This case is a sequel to
In re Patterson,
Merely obtaining an exemption would have done the Thompsons no good. (This was also true in
Patterson.)
The bank had a lien on the farm equipment, and an exemption is not effective against a lien unless it comes within the lien-avoidance provision of the Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. § 522(f); otherwise it is effective only against unsecured creditors. That provision allows the debtor to “avoid the fixing of a lien on an interest of the debtor in property to the extent that such lien impairs an exemption to which the debtor would have been entitled under [11 U.S.C. § 522(b)(2)(A) ], but only [so far as directly relevant to this case] if such lien is ... a nonpossessory, nonpurchase-money security interest in any ... implements, professional books, or tools, of the trade of the debtor or the trade of a dependent of the debtor.” 11 U.S.C. § 522(f)(2)(B). The bankruptcy judge, sеe
The bank disagrees. It argues that our narrow construction in
Patterson
of the words “implements” and “tools of the trade” as they appear in 11 U.S.C. § 522(d)(6) must extend to the identical language in section 522(f)(2)(B), even though we had said in
Patterson
thаt “the same language in section 522(f), since it could be picking up a tools of the trade exemption in state law as well as the tools of the trade exemption (which need not have the same scope) in 522(d), could mean two different things.”
Allowing the debtor to avoid a lien on tractors and other items of farm equipment potentially worth many thousands of dollars does not advance the purpose of the lien-avoidance section. It not only opens a large loophole in the statute to the detriment of secured lenders, but by doing so it hurts farmers as a class. The less security they can give for a loan, the less money secured lenders will lend them. Alternatively thоse lenders will charge higher interest rates to protect themselves against the increased risk that in the event of a default some of the collateral for the loan will be placed beyond the lender’s reach. Or they may demand more collateral. There might appear to be a partial offset, however — for wouldn’t unsecured creditors be willing to lend on better terms, the less sеcured credit had been extended to the debtor? But no; the exemption that triggers lien avoidance under section 522(f) is also effective against unsecured creditors —that is what it means to exempt property; it is removed from the bankrupt estate. In addition, because disappointed secured creditors will file as unsecured creditors, there will be more creditors fighting over the debtor’s carcass. The general point is that, at least within broad limits, the law cannot help debtors by curtailing the rights of creditors. “The welfare of debtors and of creditors is intertwined; the fewer the protections for creditors, the higher interest rates are, and interest is paid by debtors; conversely, the greater the protection for creditors, the lower interest rates are, and debtors as a grouр benefit.”
In re Xonics Imaging, Inc.,
Despite the powerful arguments for the bank’s interpretation, we, like the three other circuits that have addressed the question, consider them overborne by the language and structure of section 522 as a whole. See
In re Liming,
Section 522(f)(2)(B) explicitly names the tools of the trade exemption as one entitled to lien avoidance. It also makes no reference to section 522(d)(6) save as may be implicit in the identical wording of the two sections, and places no dollar limit (as in section 522(d)(6)) on the exemption. As a semantic matter, the reference in section 522(f)(2)(B) to the tools of the trade еxemption is to both the federal exemption and the corresponding state exemption, depending on which the debtor has elected under section 522(b)(2)(A). Semantics can mislead, but it seems unlikely that Congress would simply have overlooked the existence of state exemptions for tools of the trade. Such exemptions are common and commonly more generous than the federal exemption, as we have seen, and the Bankruptcy Code of 1978 was a carefully although not infallibly deliberated measure.
The bank concedes as it must that the Thompsons were within their rights in electing the Wisconsin exemption and does not argue that any item of exempted equipment is something other than a tool of the trade within the meaning of the Wisconsin statute. In effect it asks us to combine a federal definition of tools of the trade
{Patterson
) with the dollar limits in the Wisconsin statute. This would produce the anomaly that although, as against unsecured creditors, the Thompsons can remove the entire $8,375 from the bankrupt estate, as against the secured creditor (the bank) they can remove only $600. This is because the Wisconsin statute imposes a limit of $300 per debtor on “small tools and implements,” Wis.Stаt. § 815.18(6) — the only category of farm equipment that (according to the bank) is embraced by the narrow definition of tools of the trade that we adopted in
Patterson.
Yet rather than being tighter than the exemption in section 522(d)(6), as the bank’s analysis implies (for $600 is less than $750), the lien-avoidance provision of 522(f)(2)(B) omits the $750 ceiling in 522(d)(6). Maybe not too much should be made of this omission, though. Lien avoidance is permitted only “to the extent that such lien impairs an exemption to which the debtor would have been entitled.” 11 U.S.C. § 522(f)(2)(B). That would seem to imply that the $750 ceiling in section 522(d)(6) automatically caps lien avoidance for debtors electing the federal exemption for tools of the trade. This is not certain, however. It can be argued that the “wild card” exemption of 522(d)(5), which allows the debtor to exempt his “aggregate interest in any property, not to exceed in value $400 plus up to $3,750 of any unused amount of the exemption provided” in 11 U.S.C. § 522(d)(1) for the debt- or’s residence, can be applied to property consisting of tools of the trade, thereby turning the wild-card exemption into another tools of the trade exemption that can be used with section 522(f)(2)(B) to avoid liens. Weird as this argument may seem, the Third Circuit aсcepted it in
Augustine v. United States, supra,
There is an analogy between the consequences of adopting the bank’s interpretation and the problem created by selective borrowing of state statutes of limitations for federal statutes that specify no limitations period. The tightness of a limitations period depends not only on the nominal length of the period but also on defenses to the statute of limitations, such as tolling, and on other circumstances that determine the length of the period in particular cases. “The actual generosity of a statute of limitations depends not only on the nominal period within which suit must be brought but on provisions allowing that period to be extended for various reasons, so that if the federal court borrows just the period it may in fact be giving plaintiffs more or less time than the state that enacted the
*421
borrowed statute would have thought appropriate in the circumstances.”
Del Raine v. Carlson,
Despite our earlier remarks about what the authors of the Bankruptcy Code must have known, we acknowledge the possibility that they overlоoked the potential interaction between the lien-avoidance provision for tools of the trade and the state exemption for tools of the trade that a debtor in a state having a generous such exemption might elect under section 522(b)(2)(A). Even carefully considered, carefully drafted, statutes exhibit flaws in drafting. See, e.g.,
Wisconsin Knife Works v. National Metal Crofters,
But as we have been at pains to emphasize, we cannot repair section 522(f)(2)(B) simply by adopting a uniform federal definition for tools of the trade. By doing so we would be arbitrarily truncating the Wisconsin exemption. If Congress can find the time, it may want to consider whether to plug the loophole that the Thompsons have found in the lien-avoidance provision. That could be done by confining section 522(f)(2)(B) to tools of the trade (including implements and professional books — remember that we are using “tools of the trade” to cover all three categories) having a value no greater than $750, or some other specified value. There would still be problems, though. Subsection (2)(A) of section 522(f) (household furnishings, etc. — including jewelry and аnimals) also lacks a dollar ceiling. And while the corresponding federal exemptions have caps ($500 for jewelry, $4,000 for household furnishings and other personal goods, other than jewelry), see 11 U.S.C. §§ 522(d)(3), (4), implying that avoiding liens on such items is identically capped, the caps are not necessarily the same as in the corresponding state exemptions. And the interplay of the wild-card exemption must also be considered.
The bank may be right to grouse about section 522(f)(2). See Note, Avoiding Liens Under the Bankruptcy Code: Construction and Application of Section 522(f), 15 U.Mich.J.Law Reform 577 (1982). But it is grousing to the wrong body.
The bank argues, finally, that section 522(f)(2)(B) is unconstitutional under the just-compensation clause of the Fifth Amendment if construed (as we have just construed it) to destroy the bank’s lien on the tractors and other itеms held in
Patterson
not to be implements or tools of the trade for purposes of section 522(d)(6). The bank points out that its security interest is property for purposes of the takings clause, see
Louisville Joint Stock Land Bank v. Radford,
We hesitate to suggest that no prospective curtailment of property rights could ever violate that clause. What if Congress passed a law that all property sold after January 1, 1990, is subject to being taken by the federal government without compensation? There would in that case be аn immediate depressive effect on property values, so current owners of property would be hurt. But maybe the enactment of the Bankruptcy Code reduced the value of lending institutions. On the other hand not every prospective diminution in the rights of creditors can be an unconstitutional taking; for such a conclusion would come close to nullifying the Constitution’s bankruptcy clause. We need not pursue these interesting questions. The conclusion that section 522(f), when as here it is applied prospectively, does not violate the takings clause of the Fifth Amendment is the premise of
United States v. Security Industrial Bank,
All this is not to say that Congress was wise — at least from a broadly social rather than narrowly political standpoint — to create a structure that makes it impossible for farmers in particular states to create secured interests in farm machinery that survive bankruptcy. It is doubtful, as we have said, that farmers are helped by this legislative paternalism. It seems a gratuitous interference with the free market. But that is not our business.
AFFIRMED.
