In re: Patrick Heath Caldwell ( 2016 )


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  •                                                              FILED
    FEB 24 2016
    1
    2                                                        SUSAN M. SPRAUL, CLERK
    U.S. BKCY. APP. PANEL
    OF THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    3                  UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY APPELLATE PANEL
    4                            OF THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    5
    6   In re:                        )      BAP No.      NV-15-1074-JuKiD
    )
    7   PATRICK HEATH CALDWELL,       )      Bk. No.      2:14-bk-16024-LED
    )
    8                  Debtor.        )
    ______________________________)
    9                                 )
    PATRICK HEATH CALDWELL,       )
    10                                 )
    Appellant,     )
    11                                 )
    v.                            )      O P I N I O N
    12                                 )
    VICTORIA L. NELSON, Chapter 7 )
    13   Trustee,                      )
    )
    14                  Appellee.      )
    ______________________________)
    15
    Argued and Submitted on February 18, 2016
    16                          at Las Vegas, Nevada
    17                         Filed - February 24, 2016
    18             Appeal from the United States Bankruptcy Court
    for the District of Nevada
    19
    Honorable Laurel E. Davis, Bankruptcy Judge, Presiding
    20                       _________________________
    21   Appearances:     A.J. Kung, Kung & Brown, argued for appellant
    Patrick Heath Caldwell. Jacob L. Houmand,
    22                    Nelson & Houmand, P.C., argued for appellee
    Victoria L. Nelson, chapter 7 trustee.
    23                         ________________________
    24   Before:   JURY, KIRSCHER, and DUNN, Bankruptcy Judges.
    25
    26
    27
    28
    1   JURY, Bankruptcy Judge:
    2
    3        Chapter 71 trustee, Victoria L. Nelson (Trustee), objected
    4   to the Nevada homestead exemption in the amount of $550,000
    5   claimed by debtor Patrick Heath Caldwell (Debtor), seeking to
    6   limit it to the statutory cap of $155,675 under § 522(p)(1).
    7   Trustee argued that Debtor acquired an interest in the homestead
    8   property within the meaning of § 522(p)(1) because the property
    9   was conveyed by Caldwell Family Investments II, LLC (LLC) to
    10   Debtor and his spouse as trustees of the Caldwell Family 1998
    11   Trust (Trust) during the 1215-day period preceding the date of
    12   the filing of Debtor’s petition.    Debtor asserted that the
    13   limitation under § 522(p)(1) was not triggered since he retained
    14   a beneficial and equitable interest in the property at all times
    15   despite transfers of the fee title to the property to and from
    16   the Trust and the LLC.
    17        The bankruptcy court sustained Trustee’s objection.
    18   Looking first to the laws of Nevada and Delaware regarding
    19   limited liability companies, the court found that Debtor did not
    20   have an ownership interest in the property during the time when
    21   the LLC was the record title holder.   Next, the court relied
    22   upon Nevada case law which required a debtor to have some form
    23   of equity in the property in order to claim a homestead — the
    24   court finding that this equity contemplated ownership.   Finally,
    25
    1
    26          Unless otherwise indicated, all chapter and section
    references are to the Bankruptcy Code, 
    11 U.S.C. §§ 101-1532
    .
    27   “Rule” references are to the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy
    Procedure, and “Civil Rule” references are to the Federal Rules
    28   of Civil Procedure.
    -2-
    1   the bankruptcy court followed out-of-jurisdiction case law which
    2   rejected a debtor’s attempt to claim a homestead exemption in
    3   real property held in the name of an LLC.   Debtor moved for
    4   reconsideration which the bankruptcy court denied.   This appeal
    5   followed.   For the reasons explained below, we REVERSE.
    6                               I.   FACTS
    7   A.   Prepetition Transfers Of Debtor’s Property
    8        The facts are undisputed.    Debtor and his spouse
    9   (Ms. Caldwell) purchased real property located on Eagle Hills
    10   Drive, Las Vegas, Nevada (Property) in March 1994.   The record
    11   shows that Debtor and Ms. Caldwell have continuously resided in
    12   the home on the Property since they purchased it and have made
    13   all mortgage payments, paid taxes, maintained insurance and
    14   assumed all other responsibilities of a real property owner.
    15   Since 1994 they have transferred title to the Property seven
    16   times to and from the Trust and the LCC.    These transfers were
    17   for no consideration and, per Debtor’s declaration, for estate
    18   planning purposes.
    19        In June 1998, they transferred the Property to the Trust
    20   with Debtor and Ms. Caldwell as the sole trustees via a recorded
    21   quitclaim deed.   Over five years later, in October 2003, the
    22   Property was transferred from the Trust back to Debtor and
    23   Ms. Caldwell as joint tenants via a recorded quitclaim deed.    In
    24   February 2006, Debtor and Ms. Caldwell transferred the Property
    25   back to the Trust via a recorded quitclaim deed.
    26        On October 14, 2008, Debtor formed the LLC, a Delaware
    27   limited liability company, by filing Articles of Organization
    28   with the Delaware Secretary of State.    Debtor and Ms. Caldwell
    -3-
    1   are the sole members of the LLC.      In November 2010, the Property
    2   was transferred from the Trust to the LLC via a recorded
    3   quitclaim deed.   On April 26, 2011, a declaration of homestead
    4   was recorded against the Property by the LLC.
    5        On October 10, 2011, the Property was transferred from the
    6   LLC to the Trust.    On the same date, a declaration of homestead
    7   was recorded against the Property, this time by the Trust, which
    8   stated the following:    “This declaration constitutes an
    9   abandonment of the former declaration recorded on April 26,
    10   2011.”
    11   B.   Bankruptcy Events
    12        On September 5, 2014, 1061 days after the LLC transferred
    13   title to the Property to the Trust, Debtor filed his chapter 7
    14   petition (Petition Date).   Ms. Nelson was appointed as the
    15   chapter 7 trustee.
    16        In his schedules, Debtor listed the Property value as
    17   $1,065,000 and total liens of $516,802, leaving a net equity of
    18   $548,198 in the Property.   Debtor claimed the full $550,000
    19   homestead exemption in the Property under Nevada Revised
    20   Statutes (NRS) 21.090(1)(l) and 115.050.
    21        Trustee objected to Debtor’s homestead exemption in the
    22   amount of $550,000, seeking to limit it to $155,675 under
    23   § 522(p)(1) due to the transfer from the LLC to the Trust within
    24   the 1215-day period prior to the Petition Date.
    25        In response, Debtor argued that the limitation under
    26   § 522(p)(1) did not apply because he always retained a
    27   beneficial and equitable interest in the Property despite the
    28   numerous transfers of legal title to and from the Trust and the
    -4-
    1   LLC.   Debtor reasoned that such interests were retained since he
    2   and his spouse were the sole trustees of the Trust and the sole
    3   members of the LLC and thus Debtor was “merely transferring
    4   title from himself to an entity owned by him.”   He also asserted
    5   that although the LLC held the title to the Property, his
    6   continuing payment of taxes, the mortgage, and insurance
    7   indicated that he and Ms. Caldwell continued to use and consider
    8   the Property as their own.   Debtor further maintained that
    9   neither he nor Ms. Caldwell needed to be vested with legal title
    10   to validly declare a homestead under NRS 115.020.   For these
    11   reasons, Debtor argued anew that he received no “interest” for
    12   purposes of § 522(p)(1) or the homestead exemption under Nevada
    13   law when the LLC transferred legal title to the Trust.   Finally,
    14   Debtor pointed out that the purpose behind § 522(p)(1) would not
    15   be served under the facts of this case as he never attempted to
    16   shield assets or liquidate nonexempt assets to artificially
    17   increase the equity in his home.
    18          In a supporting declaration, Debtor testified that the
    19   transfers of title to the Property were “made for estate
    20   planning purposes only, pursuant to advice from [his] financial
    21   planners and/or counsel.”    He also declared:
    22          My wife and I have always been the sole trustee and
    members of the Family Trust and Family Investment LLC;
    23          and the Family Trust and Family Investment LLC held
    legal title to the Eagle Hills Home at various times,
    24          in trust for my wife and I.
    25          After a hearing on January 27, 2015, the bankruptcy court
    26   placed its findings of fact and conclusions of law on the record
    27   on February 17, 2015.   The court ruled that Debtor acquired an
    28   interest in the Property on October 10, 2011, the date the LLC
    -5-
    1   transferred the Property to the Trust, and because this date was
    2   1061 days prior to the petition date, § 522(p)(1) limited
    3   Debtor’s homestead exemption to $155,675.   In reaching this
    4   conclusion, the court noted that under either Nevada or Delaware
    5   limited liability law, Debtor did not hold an interest in the
    6   Property while it was titled in the name of the LLC because the
    7   LLC was a separate legal entity and a member’s interest in a
    8   limited liability company is personal property.   The court
    9   further noted that a requirement for exempting equity in a
    10   homestead under Nevada law was an ownership interest rather than
    11   a general or possessory interest in the Property, citing Savage
    12   v. Pierson, 
    157 P.3d 697
     (Nev. 2007).   Finally, relying on out-
    13   of-jurisdiction case law which interpreted exemption statutes in
    14   other states, the bankruptcy court rejected Debtor’s contention
    15   that he could claim a homestead exemption in real property held
    16   in the name of an LLC.   Based on all these authorities, the
    17   court found that Debtor acquired his interest in the Property
    18   within the meaning of § 522(p)(1)(A) on October 10, 2011, when
    19   title to the Property was transferred by the LLC to the Trust.
    20        On February 24, 2015, the bankruptcy court entered the
    21   order sustaining Trustee’s objection (Exemption Order).     On the
    22   same day, Debtor filed a motion for reconsideration.   There,
    23   Debtor maintained that the LLC held the Property “in trust” for
    24   Debtor and Ms. Caldwell.   As a result of this trust-like
    25   arrangement, Debtor asserted that he retained a beneficial or
    26   equitable interest in the Property and, therefore, he could
    27   claim a homestead exemption in the Property under Nevada
    28   homestead law even though the LLC was the record titleholder of
    -6-
    1   the Property.
    2        On March 3, 2015, Debtor filed a notice of appeal (NOA)
    3   from the Exemption Order.    Subsequently, the bankruptcy court
    4   rejected Debtor’s “in trust” theory on the ground that there was
    5   no evidence of an express trust between Debtor and the LLC and
    6   thus even if such a trust existed, it was a “secret” trust.    The
    7   court denied his motion for reconsideration by an order entered
    8   on March 13, 2015 (Reconsideration Order).   Debtor then filed an
    9   amended NOA indicating that he was appealing both the Exemption
    10   Order and the Reconsideration Order.2
    11                          II.    JURISDICTION
    12        The bankruptcy court had jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C.
    13   §§ 1334 and 157(b)(2)(B).    We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C.
    14   § 158.
    15                                III.    ISSUE
    16        Whether the bankruptcy court erred by finding that
    17
    18        2
    Trustee subsequently entered into a compromise with U.S.
    19   Bank, N.A. which held a stipulated judgment lien on the
    Property. The parties disputed whether such lien was perfected.
    20   Pursuant to the compromise, the estate would receive 67% of the
    net proceeds from the sale of the Property and the bank would
    21   receive 33% of the proceeds. Trustee then listed the Property
    for sale. Debtor moved for a stay pending appeal which the
    22
    bankruptcy court denied. On June 10, 2015, the Panel denied
    23   Debtor’s request for an emergency stay. On September 4, 2015,
    the Panel granted Debtor’s renewed motion for an emergency stay
    24   to prevent the sale of the Property pending resolution of this
    appeal, as the sale would not provide enough proceeds to satisfy
    25   Debtor’s homestead exemption claimed in the amount of $550,000
    26   should he prevail. In other words, if Debtor prevails, the
    estate will net no money after the homestead is paid, which
    27   would make such sale of no benefit to the estate. The stay was
    conditioned upon Debtor’s continued payments on the secured debt
    28   and maintenance of insurance on the Property.
    -7-
    1   § 522(p)(1) applied under these circumstances.
    2                         IV.   STANDARDS OF REVIEW
    3        A bankruptcy court’s interpretation of the Bankruptcy Code
    4   is a matter of law subject to de novo review.     Predovich v.
    5   Staffer (In re Staffer), 
    262 B.R. 80
    , 82 (9th Cir. BAP 2001),
    6   aff’d, 
    306 F.3d 967
     (9th Cir. 2002).
    7        We review a bankruptcy court’s interpretation of state law
    8   de novo in order to determine if it correctly applied the
    9   substantive law.   Kipperman v. Proulx (In re Burns), 
    291 B.R. 10
       846, 849 (9th Cir. BAP 2003) (citing Astaire v. Best Film &
    11   Video Corp., 
    116 F.3d 1297
    , 1300 (9th Cir. 1997) (issues of
    12   state law are reviewed de novo).
    13        Findings of fact are reviewed under a clearly erroneous
    14   standard.   A court’s factual determination is clearly erroneous
    15   if it is illogical, implausible, or without support in the
    16   record.   United States v. Hinkson, 
    585 F.3d 1247
    , 1261-62 & n.21
    17   (9th Cir. 2009) (en banc).
    18                               V.   DISCUSSION
    19        Section 522(p)(1) imposes a limitation on the homestead
    20   exemption a debtor can claim regardless of the applicable state
    21   law exemptions.    In re Kane, 
    336 B.R. 477
    , 481 (Bankr. D. Nev.
    22   2006); In re Virissimo, 
    332 B.R. 201
    , 207 (Bankr. D. Nev. 2005).
    23        Section 522(p)(1) provides in relevant part:
    24        Except as provided in paragraph (2) of this subsection
    and sections 544 and 548, as a result of electing
    25        under subsection (b)(3)(A) to exempt property under
    State or local law, a debtor may not exempt any amount
    26        of interest that was acquired by the debtor during the
    1215-day period preceding the date of the filing of
    27        the petition that exceeds in the aggregate $155,675 in
    value in--
    28
    -8-
    1        (A) real or personal property that the debtor or a
    dependent of the debtor uses as a residence; . . . .
    2
    3   To determine whether the statutory cap applies, we consider
    4   whether Debtor “acquired an interest” within 1215 days of filing
    5   for relief.
    6        In this regard, Trustee submits that Debtor had no interest
    7   in the Property prior to the October 10, 2011 transfer of legal
    8   title from the LLC to the Trust because (1) the LLC held legal
    9   title to the Property; (2) the LLC was the legal owner of the
    10   Property under Delaware and Nevada limited liability laws; and
    11   (3) Debtor could not have claimed a homestead exemption while
    12   the Property was held in the name of the LLC.   According to
    13   Trustee, it follows that the upon the transfer of legal title
    14   from the LLC to the Trust,3 Debtor “acquired an interest” in the
    15   Property within the meaning of § 522(p)(1).
    16        In response, Debtor asserts that he retained a beneficial
    17   and equitable interest in the Property since 1994 despite the
    18   transfers of title to and from the LLC and the Trust over the
    19   years.   To demonstrate his retained interest, he points out that
    20   he and Ms. Caldwell have continuously resided in the dwelling on
    21   the Property since 1994 and have paid the mortgage, taxes, and
    22   insurance.    Debtor further asserts that he could claim a
    23   homestead exemption under Nevada law while title was held by the
    24   LLC because of his use and continued possession of the Property
    25   as a “householder,” and there is no requirement that he hold
    26
    3
    27          Trustee concedes that when title is in a revocable trust
    where a debtor is the settlor and beneficiary, the debtor may
    28   claim a homestead.
    -9-
    1   legal title to the Property for it to be a homestead under
    2   Nevada law.    According to Debtor, since he retained an interest
    3   in the Property and it was always his homestead, the Property
    4   was always an exempt asset under Nevada law despite the transfer
    5   of title to the LLC.    Based on these premises, Debtor contends
    6   that he did not “acquire an interest” when the LLC transferred
    7   title to the Property to the Trust within 1061 days before the
    8   Petition Date, and thus the limitation of § 522(p)(1) is not
    9   applicable.    In short, Debtor’s position, for purposes of the
    10   homestead exemption, is that he retained a sufficient interest
    11   in the Property during all the multiple conveyances of legal
    12   title to and from the LLC.    For the reasons discussed below,
    13   Debtor has the better argument.
    14           We look to Nevada law to determine whether Debtor held an
    15   interest in the Property which would support a claim of
    16   homestead while the LLC was the sole titleholder.    Butner v.
    17   United States, 
    440 U.S. 48
    , 54–55 (1979) (determination of
    18   property rights is controlled by state law).    NRS 21.090(1)(l)
    19   exempts homestead property from execution “as provided for by
    20   law.”    Under NRS 115.005(2)(a), the “Homestead” is broadly
    21   defined as “the property consisting of . . . [a] quantity of
    22   land, together with the dwelling house thereon and its
    23   appurtenances; . . . .”    These statutes do not designate how
    24   title to the property is to be held, and they do not limit the
    25   estate that must be owned, i.e., fee simple or some lesser
    26   interest.    Nevada courts have held that the exemption should be
    27   liberally and beneficially construed in favor of the debtor and
    28   protecting the family home.    See In re Norris, 
    203 B.R. 463
    , 465
    -10-
    1   (Bankr. D. Nev. 1996) (citing Jackman v. Nance, 
    857 P.2d 7
     (Nev.
    2   1993)).
    3        In Nevada, to secure the benefits of the statutory
    4   provisions exempting the homestead from forced sale, it is
    5   necessary that a declaration of homestead be filed for record.4
    6   NRS 115.020; I.H. Kent Co. v. Busscher, 
    277 F.2d 901
    , 905 (9th
    7   Cir. 1960).   “The declaration must state:   (a) When made by a
    8   married person or persons, that they or either of them are
    9   married, or if not married, that he or she is a householder.”
    10   NRS 115.020(2)(a).   The Nevada Supreme Court has “defined the
    11   term householder as ‘one who keeps house,’ further stating that
    12   a householder ‘must be in actual possession of the house’ and
    13   must be ‘the occupier of a house.’”   Van Meter v. Nilsson (In re
    14   Nilsson), 
    315 P.3d 966
    , 969 (Nev. 2013) (quoting Goldfield
    15   Mohawk Mining Co. v. Frances–Mohawk Mining & Leasing Co., 
    102 P. 16
       963, 965 (Nev. 1909)).   In Goldfield, the court stated that
    17   “householder” referred “to the civil status of a person, not his
    18   property, and a man may be a householder without owning real
    19   estate.”   102 P. at 966.
    20        Debtor maintains that he was the “householder” of the
    21   Property since he and his family continuously occupied the
    22   Property as their primary residence since 1994.   We note that
    23   the requirement of “householder” as used in the declaration
    24   statute is directed at persons “not married.”   NRS
    25   115.020(2)(a).   As we understand the record, Debtor was married.
    26
    27
    4
    The declaration may be filed at any time prior to an
    28   execution sale.
    -11-
    1   Nonetheless, the “householder” definition is useful for our
    2   analysis.   Based on the undisputed evidence that Debtor
    3   continually resided on the Property since 1994 and was at all
    4   times in actual possession of the house, we have no doubt that
    5   Debtor meets the definition of a “householder” under Nevada law.
    6   Debtor met the possession and occupancy requirements for a
    7   “householder” and did not need to hold fee simple title to the
    8   Property to achieve that status under Nevada law.   Accordingly,
    9   Debtor has established that the Property was protected as a
    10   homestead even when the LLC was the titleholder.
    11         Although Debtor was a “householder,” Nevada law requires
    12   that a homestead claimant have some type of interest in the
    13   property to claim the “equity” exemption up to $550,000 under
    14   NRS 115.010.   While Nevada law does not distinguish between the
    15   types of interests in property that qualify for the homestead
    16   exemption,5 the Nevada Supreme Court has held that a claimant
    17   must have more than a general interest in or right to possession
    18   of the property claimed to be exempt.   Savage, 
    157 P.3d at
    701-
    19   02.   There, the court considered whether a security deposit in a
    20   residential lease was exempt from execution under NRS
    21   21.090(1)(l) or Nevada’s homestead law.6   The court first noted
    22   that the homestead exemption extended only to the “equity” in
    23   the property held by the claimant.    “Equity” is defined in NRS
    24
    5
    Likewise, it is not necessary for us to do so in the
    25   context of this appeal.
    26         6
    The court also considered the exempt status of the
    27   security deposit under NRS 21.090(1)(m) - Nevada’s dwelling
    exemption. In that analysis, the court came to the same
    28   conclusion that it was not exempt.
    -12-
    1   115.005(1) as “the amount that is determined by subtracting from
    2   the fair market value of the property the value of any liens
    3   excepted from the homestead exemption pursuant to subsection 3
    4   of NRS 115.010 or NRS 115.090.”   In interpreting the statutory
    5   language, the court concluded that “the statutory definition of
    6   ‘equity’ [under NRS 115.005(1)] contemplates more than a general
    7   ‘interest’ in the property or the right to possession, it
    8   contemplates ownership.”   
    157 P.3d at 701
    .   Since the security
    9   deposit did not qualify as “equity,” the court decided that the
    10   debtor could not claim it exempt under Nevada’s homestead law.
    11        Although Savage is factually distinguishable from this
    12   case, the Nevada court’s interpretation of “equity” in the
    13   context of the homestead exemption provides some guidance for
    14   our review in this appeal.   In contrast to Trustee’s position,
    15   the holding in Savage does not say that a debtor has to have an
    16   ownership interest in the property equivalent to fee simple
    17   ownership in order to claim a homestead exemption.    Although the
    18   court found that the definition of “equity” contemplated
    19   “ownership,” it did not limit the estate that must be owned
    20   beyond saying that the interest had to be more than a “general
    21   interest” or right to possession.     Read in the context of the
    22   definition of a “householder” and the case law we cited above,
    23   the “ownership” required by Savage cannot be limited to only fee
    24   simple title.
    25        The record shows that the interest Debtor retained in the
    26   Property after the transfer of legal title to the LLC was more
    27   than a general interest or the mere right to exclusive
    28   possession.   According to the record, he retained all the
    -13-
    1   indicia of ownership by his possession and use of the Property
    2   along with the payment of the mortgage, taxes, and insurance.
    3   Plainly, the “equity” in the Property which is subject to the
    4   exemption was the result of payments made by Debtor over the
    5   years.   Trustee did not present any evidence to controvert these
    6   facts.   We thus conclude that Debtor was not divested of all
    7   interests in the Property by the transfer of legal title to the
    8   Property to the LLC.   Accordingly, Debtor’s homestead rights in
    9   the Property before and after the transfers of title remained
    10   unchanged.
    11        Finally, it does not matter that a declaration of homestead
    12   with respect to the Property was filed on October 10, 2011,
    13   within 1061 days of the filing of the petition.   The filing of a
    14   homestead declaration does not trigger the statutory cap under
    15   § 522(p)(1).   Greene v. Savage (In re Greene), 
    583 F.3d 614
    , 620
    16   (9th Cir. 2009).   Like the debtor in Greene, Debtor acquired his
    17   exemptible interest in the Property in 1994, well outside the
    18   statutory period contained in § 522(p)(1), and, as discussed
    19   above, that exemptible interest never changed.
    20        In enacting § 522(p)(1), we do not believe that Congress
    21   envisioned limiting a debtor’s homestead exemption where as here
    22   (1) debtor purchased the property in 1994, well before the start
    23   of the 1215-day period, (2) continuously possessed and occupied
    24   the Property as his homestead, and (3) accumulated the “equity”
    25   by making regular mortgage payments throughout his occupancy.
    26        In sum, we conclude that the transfer of title from the LLC
    27   to the Trust did not constitute an “interest” that was
    28   “acquired” by Debtor to limit his homestead claim, within the
    -14-
    1   meaning of § 522(p)(1).   As discussed above, Nevada law
    2   protected Debtor’s homestead rights in the Property throughout
    3   the various transfers of title.    Therefore, the statutory cap
    4   does not apply.7
    5                             VI.   CONCLUSION
    6        We REVERSE the bankruptcy court’s order limiting Debtor’s
    7   homestead exemption pursuant to § 522(p)(1).
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    7
    27          Because we reverse on other grounds, it is not necessary
    for us to address Debtor’s other argument that the LLC held the
    28   Property “in trust.”
    -15-