MEMORANDUM DECISION
The matters pending before the Court are the chapter 7 trustee’s objection to the debtor’s exemptions and the adversary proceeding in which the trustee seeks the denial of the debtor’s discharge. At the final hearing the trustee represented himself and Jared Redfield appeared on behalf of the debtor. The parties stipulated to the facts and submitted both the exemption and dischargeability issues to the Court for determination. The Court took the matter under advisement. The following constitutes the Court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law pursuant to Fed. R. Bankr.P. 7052.
One of the most contentious aspects of bankruptcy law is the notion that by filing for relief debtors are getting away with something. This impression is only heightened when a debtor converts nonexempt assets into exempt property on the eve of bankruptcy in an attempt to protect them from creditors. Often innocuously described by debtors as “pre-bankruptcy planning,” this transformation of assets is frequently regarded by others as a shell game, easily manipulated by a clever operator into a vehicle for fraud. 1 In this case, the trustee takes exception to Mr. Bronk’s pre-petition efforts to shield approximately $140,000.00 from his creditors. Resolution of the dispute requires consideration of not only the boundaries of permissible bankruptcy planning but also Wisconsin exemption law. For the reasons which follow, the Court concludes that Mr. Bronk is entitled to a discharge, but not to all of the exemptions he has claimed.
Mr. Bronk filed bankruptcy on August 5, 2009. Prior to the filing, he owned an unencumbered home in Stevens Point, Wisconsin. In May of 2009, he borrowed $95,000.00 from Citizens Bank and gave the bank a mortgage on his home. He used the mortgage proceeds to fund several EdVest College Savings Plans, ostensibly for the benefit of his grandchildren. 2 The debtor also had a certificate of deposit at Citizens Bank in the amount of $42,000.00. A few weeks before the petition date, the debtor converted the CD to an annuity with CM Life Insurance Company; the annuity was then claimed as exempt on the debtor’s schedule C. Mr. Bronk admits that prior to the transfers he had incurred substantial debts relating *908 to his wife’s medical care. 3 He performed these transactions on the advice of an attorney, who told Mr. Bronk that they would accomplish his goal of defraying the educational expenses of his grandchildren while allowing him to remain in his own home. According to the trustee, these transfers effectively converted all of the debtor’s non-exempt assets to exempt ones, leaving nothing for his creditors.
The trustee has objected to the debtor’s exemptions and has also sought to deny the debtor’s discharge on the theory that the debtor’s pre-filing conduct strayed into that murky realm where overly aggressive asset protection only serves to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors, fresh starts become head starts, and pigs are safe but hogs are slaughtered. 4 The trustee also objected to the specific exemption claims, and contends that even if the debt- or did not engage in excessive (or fraudulent) bankruptcy planning, the exemptions should still be denied because the assets do not fit within the confines of the relevant statutory provisions.
Certain basic principles are applicable to these determinations. The purpose of the bankruptcy code is to provide an equitable distribution of a debtor’s assets to creditors and to relieve the “honest debtor” from the weight of oppressive indebtedness.
Village of San Jose v. McWilliams,
I. Hindering, Delaying, or Defrauding Creditors
The first issue for consideration is something of a two-for-one deal: i.e., whether the debtor’s discharge should be denied and his exemptions disallowed because he transferred property with the intent to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors. In order to succeed on an objection
*909
to discharge under 11 U.S.C. § 727(a)(2)(A), the trustee must prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the debtor’s actions occurred in the year prior to the bankruptcy filing, that the act (or acts) in question consisted of transferring, removing, destroying, or concealing the debtor’s property, and that the debtor acted with the intent to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors.
In re Smiley,
Under § 522(b) of the bankruptcy code, a debtor “can choose to exempt from property of the bankruptcy estate that property which is exempt under the applicable state or federal law.”
Sholdan v. Dietz,
As the Seventh Circuit observed in
Smiley,
“Conversions of assets from nonexempt to exempt forms within the year preceding a petition for bankruptcy are not necessarily fraudulent to creditors.”
First, many of the relevant authorities deal with an objection to discharge or an objection to exemptions, but not necessarily both. Regardless, the same basic standard is applicable to denial of either an exemption or the discharge. As noted by the Eighth Circuit:
[T]he standard applied consistently by the courts [in discharge objection cases] is the same as that used to determine whether an exemption is permissible, i.e., absent extrinsic evidence of fraud, mere conversion of non-exempt property to exempt property is not fraudulent as to creditors even if the motivation behind the conversion is to place those assets beyond the reach of creditors.
Norwest Bank Nebraska, N.A. v. Tveten,
The second point to be made concerns the factors themselves, and the court’s consideration of the amount of the claimed exemption. When considering whether to grant a discharge and allow a debtor to leave many obligations unpaid, the temptation is to place considerable weight on the amount of money a debtor hopes to shield from creditors. This sentiment manifests itself in a variety of characterizations, whether it be the slaughtered hog of
Zou-har
or merely the “smell test” mentioned by the bankruptcy court in
In re Johnson,
It would constitute a perversion of the purposes of the Bankruptcy Code to permit a debtor earning $180,000 a year to convert every one of his major nonexempt assets into sheltered property on the eve of bankruptcy with actual intent to defraud his creditors and then emerge washed clean of future obligation by carefully concocted immersion in bankruptcy waters.
First Tex. Sav. Ass’n v. Reed (In re Reed),
*911
Notably, however,
Smiley
rejected the
Zouhar
court’s conclusion that the size of the exemption claim was itself evidence of fraud.
See
Smiley
cautioned that courts should not prohibit “a debtor’s full use of exemptions within the limits of the law,” and concluded that it is irrelevant that the debtor stands to gain even “a large amount” if the claimed exemption is upheld.
*912
This approach is consistent with
Smiley’s
analysis of whether pre-bankruptcy planning imperils a debtor’s discharge, as the Seventh Circuit agreed with the line of authority which looked for “some act
extrinsic to the conversion
which hinders, delays or defrauds.”
(1) that the debtor obtained credit in order to purchase exempt property; (2) that the conversion occurred after the entry of a large judgment against the debtor; (8) that the debtor had engaged in a pattern of sharp dealing prior to bankruptcy; ... and (4) that the conversion rendered the debtor insolvent.
Id.
(citing 4
Collier on Bankruptcy
¶ 727.02[3] at 19-20 (15th ed. 1986)). Admittedly, this is a non-exclusive list, and other factors can be examined. In
Bogue,
the court considered additional factors such as the proximity of the conversion to the filing date, the source of the funds, whether the debtor attempted to mislead creditors during the conversion, the purpose of the conversion, and whether the conveyances were for less than fair consideration.
The trustee also cites the factors outlined in McWilliams as relevant to the determination of “actual intent” under § 727(a)(2), even though that case involved the transfer of property to third parties rather than the exemption planning at issue here. The McWilliams factors (often included among lists of the so-called “badges of fraud”) are the following:
(1) the lack or inadequacy of consideration; (2) the family, friendship or close associate relationship between the parties; (3) the retention of possession, benefit or use of the property in question; (4) the financial condition of the party sought to be charged both before and after the transaction in question; (5) the existence or cumulative effect of the pattern or series of transactions or course of conduct after the incurring of debt, onset of financial difficulties, or pendency or threat of suits by creditors; and (6) the general chronology of the events and transactions under inquiry.
The question is whether the trustee in this case has proffered sufficient evidence of conduct that goes beyond the simple act of converting (or transforming) non-exempt assets to exempt ones. In this regard, the trustee contends that consideration of the various factors is unnecessary because the debtor admitted his wrongful conduct and conceded that he attempted to create exempt assets on the advice of his prior bankruptcy counsel. The trustee notes that a debtor who admits to transferring property with the intent of placing it beyond the reach of his creditors has essentially admitted to conduct which violates § 727(a)(2)(A), and there is no need to rely upon circumstantial evidence or inferences in determining whether he acted with the requisite intent.
See In re Adeeb,
Adeeb, however, involved a debtor who was allegedly advised by an attorney to transfer the title of some of his real estate for no consideration to “third parties who could be trusted.” Id. at 1341. While the court noted that, in general, a debtor who relies upon the advice of his attorney lacks the intent required to deny him a discharge of his debts, “the debtor’s reliance [on the advice] must be in good faith.” Id. at 1343. Both the debtor and the attorney knew that the purpose of these transfers was to hinder or delay creditors, and the debtor was not entitled to rely upon a defense that he relied in good faith on the advice of an attorney. Id. The bankruptcy court found that the debtor transferred the real property out of his estate with the actual intent to hinder or delay a creditor. Much like the debtor in the Seventh Circuit’s McWilliams decision, the debtor in Adeeb attempted to create the illusion that he no longer owned the property. On appeal, the Ninth Circuit affirmed, finding that he “knowingly” acted to hinder or delay creditors. Id.
Put simply, the debtor in
Adeeb
had no legitimate purpose for the transfers other than to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors; he was manufacturing fictional transactions to create a smokescreen that would make it difficult for his creditors to collect upon their claims.
12
Mr. Bronk, on the other hand, was attempting to take advantage of legally available exemptions. The Seventh Circuit has indicated that in this context, “evidence that the debtor is motivated by a desire to shield assets” will not transform exemption planning into fraudulent conduct.
Smiley,
*914
On its own, the desire to protect assets in a legitimate way (i.e., through the use of properly claimed exemptions) is simply not evidence of fraudulent intent. In one recent case, the Ninth Circuit concluded that a debtor’s conversion of a nonexempt individual retirement account into a pension fund on the eve of bankruptcy did not constitute a fraudulent transfer, even though the net effect was that the debtor realized an exemption of almost $1.4 million.
See Gill v. Stern (In re Stern),
Another instructive case is
Murphey v. Crater (In re Crater),
If conversion of nonexempt into exempt assets should not itself result in denial of discharge, should it do so when it occurs shortly after the debtor has been sued or incurred a large debt, or is insolvent, or is about to file bankruptcy? If that were the rule, it would mean that prospective debtors could engage in exemption planning only up until the point where it appeared they might need to do so.... [T]his would be to add a restriction to the exemption that the legislature (and Congress) did not impose, i.e., certain assets are exempt only if purchased while solvent, while not owing substantial debts, or some significant period of time prior to levy of execution or bankruptcy.
Id. at 765.
Indeed, it is unlikely that any transformation of non-exempt assets would be regarded as fair or just by creditors, especially when it reduces their prospects *915 of repayment. However, Congress envisioned that debtors would be allowed to make “full use” of available exemptions, and it would be impossible for a debtor to do so without some level of planning or an intent to preserve assets at the expense of creditors. 14 What elevates exemption planning into an offense under § 727(a)(2) is the “extrinsic” conduct — the other things the debtor may have done. Or as another court observed:
The upshot is clear, and not particularly surprising. Facts matter. The prebankruptcy conversion of non-exempt assets to exempt assets is not per se fraudulent, but neither is it per se proper and insulated from scrutiny and possible avoidance. There is no absolute safe harbor for bankruptcy exemption planning.
Gugino v. Orlando (In re Ganier),
A review of other cases, including those cited by the trustee, also indicates that debtors normally “lose” (either their discharge or their exemption claim) only when they do more than simply engage in pre-bankruptcy planning. For example, in
In re McNamara,
In the present case, Mr. Bronk has acknowledged that he attempted to place his non-exempt assets — the equity in his home and the money in a bank account — into forms which might be claimed as exempt and protected from creditors in a bankruptcy proceeding. He did so on the advice of his attorney. The trustee has not identified any negotiations with creditors in which the debtor misrepresented his assets or his intentions in order to forestall creditors from pursuing their claims.
18
The proximity of the conversion to the filing appears to have more to do with a desire to end the insurance dispute and Mr. Bronk’s poor health than with a desperate bid to exempt assets before a creditor might seize them. While Mr. Bronk did borrow against his homestead to fund the college savings accounts, there is no evidence of the sort of tangled lending arrangements which might suggest fraudulent intent.
See Bogue,
There is no evidence of a “pattern of sharp dealing” prior to bankruptcy.
See Smiley,
The protection of the bankruptcy code and the benefit of the discharge are reserved for the “honest but unfortunate debtor.”
Grogan v. Garner,
II. Exemption of College Savings Accounts
Even though Mr. Bronk did not hinder, delay, or defraud his creditors, his exemption claims themselves must still be scrutinized because the trustee contends that they fail to meet the requirements of the statute. The Court will begin with the college savings accounts. Wis. Stat. § 815.18(3) provides that certain specified property is exempt from the claims of creditors. Among the items delineated in the statute is “[a]n interest in a college savings account under s. 14.64.” See Wis. *918 Stat. § 815.18(3)(p). Meanwhile, Wis. Stat. § 14.64(7)(a) provides that “[a] beneficiary’s right to qualified withdrawals under this section is not subject to garnishment, attachment, execution or other process of law.” The debtor argues that this provision “adds” to the exemption found in Wis. Stat. § 815.18(3)(p), rather than limits it. The trustee contends that these provisions, taken together, compel the conclusion that only a beneficiary’s right (or interest) in a college savings account is subject to exemption. The corollary of this suggestion, of course, is that Mr. Bronk may not claim an exemption and that the trustee is entitled to the funds.
The starting point for statutory construction is the language of the statute itself. Where the statute is unambiguous, the court’s inquiry is complete; it must enforce the statute in accordance with its terms.
See Connecticut Nat’l Bank v. Germain,
In order to reach a conclusion, it is helpful to consider the history of college savings accounts — or “529 plans,” as they are often called. In order to encourage families to save money to pay for college, Congress added provisions to the Internal Revenue Code which enabled states to create what are called “Qualified Tuition Programs.” See 26 U.S.C. § 529. These programs come in two flavors: the prepaid tuition plan and the education savings plan. The prepaid option allows someone to purchase tuition credits on behalf of a beneficiary and essentially “lock in” tuition at the current rate. The savings account option, on the other hand, allows contributors to make contributions to an account established for a “designated beneficiary.” 21 The deposited money may then be placed in a variety of investment options or portfolios, and all earnings are exempt from income tax while invested in the account. The earnings avoid tax entirely as long as they are withdrawn to pay “qualified higher education expenses” to an “eligible educational institution.” 22
In the tax context, contributions to a Section 529 savings plan are “treated as a completed gift to such beneficiary” and *919 not as a future interest in property, which means that funding such a plan qualifies for the federal gift tax annual exclusion. See 26 U.S.C. § 529(c). Even though the tax code regards the contributions as a completed gift, the statute provides that the account owner, not the beneficiary, has total control over the account assets, a fact which some fear undermines the entire purpose. 23 Perhaps in part because the account owner retains so much control over the deposited funds, college savings plans have proven quite popular. Wisconsin, like every other state, enacted legislation to permit the creation of 529 accounts. Wis Stat. § 14.64(l)(a) specifies that the “account owner” is the person who establishes the account. Account owners are authorized to contribute to an account, select beneficiaries, change beneficiaries, transfer the funds to another account, designate someone else to receive the funds, or even disburse the funds to themselves. See § 14.64(3). The Wisconsin College Savings Program Board (the entity statutorily charged with administering the program which handles college savings accounts) outlines the ownership of contributions and earnings as follows:
Although contributions to an account can be made by anyone, the account owner retains ownership and control of all contributions as well as all earnings credited to the account up to the date they are directed for disbursement. A designated beneficiary or contributor who is not the account owner has no control over any of the account assets.
See EdVest College Savings Plan Program Description and Participation Agreement published by the Wisconsin College Savings Program Board (dated July 16, 2010) at 8 (emphasis added). 24
As the trustee argues and the debtor acknowledges, funds deposited into a college savings fund can be withdrawn by the account owner at any time and for any reason. 25 The EdVest agreement indi *920 cates that “[a]n account owner may make withdrawals from his or her account or terminate his or her participation at any time.” Participation Agreement at 14. In fact, the debtor’s brief notes the possibility that Mr. Bronk will “require these assets to provide for his own care and the beneficiaries will not be able to collect.” Debt- or’s Trial Brief at 7. The debtor’s retention of control over the funds is undoubtedly one of the reasons the trustee challenged the debtor’s discharge under § 727(a)(2). However, this alone does not preclude the exemption claim, as debtors retain control over many of the assets subject to exemption under Wisconsin law, such as a homestead, a vehicle, or money in a “depository account.” The real question is whether Mr. Bronk’s “ownership” of the account qualifies for exemption.
Both parties argue that the statute’s plain language compels the result they propose. As is often the case, however, there is logical support for both interpretations. Each cites to a competing rule of statutory construction — the debtor to the idea that exemption laws are to be liberally construed in favor of the debtor, and the trustee to the notion that statutes should be construed in such a manner as to avoid rendering a portion meaningless. As this Court has said on other occasions, the state legislature has broad discretion in implementing its constitutional prerogative to provide exemptions to debtors.
See In re Bruski,
It is well settled that exemption laws must have a liberal construction, within the limits contemplated by the legislature, so as to secure their full benefit to the debtor, in order to advance the humane purpose of preserving to the unfortunate or improvident debtor and his family the means of obtaining a livelihood and thus prevent him from becoming a charge upon the public.
Opitz v. Brawley,
At the same time, a liberal construction of authorized exemptions does not alter the fact that in the absence of a constitutional or statutory provision which provides otherwise,
all
of the property of a debtor may be subject to the payment of his debts.
See Northwest Bank & Trust Co. v. Minor,
*921
Likewise, if a statute is “capable of being understood by reasonably well-informed persons in two or more senses,” it is ambiguous and a court may consult extrinsic sources, such as legislative history, to reach an interpretive conclusion.
County of Dane v. Labor & Indus. Review Comm’n,
Based on all of this, the Court finds it cannot agree with the debtor that allowance of the exemption is required by the “plain language” of Wis. Stat. § 815.18(3)(p). That subsection was added to the Wisconsin exemptions at the same time that the legislature enacted Wis. Stat. § 14.64(7)(a). The two are certainly “closely-related statutes” and must be construed in relation to one another in order to ascertain the legislative intent. The legislature authorized the Wisconsin college savings program in 2000 as part of 1999 Wis. Act 44 relating to “College Tuition and Expenses and College Savings Programs.” In addition to creating Wis. Stat. § 14.64 and adding Wis. Stat. § 815.18(3)(p), the act also modified and amended Wis. Stat. § 14.63, the section that relates to prepaid tuition plans. Intriguingly, one of the provisions amended was Wis. Stat. § 14.63(8), which now reads as follows:
Moneys deposited in the tuition trust fund and a beneficiary’s right to the payment of tuition, fees and the costs described in sub. (5)(a) under this section are not subject to garnishment, attachment, execution or any other process of law. [Emphasis added]
The difference between this section and Wis. Stat. § 14.64(7)(a) seems minor at first glance, but the legislature appears to have made a crucial distinction between the “money deposited” and a “beneficiary’s right” to the use of those funds. In the context of a prepaid tuition plan, both the “money deposited” and the beneficiary’s right to the money are exempt from garnishment, attachment, and the like. For college savings plans, however, the Wisconsin legislature only provided that the “beneficiary’s right to qualified withdrawals” was exempt. Given that these two provisions — as well as the subsections of Wis. Stat. § 815.18(3) which authorize exemptions of tuition units purchased “under” § 14.63 and interests in college savings accounts “under” § 14.64 — were enacted at the same time, there must have been a reason for the distinction. 26
It must be remembered that these accounts are property of Mr. Bronk’s bankruptcy estate. Under 11 U.S.C. § 541(a)(1), the filing of a bankruptcy petition creates a bankruptcy estate that includes “all legal or equitable interests of
*922
the debtor in property as of the commencement of the case.” The scope of this provision is broad and all encompassing.
See Chappel v. Proctor (In re Chappel),
In this regard, § 541(b)(6) was added by the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005. It provides that property of the estate does not include:
[Fjunds used to purchase a tuition credit or certifícate or contributed to an account in accordance with section 529(b)(1)(A) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 under a qualified State tuition program (as defined in section 529(b)(1) of such Code) not later than 365 days before the date of the filing of the petition in a case under this title, but—
(A) only if the designated beneficiary of the amounts paid or contributed to such tuition program was a child, stepchild, grandchild, or stepgrandchild of the debtor for the taxable year for which funds were paid or contributed;
(B) with respect to the aggregate amount paid or contributed to such program having the same designated bene *923 fíciary, only so much of such amount as does not exceed the total contributions permitted under section 529(b)(7) of such Code with respect to such beneficiary ...; and
(C) in the case of funds paid or contributed to such program having the same designated beneficiary not earlier than 720 days nor later than 365 days before such date, only so much of such funds as does not exceed $5,475[.]
As the court noted in
Bourguignon,
the statute provides an exclusion from property of the estate for 529 accounts on a “sliding scale.”
This brings the discussion back to the Wisconsin exemption. Did the Wisconsin legislature intend to permit a broad, unlimited exemption of college savings funds which could be claimed by the account owner as well as the beneficiary? Or did the legislature specifically intend to restrict this exemption to the beneficiary of such accounts, thus limiting the possibility of abuse by account owners? While 529 accounts are creatures of federal law, the enabling legislation — and the corresponding exemption from the claims of creditors, if such an exemption exists — is a function of state law. Notably, even though all 50 states have passed legislation authorizing college savings accounts, there is no uniformity regarding exemption of those assets under state law.
In
Addison,
for example, the debtor sought to claim the accounts as exempt under Minnesota law. The court noted that there was no Minnesota exemption for college savings accounts, other than a provision in the enabling statute which provided that “[p]lan assets are not subject to claims by creditors of the state.” The court recognized that this provision did not exempt the accounts from all creditors, which meant that the funds were found to be non-exempt property of the debtor’s bankruptcy estate.
A brief comparison of statutory language illustrates the variety of differences even among those states that do offer an exemption. For example, the Virginia provisions indicate that “money in the Plan shall be exempt from creditor process and shall not be liable to attachment, garnishment, or other process ... to pay any debt or liability of any purchaser, contributor, or beneficiary.” See Va.Code Ann. § 23-38.81(E) (West 2010). In Nevada, Section 529 plans are covered by an exemption for “[mjoney, not to exceed $500,000 in present value” in “a trust forming part of a qualified tuition program ... unless the money is deposited after the entry of a judgment against the purchaser or account owner or the money will not be used by any beneficiary to attend a college or university.” See Nev.Rev.Stat. § 21.090(r) (2009).
*924 In New York, monies in a 529 account are “one hundred percent” exempt if the account is established in connection with a scholarship program or the judgment debtor “is the account owner and designated beneficiary of such account and is a minor”; otherwise, the exemption is limited to $10,000.00. See N.Y.C.P.L.R. § 5205(j) (McKinney 2009). New Jersey law provides that “moneys paid into” a 529 account are exempt from all claims of creditors “of the contributor or the designated beneficiary.” See N.J. Stat. Ann. § 18A:71B-41.1 (2010). South Dakota, meanwhile, provides that “any amount in or credited to any account” is exempt and not considered an asset or property of the account owner, contributor, or designated beneficiary, but that any funds “contributed within one year prior to the account owner or contributor filing a [bankruptcy] petition” are not exempt. See S.D. Codified Laws § 13-63-20 (2010).
For a number of years, the Louisiana exemption found in La.Rev.Stat. Ann. § 17:3096 G provided that “the right of a beneficiary to the assets of an education savings account shall not be subject to” execution by creditors. In June of 2010, however, the statute was amended to also provide that “monies paid into or out of the assets and the income of any validly existing ... [529 account] shall not be liable to attachment, levy, garnishment, or legal process in the state in favor of any creditor of or claimant against any program participant, owner, or contributor, or program.” See La.Rev.Stat. Ann. § 17:3096 G (2010). The original version of the Louisiana statute was linguistically similar to Wis. Stat. § 14.64(7)(a). Unlike many of the other state statutes, the Wisconsin statute also does not provide that the money in the account is exempt; it simply provides that the beneficiary’s right to withdrawals is exempt. While the Louisiana legislature’s recent decision to broaden its exemption is not determinative, it is nonetheless illustrative of the fact that it would have been quite easy for the Wisconsin legislature to clearly provide a broad exemption for college savings plans. Indeed, the legislature appears to have done exactly that with prepaid tuition plans under Wis. Stat. § 14.63(8).
It is certainly not inconceivable that the Wisconsin legislature intended to create an unlimited exemption for college savings accounts and that the “account owner” would be entitled to claim that exemption. But as the cited authorities indicate, there are a number of states which have opted not to protect these accounts at all, while others have added various protections to deter possible abuse. Consequently, it is also possible that the legislature only wished to extend protection to the beneficiary. Construing the relevant statutes together, in context, as the Wisconsin Supreme Court has indicated should be done, leads to the conclusion that only the “beneficiary’s right” to qualified withdrawals from a college savings account under § 14.64 are exempt under § 815.18(3)(p). 29 Any other result would ignore the distinctions the legislature made between the “monies deposited” and the “beneficiary’s right” to withdrawals found in §§ 14.63(8) and 14.64(7), and would also render both of those sections superfluous. As such, Mr. *925 Bronk is not entitled to claim the accounts as exempt. Since the accounts are nonexempt property of the estate, the trustee is entitled to the turnover of the funds so that they may be distributed to creditors.
III. Exemption of Annuity
The debtor also seeks to exempt the $42,000.00 annuity created on the eve of the bankruptcy filing. In his schedules, the debtor asserted that the annuity was exempt under Wis Stat. § 815.18(3)(j), which provides an exemption for:
Assets held or amounts payable under any retirement, pension, disability, death benefit, stock bonus, profit sharing plan, annuity, individual retirement account, individual retirement annuity, Keogh, 401-K or similar plan or contract providing benefits by reason of age, illness, disability, death or length of service and payments made to the debtor therefrom.
The trustee, however, argues that the annuity is not exempt under this provision and must instead be subject to the limitations of § 815.18(3)(f), which provides an exemption for “life insurance and annuities.” Under this subsection, “any unmatured life insurance or annuity contract owned by the debtor and insuring the debtor,” together with the “debtor’s aggregate interest, not to exceed $150,000 in value” in accrued dividends, interest, or loan value of those insurance or annuity contracts, are exempt. If, however, the annuity contract was issued “less than 24 months before” the date the exemption is claimed, the exemption amount is limited to $4,000.00.
In
In re Bruski,
Notably, § 815.18(3)(f) was modified by the legislature in 2003. The legislature added § 815.18(2)(am), which defines an annuity as “a series of payments payable during the life of the annuitant or during a specific period.” The legislature also added the language relied upon by the trustee. But the legislature did not alter the specific language of § 815.18(3)® relied upon in both Bruski and Bogue. Thus the question before the Court: which provision is applicable to Mr. Bronk’s annuity? Clearly, the annuity was issued less than 24 months before Mr. Bronk claimed it as exempt. But § 815.18(3)(f) also recognizes that some annuities can be claimed as exempt under § 815.18(3)®, and provides an exception for the annuities that might be covered elsewhere (§ 815.18(3)(f)(2) begins, “Except as provided in subd. 3 and par. ®.... ”). The answer to this dispute appears to be controlled by whether Mr. Bronk’s annuity is one which “provides benefits by reason of age, illness, disability, death or length of service,” so that it falls within the exemption authorized by § 815.18(3)0). Otherwise, it would be sub *926 ject to the limitations found m § 816.18(3)©.
In his brief, the trustee offered legislative analysis of the amendments by the Legislative Reference Bureau. The analysis points out that at the time of the amendments, the exemption laws did not “address exemptions from creditor claims for an unmatured annuity that is owned by the debtor and that insures the debtor, his or her dependent, or a person on whom the debtor is dependent.” See Wisconsin Bill Analysis, 2003 Reg. Sess. S.B. 504. Such annuities (as well as “any accrued dividends, interest, or loan values of such annuity contracts”) are now exempt. This analysis reflects that the legislature believed it was curing a defect in the current law, but only insofar as current law did not protect certain annuities from exemption. 30 There is no indication that the revisions to the statute were intended to close a loophole or to preclude debtors from utilizing the exemptions previously available under Wis. Stat. § 815.18(3)Cj). As noted in Wis. Stat. § 815.18(1), the exemption provisions are to be construed to secure their “full benefit” to debtors. There is no indication that the legislature intended to overturn the prior interpretation of § 815.18(3)© as concerns annuities but rather envisioned that it was providing an additional exemption for certain “unmatured” annuities which might not be subject to the additional requirements of the existing provisions. The parties have not supplied the Court with much information about the nature of Mr. Bronk’s annuity, but it appears to sufficiently qualify for exemption under § 815.18(3)(j) and as such will be allowed.
An order and judgment shall be entered consistent with this decision.
Notes
. As one treatise observes, "The transfer of assets on the eve of bankruptcy is a lightning rod for intense scrutiny.” See Keith M. Lundin & William H. Brown, Chapter 13 Bankruptcy 4th ed. § 181.1 at ¶ 1, sec. rev. June 7, 2004, www.chl3online.com.
. These accounts were listed on schedule B of the debtor’s bankruptcy petition, and included accounts for the benefit of Alyssa Bronk ($24,-124.77), Brandy Alexandria Marie Bronk ($19,697.48), Colton James Bronk ($19,-689.44), Kelly Leigh Bronk ($19,697.48), and Megan Marie Bronk ($19,583.73). As the trustee notes, the debtor did not receive any consideration for these transfers and retains control over the funds.
. Apparently, an error in his wife's health insurance enrollment meant that many of the expenses incurred prior to her death in 2007 were not covered by insurance. Mr. Bronk himself suffered a stroke in early 2009 after a lengthy battle with the insurance company over these expenses.
. As one court rather famously observed, "There is a principle of too much; phrased colloquially, when a pig becomes a hog it is slaughtered.”
In re Zouhar,
. Mr. Bronk's schedule C indicates that he also claimed an exemption under § 815.18(3)© for an IRA in the amount of $32,438.21. The trustee does not object to this exemption.
. As the code provides, a "transfer” is "each mode, direct or indirect, absolute or conditional, voluntary or involuntary, of disposing of or parting with (i) property; or (ii) an interest in property.” 11 U.S.C. § 101(54)(D).
.The legislative history of the bankruptcy code reflects congressional intent to allow debtors to convert non-exempt property into exempt property, and the House and Senate reports specifically provide: "The practice is not fraudulent as to creditors, and permits the debtor to make the full use of the exemptions to which he is entitled under the law.” H.R.Rep. No. 95-595 at 361 (1977), as reprinted in 1978 U.S.C.C.A.N. 5963, 6317; S.Rep. No. 95-989, at 76 (1978), as reprinted in 1978 U.S.C.C.A.N. 5787, 5862.
. Although the Johnson court did articulate the inherent challenge associated with either approach:
Animal husbandry at least furnishes weight and age tests to divide "pigs" from "hogs”; the use of a "smell” test, while of some utility in the most extreme (presumably to be read "most odious”) cases, would be so subject to the pitfalls of subjectivity as to have no paradigmatic value at all. Everyone's nose, after all, is different.
. Indeed, the amount' — or value — of assets transferred by the debtor would appear far more relevant as circumstantial evidence of fraudulent intent in a situation in which the debtor actually transferred property to another person, rather than simply transformed non-exempt assets into exempt ones. At least in the latter context, debtors are not to be prohibited from the "full use of exemptions within the limits of the law.”
Smiley,
. In
Vangen,
the debtor mortgaged her home (much like Mr. Bronk) and sold an interest in a commercial building. The creditor contended that she had "drained” the non-exempt equity from her assets, but all that was proven was that the debtor had sought to take "full use” of the available exemptions.
. A review of the Wisconsin exemption statute reveals that the state legislature is fully capable of providing caps on exemption claims in order to curb possible abuse. Article I, Section 17 of the Wisconsin Constitution authorizes exemption laws and provides that "[t]he privilege of the debtor to enjoy the necessary comforts of life shall be recognized by wholesome laws, exempting a reasonable amount of property from seizure or sale for the payment of any debt or liability hereafter contracted.” The legislature has determined that it is reasonable to permit a debtor a $5,000.00 exemption in depository accounts, a $75,000.00 exemption in a homestead, and an unlimited exemption in some items, including certain retirement benefits, even though other provisions are limited to amounts “reasonably necessary for the support of the debtor and the debtor's dependents.” See Wis. Stat. §§ 815.20 and 815.18(3)(i), (j), and (k) for comparison. Making full use of these exemptions is not fraudulent, but it is possible for a court to find that a debtor engaged in inappropriate behavior in order to claim them.
. The debtor in
Adeeb
did attempt to "cure” his conduct by recovering the assets himself and disclosing the transactions in his bankruptcy case. The Ninth Circuit found such redemptive behavior might absolve a debtor and permit issuance of a discharge. The Seventh Circuit, however, rejected this idea in
McWilliams. See
. Admittedly,
Stem
was not a "simple instance” of eve-of-bankruptcy planning, as at least a portion of the transferred funds might have been exempt anyway.
See Wolkowitz
v.
Beverly (In re Beverly),
. As the
Crater
court observed, disallowance of an exemption simply because the debtor sought to protect assets "would be contrary to the very purpose of providing exemptions, and because the ability to make intelligent use of the exemptions was specifically addressed and permitted” in the bankruptcy code.
. Intriguingly, the Seventh Circuit indicated that it was still not clear that Smiley intended to
defraud
his creditors.
.Much like the debtors in
McWilliams,
whose transfers were designed “to create the appearance that they no longer owned the property.”
. In one of the cases cited by the trustee, in the context of 11 U.S.C. § 522(o) (relating to the reduction of a homestead exemption) the debtors were found to have acted with the intent to "hinder, delay, and defraud” creditors when they sold non-exempt assets and applied the proceeds to their homestead.
See In re Lacounte,
. In his brief, the debtor notes that his creditors had not obtained judgments against him. However, the debtor’s statement of financial affairs indicates that a hospital did obtain a monetary judgment against him in Portage County in a case styled St. Michael’s Hospital v. Leonard Bronk, Case No. 09-CV-95. The debtor's schedule F indicates the hospital was owed approximately $230,000.00. Nonetheless, the trustee does not offer any evidence that the debtor attempted to hinder or delay this creditor's pursuit of his assets while he attempted to protect them from seizure by utilizing the exemptions available to him under Wisconsin law.
. To the extent the amount or value of the assets converted into exempt property is relevant, the Court finds it relatively modest and in keeping with the debtor's legitimate desire to preserve his assets within the boundaries of the Wisconsin exemption laws. It does not indicate that he sought to defraud his creditors.
. Further, while these transfers may have transformed virtually all of Mr. Bronk's nonexempt assets into exempt ones, he hardly resembles the affluent debtors of Tveten or Reed, nor does he have a sizeable income in addition to these assets. According to his statement of financial affairs, his 2007 income of $81,589.00 included social security of $26,022.00 and pension distributions of $55,567.00; his 2008 income of $27,699.00 included social security of $22,905 and pension distributions of $4,794.00. Through the date of filing in August of 2009, his 2009 income totaled $13,846.00 (social security of $10,626.00 and pension distributions of $3,220.00).
. For purposes of this decision, further references to "529 plans” will, unless otherwise noted, mean savings accounts rather than prepaid tuition accounts.
. Earnings withdrawn for other purposes are subject to income tax and a 10% penalty.
. See Adam Winger, “Pick on Someone Your Own Size: Exposing the Account Owner's Silent Assault on Section 529 Savings Accounts,” 35 ACTEC J. 277, 278 (Winter 2009) ("It is inconsistent with general tax transfer concepts that a contributor enjoy the tax benefits of a completed gift while retaining sole control over the account assets. Furthermore, the [account owner's] unbridled ability to both rename the beneficiary and withdraw funds frustrates Section 529's intent, placing the [beneficiary’s] education at risk.”).
. See http://a584.g.akamai.nefifi584/1326/ld/ www.wellsfargoadvantagefunds.com/pdf/529/ edvesfiprogram_description.pdf (last accessed December 28, 2010). The Wisconsin College Savings Program also offers another plan, the "tomorrow’s scholar” college savings plan. The participation agreement for that plan contains similar language regarding account ownership. See tomorrow’s scholar college savings plan Program Description and Participation Agreement (dated July 16, 2010) at 7, found at http://www.wellsfargoadvantage funds.com/pdfi529/ts/program_description_ new.pdf (last accessed December 28, 2010).
.There is an argument that funds invested in the EdVest program are held in trust.
See
Robert A. Pasch, 12 Wis. Prac., Wis Collection Law § 15.3 (2d ed.) at ¶ 13. However, in the typical case account owners — such as Mr. Bronk — have no fiduciary duties whatsoever to the beneficiaries of the accounts. Unlike a trust, with 529 accounts there is no surrender of dominion or control of the funds.
See
Winger, 35 ACTEC J. at 281 (the account owner is in "an even better position than the settlor of a revocable trust because, while she retains complete control over the account, she is assigned none of the accompanying legal duties”). In the bankruptcy context, courts have recognized that funds placed in 529 accounts remain property of the bankruptcy estate and do not constitute a spendthrift or other form of trust.
See Addison,
. Unfortunately, there is very little legislative history or analysis on this point. See Wi. B. An., 1999 Reg. Sess. A.B. 654.
. The "ownership” of the funds might be impacted if a debtor utilized a trust or a custodial account under a state’s Uniform Gifts to Minors Act or a Uniform Transfers to Minors Act to fund a college savings account.
See Bourguignon,
. In
Przybylski,
the court suggested that the creation of EdVest accounts might also be pursued as fraudulent transfers.
. It is also worth noting that the EdVest Participation Agreement makes no mention of a broad state exemption, and instead merely observes that “[u]nder Wisconsin law, a designated beneficiary's right to qualified withdrawals from the Program is not subject to garnishment, attachment, execution, or other process of law.” See Participation Agreement at 27. While not itself determinative, this reference to Wis. Stat. § 14.64(7), rather than Wis. Stat. § 815.18(3)(p), further illustrates that the two sections should be construed together.
. Indeed, the Wisconsin Senate Bill Memo on the 2003 legislation indicates that it was designed for “annuities not covered under s. 815.18(3)(j). Wisconsin Senate Bill Memo, 2003 Reg. Sess. S.B. 504 (May 11, 2004).
