MEMORANDUM OPINION •
On July 2, 1984, Donald Lee Barnhart and Jane Zimmer Barnhart (hereinafter the “Barnharts”), Debtors herein, filed a Motion For Avoidance of Liens under Section 522(f) of the Bankruptcy Code, wherein they sought to avoid eight judicial liens encumbering their homestead and impairing their claimed homestead exemption under applicable Texas law. Of the eight creditors claiming judicial liens, only two, InterFirst Bank Wichita Falls, N.A. (hereinaftеr “InterFirst”) and American National Bank (hereinafter “American”) filed a response and appeared in opposition to said Motion. An order avoiding the liens asserted by the other six judicial lien claimants has been entered. The parties were requested to submit legal briefs on the issues raised by the Debtors’ motion and the response filed by InterFirst and American.
Findings of Fact
Based on the pleadings on file and the Stipulation filed by the parties on November 6, 1984, the Court makes the following findings of fact. The Barnharts filed their Joint Voluntary Petition seeking relief under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code on May 7, 1984. In their Amendments to Schedules filed on June 22, 1984, the Barn-harts on Schedule B-4 list certain real property located at 2020 Downing, Wichita Falls, Texas as exempt as their homestead under Texas Property Code Annotated, *279 Section 41.001 et seq. The Debtоrs purchased this property on January 29, 1971, which has been their urban homestead since that date. At the time of purchase, the fair market value of the Barnhart’s lot excluding improvements was twenty thousand ($20,000.00). The fair market value of their lot, irrespective of improvements, as of November 6, 1984, is stipulated to be eighty thousand dollars ($80,000.00). It is agreed that the lot upon which the Barn-hart’s homestead is located exceeds one acre. According to the parties’ stipulation, seventeen percent of this lot is in excess of one acre.
The Barnhart’s homestead is encumbered by a valid purchase money mortgage and a valid home improvement loan held by United Savings, Wichita Falls, Texas. A balance of $24,569.33 remains on the original purchase money mortgage, Loan No. 119018904E, as of November 6, 1984, with interest accruing at $5.35 per diem. The remaining balance on the home improvement loan, Loan No. 70-900643-8 is $3,170.08 as of November 6, 1984. In addition, the Barnhart’s homestead is further encumbered by judgment liens held by In-terFirst and American. These liens arose out of loans Donald Barnhart arranged with InterFirst and American on behalf of his vending business. Barnhart borrowed a sum of $20,000.00, Loan No. 764, on June 10, 1981 from American and gave as collateral, certain vending machines. American reduced this debt to a judgment and filed it on March 2, 1983, in Volume 47 at Page 484, Abstract Judgment No. 3246, Wichita County Abstract, Judgment Records, Wichita County, Texas. On February 2, 1982, Barnhart borrowed a sum of $23,157.58 and $2,853.30 on March 10, 1982 from In-terFirst which were personally guaranteed by the Debtor. These debts were reduced to judgment and filed on January 28, 1983 in Volume 47 at Page 352, in Abstract Judgment No. 1474, Wichita County Abstract Judgment Records, Wichita County, Tеxas. American’s claim as of November 6, 1984, is $46,345.30 including interest and InterFirst’s claim is for $39,102.69, inclusive of interest.
The parties have stipulated that the applicable homestead exemption existing on January 29,1971, the date of purchase, was $10,000. They have also stipulated that the homestead exemption applicable on November 6, 1984 authorizes a one acre exemption, irrespective of improvements, for all urban homestead claimants. The parties agree that the homestead exemption statute provides for retroactive application.
Conclusions Of Law
The issue before the Court concerns the constitutionality of the homestead exemption statute. It is InterFirst’s and American’s contention that Section 41.001, et seq., of the Texas Property Code Annotated violates the Contract Clause of the United States Constitution. They argue that the retroactive application of this statute affects and impairs the enforcement of their notes against Donald Lee Barnhart and destroys their vested property interests in the Barnhart’s homestead. It is their position that when the loans were reduced to judgments and abstracted, their liens became vested property rights. American and InterFirst sеek to share in a pro-rata basis with the mortgage lienholder and the home improvement lienholder, United Savings, in the non-exempt portion of the Barnhart’s lot. The Barnharts argue that the one-acre homestead exemption is constitutional, and, therefore, that InterFirst and American must satisfy their judgment liens from the property in excess of the one acre exemption after the United Saving’s liens аre extinguished. The Court is in accord with the arguments presented by the Barn-harts and, hereby rules for the Debtors.
The bankruptcy courts must resort to state law for interpretation of state exemption rights in homesteads. COLLIER ON BANKRUPTCY, VOLUME 3, 11522.23 (15 ed. 1984). In Texas, a homestead is defined and prescribed by Article XVI, Section 51 of the Texas Constitution. It sets forth the applicable Texas homestead exemption and provides in pertinent рart:
*280 “The homestead, not in a town or city, shall consist of not more than two hundred acres of land, which may be in one or more parcels, with the improvements thereon; the homestead in a city, town or village shall consist of a lot or lots amounting to not more than one acre of land, together with any improvements on the land.” Tex.Const. Art. XVI, Section 51.
Article XVI, Section 51 of the Texas Constitution was amеnded in 1983 as a result of House Joint Resolution 105 passed by the Texas House of Representatives on April 14, 1983, and approved by the Texas Senate on May 1, 1983. It was approved by Texas voters on November 8,1983. The 1983 constitutional amendment of the Texas homestead exemption was codified in the recently enacted Texas Property Code. Texas Prop.Code Ann. § 41.001 (Vernon 1984). That codification is a result of the passage of House Bill No. 2006 amending Article 3833(a) from a $10,000 exemption provision for urban homesteads to a one acre exemption, including any improvements. A significant change provided by Section 41.001 of the Property Code is that it authorized the application of the one acre homestead exemption “to all homesteads in this state regardless of the dates they were created”. Tex.Prop.Code Ann. § 41.001 (Vernon 1984). The plain language of Section (c) of Article 41.001 of the Texas Property Code clearly provides for retroactive application of the one acre homestead exemption to all homesteads in Texas whatever the date of homestead designation.
InterFirst and American argue tht the retroactive application of the one acre exemption to all homesteads, regardless of the dates they were created, is violative of Article I, Section 10 of the United States Constitution. To support their position, they refer the Court to two United States Supreme Court cases,
Gunn v. Barry,
15 Wall 610,
One recent United States Supreme Court case which addressed the impairment of contracts issue raised by InterFirst and American has held that certain exceptions to the rule against impairment of contracts exist.
El Paso v. Simmons,
The
Simmons
Court then went on to note that “not only are existing laws read into contracts in order to fix obligations as bеtween the parties, but the reservation of essential attributes of sovereign power is also read into contracts as a postulate of legal order. Moreover, the ‘economic interest’ of the state may justify the exercise of a continuing and dominant protective power notwithstanding interference with contracts.”
Id.
The Simmons Court recognized 'that the initial interpretations of the Contracts Clause contained in the Gunn and Kearzey cases should be limited by considerations of state sovereignty and the obligations of a state to protect the “vital interests of its citizens”. Clearly, the Simmons Court established that the state has the ability to modify contractual obligations provided that it is consistent with the fair intent of the constitutional limitations of that power. To the extent that the amendments to the Texas homestеad exemption protects the vital interests of citizens of this state, is remedial in nature, has a broad basis of underlying public policy and is consistent with the tradition of liberal construction of Texas exemption laws, the Simmons case supports the retroactive application of the 1983 homestead amendment and establishes that such retroactive application does not run afoul of the Contract Clause of the United States Constitution.
InterPirst and American refer the Court to a recent United States Supreme Court case,
United States v. Security Industrial Bank,
Recently, Judge Michael A. McConnell, United States Bankruptcy Court, Northern District of Texas, in a memorandum opinion in the cases of Tim Truman and John Hugh Niland v. Darwin Deason and Continental Savings Association, Adversary No. 384-3299, and Darwin Deason v. John Hugh Niland and Continental Savings Association, Adversary No. 384-3000, has ruled that the 1983 constitutional amendment “seems to express a clear legislative intent to have the amendment ‘relate back’ to the creation of any urban homestead”. (Non-published opinion dated March 6, 1985, at p. 23). The retroactive application of this amendment, however, is contrary to *282 the well established bankruptcy rule that a debtor’s exemption rights are fixed on the date of filing the petition. The Court resolved this conflict in fаvor of state law holding that “the Debtor’s exemption rights flow from and should be governed by state law.” Id. This Court is in agreement with Judge McConnell’s decision in regard to the issue concerning the retroactive application of the 1983 constitutional amendment.
The Bankruptcy Court for the Western District of Washington has also addressed the specific issue raised in this case and ruled that retroactive appliсation of an amendment expanding the homestead exemption was not violative of the Contract Clause of the United States Constitution.
In re Wenner,
InterFirst and American argue that the courts in Texas have consistently refused to give retrospective application to changes in the homesteаd exemption provisions of the State Constitution or as provided by statutory enactments. In support of their argument, they refer the Court to cases which were decided prior to the 1983 amendment to Section 51 of the Texas Constitution and the 1984 codification of this amendment. They cite the cases of
Wright vs. Straub,
In reply, the Barnharts refer the Court to
Dallas Power & Light Company v. Loomis,
Apart from the existing case law and the clear language of the statute expressing the legislature’s obvious intent that the homestead exemption was to be applied retroactively, the Court is obliged to consider public policy considerations in favor of retroactive application of the Texas homestead exemption. First, the remedial purpose of the amendments was to increase the protections afforded to all homestead claimants in this state as a result of the effects of inflation and increased market demands. To deny retroactive application would not only thwart the underlying purpose, but also would lead to incongruous results. Certain individuals would be taxed with lower exemptions based solely on the date on whiсh they purchased their homesteads. The amendments to the exemption statute seek to avoid this result. Secondly, the state’s right and obligation to protect the “vital interests” of its people will be limited. The only party to benefit from a prospective application of the exemption will be creditors, whose rights the exemption laws were not intended to protect. Finally, failure to apply the statute retroactively would be contrary to the long-established policy of the courts of this state to apply exemption laws liberally and to resolve any doubts in favor of the homestead claimants.
Cocke v. Conquest,
The issue remaining before the Court is satisfaction of InterFirst’s and American’s liens. Under the United States Bankruptcy Code, valid liens are preserved even against exempt propеrty. Exempt property, such as the Barnhart’s homestead, is not protected from the enforcement of valid liens. COLLIER ON BANKRUPTCY, VOLUME 3 ¶ 522.27 (15th Ed. 1984). The mortgage and home improvement liens held by United Savings, Wichita Falls, are without question valid liens. This is also true in regard to the liens held by American and InterFirst.
In accordance with the previous discussion, the Barnhart’s homestead is exempt as to one acre, inclusive of improvements. The parties stipulated that the fair market value of the Barnhart’s lot in its entirety is $80,000 and that seventeen percent (17%) of the area of this lot exceeds one acre. Seventeen percent (17%) of $80,000, the present fair market value, is $13,600. Since the debt of United Savings, the purchase money lienholder, exceeds $24,-000.00, none of this $13,600 which is the non-exempt portion of the bankrupts’ homestead will be availablе to be applied to the liens of American and InterFirst. The Court held in
In re Bobbitt,
