RULING ON OBJECTION TO EXEMPTION
I.
ISSUE
The debtor, Cynthia Morzella, filed her Chapter 7 petition on December 10, 1993, listing as an unencumbered asset valued at $55,000 a one-half interest in her residence located at 57 Pine Ridge Drive, Harwinton, Connecticut. The debtor, electing in her bankruptcy petition the Connecticut state law exemptions, claimed the residence as fully exempt under Conn.Gen.Stat. § 52-352b(t), which exempts a “homestead of the exemptioner to the value of seventy-five thousand dollars.... ”
Raymond Costa (Costa), a creditor whose state-court claim against the debtor for injuries sustained in a 1986 automobile accident was pending on the date of the debtor’s bankruptcy petition, timely filed an objection to the debtor’s homestead exemption. Costa contends, in effect, that since his claim against the debtor accrued prior to October 1, 1993, the effective date of Conn.Gen.Stat. § 52-352b(t), the exemption, at least to his claim, is ineffectual, and the residence remains property of the debtor’s estate for the purpose of satisfying his claim.
The debtor seemingly agrees that the homestead exemption statute operates prospectively only, but she denies Costa can seek satisfaction of his claim from her interest in the residence. The court granted" the debtor her unopposed discharge on March 24, 1994.
II.
A.
Connecticut’s Homestead Exemption
Connecticut’s exempt property statute was amended during 1993 by Connecticut Public Act 93-301 (the “Act”) to establish, apparently for the first time in Connecticut, a homestead exemption and in the amount of $75,-000. Conn.Gen.Stat. § 52-352b, as amended by the Act, provides:
The following property of any natural person shall be exempt:
(t) The homestead of the exemptioner to the value of seventy-five thousand dollars, provided value shall be determined as the fair market value of the real property less the amount of anystatutory or consensual lien which encumbers it.
Conn.Gen.Stat. § 52-352b(t). “Exempt” is defined as “not subject to any form of process or court order for the purpose of debt collection,” and “homestead” is defined as “owner-occupied real property used as a primary residence.” Id. § 52-352a(c), (e). Read together, the homestead exemption seems to provide that a creditor may not subject to any form of process or court order, for the purpose of debt collection, the residence of an exemptioner to the value of $75,000, net of existing statutory or consensual liens.
The Act provides that it “shall take effect October 1,1993, and shall be applicable to any lien for any obligation or claim arising on or after said date.” 1993 Conn.Pub.Act 301, § 3. The most reasonable interpretation of this section is that the Act applies to any prejudgment attachment, see Conn.Gen. Stat. § 52-278b, or judgment lien, see id. § 52-380a, placed on the exemptioner’s residence for the purpose of collecting a debt incurred as a result of an obligation or claim arising on or after October 1, 1993.
Legislative history generally supports this interpretation of the exemption’s application. Representative Holbrook, who introduced the legislation, explained in legislative hearings on the Act that “[w]e are not talking about anything here that is retroactive. It takes effect with any unsecured loans that occur after [October 1, 1993]-” Conn.Gen.Assembly House Proceedings 1993, Vol. 36, Part 30, [hereinafter House Proceedings] at 10824, 10855-56.
To date, two Connecticut courts have held that the homestead exemption only applies to obligations and claims arising after October 1,1993, the effective date of P.A. 93-301. Based on the express statutory language, the legislative history, and the limitations of the Contract Clause on retroactive state legislation, the Connecticut Superior Court, in
Centerbank v. Associated Risk Servs., Inc.,
No. 93-035-50-42S,
Both the legislative history and the relatively clear language used in the Act appear to make it obvious that the intention of the Legislature was not to affect the ability to obtain a remedy when the obligation or claim was already in existence on October 1, 1993. It would appear that the Act is simply inapplicable unless the original obligation or claim for which judicial remedy is now sought arose after the effective date of the Act. Not only is this conclusion supported by the legislative history, but it is probably mandated by the federal constitution.
Id.
at *1.
See also L. Suzio Asphalt Co. v. Ferreira Constr. Corp.,
No. 35-19-12,
B.
Issues Arising wpon Application of State Homestead Exemption in Bankruptcy Cases
The application prospectively only of a newly enacted exemption creates a number of issues as to whether and how exempted property is to be administered for unaffected creditors. When a debtor has creditors whose claims arose both before and after the effective date of the exemption, the debtor’s creditors will have nonuniform rights vis-a-vis the exempt property. Questions therefore arise as to which court, bankruptcy or state, should determine the claims of creditors not subject to the exemption. Courts, to date, have endorsed a variety of solutions to these administrative issues.
Unlike the definition of estate property under the Bankruptcy Code (the Code),
see infra
note 2, estate property under the former Bankruptcy Act of 1898 did not include exempt property. The Supreme Court, in
Lockwood v. Exchange Bank,
The Seventh Circuit, in a case decided under the former Bankruptcy Act, followed the dictate of
Lockwood
and held that in bankruptcy cases, the court should set aside as exempt the property claimed under state statutes in effect at the time the petition was filed, and creditors whose claims arose prior to the effective date of the exemption statute would litigate their rights in state court.
In re Zahn,
Because Code § 541(a)(1)
2
includes exempt property as property of the estate, subject to the debtor exempting such property out of the estate under § 522,
3
the reason
Murillo
analyzes the method by which the amount of a nonuniform exemption should be determined. Under this method, the debtor is entitled to the exemption amount allowed by the exemption statute in effect as of the commencement of the ease, minus the aggregate of all claims pre-dating the amendment, with the aggregate limited to the amount of the increase in the exemption.
Id.
at 614.
Cf. also Swenor v. Robertson,
III.
CONCLUSION
The procedural concepts adopted by courts post-Code for having the bankruptcy court administer the exempt homestead asset and distribute to those eligible creditors holding pre-amendment claims the nonexempt portion of the homestead clearly makes the most sense and is adopted by this court. 4 It avoids the spectacle of the pre-amendment creditors rushing to be the first to attach the homestead to the exclusion of subsequent attachments. It should be acknowledged that this solution is based upon ideas advanced by Professor George M. Treister, an eminent bankruptcy expert. The district court, in Swenor, quoted extensively from a Treister article, The Effect in Bankruptcy of the Increased Homestead Exemption, 39 J.St.B.Cal. 143 (1964), in which Professor Treister concluded, “[This solution] gives creditors as a group the same rights to the homestead as they collectively would have had outside of bankruptcy, yet it distributes the nonexempt portion of the homestead in bankruptcy ratably, and avoids any undesirable ‘grab law' result.” Id. at 148.
The objection by Costa to the debtor’s exemption of her homestead is sustained to the extent, if any, that Costa’s pending claim is subsequently established, and the stay afforded by Code § 362(a) continues for such purposes. It is
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. While the court is satisfied that the exemption is not to be applied retrospectively, the context in which the legislature created the exemption could create the impression that retrospective application was the purpose behind the legislation. Representative Holbrook stated that the homestead exemption was meant to "send a message in light of this bad economy that we have been faced with, to the people of the State that we do care and that we do hear them and we are making some effort to protect their homes.” House Proceedings at 10856. Representative Radcliffe, another supporter of the legislation, similarly stated that creating a homestead exemption was "[s]omething that we really should do, particularly in difficult economic times where the threat of losing a home is much greater than in boom times.”
Id.
at 10858. These comments, if standing alone, could support an interpretation that the purpose of the legislation was remedial and intended to prevent Connecticut residents from losing their homes during an economic period when many people were having difficulty meeting existing liabilities. Applying the homestead exemption prospectively to only those liabilities that were incurred after the exemption became effective is of no assistance to residents delinquent in their current liabilities.
Cf. In re Johnson,
. Section 541(a)(1) provides:
The commencement of a case under section 301, 302, or 303 of this title creates an estate. Such estate is comprised of all the following properly, wherever located and by whomever held:
(1) ... all legal or equitable interests of the debtor in property as of the commencement of the case.
11 U.S.C. § 541(a)(1).
. The legislative history expressly states that § 541(a)(1)
has the effect of overruling Lockwood v. Exchange Bank,190 U.S. 294 ,23 S.Ct. 751 ,47 L.Ed. 1061 (1903), because it includes as property of the estate all property of the debtor, even that needed for a fresh start. After the property comes into the estate, then the debtor is permitted to exempt it under proposed 11 U.S.C. 522, and the court will have jurisdiction to determine what properly may be exempted and what remains as property of the estate.
H.R.Rep. No. 595, 95th Cong., 1st Sess. 368 U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 1978, pp. 5787, 6323-6324 (1977).
See, e.g., In re Graham,
. This proceeding does not involve any of the issues addressed by the Supreme Court in
Owen v. Owen,
