MEMORANDUM OPINION
The Chapter 7 Trustee brought this adversary proceeding to recover the interest in a certain trust which had passed to the debtor’s minor child as the result of a prepetition disclaimer executed and filed by the debtor, a beneficiary of the trust. Defendants include the debtor and trustees of the subject trust. The trustee contends that the disclaimer constituted a fraudulent transfer under Section 548(a) of the Bankruptcy Code, 1 and that the disclaimed interest is recoverable under Section 550 of the Code. Both the plaintiff and the defendants have sought summary judgment. After a careful review of the facts and applicable law, the court finds that summary judgment should be granted in favor of the defendants and against the plaintiff.
This court has jurisdiction over this adversary proceeding pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 157 and 1334. This is a core proceeding under 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(E) and (H).
Summary judgment is appropriate “if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact, and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law”, Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c) which is made applicable to these proceedings by Fed.R.Bankr.P. 7056. On a summary judg
*17
ment motion, the court is required to pierce the pleadings and evaluate the actual proof to determine whether summary judgment is appropriate.
Id.
at Advisory Committee Notes. The party moving for summary judgment bears the initial burden to show the absence of a genuine factual dispute. Once the movant first shows the absence of any genuine issue of material fact, see
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
Summary judgment is appropriate here since the material facts are undisputed. They are:
1. The debtor was the beneficiary of a 1/21 interest in certain trusts established by the Faulk Joint Revocable Trust (the “trust”).
2. On September 14, 2000, the debtor filed a disclaimer of her interest in the trust in the offices of the Court Clerk and the County Clerk of Oklahoma County, Oklahoma.
3. The disclaimer was executed and filed in accordance with the requirements for an effective disclaimer as prescribed by Okla.Stat. tit. 60, §§ 751-759 (the “disclaimer statutes” or the “Act”).
4. The debtor received no consideration for the execution of the disclaimer.
5. The debtor was insolvent at the time of the execution and filing of the disclaimer.
6. The debtor’s interest in the trust had vested before the debtor executed and filed the disclaimer, but there had been no distribution of the trust interest to the debtor.
7. The debtor filed this bankruptcy proceeding on September 15, 2000, the day after she had filed the disclaimer.
8. The debtor’s minor son, Thomas Alexander Dodson, succeeded to the interest in the trust to which the debtor would have been entitled had the debtor not filed the disclaimer.
There being no factual disputes, the issue to be resolved is whether the disclaimer was a “transfer of an interest of the debtor in property” within the meaning of Code Section 548(a)(1). The trustee alleges that the disclaimer was a transfer of what would have been property of the bankruptcy estate, but for the disclaimer, and was a deliberate act done by the debt- or “to keep her trust interest from her creditors and bestow it on her son.” In opposition, defendants rely on the “relation back” provision of the disclaimer statutes by which disclaimed property is deemed to pass as if the disclaimant had died before her interest vested; thus, the debtor had no property interest which could be transferred. The trustee counters that the “relation back” doctrine is a mere legal fiction created by state law, which cannot override the Bankruptcy Code.
Under the disclaimer statutes, a beneficiary may disclaim any interest, in whole or in part, to which he or she is entitled under any trust, instrument of conveyance *18 or other nontestamentary instrument by executing and filing a disclaimer meeting certain requirements. Act §§ 751-752. To be effective, such a disclaimer must be filed within nine months after the beneficiary’s interest vested, or in the statutory terminology “after the event which ... [caused the beneficiary] ... to become finally ascertained and his interest to become indefeasibly fixed both in quality and in quantity.” Id. at § 752.
The effect of a properly executed and timely filed disclaimer is to cause the interest which was disclaimed to be distributed as if the disclaimant had died immediately prior to the event which caused the disclaimant’s interest to become vested.
Id.
at § 755. Thus, the disclaimer relates back to a time when the disclaimant had no interest. Since the disclaimed interest is treated as if the disclaimant never owned it, the interest passes directly from the trust to the one who would be entitled to it if the disclaimant had died before the interest vested.
Garrett v. Vaughan (In re Vaughan),
Significantly, the disclaimer statutes expressly provide that the disclaimer relates back to immediately preceding the event which caused the beneficiary’s interest to vest, “for all purposes.” Act at § 755. The importance of this provision will be shown in the subsequent discussion of cases construing similar disclaimer statutes.
In order for there to be a fraudulent transfer under Section 548 of the Bankruptcy Code there must be a “transfer of an interest of the debtor in property.” “Transfer” is defined in Code Section 101(54) to include “every mode ... of ... parting with ... an interest in property”. However, the Code does not state what constitutes an “interest in property.” In the absence of any controlling federal law, state law must be applied to determine what is a debtor’s “interest in property.”
Barnhill v. Johnson,
At the time the debtor filed the disclaimer, her right to the subject 1/21 trust interest had vested, as provided by the terms of the trust. However, as permitted by the disclaimer statutes, she chose to reject the trust interest by executing and filing a disclaimer. Upon the execution and filing of the disclaimer, the subject interest passed as if the debtor had died immediately before the event which caused her trust interest to vest; and the disclaimer related back to such date “for all purposes.” Thus, by the express wording of the statute, the effect of the disclaimer was that the debtor was deemed to have died before she acquired any interest in the trust.
Four circuit courts and a fifth circuit’s bankruptcy appellate panel have ruled that a prepetition disclaimer did not constitute a transfer under facts analogous to those presented here. The Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals has previously considered whether a disclaimer executed under Colorado statutes similar to the Oklahoma disclaimer statutes constituted a fraudulent transfer of property under the former Bankruptcy Act. In
Hoecker v. United Bank of Boulder,
The Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals applied the same reasoning in
In re Atchison,
The trustee argues that the disclaimer constituted a transfer of an interest in property because when [debtor] ... executed the disclaimer she must have had an interest which could be disclaimed. But she did not. The relation back provision of the Illinois disclaimer statute eliminated any interest [debtor] ... held at the time of the disclaimer.
Id. at 211. Concerning the application of state law, the court stated; “Cases cited by the trustee to the contrary are unpersuasive because they fail to give full application to the relation back doctrine under applicable state laws.” Id.
Like the Oklahoma disclaimer statutes, the Illinois statute in Atchison provided that the disclaimer related back to the time immediately preceding the event which caused the disclaimant’s interest to vest “for all purposes.” In that regard, the Seventh Circuit ruled:
To argue, as the trustee does, that at the moment of the disclaimer there had to be some property interest which the beneficiary disclaimed ignores the express language of the Illinois disclaimer statute which says for all purposes there was not.... She had nothing to transfer.
Id. (emphasis added).
Likewise, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals concluded that a prepetition disclaimer executed under Texas law was not a transfer of property within the meaning of Code Section 548(a).
See In re Simpson,
Yet another circuit court, the Eighth, applied the same principle in
Blackwell v. Lurie (In re Popkin & Stern),
The Ninth Circuit Bankruptcy Appellate Panel, in
In re Bright,
While the Oklahoma courts have not ruled on the issue, a number of other state courts have held that disclaimers are not transfers, because of the effect of the relation back doctrine.
See Dyer v. Eckols,
Having discussed the considerable authority supporting the position that a disclaimer is not a transfer, the court turns to the arguments of the trustee. The trustee places his principal reliance on
Drye v. United States,
Even though Drye involved the construction of a tax lien statute, the trustee urges this court to apply the Drye holding to the instant case. He asserts that the definition of “transfer” under Section 541 of the Bankruptcy Code is no less expansive than under Section 6321 of the Internal Revenue Code.
This court, however, is not persuaded that
Drye
has application here for reasons both factual and legal. An important factual distinction between the two cases is that in
Drye,
the tax lien had been filed and had already attached to the subject property before the disclaimer was filed. This would be analogous to a postpetition disclaimer, where the subject property had become property of the estate before the filing of the disclaimer, and not a prepetition disclaimer, as is before the court. Generally, postpetition disclaimers have not been upheld in bankruptcy.
In re Betz,
Further, the fact that
Drye
was a tax case cannot be minimized. The court’s decision was based on its construction of the specific language of Section 6321 of the Internal Revenue Code. In support of its ruling, it cited only cases involving tax liens. As stated in
In re Nistler,
For these reasons, this court declines to extend the holding of Drye regarding tax liens to the clearly distinguishable facts before it in the case at bar.
In addition, the trustee focuses much of his attention on the meaning of “transfer” under Section 101(54) of the Bankruptcy Code, while ignoring, for the most part, the meaning of the critical phrase “interest in property,” as used in Section 548(a) of the Code. From the United States Supreme Court and Circuit Court decisions discussed herein, it is abundantly clear that state law must be applied in making a determination of what constitutes an “interest in property.” Under the applicable *21 state law, the Oklahoma disclaimer statutes, it is equally clear that a disclaimer relates back for all purposes, including for the purpose of determining whether there was a fraudulent transfer. The application of the relation back doctrine results in the disclaimant having no interest in property that could be transferred.
The trustee makes the policy argument that the disclaimer statutes of Oklahoma and other jurisdictions were enacted to permit the shifting of tax burdens from the beneficiary to another, and not to defeat creditors. Whatever the motivation of the legislature, it did not see fit to restrict the use of a disclaimer to tax shifting purposes. Rather, it made the disclaimer relate back “for all purposes.” See
Dyer v. Eckols,
Finally, citing § 756 of the disclaimer statutes, the trustee urges that Oklahoma’s disclaimer statutes prohibit disclaimers in violation of the Oklahoma Fraudulent Conveyance Act. Section 756 states in pertinent part:
Nothing included in this act shall be deemed to amend, repeal or abrogate in any manner Title 24 O.S.1971, Sections 101 through 111, inclusive. 4
Trustee admits he has no case authority to support his position. That the disclaimer statutes did not amend, repeal or abrogate the then-existing UFCA does not indicate that the subject disclaimer violated the UFCA or its successor, the UFTA.
The trustee has not cited, nor is the court aware of, any cases from the circuit court level or above which have held that a prepetition disclaimer constituted a transfer of an interest in property. Thus, this court is compelled to follow the great weight of authority that a prepetition disclaimer is not such a transfer.
Regardless of the unfortunate effect on creditors, if the state disclaimer law is to be followed, as the U.S. Supreme Court and Circuit Courts have required, it is axiomatic that the debtor’s timely filed disclaimer had the effect of preventing the debtor from owning an interest in the disclaimed property. Without an interest in property there was nothing to transfer. And without a transfer there was not a fraudulent transfer under Section 548(a) of the Bankruptcy Code.
For the above reasons, the court grants summary judgment in favor of the defendants and against the plaintiff. The court will enter an appropriate judgment herein this day.
Notes
. All references to the Bankruptcy Code or to the Code herein are to the United States Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. §§ 101-1530.
. In a dissenting opinion, Judge Holloway maintained that what constituted a “transfer” was a federal question arising under a federal statute which should have uniform application, not affected by state law.
. For a discussion of policy considerations regarding disclaimers and fraudulent transfers see
In re Bright,
. The Uniform Fraudulent Conveyance Act (“UFCA”) was enacted by the Oklahoma legislature as Okla.Stat. tit. 24, §§ 101-111. Some 13 years after Section 756 was passed, the Oklahoma legislature repealed the UFCA contemporaneous with the adoption of the Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act ("UFTA”) found at Okla.Stat. tit. 24, §§ 112-123.
