IN RE: MELISSA ANN MARESCA, Debtor. TERRY DONOVAN, Creditor-Appellant, -v.- MELISSA ANN MARESCA, Debtor-Appellee.
No. 19-3331
United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit
December 14, 2020
AUGUST TERM, 2020
Argued: October 22, 2020
Creditor-appellant Terry Donovan appeals from a judgment of the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut (Underhill, C.J.) affirming an order of the United States Bankruptcy Court (Nevins, B.J.) granting debtor-appellee Melissa Ann Maresca‘s motion to avoid a judicial lien. Pursuant to
JEREMIAH DONOVAN, Old Saybrook, CT, for Creditor-Appellant.
GREGORY F. ARCARO, Grafstein & Arcaro, LLC, New Britain, CT, for Debtor-Appellee.
KATZMANN, Circuit Judge:
A debtor who cannot satisfy her obligations may seek a fresh start through personal bankruptcy. To facilitate this fresh start, and to allow her to “maintain an appropriate standard of living as [she] goes forward after the bankruptcy case,” the Bankruptcy Code provides that the debtor may “exempt” certain property from the pool of assets available to satisfy her creditors. 4 Collier on Bankruptcy ¶ 522.01 (16th ed. 2020); see
The exemption at issue here is the so-called “homestead” exemption, which allows the debtor to exempt a portion of her interest in property that she or her dependent “uses as a residence.”
BACKGROUND
The relevant facts are undisputed. In 2005, debtor-appellee Melissa Ann Maresca and her then-husband Charles Crilly bought a house (the “Property“) in Essex, Connecticut. Though now divorced, Maresca and Crilly jointly own the property. Crilly uses the Property as his primary residence, and Maresca lives in an apartment in a nearby town. Per their divorce decree, Maresca and Crilly share joint custody of their son, who resides primarily with Maresca but who spends several days each week with Crilly at the Property and attends school in the town where the Property is located.
In 2011, Maresca retained creditor-appellant Terry Donovan as her attorney in her divorce action against Crilly. After a lengthy representation, Donovan secured a favorable arbitration award for Maresca, which was subsequently
In 2016, Maresca filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy. She claimed an exemption in her interest in the Property under
When a debtor files for bankruptcy, she may “exempt” certain interests from her “estate,” thus removing them from the pool of assets available to satisfy her creditors.
The bankruptcy court (Nevins, B.J.) granted Maresca‘s motion to avoid the lien, concluding that Maresca‘s interest in the Property was exempt under
Donovan appealed to the district court (Underhill, C.J.), which affirmed the bankruptcy court‘s order. Like the bankruptcy court, the district court adopted the plain-meaning approach. Because Maresca‘s son uses the Property as a residence—albeit a non-primary one—the district court concluded that Maresca‘s interest in the Property was exempt under
DISCUSSION
The sole issue in this appeal is whether the term “residence” in
In resolving the question before us and concluding that the term “residence” in
We believe, furthermore, that Congress‘s choice of terminology was deliberate. As Maresca notes, several provisions in the Bankruptcy Code use the term “principal residence.” See, e.g.,
These are persuasive reasons to interpret the statute according to its own terms, rather than look to state law to imbue the text with meaning. But even if we were otherwise inclined to adopt the state-law approach, we would find it difficult to square that approach with the text of
Moreover, at least in this case, the statutory purpose revealed by this legislative history supports, rather than undermines, Maresca‘s position that the Property should be exempt. By exempting Maresca‘s interest in the Property,
Lastly, Donovan raises a practical concern with the plain-meaning approach. He argues that construing
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
