruptcy Code correctly in this dispute.
Although the district court properly determined the value of the debtor’s property interest and
attempted to abide by the provisions of 11 U.S.C. § 522(f)(2)(A), that court erred in ruling that the
judicial lien at issue should be avoided in its entirety. We conclude, instead, that LPP should retain
a judgment lien on the debtor’s property in the amount of $13,654.91, the difference between the
value of the original lien and the amount by which the debtor’s exemption was impaired pursuant
to applicable statutory provisions. We therefore AFFIRM the judgment of the district court in part,
REVERSE in part, and REMAND this case for further proceedings as necessary.
Nos. 03-5607/5653 In re Brinley Page 8
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CONCURRENCE
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DAVID D. DOWD, JR., District Judge, concurring. I agree with the well written opinion
of Judge Daughtrey because I am of the view that her analysis is consistent with the precedent that
has developed since Congress adopted 11 U.S.C. § 522(f)(1). However, the notion that a subsequent
mortgage lien, under the bankruptcy law, preempts an earlier filed judgment lien turns the whole
concept of creditors’ rights on its head. The potential for fraud is obvious.
As long as the statute remains in effect, the judgment creditor must promptly initiate
foreclosure proceedings to avoid the real probability that a subsequently filed mortgage lien will
trump the judgment lien. That Congress intended this result, in the context of a “fresh start,” I find
difficult to comprehend, but I cannot deny that it is within Congress’s express Article I, Sec. 8
authority to regulate interstate commerce and “[t]o establish . . . uniform Laws on the subject of
Bankruptcies[.]” As it has already been decided that the statute does not constitute a taking in
violation of the Fifth Amendment, I reluctantly concur.
I am authorized to say that Judge Batchelder joins me in this opinion.