MEMORANDUM OF DECISION
This Chapter 7 case is before the court on the trustee’s objection to an exemption claimed by the debtor in a workers’ compensation action. Because awards arising from such actions are exempt under Illinois law, the objection is overruled and the exemption allowed.
Jurisdiction
This matter is within the jurisdiction of the district court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1334(b), and may be referred to a bankruptcy judge pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 157(a). The matter has been so referred pursuant to General Rule 2.33 of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois. It is a core proceeding pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(B), and hence a bankruptcy judge may enter an appropriate order pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(1).
*22 Facts
There is no dispute about the relevant facts. The debtor in this case, Michael McClure, filed a voluntary Chapter 7 petition on May 23, 1994. The schedules attached to the petition (1) listed as one of the debtor’s assets a workers’ compensation action against American Airlines, of unknown value, and (2) asserted that this action was exempt under the general Illinois exemption law, now codified at 735 ILCS 5/12-1001. On July 28, 1993, within the time specified by Fed.R.Bankr.P. 4003, the trustee objected to the asserted exemption, on the ground that the relevant provision of the exemption law was the exemption for awards on account of personal injury, an exemption limited to $7500. In apparent response to this objection, the debtor amended his schedules to claim that the workers’ compensation action was exempt under a special provision of Illinois law, 820 ILCS 305/21, which contains no dollar limitation. The trustee continued to object to the claimed exemption, and the debtor and the trustee have submitted briefs in support of their positions.
Discussion
The background of the dispute now before the court has been set forth in a number of decisions dealing with objections to discharge, including, most pertinently,
In re Yonikus,
Under Section 541(a) of the Bankruptcy Code (11 U.S.C.), the commencement of a bankruptcy case creates an estate that can be liquidated to satisfy the claims of creditors. The estate is defined broadly, to include (with exceptions not relevant here) all property interests of the debtor, including contingent claims.
Yonikus,
Illinois has enacted, and included within its Code of Civil Procedure, a general exemption law for personal property that largely parallels the federal exemptions set forth in Section 522(d) of the Bankruptcy Code. 735 ILCS 5/12-1001. As with Section 522(d), none of the provisions of Illinois’ general exemption law specifically refer to workers’ compensation actions. However, there are two provisions that might arguably apply to such actions. Subsection (h)(4) allows an exemption in the debtor’s “right to receive, or property that is traceable to a payment, not to exceed $7500 in value, on account of personal bodily injury of the debtor.” This is the provision, that the trustee relies upon in seeking to limit the debtor’s exemption in a workers’ compensation award to $7500. However, another provision of the general exemption law, subsection (g)(3), allows an unlimited exemption in the debtor’s “right to receive a disability, illness, or unemployment benefit.” Had the debtor chosen to base his claimed exemption on subsection (g)(3), this court would have had the task of determining whether a workers’ compensation claim is more reasonably categorized as “a right to receive payment on account of personal bodily injury” or as “a right to receive a disability or other unemployment benefit.” 1
*23 The debtor, however, does not rely on any provision of the general Illinois exemption law. Rather, the debtor’s exemption claim is based on Section 21 of the Illinois Workers’ Compensation Act. 820 ILCS 305/21. Section 21 provides in pertinent part as follows:
No payment, claim, award or decision under this Act shall be assignable or subject to any lien, attachment or garnishment, or be held liable in any way for any lien, debt, penalty or damages_ The compensation allowed by any award or decision of the Commission shall be entitled to a preference over the unsecured debts of the employer, wages excepted, contracted after the date of the injury to an employee.
The trustee resists the conclusion that this section allows workers’ compensation actions to be claimed as exempt in bankruptcy. The trustee’s argument appears to be the following: both the general Illinois exemptions and the provision of Illinois law prohibiting use of federal exemptions in bankruptcy are included in the Illinois Code of Civil Procedure (indeed, they were enacted together as P.A. 82-280), and therefore any state law that is not in the Code of Civil Procedure must specifically state that it is available as an exemption in bankruptcy in order to be so available.
It is difficult to see why the placement of provisions of state law within a particular codification should have the substantive impact for which the trustee argues. Nothing in the Code of Civil Procedure states that only exemption provisions contained within that Code are available in bankruptcy eases, and so there is no reason why Section 21 of the Workers’ Compensation Act should be required to state explicitly that it is available as an exemption in bankruptcy. But more fundamentally, the trustee’s argument misunderstands the relationship between the Bankruptcy Code and state law. As outlined above, the Code allows states to prohibit the use of the federal exemptions otherwise available under Section 522(d), but the Code does not allow states to prohibit the use in bankruptcy of exemptions otherwise available under state law. To the contrary, Section 522(b)(2) provides debtors the option of exempting “any property that is exempt under ... State or local law that is applicable on the date of the filing of the petition.” Thus, if an exemption is available under state law, it must be available in bankruptcy, and the only question is whether Section 21 of the Workers’ Compensation Law provides for an exemption of workers’ compensation claims.
Plainly it does. Although Section 21 does not employ the words “exemption” or “exempt,” it does state that workers’ compensation claims shall not be “subject to” any lien, attachment or garnishment, or be “held liable in any way” for any lien, debt, penalty or damages. That this language is effective to exempt workers’ compensation claims from judgments of creditors was the emphatic conclusion of the Illinois Appellate Court in
Mentzer v. Van Scyoc,
There appears to be no authority to the contrary. In
In re Yonikus,
Because Section 21 of the Workers’ Compensation Act is an applicable statute of exemption, it was available to be claimed by the debtor in the present case, and the trustee’s objection to the claimed exemption must be overruled.
Conclusion
For the reasons stated above, the trustee’s objection to the exemption claimed by the debtor in the full amount of his workers’ compensation claim is overruled, and the exemption is allowed. A separate order will be issued in conformity with this opinion.
Notes
. Although this question appears not to have been addressed in the context of Illinois exemption law, the same issue has been addressed under the federal exemptions of Section 522(d). Like subsection (h)(4) of the Illinois general exemption law. Section 522(d)(11)(D) of the Bankruptcy Code exempts a debtor’s right to receive payment "not to exceed $7,500” on account of personal bodily injury. And like subsection (g)(3) of the Illinois law, Section 522(d)(10)(C) exempts, without limitation, the debtor’s right to receive “a disability, illness, or unemployment benefit.” As the Court of Appeals pointed out in
Yonikus,
"[m]ost bankruptcy courts considering
*23
the issue ... have determined that [workers’ compensation awards] appropriately belong under § 522(d)(10)(C).”
. In this respect, Illinois is apparently in company with most state law. One survey observes that "[a]ll workmen’s compensation statutes found protect in one degree or another a workmen’s compensation award made for a work-connected personal injury from seizure by the workman’s creditors.” C.B. Higgins, Annotation,
Construction and Effect of Statutory Exemptions of Proceeds of Workmen's Compensation Awards,
