Posted by NCBRC - August 17th, 2022
The debtor could not exempt property of the estate which he owned as a tenant in the entirety with his non-filing spouse with respect to a debt he owed to the IRS where section 522(b)(3)(B) exempts such property only to the extent it would be exempt under nonbankruptcy law and the Tax Code permits the IRS to collect against the property. Morgan v. Bruton (In re Morgan), No. 21-891 (N.D. N.C. Aug. 12, 2022). Read More
Posted by NCBRC - August 21st, 2019
Where state exemption law does not specifically apply to a contingent future interest in a tenancy by the entirety, the interest is not exempt under bankruptcy law and the debtor cannot avoid a judgment lien under section 522(f). In re Jaffe, No. 18-2726 (7th Cir. Aug. 5, 2019).
Including a mini-tutorial on the history of women’s property rights, from coverture (married woman’s property interests absorbed by her husband), to tenancy by the entirety (co-ownership and transfer to surviving spouse), to the Married Women’s Property Acts (providing means for women to own property and emerge from financial and social dependency), the circuit court explored the interaction of bankruptcy exemptions and Illinois property law.
The debtor entered bankruptcy owning his residence with his wife as a tenant in the entirety. When his wife died post-bankruptcy, he sought to exempt his entire fee simple interest in the property and avoid his creditor’s judgment lien under section 522(f) as impairing his exemption. The district court found that he could do so, and the creditor appealed.
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