FINAL JUDGMENT GRANTING PLAINTIFF’S COMPLAINT FOR LIEN AVOIDANCE EXCEPT AS TO FIREARMS
Thе debtor has brought this adversary action for the purpose of avoiding the de *323 fendant’s lien on the debtor’s household goods under section 522(f) of the Bankruptcy Code. The defendant filed an answer to the complaint in which, in pаrt, it objected to the reopening of the debtor’s case for the purpose of this lien avoidance action. Therefore, the court set a hearing for March 20, 1981, in Joplin, Missouri. The plaintiff then appeared by R. J. Gоrdon, Esquire, his counsel, and the defendant appeared by Richard Beydler.
Thereupon, the defendant, although granted an explicit opportunity to do so, showed no reason why the bankruptcy case should not be reоpened for the purpose of determining the lien avoidance action. Therefore, the bankruptcy case will be reopened for that purpose.
On the merits of the complaint for lien avoidance, the defendant sought first to raise the defense that the debtor has no equity interest in the property on which the lien is sought to be avoided. The defendant would thus equate “interest of the debtor” within the meaning of section 522(f) with “equity interest,” just as this court has previously held in
Miller v. Peoples Bank of Miller,
Nor does the defense of unconstitutionality apply to this action, in which the defendant’s security interest admittedly was not perfected prior to October 1, 1979. See
In re Rodrock,
Finally, the defendant asserts that some of the goods to which the lien has attached are firearms and thus without the description of the types of property upon which liеns may be avoided under section 522(f). With this contention the court must necessarily agree. It does not appear that firearms can arguably fall within any of the property described under section 522(f)(1) as property on which а lien may be avoided. 3 Therefore, as respects the firearms, the lien may not be avoided.
It is therefore, accordingly, for the foregoing reasons,
ADJUDGED that plaintiff’s complaint for lien avoidance be, and it is hereby, granted except with respect to firearms and it is in that resрect denied. 4
Notes
. As was noted by this court in its earlier decision in Miller v. Peoples Bank of Miller, In proceedings under chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code No. 80-00778-SW (W.D.Mo.Bkrtcy Nov. 27, 1980), the lone portion of the Code which appears to be unambiguous on the meaning of the “interest of the debtor” upon which a lien may be avoided is the following legislative history under section 722 of the Code:
“(F)or example, if a debtor owned a $2000 car, subject to a $1,200 lien, the debtor could exempt his $800 interest in the car ...”
As analyzed in Miller, supra, “(t)his explicative material makes it clear that the debtor entitles himself to exemption from a lienholder’s rights as a secured creditor ... only to the extent that he has paid for, and thus has an equity interest in, that property.” The district court’s analysis in the Lovett case is as follows:
“Judge Stewаrt’s limitation of the phrase ‘interest of the debtor in the property’ to the debtor’s ‘equity’ in the property, appears to rest, as a matter of construction, on legislative history which does, at one point, refer to an equity interest as an ‘interest’. The pertinent sentence, explaining another section of the Code relating to exemptions, states: ‘Thus, for example, if a debtor owned a $2,000 car, subject to a $1,200 lien, the debt- or could еxempt his $800 interest in the car.’ In the quoted sentence it is stated that the ‘debtor owned a $2,000 car,’ thus implying that the debtor had some property interest in the entire car. While the equity is thus an ‘interest,’ it is not necessarily the only interest of the debtor in the property.”
But the exemptable interest is, within the meaning of section 522(f), the only interest upon which a lien may be avoided. That section explicitly provides for lien avoidance only “to the extent that such lien impairs an exemption to which the debtor would have been entitled.”
. In
Lovett,
the district court also supported its decision by the “light of the statutory objectives and history of the section, as recited in .. .
Kursh (v. Dial Finance Company of Missouri,
“(I)t is unjust and senseless to make all creditors give up their property interests for the sins of a minority of them. This is especially so when the evils to be protected against are sufficiently protected under the general law which refuses enforсement to unconscionable contracts and contracts of adhesion. And finally, there is nothing in the legislative history thus adverted to which unambiguously warrants lien avoidance without regard to the existence of an equity in the prоperty for the debtor ...”
The “many citations of cases” in the
Kursh
opinion generally include decisions which do
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not rule on the question of the meaning of “interest of the debtor” and from which it could not be ascertained whether or not the debtor in fact had any equity in the property.
In re Coronado,
Subsequent to the decision of this court in
Miller v. Peoples Bank of Miller, supra,
some published decisions have held that section 522(f) is to be construed to provide that a debtor may avoid a lien to the extent that he сould have exempted the property in the absence of a lien. See
In re Boteler,
Finally, it must be noted that, in
Miller, supra,
this court noted that, if section 522(f) were not held to apply only to the unencumbered portion of the property in accordance with the legislative history, then the constitutional prohibition against taking property for a private purpose and without just compensation might apply. This notion receives support both in the
Lovett
decision and in
In re Rodrock,
. In respect of the types of articles whiсh may be included in lien avoidance, section 522 “has been strictly construed by the courts.” Matter of Boozer, 4 B.R. 524, 527 (N.D.Ga.1980).
. In respect to the other household and person- . al goods on which the defendant has a security interest, the lien must be regarded as avoided.
