FILED
NOV 2 2022
SUSAN M. SPRAUL, CLERK
ORDERED PUBLISHED U.S. BKCY. APP. PANEL
OF THE NINTH CIRCUIT
UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY APPELLATE PANEL
OF THE NINTH CIRCUIT
In re: BAP No. EW-22-1016-FLB
MONTE L. MASINGALE (Deceased) and
ROSANA D. MASINGALE, Bk. No. 15-03276-FPC11
Debtors.
ROSANA D. MASINGALE,
Appellant,
v. OPINION
JOHN D. MUNDING, Chapter 7 Trustee;
STATE OF WASHINGTON; GREGORY
M. GARVIN, Acting U.S. Trustee,
Appellees.
Appeal from the United States Bankruptcy Court
for the Eastern District of Washington
Frederick P. Corbit, Bankruptcy Judge, Presiding
APPEARANCES:
Darren D. Digiacinto of Winston & Cashatt argued on behalf of appellant;
Thomas Buford of Bush Kornfeld, LLP argued on behalf of appellee John
D. Munding, Chapter 7 Trustee; Dina L. Yunker argued on behalf of
appellee State of Washington.
Before: FARIS, LAFFERTY, and BRAND, Bankruptcy Judges.
FARIS, Bankruptcy Judge:
INTRODUCTION
Monte L. Masingale and Rosana D. Masingale filed a chapter 111
bankruptcy petition and claimed a “100% of FMV [fair market value]”
exemption in their homestead. No one objected. Years later, the bankruptcy
court converted the case to chapter 7. Mrs. Masingale 2 and the chapter 7
trustee disputed the amount of the homestead exemption to which
Mrs. Masingale was entitled: the chapter 7 trustee argued that she was
bound by the statutory limit under § 522(d)(1), but Mrs. Masingale
contended that she was entitled to the entire fair market value of the
property, because no one had objected to the claimed homestead
exemption. The bankruptcy court agreed with the chapter 7 trustee and
approved his request to sell the property, limiting the homestead
exemption to $45,950.
Mrs. Masingale appeals, arguing that the bankruptcy court erred in
determining the amount of the homestead exemption. We agree with
Mrs. Masingale. We REVERSE the portions of the order on appeal that
determine the amount of the homestead exemption and REMAND. We
publish to explain the effect of a “100% of FMV” exemption claim and to
reiterate that parties must timely object to any improper exemption claim,
1
Unless specified otherwise, all chapter and section references are to the
Bankruptcy Code,
11 U.S.C. §§ 101-1532, and all “Rule” references are to the Federal
Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure.
2
Mr. Masingale passed away in July 2016 during the pendency of the bankruptcy
case. Mrs. Masingale is the only appellant in this appeal.
2
no matter how frivolous.
FACTS
A. The chapter 11 bankruptcy case
In 2015, the Masingales filed a chapter 11 bankruptcy petition. In
their Schedule A, they listed their residential real property in Greenacres,
Washington. They reported that the property was worth $165,430 and was
encumbered by a $130,724 mortgage lien. In their schedule of exempt
property (Schedule C), they claimed a homestead exemption pursuant to
§ 522(d)(1) for “100% of FMV” as follows:
The Masingales’ meeting of creditors concluded on November 25,
2015. Creditors thereafter had thirty days to object to the claimed
exemptions; no one objected to any exemption.
Mr. Masingale passed away in July 2016. Mrs. Masingale continued
to live in the home and prosecute the bankruptcy case.
On August 23, 2017, the court confirmed Mrs. Masingale’s chapter 11
plan. The plan provided that Mrs. Masingale would retain the home and
pay in full the claims secured by the property. The plan discussed the
claimed exemptions in a muddled fashion; it appeared to claim the entire
fair market value of the home as exempt but acknowledged that the
3
property would not be exempt until all creditors were paid in full.
B. Conversion to chapter 7
Mrs. Masingale was unable to complete the plan. The U.S. Trustee
moved to dismiss or convert the case for failure to file required reports. On
November 19, 2018, over a year after plan confirmation, the bankruptcy
court converted the case to one under chapter 7. John D. Munding became
chapter 7 trustee (“Trustee”).
In September 2021, Mrs. Masingale filed a motion to sell her home for
$400,500. She requested that the bankruptcy court confirm that the net
proceeds of the sale would be fully exempt.
The Trustee objected to the motion to sell. Among other things, he
argued that the proceeds were property of the bankruptcy estate, because
the homestead exemption was fixed on the petition date. He also pointed
out that the residence was property of the bankruptcy estate, and only the
chapter 7 trustee has the authority to sell the property.
Thereafter, Mrs. Masingale withdrew her motion to sell.
C. The motion to compel abandonment of the homestead
Instead, Mrs. Masingale filed a motion to compel the Trustee to
abandon her home (“Motion to Abandon”). She claimed that “100% of
FMV” of the home was exempt because no one had objected to the
Masingales’ claimed homestead exemption.
Mrs. Masingale explained that, under § 522(l), property that the
debtor claims as exempt is exempt unless a party in interest objects. She
4
said that she and her husband had complied with the applicable rules to
schedule their real property and claim the homestead exemption. No party
in interest objected to their claimed exemptions, and Rule 1019(2)(B)(i) bars
a new period for objections after conversion to a chapter 7 case if the case
was converted more than one year after plan confirmation.
Mrs. Masingale relied on Taylor v. Freeland & Kronz,
503 U.S. 638
(1992), for the proposition that even a blatantly improper exemption claim
survives if no one objects. She also pointed to Schwab v. Reilly,
560 U.S. 770
(2010), as support for her position that a claimed exemption for “100% of
FMV” was valid. In that case, the U.S. Supreme Court seemingly approved
of the term “100% of FMV” to indicate when a debtor attempts “to exempt
the full market value of the asset or the asset itself.”
Id. at 792.
The Trustee objected to the Motion to Abandon. He argued that the
homestead exemption was fixed on the petition date at $45,950 under
§ 522(d)(1); any postpetition appreciation inured to the benefit of the
bankruptcy estate; and the property was of significant value to the estate.
The State of Washington Attorney General’s Civil Rights Unit (the
“State”)3 also objected to the Motion to Abandon and joined in the
Trustee’s objection. It argued that the cited language from Schwab was dicta
or a “suggestion.” Alternatively, the State contended that the schedules
were ambiguous and must be construed against the debtors. Finally, it
The State held two claims against the Masingales: one for unpaid sales taxes
3
owed by their businesses and the other for sexual harassment of female employees.
5
argued that the U.S. Supreme Court’s Taylor decision was inapposite
because, unlike in that case, creditors were prevented from objecting to the
Masingales’ exemptions post-conversion under Rule 1019(2)(B)(i).
D. The motion to sell
Shortly thereafter, the Trustee filed a motion to sell Mrs. Masingale’s
home (“Motion to Sell”). He again argued that, under § 522(d), the
maximum allowed homestead exemption due to Mrs. Masingale was
$45,950. The State supported the Motion to Sell.
Mrs. Masingale objected to the Trustee’s Motion to Sell. She argued
that “[t]he real property is Debtor’s Home and is fully exempt property”
and incorporated her earlier arguments and filings.
E. The bankruptcy court’s order denying the Motion to Abandon and
granting the Motion to Sell
After holding a hearing, 4 the bankruptcy court denied the Motion to
Abandon and granted the Motion to Sell. It held that the issue key to both
motions was the value of the homestead exemption: if it was unlimited, as
Mrs. Masingale claimed, the court could order the Trustee to abandon the
estate’s interest in the property and disallow a sale; but if it was limited to
$45,950, the Trustee could sell the property and recover equity for the
benefit of the bankruptcy estate.
4 Mrs. Masingale did not provide us with a copy of the hearing transcript. We
may presume that there is nothing in the missing transcript that would help the parties’
positions on appeal. U.S. Dep’t of Educ. v. Carrion (In re Carrion),
601 B.R. 523, 525 n.3
(9th Cir. BAP 2019).
6
The bankruptcy court first held that the absence of an objection to the
homestead exemption claim does not result in the entire property being
removed from the bankruptcy estate. It relied on Gebhart v. Gaughan (In re
Gebhart),
621 F.3d 1206 (9th Cir. 2010), for the proposition that, even when
no party objected to the homestead exemption claim and a homestead
increased in value, the debtor’s exemption removed from the estate only a
fixed interest in the property equal to the value of the exemption claimed
but did not remove the entire asset from the estate.
Second, the bankruptcy court held that, when the Masingales filed
their petition in 2015, their claim of “100% of FMV” was limited to $45,950
under § 522(d). It rejected a trend among debtors to claim “100% of FMV”
pursuant to dicta in Schwab, noting that many of those attempts were
unsuccessful.
Third, the bankruptcy court held that the increase in the home’s
equity between 2015 and 2022 belongs to the bankruptcy estate because
§ 541(a) includes the “appreciation in value of a debtor’s home.” It
authorized the Trustee to pay Mrs. Masingale the maximum allowed
homestead exemption of $45,950.
Mrs. Masingale timely appealed.
F. Sale of Mrs. Masingale’s home
The Trustee reported that he sold Mrs. Masingale’s home for
$422,000. The net proceeds of the sale (after payment of the senior lien and
7
costs of sale) totaled $222,783.34.5 The Trustee represents that “[s]ale
proceeds were disbursed in accordance with the [order on appeal].”
On Mrs. Masingale’s motion, the bankruptcy court issued an order
directing the Trustee to hold the proceeds of the sale pending appeal and
further court order. The record does not reveal exactly how much money
was disbursed or how much of the sale proceeds remains with the estate.
JURISDICTION
The bankruptcy court had jurisdiction under
28 U.S.C. §§ 1334 and
157(b)(2)(B) and (N). Subject to our discussion of mootness below, we have
jurisdiction under
28 U.S.C. § 158.
ISSUE
Whether the bankruptcy court erred in limiting the Masingales’
homestead exemption to $45,950.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review de novo the bankruptcy court’s interpretation of the
Bankruptcy Code and Rules. Temecula v. LPM Corp. (In re LPM Corp.),
300
F.3d 1134, 1136 (9th Cir. 2002). “The determination of a homestead
exemption based on undisputed facts is a legal conclusion interpreting
statutory construction which is reviewed de novo.” Klein v. Chappell (In re
Chappell),
373 B.R. 73, 76 (9th Cir. BAP 2007), aff’d sub nom. In re Gebhart,
621
F.3d 1206 (9th Cir. 2010).
5
The Trustee filed a motion to supplement the record with two documents,
including the notice of sale and attached settlement statement. We GRANT the motion.
8
“De novo review requires that we consider a matter anew, as if no
decision had been made previously.” Francis v. Wallace (In re Francis),
505
B.R. 914, 917 (9th Cir. BAP 2014).
DISCUSSION
A. This appeal is not moot.
The Trustee argues that we should dismiss this appeal because it is
both statutorily and equitably moot. We disagree on both counts.
First, the Trustee argues that the appeal is statutorily moot under
§ 363(m) because Mrs. Masingale did not seek a stay pending appeal and
the Trustee sold the property to a third party. He contends that the sale has
been consummated and “the proceeds disbursed[.]”
“We cannot exercise jurisdiction over a moot appeal.” Ellis v. Yu (In re
Ellis),
523 B.R. 673, 677 (9th Cir. BAP 2014). Section § 363(m) provides that
reversal or modification on appeal of an authorization under
[§ 363(b) or (c)] of a sale or lease of property does not affect the
validity of a sale or lease under such authorization to an entity
that purchased or leased such property in good faith . . . unless
such authorization and such sale or lease were stayed pending
appeal.
See also Paulman v. Gateway Venture Partners III, LP (In re Filtercorp, Inc.),
163
F.3d 570, 576 (9th Cir. 1998) (When a “sale of assets is made to a good faith
purchaser, it may not be modified or set aside unless the sale was stayed
pending appeal.”). In other words, § 363(m) protects the interests of good-
faith purchasers who buy property pursuant to a sale under § 363(b) when
9
a party in interest has failed to stay the sale pending appeal.
Mrs. Masingale is not seeking to undo the sale; rather, she only
challenges the amount of homestead exemption and the distribution of the
sale proceeds. Because Mrs. Masingale does not challenge “the validity of
the sale,” § 363(m) is inapplicable.
Second, the Trustee argues that this appeal is equitably moot, because
it would be inequitable to the third-party purchasers to undo the sale.
Furthermore, Washington law does not allow the reversal of a sale
transaction or recovery of money paid to third parties. The Trustee’s
argument again misstates Mrs. Masingale’s position on appeal; she does
not seek to undo the sale.
Under the equitable mootness doctrine, we may “dismiss appeals of
bankruptcy matters when there has been a ‘comprehensive change of
circumstances . . . so as to render it inequitable for this court to consider the
merits of the appeal.’” Rev Op Grp. v. ML Manager LLC (In re Mortgs. Ltd.),
771 F.3d 1211, 1214 (9th Cir. 2014) (quoting Motor Vehicle Cas. Co. v. Thorpe
Insulation Co. (In re Thorpe Insulation Co.),
677 F.3d 869, 880 (9th Cir. 2012)).
“An appeal is equitably moot if the case presents ‘transactions that are so
complex or difficult to unwind’ that ‘debtors, creditors, and third parties
are entitled to rely on [the] final bankruptcy court order.’” Id. at 1215
(quoting In re Thorpe Insulation Co.,
677 F.3d at 880). To determine whether
an appeal is equitably moot, the court must consider (among other factors)
“whether the bankruptcy court can fashion effective and equitable relief
10
without completely knocking the props out from under the plan and
thereby creating an uncontrollable situation for the bankruptcy court.” In re
Thorpe Insulation Co.,
677 F.3d at 881.
Granting the relief that Mrs. Masingale requests would not create the
type of “uncontrollable situation” that the equitable mootness doctrine
addresses. As noted above, Mrs. Masingale is not seeking to undo the sale
or recover money paid to her mortgage lender. Additionally, the estate
received net proceeds of approximately $222,000 from the sale of
Mrs. Masingale’s home, and despite the Trustee’s representation that he
distributed an unspecified amount of the proceeds, there appears to be
remaining funds that the court directed the Trustee to hold pending this
appeal. Even if the Trustee had fully distributed the sale proceeds, he has
not shown that it would be impossible or inequitable to claw back those
payments from administrative and unsecured creditors. Thus, the Trustee
has failed to demonstrate that equitable mootness requires the dismissal of
this appeal.
B. The bankruptcy court erred in holding that the homestead
exemption was limited to the statutory dollar limit.
Mrs. Masingale argues that the bankruptcy court erred in limiting the
homestead exemption to $45,950. She contends that no one objected to the
claim of “100% of FMV,” so the Masingales were entitled to the full amount
of the claimed exemption even if it exceeded the statutory limits. This
appeal thus presents two questions: (1) whether the absence of an objection
11
means that the Masingales’ exemption claim is valid even though it is
larger than the law allows; and (2) whether the Masingales claimed as
exempt the full fair market value of the property at the time of the sale,
rather than the value on the petition date. We answer both questions in the
affirmative.
1. The Masingales’ exemption claim was no longer contestable.
Section 522(l) and the Supreme Court’s decision in Taylor foreclose
any debate on the first question. Section 522 governs the allowance of
exemptions in bankruptcy. Section 522(l) provides that “[t]he debtor shall
file a list of property that the debtor claims as exempt under subsection (b)
of this section. . . . Unless a party in interest objects, the property claimed as
exempt on such list is exempt.”
A party in interest may object to any of the claimed exemptions
within thirty days after the conclusion of the § 341 meeting of creditors.
Rule 4003(b)(1). When a chapter 11 case is converted to one under chapter
7, parties in interest have a new thirty-day period to object to a claimed
exemption, unless “the case was converted to chapter 7 more than one year
after the entry of the first order confirming a plan . . . .” Rule 1019(2)(B)(i).
Taylor holds that § 522(l) means what it says: if no one files a timely
objection, an exemption claim is valid even if it had no “colorable basis” in
the law. In that case, the chapter 7 debtor claimed as exempt her expected
recovery in a pending lawsuit and listed the value as “unknown.”
503 U.S.
at 640. No one objected to the exemption claim.
Id. at 641.
12
Ultimately, the debtor recovered $110,000 and paid most of it to her
attorneys. The trustee demanded that the attorneys turn over the proceeds
as property of the estate. The attorneys refused, asserting that the debtor
had claimed the litigation proceeds as exempt.
Id. The bankruptcy court
and district court both sided with the trustee, but the Third Circuit Court of
Appeals reversed, holding that the debtor had claimed the proceeds from
the lawsuit as exempt, and the trustee had failed to object timely to the
claimed exemption.
Id. at 641-42.
The U.S. Supreme Court affirmed the Third Circuit. It noted that the
statute only permitted the debtor to exempt a small portion of the
proceeds. Nevertheless, the trustee’s failure to object precluded him from
later challenging the claimed exemption amount.
Id. at 642 (stating that the
trustee “apparently could have made a valid objection under § 522(l) and
Rule 4003 if he had acted promptly. We hold, however, that his failure to
do so prevents him from challenging the validity of the exemption now”).
The Court held that the trustee “cannot contest the exemption at this time
whether or not [the debtor] had a colorable statutory basis for claiming it.”
Id. at 643-44. It observed that “[d]eadlines may lead to unwelcome results,
but they prompt parties to act and they produce finality.” Id. at 644.
The Court was similarly unconvinced by the trustee’s policy
argument that the lack of a good faith requirement would create “improper
incentives” and encourage debtors to claim exemptions to which they were
not entitled in the hopes that parties in interest would fail to timely object.
13
The Court reasoned that “[d]ebtors and their attorneys face penalties under
various provisions for engaging in improper conduct in bankruptcy
proceedings. These provisions may limit bad-faith claims of exemptions by
debtors. To the extent that they do not, Congress may enact comparable
provisions to address the difficulties that [the trustee] predicts will follow
our decision.” Id. at 644-45 (citations omitted).
In the present case, neither the State nor the Trustee timely objected.
The Trustee attempts to avoid the consequences of Taylor by pointing out
that he was not appointed until after the case was converted to chapter 7,
so he had no opportunity to object during the chapter 11 phase of the case.
But, under Rule 1019(2)(B)(i), parties in interest are not afforded a new time
period to object to exemptions when cases are converted from chapter 11 to
chapter 7 more than a year after plan confirmation. We do not fault the
Trustee for failing to object before he took office; nevertheless, the rules
make clear that he cannot object now. Because no party in interest timely
objected to the homestead exemption, it is not subject to challenge.
2. The Masingales exempted their home’s entire fair market
value.
In Schwab, the U.S. Supreme Court largely answered the second
question. It began by reaffirming Taylor’s holding, stating that, “[i]f an
interested party fails to object within the time allowed, a claimed
exemption will exclude the subject property from the estate even if the
exemption’s value exceeds what the Code permits.”
560 U.S. at 775-76. But
14
the Court clarified that, when a debtor claims an exemption that is facially
within the dollar limits of § 522(d), parties in interest do not have an
obligation to object. In so ruling, the Court stated that a debtor may claim
“100% of FMV” to put parties in interest on notice that he intends to claim
the full value of the property as exempt.
In that case, the chapter 7 debtor scheduled her business equipment,
which she valued at $10,718. She claimed exemptions in the equipment for
the same dollar amount. Id. at 775. The chapter 7 trustee did not object, but
he later learned that the value of the equipment may be much higher than
the debtor’s valuation. Id. at 776. The trustee sought to sell the equipment
and pay the debtor her claimed $10,718 exemption, with the balance
inuring to the benefit of the estate. The debtor objected, arguing that the
trustee was on notice that she was exempting the full value of the
equipment, so the trustee’s failure to object to her claim of exemption
prevented him from recovering any portion of the equipment for the estate.
The bankruptcy court denied the trustee’s motion, and the district
court affirmed. The Third Circuit similarly affirmed, relying on Taylor and
holding that, by equating the $10,718 exemption with the stated value of
the equipment, the debtor made known her intent to exempt the
equipment’s full value. Id. at 777.
The Supreme Court held that the Third Circuit misinterpreted Taylor
and reversed. It could not accept the debtor’s position that her schedules
evidenced an intent to possibly claim more than the statutes allowed. It
15
stated that the trustee “had no duty to object to the property [the debtor]
claimed as exempt . . . because the stated value of each interest, and thus of
the ‘property claimed as exempt,’ was within the limits the Code allows.”
Id. at 782. In other words, because the claimed exemption was within the
statutory limits, the trustee was not required to object.
The Court distinguished Taylor, because the debtor there listed the
“value claimed exempt” as “unknown,” and the issue concerned “a
trustee’s obligation to object to the debtor’s entry of a ‘value claimed
exempt’ that was not plainly within the limits the Code allows.” Id. at 788-
89. Conversely, the debtor in Schwab claimed a particular dollar amount for
exemptions that were “facially within the limits the Code prescribes and
raise no warning flags that warranted an objection.” Id. at 789. Thus, Taylor
“establishes and applies the straightforward proposition that an interested
party must object to a claimed exemption if the amount the debtor lists as
the ‘value claimed exempt’ is not within statutory limits, a test the value
($ unknown) in Taylor failed, and the values ($8,868 and $1,850) in this case
pass.” Id. at 790.
Crucial to this appeal, the Court described what the debtor should
have done to claim the entire asset as exempt:
Where, as here, it is important to the debtor to exempt the
full market value of the asset or the asset itself, our decision
will encourage the debtor to declare the value of her claimed
exemption in a manner that makes the scope of the exemption
clear, for example, by listing the exempt value as “full fair
16
market value (FMV)” or “100% of FMV.” Such a declaration
will encourage the trustee to object promptly to the exemption
if he wishes to challenge it and preserve for the estate any value
in the asset beyond relevant statutory limits. If the trustee fails
to object, or if the trustee objects and the objection is
overruled, the debtor will be entitled to exclude the full value
of the asset. If the trustee objects and the objection is sustained,
the debtor will be required either to forfeit the portion of the
exemption that exceeds the statutory allowance, or to revise
other exemptions or arrangements with her creditors to permit
the exemption. See Fed. Rule Bkrtcy. Proc. 1009(a). Either result
will facilitate the expeditious and final disposition of assets,
and thus enable the debtor (and the debtor’s creditors) to
achieve a fresh start free of the finality and clouded-title
concerns [the debtor] describes.
Id. at 792-94 (footnotes omitted) (emphases added).
The Masingales followed the Supreme Court’s suggestion to the
letter. They wanted to claim the entire value of their home as exempt, so on
Schedule C they claimed an exemption in an amount equal to “100% of
FMV.” Under Schwab, this notation is proper to indicate an intent “to
exempt the full market value of the asset or the asset itself,” id. at 792
(emphasis added), and should the parties in interest fail to object, “the
debtor will be entitled to exclude the full value of the asset,” id. at 793
(emphasis added).
The Trustee attempts to distinguish Taylor and Schwab. He argues
that Taylor concerned an exemption claim valued at “unknown,” while the
Masingales claimed the homestead exemption pursuant to the statutory
17
limits of § 522(d)(1). Further, he argues that Schwab does not support an
unlimited homestead exemption.
Although the Masingales cited § 522(d)(1) as the statutory basis for
their homestead exemption, the “100% of FMV” notation made clear that
they were attempting to exempt the “full market value of the asset,” as
explained in Schwab. 6 There is no meaningful difference between this tactic
and the Taylor debtor’s “unknown” value, which the Court held
sufficiently indicated the debtor’s intent to exempt the entirety of the
litigation proceeds despite the dollar limits of § 522(d). As the Court stated
in Schwab, “an interested party must object to a claimed exemption if the
amount the debtor lists as the ‘value claimed exempt’ is not within
The bankruptcy court ignored this language in Schwab, stating instead that the
6
“100% of FMV” discussion was dicta and that courts have rejected subsequent attempts
by debtors to claim “100% of FMV.” We do not agree that we can so easily reject
language that the Supreme Court has approved for this very situation.
Furthermore, its citation to our unpublished decision, Messer v. Maney (In re
Messer), BAP Nos. AZ-11-1505-JuPaD, AZ-11-03007-JuPaD,
2012 WL 762828 (9th Cir.
BAP Mar. 9, 2012), misses the mark. In that case, we sustained the chapter 7 trustee’s
objection to the debtor’s exemption claim of 100% of the fair market value of her
automobile valued at $12,000 because it exceeded the Arizona state exemption of $5,000.
Id. at *1. We rejected the debtor’s attempt to rely on the language in Schwab concerning
the use of “100% of FMV,” because Arizona law expressly limited the exemptions to a
specific dollar value.
Id. at *3. But Messer differs from this case because the trustee there
timely objected to the debtor’s claim of exemption, and the bankruptcy court properly
sustained the objection. Had a party in interest timely objected to the Masingales’
homestead exemption that blatantly exceeded the statutory limits, the bankruptcy court
probably would and should have sustained that objection. But because there was no
timely objection, Taylor directs that the Masingales were entitled to the full value of
their claimed homestead exemption.
18
statutory limits . . . .”
560 U.S. at 790. Like an “unknown” value, “100% of
FMV” is not a dollar value; it can only refer to the value of the entire asset;
and it is not tied to the statutory limits. Even if there is no colorable
statutory basis for the claimed exemption, Taylor directs that we must
allow the exemption.
The State argues that it had no reason to object to the claimed
homestead exemption based on information contained in the Masingales’
other schedules. The State points out that, in their schedules of assets and
liabilities, the Masingales said that the property was worth $165,430 and
was subject to secured debt of $130,724; this left $34,706 of equity. Because
this amount is less than the statutory exemption ($45,950), the State claims
that it did not need to object pursuant to Schwab. The Trustee makes a
similar argument that, based on representations in their disclosure
statement and plan, the Masingales’ exemption claim was only $18,163.
These arguments disregard the fact that, when the Masingales
claimed the exemptions on Schedule C, they did not claim any specific
dollar amount, but rather claimed “100% of FMV.” This was not
ambiguous; Schwab, decided five years prior to the petition date, counseled
that such a statement makes “clear” to creditors that the debtor intends to
“exempt the full market value of the asset . . . .”
Id. at 792. If the State
disagreed with the exemption claim, or was not sure how much the
Masingales were claiming, the State should have objected and allowed the
bankruptcy court to resolve the matter. See Taylor,
503 U.S. at 644. The State
19
did not do so within the thirty-day objection period, so it is foreclosed from
now challenging the homestead exemption claim.
These arguments are also wrong for the same reason that the debtor’s
position in Schwab was wrong. In Schwab, the debtor argued (in effect) that,
although the schedule of exempt property claimed a fixed dollar amount,
the court should have inferred from other schedules that the debtor was
claiming the full value of the property, whatever it turned out to be. The
Supreme Court rejected this position. Trustees and creditors may not rely
on information from other schedules when deciding whether to object to an
exemption claimed in the schedule filed for that purpose. See Schwab,
560
U.S. at 784-85. After all, § 522(l) provides that the debtor must file a “list” of
exempt property and that, “[u]nless a party in interest objects, the property
claimed as exempt on such list is exempt.” (Emphasis added.)
The Trustee argues that our decision in Chappell,
373 B.R. 73, and the
Ninth Circuit’s decision in Gebhart,
621 F.3d 1206, dictate that the value of
the homestead exemption may not exceed the statutory dollar amount.
Neither of those cases controls the result in this appeal. In Chappell, the
debtors claimed a homestead exemption totaling $21,511.25, which was less
than the statutory limit of $36,900.
373 B.R. at 77-78. When their homestead
appreciated in value, the debtors argued that their exemption, at the time it
was claimed, was their entire interest in the property, such that it withdrew
the property from the bankruptcy estate. We disagreed, holding that the
debtors never indicated an intent to claim an exemption in excess of the
20
dollar amount listed in their Schedule C and, at any rate, could not exceed
the statutory limit of $36,900. We distinguished Taylor and pointed out that
“the debtors here claimed an exemption in a specified amount. The basis
for their exemption claim in their residence was valid under § 522(d)(1).”
Id. at 78.
Gebhart was a consolidated appeal including our decision in Chappell.
In both appeals, the debtors claimed dollar-figure homestead exemptions
below the statutory limits. The homes subsequently increased in value, and
the trustees sought court approval to sell the property to realize the
increased value for the benefit of the estate. The Ninth Circuit held that the
homestead exemptions in those cases “do not permit the exemption of
entire properties, but rather specific dollar amounts.”
621 F.3d at 1210. It
held that “the fact that the value of the claimed exemption plus the amount
of the encumbrances on the debtor’s residence was, in each case, equal to
the market value of the residence at the time of filing the petition did not
remove the entire asset from the estate.”
Id.
In short, Chappell and Gebhart stand for the uncontroversial
proposition that a debtor claiming a dollar-figure exemption within the
statutory limits is not entitled to recover anything more than the claimed
amount. This is exactly consistent with Schwab, and it does not address a
case in which the debtor exempts “100% of FMV.”
Finally, the Trustee argues that judicial estoppel prevents
Mrs. Masingale from deviating from her previous representation that the
21
homestead exemption was limited to $18,163. We see no such
representation; when asked to claim exemptions, the Masingales always
claimed that the entire value of the property was exempt, so there is no
basis for judicial estoppel. See In re Carrion,
601 B.R. at 529 (stating that the
elements of judicial estoppel are: “(1) whether a party’s later position is
‘clearly inconsistent’ with its original position; (2) whether the party has
successfully persuaded the court of the earlier position; and (3) whether
allowing the inconsistent position would allow the party to ‘derive an
unfair advantage or impose an unfair detriment on the opposing party’”
and finding that the debtor did not take inconsistent positions).7
3. The “snapshot rule” does not change the result.
The bankruptcy court held that the Masingales’ exemption was
limited to the value of the property at the petition date and did not include
any appreciation from the petition date until the sale, almost seven years
later. The difference is significant: according to the Masingales’ schedules,
the property was worth $165,430 on the petition date in 2015, while the
Trustee sold it for $422,000 in 2022.
Under the so-called “snapshot rule,” a debtor’s claimed exemptions
are fixed on the petition date. See Wilson v. Rigby,
909 F.3d 306, 308 (9th Cir.
2018) (“This rule determines not only what exemptions a debtor may claim,
it also fixes the value that a debtor is entitled to claim in her exemptions.”);
7
Furthermore, we note that the confusing and contradictory nature of the plan
makes it difficult to determine exactly what the Masingales proposed.
22
Klein v. Anderson (In re Anderson),
613 B.R. 279, 282 (9th Cir. BAP 2020)
(“When the homeowner files bankruptcy, her right to claim an exemption
is fixed as of the petition date; this is often referred to as the ‘snapshot
rule.’”), aff’d,
988 F.3d 1210 (9th Cir. 2021); In re Cofer,
625 B.R. 194, 199
(Bankr. D. Idaho 2021) (“[E]xemptions are determined as of the petition
date pursuant to § 522(a)(2), and § 348(a) makes clear that conversion does
not change the date of the petition.”).
Moreover, it is well settled that postpetition appreciation of estate
property inures to the benefit of the bankruptcy estate. Wilson, 909 F.3d at
309 (“[A]ll ‘[p]roceeds, product, offspring, rents, or profits’ enure to the
bankruptcy estate. . . . This includes the appreciation in value of a debtor’s
home.”).
But these decisions do not squarely address the question before us.
The snapshot rule fixes the point in time that defines the exemptions that a
debtor is entitled to take. It says nothing about what happens when a
debtor claims an exemption in postpetition appreciation to which the
debtor is not entitled and no one timely objects.
As a matter of first impression, we hold that the Masingales’ claim of
an exemption equal to “100% of FMV” includes postpetition appreciation
and becomes incontestable if there is no timely objection. The snapshot rule
is one of the limits on a debtor’s entitlement to exemptions. Taylor holds
that, if no one objects, the debtor can get the benefit of exemptions to which
the debtor is not entitled. In other words, in order to get the benefit of the
23
snapshot rule, a trustee or party in interest must object to an exemption
claim that contradicts that rule.
Gebhart is not to the contrary. Gebhart states that, “[e]ven when a
debtor claims an exemption in an amount that is equal to the full value of
the property as stated in the petition and the trustee fails to object, the asset
itself remains in the estate, at least if its value at the time of filing is in fact
higher than the exemption amount.”
621 F.3d at 1210. The Ninth Circuit
stated that “what is removed from the estate is an ‘interest’ in the property
equal to the value of the exemption claimed at filing” and that “the fact that
the value of the claimed exemption plus the amount of the encumbrances
on the debtor’s residence was, in each case, equal to the market value of the
residence at the time of filing the petition did not remove the entire asset
from the estate.”
Id. But the debtors in Gebhart claimed a fixed dollar
amount as exempt.
Id. at 1208-09. In contrast, the Masingales claimed the
entire value of the property as exempt and did not specify a dollar amount.
Taylor holds that parties may not challenge that claim at this time.
CONCLUSION
We do not condone the conduct of the Masingales and their counsel,
and we do not mean to immunize them from all consequences for making a
baseless claim of exemption. Improperly claiming exemptions, in the hope
that no one will object, is risky at best. As the Court recognized in Taylor,
503 U.S. at 644, bankruptcy courts can impose penalties against parties and
attorneys who make assertions that lack any colorable legal basis or who
24
engage in improper or bad-faith conduct. See, e.g., § 727(a)(4)(B)
(authorizing denial of discharge for presenting fraudulent claims); Rule
1008 (requiring filings to “be verified or contain an unsworn declaration”
of truthfulness under penalty of perjury); Rule 9011 (authorizing sanctions
for signing certain documents not “well grounded in fact and . . .
warranted by existing law or a good faith argument for the extension,
modification, or reversal of existing law”);
18 U.S.C. § 152 (imposing
criminal penalties for fraud in bankruptcy cases). Inherent power sanctions
may also be available. See Stanley v. Mason (In re BCB Contracting Servs.,
LLC), BAP No. AZ-21-1254-BSF,
2022 WL 1198232, at *5 (9th Cir. BAP Apr.
21, 2022) (“A court may sanction under its inherent power even when the
same conduct may also be punishable under another sanctioning statute or
rule, such as Rule 9011.” (citation omitted)), appeal filed, No. 22-60014 (9th
Cir. Jun. 6, 2022).
The bankruptcy court erred in limiting the Masingales’ homestead
exemption to the statutory limit of $45,950. We REVERSE the portion of the
bankruptcy court’s order that determined the amount of the Masingales’
homestead exemption, we AFFIRM the order in all other respects, and we
REMAND so the bankruptcy court may determine how to enforce the
exemption and what other remedies, if any, are appropriate.
25