IN RE: SUSAN MARIE KREBS,
No. 06-2959
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
May 19, 2008
FISHER, Circuit Judge.
PRECEDENTIAL. On Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania (D.C. No. 06-cv-00066E). District Judge: Honorable Sean J. McLaughlin. Argued March 6, 2008. Before: FISHER, GREENBERG and ROTH, Circuit Judges.
Gary V. Skiba (Argued) Yochim, Skiba, Johnson, Cauley & Nash 345 West 6th Street Erie, PA 16507 Attorney for Appellee
OPINION OF THE COURT
FISHER, Circuit Judge.
This appeal requires us to revisit one of our precedents in deciding whether a debtor‘s right to receive payment from an individual retirement account (IRA) may be exempt from the bankruptcy estate under
I.
Susan Marie Krebs filed a voluntary petition for bankruptcy on September 7, 2005, when she was 58 years of age. After the meeting of creditors, Gary V. Skiba, appellee herein, was designated as the Chapter 7 trustee, or the person responsible for overseeing the liquidation of the bankruptcy estate and the distribution of the proceeds. Krebs indicated on
After a hearing, the Bankruptcy Court by order dated March 3, 2006 sustained Skiba‘s objection. Krebs timely appealed that order to the District Court. By memorandum opinion and order dated May 10, 2006, the District Court affirmed, relying on precedent disallowing exemptions of amounts in retirement plans under
II.
The District Court had jurisdiction under
III.
A. Our Decision in Clark
“As a general matter, upon the filing of a petition for bankruptcy, ‘all legal or equitable interests of the debtor in property’ become the property of the bankruptcy estate and will be distributed to the debtor‘s creditors. [
11 U.S.C.] § 541(a)(1) . To help the debtor obtain a fresh start, the Bankruptcy Code permits him to withdraw from the estate certain interests in property, such as his car or home, up to certain values. See, e.g.,§ 522(d) .”
Rousey v. Jacoway, 544 U.S. 320, 325 (2005). In this case, Krebs claims that her right to receive payment from the IRA is exempt under
Krebs must establish three requirements for exemption:
- the right to receive payment must be “under a stock bonus, pension, profitsharing, annuity, or similar plan or contract“;
- the right to receive payment must be “on account of illness, disability, death, age, or length of service“; and
- the right to receive payment may be exempted only “to the extent reasonably necessary for the support of the debtor and any dependent of the debtor.”
We interpreted the third requirement in In re Clark (Clark v. O‘Neill), 711 F.2d 21 (3d Cir. 1983). In Clark, Robert H. Clark, a 43-year-old family therapist, filed a Chapter 7 petition in bankruptcy and claimed an exemption for the $17,466 in his Keogh retirement plan. Id. at 22. Contributions to such a plan are tax-deductible, and income tax on its earnings is deferred until withdrawn. The right to receive payment under the plan is triggered when a participant turns 59 1/2, dies, or is disabled. Id. If a participant receives a payment before one of these events, he must pay a penalty tax of 10% in addition to regular income taxes. Id.
The trustee in Clark filed an objection to the claimed exemption, and Clark filed a complaint against the trustee seeking a denial of the objection. In interpreting
We affirmed. We first cited the following legislative history of the exemption provisions of the Bankruptcy Code:
“The historical purpose of [] exemption laws has been to protect a debtor from his creditors, to provide him with the basic necessities of life so that even if his creditors levy on all of his nonexempt property, the debtor will not be left destitute and a public charge. [This] purpose has not changed.”
Id. at 23 (quoting H.R. Rep. No. 95-595, at 126 (1977), as reprinted in 1978 U.S.C.C.A.N. 5963, 6087). Based on that legislative history, we held: “The exemption of present Keogh payments, to the extent they are necessary for the support of the debtor, is consistent with this goal. The exemption of future
We proceeded to cite decisions from various bankruptcy courts (we did not cite a single circuit or district court decision) that showed that “[t]he result of denying the exemption with respect to future payments is in accord with the caselaw.” Id. After explaining that some of the cases were decided on other grounds, we were left essentially with one decision on point, Matter of Kochell, 26 B.R. 86 (Bankr. W.D. Wis. 1982), which we characterized as “agree[ing] that the underlying purpose of the section was to alleviate present rather than long-term need, a condition which the 44-year old debtor, a doctor in apparent good health, could not demonstrate.” 711 F.2d at 23.5 Beyond the aforementioned legislative history and the Kochell case, our opinion in Clark did not contain further reasoning to support our per se rule that only present payments from a retirement fund can ever meet the “reasonably necessary” requirement.
Judge Becker concurred in the judgment only. He specifically took exception to the majority‘s holding distinguishing between future payments and present payments, “for the distinction required by the majority‘s reasoning effectively penalizes self-employed individuals for the form in which their retirement assets are held.” 711 F.2d at 23 (Becker, J., concurring). He explained that retirement plans created by employers are not affected by the majority‘s holding because the assets of such plans are not included in the debtor‘s estate in the first place. Id. at 24. He also wrote that he would not rely on the legislative history relied upon by the majority, “given the incongruity of the result for different retirement plans.” Id.
B. The Impact of Rousey
Several of our sister courts of appeals have decided the exemption issue contrary to Clark.6 However, we lack authority to overrule it on that basis. Nor can we overrule it because we are no longer persuaded by its reasoning. The basis that permits
The Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit affirmed, relying on its prior holding that IRAs do not satisfy either of the first two requirements of
The IRAs at issue here and in Rousey (both of which fall undisputedly within the meaning of section 408 of the Internal Revenue Code,
Although the precise holding in Rousey covers only the first and second requirements of
“When they filed for bankruptcy, Richard Rousey was fifty-seven years old and petitioner Betty Jo Rousey was fifty-three. Their ability to replace those funds, a substantial part of which had been accumulated through their employer-sponsored pension plan, and through the compounding of funds held for many years, is non-existent. Nothing in the language, structure, or purpose of Section 522(d)(10)(E) suggests any reason why the fortuity that they filed for bankruptcy in 2001 rather than the year in which they would be 59 1/2 years old should determine the eligibility of their IRAs for exemption.”
Brief for Petitioners, Rousey, 2004 WL 1900505, at *35-36; see also Rousey v. Jacoway, 275 B.R. 307, 309, 311 (Bankr. W.D. Ark. 2002) (stating that the Rouseys would face a 10% tax penalty if they withdrew from their IRAs at that time). Moreover, it is the Rouseys’ age at time of petition filing that matters because the bankruptcy estate is created at the “commencement” of the bankruptcy case. See
Although the district and bankruptcy courts in our Circuit have split with respect to Rousey‘s effect on Clark, we are persuaded by the reasoning of those courts that have decided the question the way we do today. For example, the United States District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania correctly identified the polar opposite approaches to statutory interpretation in Rousey and Clark. See In re Wiggins, 341 B.R. 506, 512 (M.D. Pa. 2006). Whereas Clark narrowed allowable exemptions based on what the majority perceived as the Bankruptcy Code‘s limited purpose of maintaining the debtor‘s immediate financial security, Rousey focused only on the Code‘s plain language, which asks whether an item sought to be exempted is “similar” to “a stock bonus, pension, profitsharing, [or] annuity,” that is, whether the item provides income that substitutes for wages. Id. Other than the three requirements imposed by the plain language, “[n]o other limitation is imposed, and no higher purpose of the Bankruptcy Code is invoked.” Id. The Supreme Court did not treat as dispositive the factor essential to our per se rule: whether the plan or contract provides for immediate payments or deferred payments. We agree with Wiggins that Rousey‘s approach to construing
Finally, we are unable to determine whether Krebs’ right to receive payment from the IRA in fact meets the third requirement of
IV.
Our conclusions are as follows. It is undisputed that Krebs’ IRA meets the first two requirements of
