MEMORANDUM DECISION
On February 14, 2008, this court heard an objection to the Debtor’s claim of homestead regarding her residence at 16485 W. Spur Bell Lane, Maraña, Arizona.
Floyd White (“White”) is a creditor of the Debtor. He filed a timely objection to her homestead claim. His contention is that her homestead claim fails to take into account an equitable hen that he holds with. regard to the residence, which he asserts must come before her homestead. White also recorded a lis pendens prepetition, in connection with a Pima County Superior Court lawsuit.
After the parties stipulated to the facts, the court took the matter under advisement. All parties and the court undertook additional research, and the parties filed supplemental briefs. In his supplemental pleading. White moved for leave to file a motion for stay relief in order to obtain final judgment in state court.
This court’s duty, then, is to ascertain what type of interest White holds, and to *846 determine whether the Debtor’s claim of homestead is superior to any equitable lien held by White. After considering all points of view, the court now rules.
FACTS AND PROCEDURE IN BANKRUPTCY
In 2004, while White and the Debtor were engaged to be married, the Debtor purchased real property in her name only, known as 16485 W. Spur Bell Lane, Mara-ña. She used $10,000 of White’s money and $3,000 of her own money as the down payment for the purchase.
After living together in the residence for a brief time, the couple broke up in 2005 and the Debtor locked White out of the premises. White filed a complaint in Pima County Superior Court, and recorded a notice of lis pendens on December 16, 2005, nearly two years before the bankruptcy filing. Following a trial, the Superior Court filed its Minute Entry on September 13, 2007, which contained the court’s factual findings and legal conclusions. Although finding that no express or oral agreement existed between the parties, it nonetheless granted White an equitable lien for $10,000 (without interest) and the right to immediately foreclose the lien. The court further denied the Debtor’s counter-claim pursuant to Ahiz.Rev.Stat. § 33-420 to invalidate the lis pendens filed by White.
However, before the order was reduced to final judgment, 1 the Debtor filed this chapter 13 case on October 30, 2007. In her schedules, she listed her residence as having a value of $160,000. There exists, as a consensual lien against the property, a debt to Wells Fargo for $57,000. The Debtor claimed a $103,000 homestead exemption in the property, pursuant to Ariz.Rev.Stat. § 33-1101. 2 (Schedule C.) She scheduled White as an unsecured creditor with a disputed claim for $35,000. (Schedule F.)
White filed a secured proof of claim against the estate, pursuant to his equitable lien and lis pendens in the total amount of $21,685.10. 3 In his objection to the Debtor’s claimed homestead exemption, White maintained that the claimed exemption “impairs his lien” (emphasis supplied).
The Debtor filed her response, in which she contends that there is no equitable lien against the property, notwithstanding the lis pendens, and that, even if reduced to a judgment lien, it would be avoidable by the bankruptcy court under § 522(f)(1)(A) (provision for avoiding “judicial liens”) or § 547(b) (provision for avoiding preferential transfers). In essence, the Debtor is objecting to White’s status as a secured creditor.
ISSUES
1. Whether White’s claim in the real property is superior to that of the bank *847 ruptcy trustee (or to the chapter 13 Debt- or).
2. Whether White’s equitable lien is superior to Debtor’s homestead exemption, pursuant to state law.
3. Whether White’s equitable lien is an avoidable judicial lien which impairs the Debtor’s homestead exemption pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 522(f).
THE LAW
A. Property Rights
The primary issue for this court to determine is the nature of White’s interest in or claim to the Debtor’s property. Once decided, then the consequences of that interest will reveal themselves. It is a fundamental bankruptcy concept that property rights are to be determined pursuant to state law.
Butner v. United States,
B. The Legal Effects of the Lis Pendens in the Bankruptcy Case
Working backward, we know that White’s 2005 litigation against the Debtor concerned his claim to a legal interest in the residence to which the Debtor now holds legal title. When White began his lawsuit, he caused a
lis pendens
to be recorded in Pima County, where the real property is located. He sought either constructive co-ownership or an equitable lien. His state court action was one which “affected title” to real property, and therefore the state court found that the
lis pendens
was valid.
See Farris v. Advantage Capital Corp.,
A
lis pendens
is a statutory method for a party to litigation to alert future purchasers or encumbrancers of “the property affected ... and the claims .. made” in the complaint. Ariz.Rev.Stat. § 12-1191(B). The statute’s purpose is twofold: (1) to give notice to future third parties that whatever rights they might consider acquiring in the land could be subject to a superior right asserted by the plaintiffs in a pending action, and (2) to enable the court in which the action is pending to retain the power to fully deal with such property, to the exclusion of future claimants.
Hatch Cos. Contracting, Inc. v. Arizona Bank,
It is also the law of Arizona that any property in litigation, against which a
lis pendens
has been filed, is
“in custodia legis,
” a Latin term meaning “in the custody of the law” and “taken into the court’s charge during pending litigation over it.”
Warren v. Whitehall Income Fund 86,
In reviewing the propriety of a
lis pendens,
courts are reminded to avoid
*848
reaching the merits of the complaint unless it is necessary to resolve the issues.
TWE Retirement Fund Trust v. Ream,
On the date that the Debtor filed bankruptcy, a trustee in bankruptcy (asserting “strong arm” powers), or a chapter 13 debtor, would stand in the shoes of — at best — a judgment lien creditor which had recorded his judgment on the same day as the bankruptcy case was filed (here, October 30, 2007). 11 U.S.C. § 544(a)(1). However, such judgment lien would be junior to the Wells Fargo recorded lien, and the equitable lien of the lis pendens, because, in general, the priority of a judgment lien is determined by, and runs from, the date of its recordation. ARiz.Rev.Stat. §§ 33-961; 33-967(D); 33-964. Wells Fargo’s deed of trust and White’s lis pendens claim had both been recorded prior to the bankruptcy filing date.
As for the
lis pendens,
any ultimate judgment in favor of a plaintiff would relate back to when the
lis pendens
was recorded. 51 AmJur. 2d
LAs Pendens
§ 2. Thus, in this case, once the state court judgment is entered, White’s equitable lien will be valid as of the date he recorded his
lis pendens,
December 16, 2005.
See In re Lane,
In the Ninth Circuit, an equitable lien can only be avoided by a bankruptcy trustee, who is deemed to have had no actual or constructive notice of it.
In re Chenich,
Nor could the bankruptcy trustee avoid the lien as a preferential transfer, under § 547, because any “transfer” of the superior interest occurred on the date of the filing of the
lis pendens. Lane,
C. The Legal Effect of a Valid Equitable Lien on the Homesteaded Property
Having established that White’s equitable lien dates back at least to December 16, 2005, the next question becomes: does it defeat the Debtor’s homestead rights?
In Arizona, the homestead laws are interpreted liberally to advance the objectives of the statute, which is fundamentally to protect the family against the forced sale of the homestead property from certain creditors.
In re Foreacre,
Again, the court must look first to the Arizona homestead statute for the answer. In pertinent part, the statute provides:
A. The homestead provided for in § 33-1101, subsection A is exempt from process and from sale under a judgment or lien, except:
1. A consensual lien, including a mortgage or deed of trust, or contract of conveyance.
2. A lien for labor or materials claimed pursuant to § 33-981.
3. A lien for child support arrearag-es or spousal maintenance arrear-ages. An award of court ordered support is not a lien for the purposes of this paragraph unless one of the following applies:
(a) An arrearage lien has been reduced to judgment.
(b) A lien exists pursuant to § 25-516.
(c) The court orders a specific security interest of the property for support.
4. To the extent that a judgment or other hen may be satisfied from the equity of the debtor exceeding the homestead exemption under § 33-1101.
B. A sale as described in subsection A of this section and not excepted by subsection A, paragraph 1, 2, 3 or 4 of this section is invalid and does not convey an interest in the homestead, whether made under a judgment existing before or after the homestead is established.
Ariz.Rev.Stat. § 33-1103 (Amended 2007) (emphasis supplied)
White contends that the state court order treated the lien as a consensual lien, based on the parties’ conduct, and gave no homestead exemption credit to the Debtor. Therefore, he maintains that his equitable lien is an exception to the Debtor’s homestead rights under this statute.
The Debtor counters that, under Arizona law an equitable lien is merely “floating equity” until a judgment is entered which subjects the property to payment of the debt.
Wolfswinkel,
It is well settled law that the nature of a lien is determined by how the lien was created. 2 Collier on Bankruptcy ¶ 101.36 (15th ed. rev.2007).
An equitable lien is a right, enforceable only in equity, to have a demand satisfied from a particular fund or specific property, when one does not have possession or title to such property. Blace’s Law Dictionary, “Lien” (8th ed.2004). Put another way,
[a] equitable lien is a right over property constituting an encumbrance, so that the property itself may be proceeded against in an equitable action and either sold or sequestered upon proof of a contract out of which the lien could grow or of a duty on the part of the holder so as to give the other party a charge or lien on it.
Wolfswinkel,
An equitable lien can arise in different ways. First, in an express con
*850
tract, the parties can indicate an intent to charge or appropriate particular property as security for an obligation.
S.R. Kalmanoff v. Weitz,
Second, an equitable lien can also arise from the parties’ conduct and facts of the case from which a court may imply that it was the parties’ intention to charge a particular property for the repayment of a debt.
See Holder v. Williams,
Finally, an equitable lien can also be created by judicial decree in order to do equity under the peculiar circumstances of the case and prevent unjust enrichment.
Byers v. Wik,
Such equitable liens arise most commonly in divorce decrees, in order to effectively collateralize a future obligation, when a party is required to make equalization payments.
See, e.g., Tester v. Tester,
There is no question that, once entered, White’s judgment will become a judgment lien for a definite sum.
See Nelson,
D. Alternatively, the Equitable Lien Would NOT be Avoidable Under § 522(f)
Section 522(f) of the Bankruptcy Code allows a bankruptcy court to avoid the “fixing” of a “judicial hen” on “an interest of the debtor in property” to the extent that, as of the petition date, such hen impairs an exemption to which the Debtor would have been entitled.
In re Chiu,
Courts are divided on whether equitable hens are judicial hens. Judicially imposed equitable hens, which are imposed in dissolution proceedings, are considered to be judicial hens, in the Ninth Circuit.
Pederson,
White contends that, even if the lien is a judicial hen, it did not affix to the Debtor’s interest in property because it arose at the time he loaned the money, which was prior to the purchase of the real property. This court agrees with White. The hen is not avoidable under § 522.
Thus, White has estabhshed that his equitable hen encumbers the Debtor’s real property, in order to prevent unjust enrichment by her.
CONCLUSION
Based on the foregoing analysis, a separate order will be entered, pursuant to Fed. R. BaNKR. P. 9021, which:
1. Sustains White’s objection to the Debtor’s homestead exemption to the extent that it impairs his equitable lien; and
2. Grants White’s motion for stay relief, to the extent it authorizes him to obtain the final judgment from the Superior Court. However, to the extent that White now holds a secured claim against the Debtor’s real property, he may not execute thereon. Instead, the Debtor will no doubt amend her plan in order to provide for payment of this debt over time.
Notes
.Here, the Minute Entry order, although signed by the judge, directed White to submit a form of judgment. Thus, the Minute Entry order was not the final judgment.
See In re Cahn,
. Section 33-1101(A)(1) provides for a $150,000 homestead exemption. Debtor did not explain how she reached the figure of $103,000, which would appear to be $10,000 above her allowed exemption amount, after subtracting the deed of trust consensual lien. ($150,000 minus $57,000 equals $93,000).
. In claiming $21,685.10, White added to the $10,000 equitable lien, the post-judgment interest, as well as his attorney's fees and costs which the Superior Court instructed him to include in the form of judgment.
. Here, the chapter 13 Trustee has taken no position on this issue.
. Additionally, the court takes guidance form the equitable maxim: "Equity treats as done that which ought to have been done.”
