In re: Edward E. Elliott ( 2016 )


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  •                                                                         FILED
    JAN 28 2016
    1                                                                SUSAN M. SPRAUL, CLERK
    U.S. BKCY. APP. PANEL
    2                                                                  OF THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    3                  UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY APPELLATE PANEL
    4                            OF THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    5   In re:                        )       BAP No.     CC-15-1127-DKiG
    )
    6   EDWARD E. ELLIOTT,            )       Bk. No.     SV 11-23855-VK
    )
    7                  Debtor.        )
    ______________________________)
    8                                 )
    EDWARD E. ELLIOTT,            )
    9                                 )
    Appellant,     )
    10                                 )
    v.                            )       O P I N I O N
    11                                 )
    DIANE C. WEIL,                )
    12   Chapter 7 Trustee,            )
    )
    13                  Appellee.      )
    ______________________________)
    14
    15                        Submitted on January 21, 2016
    at Pasadena, California
    16
    Filed - January 28, 2016
    17
    Appeal from the United States Bankruptcy Court
    18                   for the Central District of California
    19            Hon. Victoria S. Kaufman, Bankruptcy Judge, Presiding
    20
    21   Appearances:     Andrew Edward Smyth argued for appellant.
    John N Tedford, IV, Danning, Gill, Diamond &
    22                    Kollitz, LLP argued for appellee.
    23   Before:    DUNN, KIRSCHER AND GAN,1 Bankruptcy Judges.
    24
    25
    26
    27
    28
    1
    Hon. Scott H. Gan, United States Bankruptcy Judge for the
    District of Arizona, sitting by designation.
    1   DUNN, Bankruptcy Judge:
    2
    3           The Debtor Edward E. Elliott (“Mr. Elliott”) appeals the
    4   bankruptcy court’s order following remand sustaining the chapter
    5   72 trustee’s (“Trustee”) objection to his homestead exemption
    6   claim.      We AFFIRM.
    7                  I.   FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    8           This is Mr. Elliott’s third appearance before this Panel.
    9   While detailed factual background information was included in our
    10   two published Opinions in Elliott v. Weil (In re Elliott), 523
    
    11 B.R. 188
     (9th Cir. BAP 2014) (“Elliott I”), and Elliott v. Weil
    12   (In re Elliott), 
    529 B.R. 747
     (9th Cir. BAP 2015) (“Elliott II”),
    13   we include some of that factual background here to provide
    14   context for the current decision.3
    15   1.   Events in the Main Case through Elliott I
    16           Mr. Elliott filed for relief in chapter 7 on December 1,
    17   2011.       In his petition and schedules, signed under penalty of
    18   perjury, he stated his address as Hiawatha Street in Granada
    19   Hills, California; he did not list any real property in which he
    20
    21           2
    Unless otherwise indicated, all chapter and section
    22   references are to the Bankruptcy Code, 
    11 U.S.C. §§ 101-1532
    .
    23           3
    The parties have provided a limited record on appeal. We
    have exercised our discretion to review additional documents
    24
    filed in the electronic records of Mr. Elliott’s main case, Case
    25   No. SV 11-23855-VK (“Main Case”), and the related adversary
    proceeding, Case No. SV 13-01118-VK (“Adversary Proceeding”).
    26   See O’Rourke v. Seaboard Sur. Co. (In re E.R. Fegert, Inc.), 887
    
    27 F.2d 955
    , 957-58 (9th Cir. 1988); Atwood v. Chase Manhattan
    Mortg. Co. (In re Atwood), 
    293 B.R. 227
    , 233 n.9 (9th Cir. BAP
    28   2003).
    2
    1   had an interest or in which creditors held secured claims; he did
    2   not claim entitlement to a homestead exemption on Schedule C; he
    3   did not disclose any ownership interest in a corporation on
    4   Schedule B; and he did not list creditors (“Judgment Creditors”)
    5   who had obtained a judgment against him in 2006 for fraud and
    6   negligent misrepresentation or any secured creditors.
    7        At his § 341(a) meeting of creditors, Mr. Elliott confirmed
    8   his address as Hiawatha Street, and he testified under oath that
    9   he had read his bankruptcy papers before he had signed them and
    10   that they were true and complete to the best of his knowledge.
    11   He also testified that he had listed everything of value that he
    12   owned and that he had listed everyone he owed money to in his
    13   schedules.   He further testified that he did not own any real
    14   property and that he had not sold, transferred or given away
    15   anything of value in the last four years.
    16        Based on the information disclosed by Mr. Elliott in his
    17   schedules and in his testimony at the § 341(a) meeting, the
    18   Trustee filed a “No Distribution” report, Mr. Elliott received
    19   his discharge, and the case was closed on March 13, 2012.   Less
    20   than two weeks later, Lee Wong Investments, Inc. (“LWI”)
    21   transferred a residential real property in Los Angeles,
    22   California (the “Buckingham Property”) to Mr. Elliott by
    23   quitclaim deed “as a gift.”   LWI is a Nevada corporation that Mr.
    24   Elliott does not dispute he organized prepetition and controls.
    25   Shortly thereafter, Mr. Elliott sent a letter to counsel for the
    26   Judgment Creditors stating that he had acquired the Buckingham
    27   Property after his bankruptcy and demanding that their judgment
    28   liens be removed.   His letter caused the Judgment Creditors to
    3
    1   investigate the history of title transactions with respect to the
    2   Buckingham Property.
    3        As detailed in Elliott I, since 2006, Mr. Elliott had
    4   maintained a continuous interest in the Buckingham Property that
    5   was disguised through a series of transfers.    On the date of his
    6   bankruptcy filing, Mr. Elliott owned the Buckingham Property
    7   through his wholly-owned corporation, LWI.   However, as noted
    8   above, Mr. Elliott did not disclose any ownership interest in
    9   either the Buckingham Property or LWI in his schedules and did
    10   not even disclose his judgment debt to the Judgment Creditors.
    11   So, the title manipulations as to the Buckingham Property
    12   remained undetected until after Mr. Elliott received his
    13   discharge and his bankruptcy case was closed.
    14        The Judgment Creditors moved to reopen Mr. Elliott’s
    15   bankruptcy case, which motion was granted, and the Trustee was
    16   reappointed to serve in the reopened case.   Mr. Elliott did not
    17   amend his schedules to disclose his interest in the Buckingham
    18   Property until nearly a year later.   In his amended schedules,
    19   Mr. Elliott included the Buckingham Property in his amended
    20   Schedule A, valued at $360,000, and stated that Bank of America
    21   held a $120,826 secured claim against it.    He also claimed a
    22   $175,000 homestead exemption in the Buckingham Property in his
    23   amended Schedule C under Cal. Code Civ. P. § 704.730(a)(3).      He
    24   neglected to list over $100,000 in outstanding real property
    25   taxes assessed against the Buckingham Property.   Based on Mr.
    26   Elliott’s valuation of the Buckingham Property, if his homestead
    27   exemption claim were allowed, there would be nothing for his
    28   bankruptcy estate.
    4
    1         The Trustee filed a timely objection to Mr. Elliott’s
    2   claimed homestead exemption in the Buckingham Property on the
    3   basis of bad faith, and the bankruptcy court sustained the
    4   objection.   Mr. Elliott appealed the denial of his exemption
    5   claim to this Panel, and while the appeal was pending, the
    6   Supreme Court issued its decision in Law v. Siegel, 571 U.S. ___,
    7   
    134 S.Ct. 1188
     (2014).
    8         Based on our conclusion that Law v. Siegel precluded
    9   bankruptcy courts from denying claimed exemptions or amendments
    10   to claimed exemptions based on a debtor’s bad faith as a matter
    11   of equity, the Panel vacated the bankruptcy court’s order denying
    12   Mr. Elliott’s homestead exemption claim as to the Buckingham
    13   Property but remanded for the bankruptcy court to determine if
    14   Mr. Elliott’s homestead exemption claim could be denied on some
    15   other basis under federal bankruptcy or California state law.
    16   See Elliott I, 523 B.R. at 193-98.
    17   2.   Events in the Adversary Proceeding through Elliott II
    18         Meanwhile, the Trustee had filed the Adversary Proceeding to
    19   revoke Mr. Elliott’s discharge and to require that the Buckingham
    20   Property be turned over to the Trustee on behalf of the
    21   bankruptcy estate under § 542(a).    The Trustee also conducted a
    22   continued § 341(a) meeting at which Mr. Elliott admitted that he
    23   lived at the Buckingham Property when he filed his bankruptcy
    24   petition, that he considered it to be his home, and that he had
    25   purchased it in 1989.
    26         After filing a motion for an order setting aside his
    27   default, Mr. Elliott filed an answer to the Adversary Proceeding
    28   complaint in pro se that did not assert any affirmative defenses.
    5
    1   After obtaining counsel, he filed an amended answer asserting as
    2   his only affirmative defense that any “mistakes on the schedules
    3   were the result of debtor’s attorney’s mistakes.”
    4         In January 2014, the Trustee filed a motion for summary
    5   judgment (“Summary Judgment Motion”) in the Adversary Proceeding
    6   seeking revocation of Mr. Elliott’s discharge under § 727(d)(1)
    7   and turnover of the Buckingham Property.   Mr. Elliott opposed the
    8   Summary Judgment Motion.    The bankruptcy court held a hearing on
    9   the Summary Judgment Motion on March 19, 2014, at which the
    10   parties appeared through counsel and argued their positions.       On
    11   April 7, 2014, the bankruptcy court granted the Summary Judgment
    12   Motion and entered a “Judgment Vesting Property in Trustee and
    13   Revocation of Discharge.”   Mr. Elliott appealed.
    14         On appeal, the Panel vacated the judgment.    It concluded
    15   that the Trustee’s discharge revocation claim was barred by the
    16   running of the limitations period in § 727(e)(1) and had to be
    17   remanded for dismissal.    The turnover portion of the judgment
    18   likewise was vacated and remanded, in light of the Panel’s prior
    19   determination in Elliott I that denial of Mr. Elliott’s homestead
    20   exemption claim on bad faith grounds was inappropriate, for the
    21   bankruptcy court to make findings as to whether the Buckingham
    22   Property was “of inconsequential value or benefit to the estate,”
    23   as required under § 542(a).   See Elliott II, 529 B.R. at 754-55.
    24   3.   Events in the Adversary Proceeding Following Remand
    25         Following remand of the Adversary Proceeding, the bankruptcy
    26   court dismissed the Trustee’s claim to revoke Mr. Elliott’s
    27   discharge and established a schedule for the parties to submit
    28   legal memoranda and evidence as to whether the estate’s interest
    6
    1   in the Buckingham Property was sufficiently consequential to
    2   warrant turnover.
    3        The Trustee submitted a brief (“Valuation Brief”) supported
    4   by the declarations of the Trustee, her counsel Aaron E. De
    5   Leest, and appraiser David S. Serber.   The Trustee had obtained
    6   appraisals of the Buckingham Property as of April 7, 2014
    7   ($580,000) and as of June 15, 2015 ($600,000).   Unpaid real
    8   property taxes and associated penalties as of June 24, 2015, for
    9   2006 through 2011 and 2013 through 2015 totaled $107,495.05.
    10        The Community Development Department of the City of Los
    11   Angeles (“CDD”) had a deed of trust recorded against the
    12   Buckingham Property on January 10, 1986, securing an indebtedness
    13   of $25,000.   Bank of America, N.A. (“B of A”) had a deed of trust
    14   recorded against the Buckingham Property on November 12, 2004,
    15   securing an indebtedness of $120,360.77 as of June 15, 2015.     The
    16   Trustee did not contest the validity or priority of the CDD and B
    17   of A trust deed liens.
    18        A deed of trust in favor of Hollywood Damage Control &
    19   Recovery (“HDCR”) to secure an indebtedness in the amount of
    20   $800,000 was recorded on October 31, 2005.   However, the Trustee
    21   had avoided and preserved the HDCR trust deed lien for the
    22   benefit of the estate.   Los Angeles County (the “County”) had
    23   recorded a personal property tax lien against the Buckingham
    24   Property in the amount of $1,449.75 on June 9, 2005.   For
    25   purposes of the Adversary Proceeding, the Trustee assumed the
    26   validity of the County’s lien.
    27        A judgment in the amount of $127,134.00 in favor of the
    28   Inglewood Family Corporation (“IFC”) had been entered on May 13,
    7
    1   2005, against Mr. Elliott and another entity and had been
    2   recorded as a judgment lien against the Buckingham Property.
    3   However, the judgment was not renewed by IFC within 10 years
    4   after it was entered.   Accordingly, under Cal. Code Civ. P.
    5   § 683.020, the judgment was no longer enforceable, and the
    6   judgment lien was extinguished.   The Judgment Creditors also had
    7   obtained judgment liens against the Buckingham Property, but by
    8   stipulation with the Trustee approved by the bankruptcy court,
    9   the Judgment Creditors had agreed that the Buckingham Property
    10   could be sold free and clear of their judgment liens, and their
    11   claims would be treated as nonpriority unsecured claims in the
    12   Main Case.   Finally, the Trustee projected 8% costs of sale
    13   (including a 6% real estate commission) with respect to the
    14   Buckingham Property.
    15        The Trustee recognized that she bore the burden of proof to
    16   establish that the estate was entitled to turnover of the
    17   Buckingham Property, but argued that Mr. Elliott had the burden
    18   to establish that the property had no consequential value or
    19   benefit for the estate.    Then, through various calculations, the
    20   Trustee ultimately presented a demonstration that if the
    21   Buckingham Property were valued at $600,000, after payment of
    22   priority liens, the net value for the estate would be $297,694.43
    23   (allowing for payment of the County’s personal property tax lien)
    24   or $299,144.18 (if the County’s personal property tax lien were
    25   treated as subordinate).   In either event, the Trustee argued
    26   that the Buckingham Property had “consequential value and benefit
    27   to the estate.”
    28        Mr. Elliott opposed (“Opposition”).    He had obtained an
    8
    1   appraisal for the Buckingham Property as of April 15, 2014
    2   valuing it at $450,000.    Deducting costs of sale and the
    3   uncontested liens of CDD, B of A and for real property taxes,
    4   totaling approximately $252,856, would leave a balance of
    5   approximately $197,144.    Ignoring the Trustee’s argument that she
    6   stepped into the shoes of the avoided HDCR trust deed lien, Mr.
    7   Elliott argued that if he prevailed on his homestead exemption
    8   claim, there would be no significant payout to unsecured
    9   creditors.    He further requested a continuance to obtain a
    10   current appraisal of the Buckingham Property.
    11           The bankruptcy court heard the issue as to whether
    12   consequential value to the estate supported turnover as claimed
    13   by the Trustee at a hearing (“Turnover Hearing”) on July 22,
    14   2015.    At the Turnover Hearing, counsel for Mr. Elliott requested
    15   time to obtain an update of his appraisal of the Buckingham
    16   Property, agreeing with counsel for the Trustee that the
    17   bankruptcy court should make its determination based on the
    18   current value of the property as at June 15, 2015.      That request
    19   was granted, but ultimately, Mr. Elliott agreed with the
    20   Trustee’s $600,000 valuation for the property.
    21           Following the Turnover Hearing, the bankruptcy court issued
    22   written findings of fact and conclusions of law (“Findings”) on
    23   August 13, 2015.    In its Findings, the bankruptcy court found
    24   that the lien for unpaid real property taxes and the trust deed
    25   liens of CDD and B of A amounted to $107,495.05, $25,000, and
    26   $120,360.77, respectively, for a total of approximately
    27   $252,855.82 as of June 15, 2015.       At the Turnover Hearing,
    28   counsel for Mr. Elliott represented that nothing was owed to HDCR
    9
    1   and that Mr. Elliott had obtained a reconveyance of HDCR’s trust
    2   deed.    For purposes of determining whether the Buckingham
    3   Property was of inconsequential value or benefit to the estate,
    4   the bankruptcy court assigned a value of $0.00 to the HDCR trust
    5   deed lien.    Based on the absence of evidence other than as
    6   reflected in the Trustee’s preliminary title report for the
    7   Buckingham Property dated June 15, 2015, the bankruptcy court
    8   valued the County’s personal property tax lien at $1,449.75.        As
    9   for IFC’s judgment lien, since it was unenforceable under
    10   California law, the bankruptcy court assigned it a value of
    11   $0.00.    Because of the Trustee’s approved stipulation with the
    12   Judgment Creditors, the bankruptcy court assigned a value of
    13   $0.00 to their judgment liens.
    14           Based on the record of evidence and arguments made by the
    15   parties, the bankruptcy court determined the net value of the
    16   Buckingham Property for the benefit of the estate, exclusive of
    17   Mr. Elliott’s homestead exemption claim, as $297,694.43,
    18   calculated as follows:
    19           Value                                         $600,000.00
    Less:
    20           Estimated costs of sale (8% of gross value)   $ 48,000.00
    Real property taxes and penalties              107,495.05
    21           CDD lien                                        25,000.00
    B of A lien                                    120,360.77
    22           HDCR lien                                            0.00
    County personal property tax lien                1,449.75
    23           IFC judgment lien                                    0.00
    Judgment Creditors judgment liens                    0.00
    24
    Total Net Value                               $297,694.43
    25
    26   Recognizing that Mr. Elliott still was pursuing a homestead
    27   exemption claim for $175,000, the bankruptcy court found that
    28   even if Mr. Elliott prevailed on his homestead exemption claim,
    10
    1   subtracting $175,000 from $297,694.43 would leave $122,694.43 of
    2   net value available to the estate.    Accordingly, with or without
    3   allowing a homestead exemption, the Buckingham Property was not
    4   of “inconsequential value or benefit to the estate.”   The
    5   bankruptcy court noted that this Panel’s decision in Elliott II
    6   had not disturbed its prior determinations that 1) the Buckingham
    7   Property was property of Mr. Elliott’s bankruptcy estate;
    8   2) title to the Buckingham Property was vested in the Trustee;
    9   and 3) the Buckingham Property could be used, sold or leased by
    10   the Trustee under § 363.    Accordingly, the bankruptcy court would
    11   enter a judgment requiring Mr. Elliott to turn over the
    12   Buckingham Property to the Trustee.
    13         One day later, on August 14, 2015, the bankruptcy court
    14   entered a judgment (“Turnover Judgment”) on the Trustee’s
    15   § 542(a) claim consistent with its Findings, determining that the
    16   Buckingham Property was property of Mr. Elliott’s bankruptcy
    17   estate, vested in the Trustee, and requiring that Mr. Elliott
    18   “immediately deliver and turn over possession of the Buckingham
    19   Property to the Trustee.”   The Turnover Judgment was not
    20   appealed.
    21   4.   Events in the Main Case following remand
    22         Following remand in the Main Case under Elliott I, the
    23   bankruptcy court established a briefing schedule for the parties
    24   to submit further legal memoranda and supporting evidence on the
    25   issues as to whether the Trustee’s objection to Mr. Elliott’s
    26   claimed homestead exemption could be sustained 1) under
    27   § 522(g)(1), or 2) based on Mr. Elliott’s failure to satisfy the
    28   California state law requirement for an “automatic Article 4”
    11
    1   homestead exemption, i.e., that Mr. Elliott have resided at the
    2   Buckingham Property continuously from the time a judgment
    3   creditor’s lien attached to the property until the court could
    4   determine that the subject dwelling was in fact a homestead.
    5        On February 13, 2015, the Trustee filed her memorandum in
    6   support of Trustee’s objection to Mr. Elliott’s claimed homestead
    7   exemption (“Trustee Memorandum”), supported by Mr. Elliott’s
    8   petition filed in the Main Case; transcripts of his testimony
    9   under oath at the original and subsequent § 341(a) meetings; a
    10   transcript of Mr. Elliott’s deposition testimony; and a copy of
    11   the declaration of Juanita Jehdian, Mr. Elliott’s fiancee.    The
    12   Trustee began her argument with respect to the application of
    13   § 522(g)(1) by quoting the relevant provisions of the statute:
    14        Notwithstanding sections 550 and 551 of this title, the
    debtor may exempt under subsection (b) of this section
    15        property that the trustee recovers under section
    510(c)(2), 542, 543, 550, 551, or 553 of this title, to
    16        the extent that the debtor could have exempted such
    property under subsection (b) of this section if such
    17        property had not been transferred, if –
    (1)(A) such transfer was not a voluntary transfer
    18             of such property by the debtor; and
    (B)the debtor did not conceal such property . . . .
    19
    20   The Trustee then posited that it was clear that Mr. Elliott
    21   concealed the Buckingham Property both from the Trustee and from
    22   the bankruptcy court, relying on a portion of the analysis from
    23   this Panel in Elliott I:
    24        The essence of Elliott’s appeal in utilizing Law v.
    Siegel to shield his misconduct from functioning as
    25        lawful grounds to deny his homestead exemption has led
    to, as Trustee bluntly but accurately asserts, Elliott
    26        practically admitting he concealed the asset and acted
    in bad faith. Indeed, Elliott does not dispute that he
    27        failed to disclose his interest in the Buckingham
    Property in his original schedules. He admits claiming
    28        Hiawatha Street as his “street address” on his petition
    12
    1        even though he knew he did not live there. Elliott
    further acknowledges that at the § 341(a) meeting he
    2        claimed his forms were true and complete, all the while
    knowing the bankruptcy court had no knowledge of the
    3        Buckingham Property he allegedly resides in and
    controlled through LWI.
    4             Accordingly, we conclude that § 522(g)(1) is
    applicable and an important limitation on Elliott’s
    5        claimed homestead exemption for the bankruptcy court to
    consider on remand.
    6
    7   Elliott I, 523 B.R. at 198.
    8        With respect to Mr. Elliott’s automatic homestead claim
    9   under California law, the Trustee admitted that “continuous
    10   residency, rather than continuous ownership, controls the Article
    11   4 analysis.”   The Trustee then surveyed the available evidence
    12   from Mr. Elliott’s petition and schedules; his § 341(a) meeting
    13   testimony; his deposition testimony; and the declaration of
    14   Juanita Jehdian.   The Trustee noted that from the outset of the
    15   Main Case, Mr. Elliott asserted that his address was on Hiawatha
    16   Street; he did not disclose any interest in the Buckingham
    17   Property or the corporation that nominally held title to the
    18   Buckingham Property; and he asserted without qualification that
    19   his bankruptcy papers were true and complete.   Only after the
    20   Main Case was reopened at the behest of the Judgment Creditors
    21   did he begin to temporize.    Following reopening, Mr. Elliott
    22   amended his schedules to include the Buckingham Property and
    23   assert a homestead exemption in it, and he testified at the
    24   second § 341(a) meeting that he lived there; he considered it his
    25   home; and he purchased it in 1989.    However, when the Trustee
    26   asked him about the Hiawatha Property, Mr. Elliott testified,
    27   “That was a uh place where my fiancé [sic] and her son and I was,
    28   would come over there quite a bit.”   At his deposition, Mr.
    13
    1   Elliott was asked and answered the following questions:
    2        Q.    “[Y]ou said you were living in and out of the Hiawatha
    3   Street; is that correct?”
    4        A.    “That’s correct.”
    5        Q.    “How long did you live there before moving back to
    6   Buckingham [Property]?”
    7        A.    “It was not a permanent address for me.”
    8        In her declaration, Ms. Jehdian stated that she had been a
    9   frequent visitor to the Buckingham Property and that she knew
    10   that Mr. Elliott resided there in December 2011.
    11        The Trustee recognized that claimed exemptions are
    12   presumptively valid, and the objecting party bears the burden of
    13   proving that an exemption is not properly claimed.    See, e.g.,
    14   Carter v. Anderson (In re Carter), 
    182 F.3d 1027
    , 1029-30 n.3
    15   (9th Cir. 1999).   However, once the Trustee produces evidence to
    16   rebut the presumption, the burden shifts to Mr. Elliott to
    17   present “unequivocal evidence to demonstrate the exemption is
    18   proper.”   
    Id.
       The Trustee’s analysis of the evidence in Mr.
    19   Elliott’s case was that the bankruptcy court was “clearly placed
    20   in a vexed position to decide which of [Mr. Elliott’s] lies are
    21   to be believed and how to determine credibility of his
    22   inconsistent statements and filings.”   In these circumstances,
    23   the Trustee argued that Mr. Elliott simply could not present
    24   unequivocal evidence to establish that his homestead exemption
    25   claim in the Buckingham Property was appropriate, and her
    26   objection to the claimed homestead exemption should be sustained.
    27        In his opposing response (“Response”), Mr. Elliott argued
    28   that § 522(g)(1) simply was not applicable because “[t]here is no
    14
    1   Court order in this case setting aside a transfer.”    He also
    2   submitted his own supporting declaration with evidence that he
    3   continuously resided at the Buckingham Property and was living
    4   there on the petition date.
    5        The bankruptcy court heard the matter at a hearing on March
    6   19, 2015 (“Exemption Objection Hearing”).   The bankruptcy court
    7   posted a tentative ruling in advance of the Exemption Objection
    8   Hearing sustaining the Trustee’s objection to Mr. Elliott’s
    9   homestead exemption claim based on the application of
    10   § 522(g)(1).   The tentative ruling was not included in Mr.
    11   Elliott’s excerpts of record, but it is included as item number
    12   94 on the Main Case docket, and we have reviewed it.    At the
    13   Exemption Objection Hearing itself, after hearing arguments from
    14   counsel, the bankruptcy court announced its ruling denying a
    15   homestead exemption to Mr. Elliott applying § 522(g)(1) based on
    16   the following analysis:
    17        [The Buckingham Property] was property of the estate
    subject to turnover. The residence was subject to
    18        turnover because [Mr. Elliott] held it in a wholly-
    owned corporation which he didn’t disclose in his
    19        schedules or at his 341(a). He concealed that that’s
    where he lived. He didn’t put it on his petition. He
    20        didn’t inform the [Trustee] during his 341(a) that’s
    where he lived. He didn’t list his interest in the
    21        corporation that held the property. He then three
    weeks after he got his discharge . . . transferred the
    22        property back to himself in his own name, and then
    wrote a letter to creditors about how their liens
    23        against the property weren’t good because it was after
    acquired and he had gotten a discharge. So, they
    24        couldn’t have liens against this property that he had
    always held in his own corporation and hadn’t disclosed
    25        as his residence.
    26        . . . .
    27        So, I mean, the point is that he – I mean, he doesn’t even
    dispute that he concealed it. He’s just saying that, well,
    28        that the turnover action isn’t sufficient to satisfy
    15
    1        522(g)(1), but, I mean, 542 satisfies, and we have a
    judgment. And I guess if it gets reversed then we’ll have
    2        to revisit it, but it’s not reversed yet, and we’re going to
    say he doesn’t get a homestead exemption based on 11 U.S.C.
    3        Section 522(g)(1).
    4   March 19, 2015 Hr’g Tr., at 9:21-10:23.
    5        Counsel for the Trustee submitted an order (“Exemption
    6   Denial Order”) consistent with the bankruptcy court’s oral ruling
    7   sustaining the Trustee’s objection to Mr. Elliott’s homestead
    8   exemption claim that the bankruptcy court signed and entered on
    9   April 8, 2015.    Mr. Elliott filed a timely appeal.
    10                          II.    JURISDICTION
    11        The bankruptcy court had jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C.
    12   §§ 1334 and 157(b)(2)(B).      An order denying a debtor’s exemption
    13   claim is a final order.       Preblich v. Battley, 
    181 F.3d 1048
    , 1056
    14   (9th Cir. 1999).    We have jurisdiction under 
    28 U.S.C. § 158
    .
    15                          III.    ISSUES
    16        1.     Did the bankruptcy court err in denying Mr. Elliott’s
    17   claimed homestead exemption under § 522(g)(1), by its terms or as
    18   a result of the Supreme Court’s decision in Law v. Siegel?
    19        2.     Did the bankruptcy court err in failing to rule on Mr.
    20   Elliott’s entitlement to a homestead exemption claim under
    21   California law?
    22                          IV.    STANDARDS OF REVIEW
    23        The denial of a debtor’s exemption claim presents questions
    24   of law that we review de novo.      Kelley v. Locke (In re Kelley),
    25   
    300 B.R. 11
    , 16 (9th Cir. BAP 2003).         De novo review means that
    26   we review a matter anew, as if no decision previously had been
    27   rendered.    Dawson v. Marshall, 
    561 F.3d 930
    , 933 (9th Cir. 2009).
    28        We review the bankruptcy court’s fact findings underlying
    16
    1   its legal conclusions for clear error.    Bronitsky v. Bea (In re
    2   Bea), 
    533 B.R. 283
    , 285 (9th Cir. BAP 2015).     We must affirm the
    3   bankruptcy court’s fact findings unless we determine that those
    4   findings are “(1) ‘illogical,’ (2) ‘implausible,’ or (3) without
    5   ‘support in inferences that may be drawn from the facts in the
    6   record.’” United States v. Hinkson, 
    585 F.3d 1247
    , 1262 (9th Cir.
    7   2009) (en banc), quoting Anderson v. City of Bessemer City, N.C.,
    8   
    470 U.S. 564
    , 577 (1985).
    9           We may affirm the decision of the bankruptcy court on any
    10   basis supported by the record.     ASARCO, LLC v. Union Pac. R.R.
    11   Co., 
    765 F.3d 999
    , 1004 (9th Cir. 2014); Shanks v. Dressel, 540
    
    12 F.3d 1082
    , 1086 (9th Cir. 2008).
    13                          V.   DISCUSSION
    14           As in Elliott I, Mr. Elliott brandishes the Supreme Court’s
    15   decision in Law v. Siegel as a talisman to ward off the Trustee’s
    16   objection to his homestead claim in the Buckingham Property.    So
    17   we commence our analysis by considering exactly what the Supreme
    18   Court decided and did in Law v. Siegel and what it did not do.
    19   A.   Law v. Siegel and its implications in this appeal
    20           Stephen Law filed a chapter 7 case and claimed a homestead
    21   exemption in his residence property (“Residence”).    The trustee
    22   did not object, and Mr. Law’s homestead exemption was allowed.
    23   Mr. Law also listed two liens against the Residence: a first deed
    24   of trust for $146,156.52 in favor of Washington Mutual Bank and a
    25   second deed of trust for $156,929.04 in favor of “Lin’s Mortgage
    26   & Associates,” securing an alleged debt to a person named “Lili
    27   Lin.”    After lengthy and expensive litigation over a period of
    28   years, the bankruptcy court found that “no person named Lili Lin
    17
    1   ever made a loan to [Mr. Law] in exchange for the disputed deed
    2   of trust,” and “the loan was a fiction, meant to preserve [Mr.
    3   Law’s] equity in his residence beyond what he was entitled to
    4   exempt” by perpetrating “a fraud on his creditors and the court.”
    5   Law v. Siegel, 
    134 S.Ct. 1188
    , 1193 (2014).      Consistent with
    6   applicable Ninth Circuit law at the time, see Latman v. Burdette,
    7   
    366 F.3d 774
     (2004), the bankruptcy court “surcharged” Mr. Law’s
    8   homestead exemption to pay a portion of the trustee’s attorney’s
    9   fees.
    10           Mr. Law appealed, and this Panel and the Ninth Circuit
    11   affirmed the bankruptcy court, but the Supreme Court granted
    12   certiorari and reversed.    It concluded that although bankruptcy
    13   courts have authority under § 105(a) to “issue any order,
    14   process, or judgment that is necessary or appropriate to carry
    15   out the provisions” of the Bankruptcy Code, § 105(a) “does not
    16   allow the bankruptcy court to override explicit mandates of other
    17   sections of the Bankruptcy Code.”      Id. at 1194, quoting 2 Collier
    18   on Bankruptcy ¶ 105.01[2], p. 105-06 (16th ed. 2013).
    19   Specifically, in Mr. Law’s case, the Supreme Court held that
    20   surcharging Mr. Law’s homestead exemption under § 105(a) or under
    21   the bankruptcy court’s inherent sanctioning authority was invalid
    22   in light of § 522(k)’s specific directive that property that a
    23   debtor properly exempts generally “is not liable for payment of
    24   any administrative expense.”    Law v. Siegel, 
    134 S.Ct. at 1195
    .
    25           The Supreme Court did not stop there in Law v. Siegel.
    26   Underlining its larger point that “whatever equitable powers
    27   remain in the bankruptcy courts must and can only be exercised
    28   within the confines of” the Bankruptcy Code, 
    id. at 1194
    , quoting
    18
    1   Norwest Bank Worthington v. Ahlers, 
    485 U.S. 197
    , 206 (1988), the
    2   Supreme Court went on to state that Ҥ 522 does not give courts
    3   discretion to grant or withhold exemptions based on whatever
    4   considerations they deem appropriate.”   Law v. Siegel, 
    134 S.Ct. 5
       at 1196.    It concluded that the Bankruptcy Code does not confer
    6   on bankruptcy courts “a general, equitable power . . . to deny
    7   exemptions based on a debtor’s bad-faith conduct.”   
    Id.
       We
    8   listened, and that was the basis for our decision to vacate and
    9   remand in Elliott I, founded on our conclusion that Law v. Siegel
    10   “abrogated our authority to deny exemptions or amendments to
    11   exemptions based on a debtor’s bad faith.”   Elliott I, 
    523 B.R. 12
       at 193.
    13        However, the Supreme Court also recognized that Ҥ 522 sets
    14   forth a number of carefully calibrated exceptions and limitations
    15   [to debtors’ exemptions], some of which relate to the debtor’s
    16   misconduct.”   Id.   Law v. Siegel does not evince any overweening
    17   affection or solicitude for dishonest debtors in bankruptcy by
    18   the Supreme Court.   In fact, the Supreme Court has repeatedly
    19   emphasized that “[t]he principal purpose of the Bankruptcy Code
    20   is to grant a ‘fresh start’ to the ‘honest but unfortunate
    21   debtor.’”   Marrama v. Citizens Bank of Mass., 
    549 U.S. 365
    , 367
    22   (2007), quoting Grogan v. Garner, 
    498 U.S. 279
    , 286 (1991), and
    23   Local Loan Co. v. Hunt, 
    292 U.S. 234
    , 244 (1934) (emphasis
    24   added).    But, the Supreme Court in Law v. Siegel sent a clear
    25   message: “The Code’s meticulous – not to say mind-numbingly
    26   detailed – enumeration of exemptions and exceptions to those
    27   exemptions confirms that courts are not authorized to create
    28   additional exceptions.”   Law v. Siegel, 
    134 S.Ct. at 1196
    , citing
    19
    1   Hillman v. Maretta, 
    133 S.Ct. 1943
    , 1953 (2013); and TRW Inc. v.
    2   Andrews, 
    534 U.S. 19
    , 28-29 (2001).
    3         Among those detailed exceptions is § 522(g)(1).   We noted in
    4   Elliott I that § 522(g)(1) might apply to support denial of Mr.
    5   Elliott’s homestead exemption claim in the Buckingham Property,
    6   see Elliott I, 523 B.R. at 197-98, and the bankruptcy court in
    7   fact based its decision to deny Mr. Elliott’s homestead exemption
    8   claim following remand on § 522(g)(1).   Accordingly, we proceed
    9   to review application of § 522(g)(1) in this case.
    10   B.   Section 522(g)(1) – its terms and application
    11         Section 522(g)(1), in relevant part, provides:
    12         [T]he debtor may exempt under subsection (b) of this
    section property that the trustee recovers under
    13         section 510(c)(2), 542, 543, 550, 551, or 553 of this
    title, to the extent that the debtor could have
    14         exempted such property under subsection (b) of this
    section if such property had not been transferred, if –
    15              (1)(A) such transfer was not a voluntary transfer
    of such property by the debtor; and
    16              (B) the debtor did not conceal such property . . . .
    17         We begin our analysis by focusing, as we must, on the
    18   operative terms of the statute.    “The starting point in
    19   discerning congressional intent is the existing statutory text.”
    20   Lamie v. United States Trustee, 
    540 U.S. 526
    , 534 (2004), citing
    21   Hughes Aircraft Co. v. Jacobson, 
    525 U.S. 432
    , 438 (1999).     “It
    22   is well established that ‘when the statute’s language is plain,
    23   the sole function of the courts – at least where the disposition
    24   required by the text is not absurd – is to enforce it according
    25   to its terms.’”   Lamie v. United States Trustee, 
    540 U.S. at 534
    ,
    26   quoting Hartford Underwriters Ins. Co. v. Union Planters Bank,
    27   N.A., 
    530 U.S. 1
    , 6 (2000).
    28         As stated in Collier’s, § 522(g) “allows the debtor to
    20
    1   exempt property that the trustee recovers under [various sections
    2   of the Bankruptcy Code, § 542 being relevant in this case] as
    3   long as the transfer was involuntary and the property was not
    4   concealed by the debtor.”   4 Collier on Bankruptcy ¶ 522.12[1]
    5   (Alan N. Resnick & Henry J. Sommer, eds., 16th ed.) (hereinafter
    6   cited as Collier on Bankruptcy) (emphasis in original).    There is
    7   no real dispute here about concealment.   “The debtor might be
    8   found to have concealed the property if the debtor takes
    9   affirmative action to mislead creditors about whether particular
    10   property existed.”   4 Collier on Bankruptcy ¶ 522.12[2][b].
    11        When Mr. Elliott filed his bankruptcy petition and
    12   schedules, he stated under penalty of perjury that he had no
    13   interest in the Buckingham Property or the corporation that held
    14   title to the Buckingham Property.    He further did not schedule
    15   any secured or judgment lien creditors whose lien claims might
    16   have alerted the Trustee to Mr. Elliott’s connection to the
    17   Buckingham Property.
    18        While Mr. Elliott quibbles in his opening brief that he
    19   included the Hiawatha Street address as his “street address”
    20   rather than his “residence” in his petition and never stated at
    21   the initial § 341(a) meeting that he resided at Hiawatha Street,
    22   he concedes that he failed to disclose in his schedules:   1) his
    23   ownership interest in the Buckingham Property; 2) his ownership
    24   interests in two corporations that he controlled and owned; and
    25   3) the claim of at least one judgment creditor.   He further
    26   concedes that he stated under oath at his § 341(a) meeting that
    27   he did not own any real property and that he did not sell or give
    28   away anything of value in the previous four years.   Appellant’s
    21
    1   Opening Brief, at 9-10.   At the Exemption Objection Hearing, Mr.
    2   Elliott’s counsel conceded that Mr. Elliott “did not disclose the
    3   company.   He did not disclose the property.”   We conclude that
    4   the bankruptcy court did not err in finding that Mr. Elliott
    5   concealed his interest in the Buckingham Property for purposes of
    6   § 522(g)(1)(B).
    7        The bankruptcy court found that the Trustee’s judgment in
    8   his § 542(a) turnover action constituted a recovery under § 542
    9   for purposes of § 522(g).4   This Panel previously considered the
    10   meaning of the term “recover” in the context of § 522(g) in Hitt
    11   v. Glass (In re Glass), 
    164 B.R. 759
    , 763 (9th Cir. BAP 1994),
    12   aff’d, 
    60 F.3d 565
     (9th Cir. 1995):
    13        As to everyday usage, Webster’s defines “recover’ as
    “to get back” or “to regain.” Webster’s New World
    14        Dictionary 1122 (3d ed. 1988). In the legal context,
    “recover” is defined as above, but is also defined as
    15        “to be successful in a suit, to collect or obtain
    amount, to have judgment, to obtain favorable or final
    16        judgment, to obtain in any legal manner in contrast to
    voluntary payment.” Black’s Law Dictionary 1147 (5th
    17        ed. 1979).
    18        In the Exemption Denial Order, the bankruptcy court made the
    19   following specific findings:
    20        On June 4, 2013, Trustee filed a turnover action
    against [Debtor] for the . . . [Buckingham] Property
    21        under § 542. Trustee has succeeded in that action.
    Hence, this constitutes a “recovery” as contemplated by
    22        § 522(g), which then brings the . . . Property within
    the scope of the § 522(g)(1) limitation on [Mr.
    23        Elliott’s] right to claim an exemption in property he
    voluntarily transferred and concealed.
    24
    25
    4
    The judgment that existed at the time the bankruptcy
    26   court made that finding subsequently was vacated in Elliott II.
    27   However, following remand and further proceedings in the
    Adversary Proceeding, the corresponding Turnover Judgment was
    28   entered, was not appealed and is final.
    22
    1
    Exemption Denial Order, at 5.
    2
    Mr. Elliott does not contest that the Trustee made a
    3
    “recovery” under § 542 in the Adversary Proceeding.   He could not
    4
    do so credibly.   Mr. Elliott opposed the Trustee’s claim for
    5
    turnover of the Buckingham Property at every stage of the
    6
    Adversary Proceeding up to the entry of the Turnover Judgment.
    7
    His apparent defense was based on the argument that unpaid real
    8
    property taxes coupled with consensual liens, with or without his
    9
    claimed homestead exemption, ate up the entire value of the
    10
    Buckingham Property, leaving nothing for the bankruptcy estate.
    11
    The bankruptcy court ultimately rejected that argument, finding
    12
    total value of the Buckingham Property net of tax liens and
    13
    allowable consensual liens to be $297,694.43.   Even if Mr.
    14
    Elliott prevailed on his $175,000 homestead exemption claim,
    15
    $122,694.43 of “consequential” net value would remain for the
    16
    estate.   As noted above, the Turnover Judgment based on these
    17
    findings was not appealed.5
    18
    19
    5
    20           Interestingly, as late as the Exemption Objection
    Hearing, Mr. Elliott’s counsel asserted that the $800,000 HDCR
    21   trust deed lien, which “the [Trustee] says it’s phony,” was “way
    22   too old to get rid of, therefore there [is] no equity.” Yet, in
    the Opposition to the Trustee’s Valuation Brief, Mr. Elliott did
    23   not even mention the HDCR trust deed lien. And, in its Findings,
    the bankruptcy court noted that counsel for Mr. Elliott
    24
    represented at the Turnover Hearing that nothing was actually
    25   owed to HDCR, and Mr. Elliott had obtained a reconveyance of
    HDCR’s trust deed. On this record, one might reasonably conclude
    26   that HDCR was Mr. Elliott’s “Lili Lin.” Fortunately, we do not
    27   have to consider this matter further in the disposition of this
    appeal.
    28
    23
    1        Mr. Elliott does argue that § 522(g)(1) is inapplicable to
    2   deny his homestead exemption claim because the Trustee did not
    3   recover property that was “transferred” for the benefit of the
    4   estate in his § 542 action, and “the reference to Section 542 [in
    5   § 522(g)(1)] describes one of the mechanisms for recovering a
    6   transfer.”   We disagree with Mr. Elliott’s argument for the
    7   following reasons.
    8        First, in § 522(g) itself, there is no explicit link between
    9   the language   “property that the trustee recovers under section
    10   . . . 542” and “to the extent that the debtor could have exempted
    11   such property . . . if such property had not been transferred.”
    12   The statute by its terms does not require that the recovery be of
    13   or from a transfer.
    14        Section 542(a), pursuant to which the Trustee obtained the
    15   Turnover Judgment, provides in relevant part:
    16        [A]n entity . . . in possession, custody, or control,
    during the case, of property that the trustee may use,
    17        sell, or lease under section 363 of this title, or that
    the debtor may exempt under section 522 of this title
    18        shall deliver to the trustee, and account for, such
    property or the value of such property, unless such
    19        property is of inconsequential value or benefit to the
    estate.
    20
    21   “Possession, custody or control” is not a defined term in the
    22   Bankruptcy Code, but the statute requires that the subject
    23   property must have been in the possession, custody or control of
    24   a third party “during the case.”     5 Collier on Bankruptcy
    25   ¶ 542.02[1].   “‘During the case’ has been held to include the
    26   pendency of the overall bankruptcy case and not just the
    27   adversary proceeding seeking turnover.”    Id.   See Beaman v.
    28   Vandeventer Black, LLP (In re Shearin), 
    224 F.3d 353
    , 356 (4th
    24
    1   Cir. 2000), cert. denied, 
    531 U.S. 1149
     (2001); and Boyer v.
    2   Carlton, Fields, Ward, Emmanuel, Smith & Cutler, P.A. (In re USA
    3   Diversified Prods., Inc.), 
    100 F.3d 53
    , 55-56 (7th Cir. 1996).
    4   There is no dispute that on the petition date, LWI rather than
    5   Mr. Elliott held title to the Buckingham Property.
    6        In the Exemption Denial Order, the bankruptcy court made the
    7   following findings:
    8        Debtor [Mr. Elliott] voluntarily transferred title to
    the [Buckingham] Property to a corporation owned by the
    9        son of Debtor’s business partner. Later, Debtor again
    transferred the Property to a corporation that was
    10        wholly owned by Debtor. In his bankruptcy petition and
    schedules and during his § 341(a) meeting of creditors,
    11        Debtor concealed these transfers and his interest in
    the Property. After he received his discharge, Debtor
    12        transferred the Property back into his name.
    13   Exemption Denial Order, at 5.   Mr. Elliott does not dispute those
    14   findings.   So, on the petition date, the transfer to LWI was
    15   still in effect.   Based on the schedules Mr. Elliott filed, he
    16   could not claim an exemption in the Buckingham Property because
    17   he affirmed under penalty of perjury that he did not have an
    18   exemptible interest in the property.   “If the exempt property is
    19   transferred, the debtor has in essence waived the
    20   exemption . . . .”    Fox v. Smoker (In re Noblit), 
    72 F.3d 757
    ,
    21   758 (9th Cir. 1995).   And as Mr. Elliott admits, exemptions are
    22   determined as of the petition date.    See § 522(b)(3)(A);
    23   4 Collier on Bankruptcy ¶ 522.05[1]; Wolfe v. Jacobson (In re
    24   Jacobson), 
    676 F.3d 1193
    , 1199 (9th Cir. 2012), citing White v.
    25   Stump, 
    266 U.S. 310
    , 313 (1924); In re Dore, 
    124 B.R. 94
    , 98
    26   (Bankr. S.D. Cal. 1991).
    27        This Panel and the Ninth Circuit faced a similar situation
    28   in Glass v. Hitt (In re Glass), 
    164 B.R. 759
     (9th Cir. BAP 1994),
    25
    1   aff’d, 
    60 F.3d 565
     (9th Cir. 1995).   In Glass, prior to filing
    2   his chapter 7 bankruptcy petition, the debtor (“Mr. Glass”) had
    3   transferred title to his residence to his son for “love and
    4   affection.”   Mr. Glass did not list the residence as an asset in
    5   his schedules and did not disclose the transfer in his statement
    6   of financial affairs.   He further did not claim a homestead
    7   exemption in the residence.   Glass, 
    60 F.3d at 567
    .    At the
    8   § 341(a) meeting of creditors, a creditor told the trustee about
    9   the prepetition transfer of the residence property.     Id.
    10   Thereafter, Mr. Glass amended his schedules to list a fee
    11   interest in the residence and claimed a homestead exemption.     Id.
    12        The trustee objected to Mr. Glass’ homestead exemption
    13   claim, contending that since Mr. Glass did not claim any interest
    14   in the residence in his original schedules and had voluntarily
    15   conveyed the residence to his son for no consideration, § 522(g)
    16   “precluded [Mr. Glass] from relying on the homestead exemption
    17   authorized by § 522(b).”   Glass, 
    164 B.R. at 760-61
    .   In
    18   addition, in the objection, the trustee stated his intent to seek
    19   avoidance of the conveyance as a fraudulent transfer under § 548.
    20   Id. at 761.   Before such an adversary proceeding was filed (and
    21   even before a demand for turnover had been made), Mr. Glass’ son
    22   reconveyed the residence to Mr. Glass, again in consideration of
    23   “love and affection.”
    24        The bankruptcy court overruled the trustee’s objection
    25   “holding [Mr.] Glass was entitled to claim the homestead
    26   exemption under section 522(b) because the trustee did not direct
    27   any action against the transferee son to achieve reconveyance of
    28   the residence to the estate, and thus, the trustee did not
    26
    1   ‘recover’ any property.”   Glass, 
    60 F.3d at 567
    .   This Panel
    2   reversed, and the Ninth Circuit affirmed the reversal, quoting
    3   with approval this Panel’s holding that, “The purpose of § 522(g)
    4   is to prevent a debtor from claiming an exemption in recovered
    5   property which was transferred in a manner giving rise to the
    6   trustee’s avoiding powers, where the transfer was voluntary or
    7   where the transfer or property interest was concealed.”   Id. at
    8   568-69.   See also Greenwood v. Clark (In re Greenwood), 
    593 F. 9
       App’x 680 (Feb. 13, 2015).
    10          In this case, the Trustee recovered the Buckingham Property
    11   under § 542(a) through the Turnover Judgment in the Adversary
    12   Proceeding.   Mr. Elliott could have exempted the Buckingham
    13   Property in his original schedules on the petition date if he had
    14   disclosed it as real property in which he claimed an interest,
    15   despite its transfer to LWI, but he did not disclose an
    16   exemptible interest in the property.   Mr. Elliott’s transfers of
    17   the Buckingham Property were voluntary, and he concealed his
    18   interest in the Buckingham Property in his petition and schedules
    19   and in his testimony at the § 341(a) meeting. On this record, we
    20   conclude that the bankruptcy court did not err in sustaining the
    21   Trustee’s objection to Mr. Elliott’s claimed homestead exemption
    22   in the Buckingham Property under § 522(g)(1).
    23   C.   No need to rule on California exemption law
    24          Mr. Elliott argues that the bankruptcy court erred in
    25   failing to analyze whether Mr. Elliott’s misconduct warranted
    26   denial of his homestead exemption claim under California state
    27   law.   Since the bankruptcy court appropriately denied Mr.
    28   Elliott’s claimed homestead exemption under an applicable
    27
    1   Bankruptcy Code provision, § 522(g)(1), it fully resolved the
    2   Trustee’s objection and was not required to proceed further to
    3   analyze Mr. Elliott’s homestead exemption claim under state law.
    4                              CONCLUSION
    5        Based on the foregoing analysis and conclusions, we AFFIRM.
    6
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Document Info

Docket Number: CC-15-1127-DKiG

Filed Date: 1/29/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/3/2017

Authorities (25)

Kelley v. Locke (In Re Kelley) , 300 B.R. 11 ( 2003 )

Hitt v. Glass (In Re Glass) , 164 B.R. 759 ( 1994 )

richard-k-latman-bettina-l-latman-v-virginia-burdette-trustee-and , 366 F.3d 774 ( 2004 )

In Re: Norman W. Shearin, Jr. Ann Shearin, Debtors. Stephen ... , 224 F.3d 353 ( 2000 )

Atwood v. Chase Manhattan Mortgage Co. (In Re Atwood) , 293 B.R. 227 ( 2003 )

In the Matter of USA Diversified Products, Inc., Debtor. R. ... , 100 F.3d 53 ( 1996 )

In Re Dore , 124 B.R. 94 ( 1991 )

In Re John L. Glass, Debtor. John L. Glass v. Michael Hitt, ... , 60 F.3d 565 ( 1995 )

Evalyn PREBLICH, Appellant, v. Kenneth BATTLEY, Appellee , 181 F.3d 1048 ( 1999 )

In Re: Nell Carter, Debtor. Nell Carter v. Peter C. ... , 182 F.3d 1027 ( 1999 )

Wolfe v. Jacobson (In Re Jacobson) , 676 F.3d 1193 ( 2012 )

White v. Stump , 45 S. Ct. 103 ( 1924 )

Dawson v. Marshall , 561 F.3d 930 ( 2009 )

In Re Audrey E. Noblit, Debtor. James Fox, Successor ... , 72 F.3d 757 ( 1995 )

Local Loan Co. v. Hunt , 54 S. Ct. 695 ( 1934 )

Anderson v. City of Bessemer City , 105 S. Ct. 1504 ( 1985 )

Norwest Bank Worthington v. Ahlers , 108 S. Ct. 963 ( 1988 )

Grogan v. Garner , 111 S. Ct. 654 ( 1991 )

Hughes Aircraft Co. v. Jacobson , 119 S. Ct. 755 ( 1999 )

Hartford Underwriters Insurance v. Union Planters Bank, N. ... , 120 S. Ct. 1942 ( 2000 )

View All Authorities »