This appeal presents questions of first impression in the administration of the Bankruptcy Act, concerning the interplay between the exempt property provisions of Section 6 of the Bankruptcy Act (11 U.S.C. § 24 (1971)), the wage garnishment restrictions of the Consumer Credit Protection Act (15 U.S.C. §§ 1671-77 (1971)), and the wage exemption provisions of the California law applicable to these bankrupts (Cal.Code Civ. Proc. § 690.6 (West Supp.1977)). After disposing of a threshold jurisdictional issue, we conclude that the Consumer Credit Protection Act (“CCPA”) does not itself create an exemption within the meaning of the Bankruptcy Act, but that by reason of its incorporation by California’s exemption statute, which, in turn, is adopted by the Bankruptcy Act, it becomes an exemption measure, with the result that 75 percent of appellants’ wages are exempt from their creditors. In this appeal, each bankrupt requests that 75 percent of his wages earned but unpaid prior to the filing of the bankruptcy petition be deemed exempt property not subject to become part of the bankruptcy estate, pursuant to Section 6 of the Bankruptcy Act. (See Bankruptcy Rule 403; Bankruptcy Act § 70(a)(5), 11 U.S.C. § 110(a)(5) (1971).) The trustee exempted 50 percent of such wages, rather than 75 percent in his report of exempt property. The district court affirmed the trustee’s determination that only 50 percent of the wages were exempt property within the meaning of Section 6. As the sums involved amount to less than $500, appellants duly requested and were granted leave to appeal to this court. (Id. § 47(a); Rule 6, Fed.Rules of App.Proc. 1 ) We also granted leave to appeal in forma pauperis.
I
We must first decide whether the district court’s order is appealable under
The distinction between “proceedings” and “controversies” in Section 24(a) is obscure and indefensibly confusing.
(See generally
2 Collier, supra, ¶¶ 24.03-.04, .08, .11 — .36; 9 Moore,
supra,
¶ 110.19[5].
See also United Kingdom Mutual, supra,
Earlier case law does not help us to interpret Section 24(a), which not only gave appeals from final judgments in proceedings
The esoteric draftsmanship of Section 24(a) does not completely obscure the draftsmen’s intent that decisions involving interpretation of fundamental provisions of the Bankruptcy Act should be subject to interlocutory appeal. Due to the peculiar nature of bankruptcy proceedings, certain interlocutory decisions may effectively determine the ultimate outcome or finally resolve rights and duties of parties in a manner not susceptible to meaningful review on appeal from the final judgment.
(See Cohen v. Beneficial Loan Corp.
(1949)
The instant case involves a basic question of interpretation of Section 6 of the Bankruptcy Act. In contrast, disputes between trustees and third parties over title to assets typically involve the property and procedural law of creditors’ rights, which are entwined in the bankruptcy proceeding only because the erstwhile debtor has become a bankrupt and the trustee has succeeded to his rights.
(See United Kingdom Mutual, supra,
Decisions about the status of exempt property can,'and frequently do, determine the entire course of the bankruptcy proceeding. Disputes over exemptions integrally affect the administration process, and are therefore among the issues that are contemplated by Section 24(a)’s exception to the final judgment rule.
(See In re Durensky, supra,
A decision that property is exempt may so deplete the potential estate that creditors will decline to participate further in the proceeding; a decision that it is not exempt will cause title to it to vest in the trustee during the pendency of the action, with all the attendant consequences of vesting. Although the exemption decision is technically interlocutory, it is frequently the final resolution of the rights of the parties for practical purposes. Erroneous determinations that property is nonexempt encourage cred
Applying the criteria which we have earlier described, we conclude that exemption disputes are proceedings in bankruptcy from which interlocutory appeals may be taken pursuant to Section 24(a), and we have jurisdiction of this appeal.
II
All parties concede that wages earned but unpaid prior to filing the petition are transferable property of the bankrupt.
(See In re Aveni, supra,
Rather than listing specific exemptions within the Bankruptcy Act itself, Section 6 of the Act provides that bankrupts shall be allowed “the exemptions which are prescribed by the laws of the United States or by the State laws in force at the time of the filing of the petition in the State wherein they have had their domicile for the six months immediately preceding the filing of the petition . . . .” (11 U.S.C. § 24.)
The federal and state statutes to which Section 6 refers do not officially purport to be bankruptcy exemptions. Rather, they are statutes designed to protect certain kinds of the debtors’ assets from attachment or execution by their creditors in ordinary judicial proceedings to collect debts. By incorporating those statutes, the Bankruptcy Act prevents creditors from being in any better position to reach a debt- or’s assets upon bankruptcy than they would have been in a non-bankruptcy setting.
(Holden v. Stratton
(1905)
Federal law supplies few exemption statutes. The primary source of bankruptcy exemptions under Section 6 is state law, which varies widely from state to state. The result is that bankrupts are given uniform treatment within states, but great disparities exist among bankrupts in different states. (See generally 1A Collier on Bankruptcy '16.02, at 795-96; Vukowich, The Bankruptcy Commission’s Proposal Regarding Bankrupt’s Exemption Rights, 63 Cal.L.Rev. 1439 (1975).)
Appellants argue that 75 percent of their wages are exempt because (1) the federal Consumer Credit Protection Act, which exempts at least 75 percent of wages from garnishment, is an exemption law within the meaning of Section 6, and (2) the California statute, Section 690.6 of the California Code of Civil Procedure, exempting certain earnings from execution, is an exemption statute within the meaning of Section 6, and the California statute adopts the provisions of the CCPA. We reject the former argument on the basis of
Kokoszka v. Belford
(1974)
The CCPA provides that a maximum of 25 percent of a wage earner’s disposable earnings 6 may be subjected to garnishment by his creditors (15 U.S.C. § 1673(a)) and that “[n]o court of the United States or any State may make, execute, or enforce any order or process in violation of this section.” (Id. § 1673(c).) Garnishment is defined as “any legal or equitable procedure through which the earnings of any individual are required to be withheld for payment of any debt.” (Id. § 1672(c).)
In
Kokoszka
v.
Belford, supra,
the Supreme Court discussed the relationship of these provisions to Section 6 exemptions in some detail. The Court there held that income tax refunds were property of the bankrupt for purposes of Section 70(a)(5) and that no part of the refunds was exempt for Section 6 purposes by reason of the CCPA.
7
(
The Court noted that the CCPA’s garnishment limitations were enacted with a full awareness of the Bankruptcy Act and in reliance upon the congressional power to enact uniform bankruptcy laws.
(Id.
at 650,
California has a comprehensive statutory scheme for protecting debtors by limiting assets to which creditors can resort. (Cal. Code Civ.Proc. §§ 688(a), 690.1-.29 (West Supp.1977).) Among the California exemption provisions is Section 690.6(a) protecting “earnings of the debtor received for his or her personal services.” It provides that of those earnings “[o]ne-half or such greater portion as is allowed by statute of the United States . . . shall be exempt .” 10 The debtor is afforded that exemption without the necessity of filing an exemption claim. (Id.) The debtor can also obtain a further exemption of as much as all of his or her earnings if the debtor can show that it is necessary for his or her use. (Id. § 690.6(b).)
We next turn to the interaction of the California statute and the Consumer Credit Protection Act. California has interpreted its statute protecting its debtors’ wages to the extent of either half “or such greater portion as is allowed by statute of the United States” to incorporate the 75 percent protection accorded by the CCPA. Thus, in
Raigoza
v.
Sperl
(1973)
We defer to California’s construction of its own statute as incorporating the CCPA. Of course, California’s interpretation of its statute is only relevant because the Bankruptcy Act adopts California’s exemption statute. (See Holden v. Stratton, supra.)
Superficially, it may seem to be anomalous that the CCPA is not an exemption statute to which the Bankruptcy Act refers, at the same time it becomes an exemption statute for all practical purposes via California law. The process of double adoption, however, is entirely consistent with Bankruptcy Act policy. The CCPA purports to do only what California permits it to do— namely, to set the levels of maximum garnishment. The California statute continues to function as an exemption statute, both for the purposes of state law and for the purposes of Section 6. Section 6 adopts, as an exemption, any state law which would shield the property in question from execution by a creditor in a non-bankruptcy proceeding and thus adopts California’s adoption of the CCPA. If we were to assume, on the contrary, that the CCPA preempted Section 690.6, the result would be the totally unacceptable result that a California bankrupt would be entirely stripped of his state wage earner’s exemption in bankruptcy proceedings. That conclusion would, of course, be inconsistent both with the purposes of Congress in creating the
The order is vacated and the cause is remanded to the district court for further proceedings consistent with the views herein expressed.
Notes
. Appellant Brissette’s wages earned but unpaid prior to bankruptcy are $152, appellant Master’s are $180, and appellant Simon’s are $75. The respective amounts in issue (25 percent of the foregoing) are $38, $45, and $18.75.
. Interlocutory appeals from controversies may be appealable in some cases pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292 (1971). (See 9 Moore, supra, at 225-26 n. 7.) This appeal does not satisfy that provision.
. Both are appealable as of right except where the amount in controversy is less than $500, in which case permission of the court of appeals must be obtained. (See discussion in text at note 1, supra.)
. Matters deemed “proceedings” under the old statutes often involved trivial matters and courts accordingly restricted them by adding the jurisdictional hurdle that such disputes must involve an exercise of judicial power which finally resolves a right or duty of a party, even if they arose in “proceedings.”
(See In re Durensky, supra,
. In California, earned but unpaid wages are property which could have been “transferred,” see Section 70(a)(5) (first clause), by a written assignment which conforms to statutory requirements. (Cal. Labor Code § 300 (West Supp.1977).) Hence it is unnecessary to consider whether California’s exemption of a portion of wages from levy and sale under judicial process in Cal.Code Civ.Proc. § 690.6 (West Supp.1977) operates to remove it from the definition of property under Section 70(a)(5)’s second clause.
. The maximum amount which may be garnished is 25 percent of disposable income or “the amount by which his disposable earnings for that week exceed thirty times the Federal minimum hourly wage whichever is less.” (15 U.S.C. § 1673(a) (1971).) The second clause means that less than. 25 percent will be garnishable for workers paid less than the minimum wage. Disposable income is defined in the statute as that remaining after the deduction of amounts which are legally required to be withheld, such as taxes and social security contributions. (Id. § 1672(b).)
. The decision did not discuss, but impliedly overruled, contrary precedent' in this circuit.
See In re Cedor
(N.D.Cal.1972)
. The square holding in
Kokoszka
was that the CCPA does not protect income tax refunds from garnishment of any sort. The Court thus did not have to reach the argument of appellants there that the passing of title to the trustee pursuant to Section 70(a)(5) constituted a “garnishment” within the meaning of the CCPA. (15 U.S.C. § 1672(c).
See
417 U.S. at
. Conversely, those federal statutes which are said to be exemption statutes of the United States do not refer explicitly to bankruptcy. (See
generally
1A Collier,
supra
, 6.17, at 900-01, citing as federal exemption statute 38 U.S.C. § 3101(a) (1971) (veteran’s pension benefits not “assignable . and exempt from taxation, . . the claim of creditors, and shall not be liable to attachment, levy, or seizure by or under any legal or equitable process whatever . . .”).
See also
5 U.S.C. § 8346(c) (1971) (federal employees’ pension benefits “not assignable, either in law or equity, or subject to execution, levy, attachment, garnishment, or other legal process.”) (predecessor statute held bankruptcy exemption in
In re Barry
(E.D.N.Y.1943)
. The statute provides in pertinent part:
“(a) One-half or such greater portion as is allowed by statute of the United States, of the earnings of the debtor received for his or her personal services rendered at any time within 30 days next preceding the date of a withholding by the employer under Section 682.3 [earnings execution provision], shall be exempt from execution without filing a claim for exemption
“(b) All earnings of the debtor received for his or her personal services rendered at any time within 30 days next preceding the date of a withholding ... if necessary for the use of the debtor or the debtor’s family . unless the debts are: (1) Incurred ... for the common necessaries of life. (2) Incurred for personal services rendered by any employee or former employee of the debtor.”
. Were the law to go further and state that it spoke to the bankruptcy situation, it would risk being deemed an unconstitutional interference with congressional prerogatives in the bankruptcy sphere. (See, e. g.,
In re Kanter
(9th Cir. 1974)
. The provision for “receipt” of federal law was added in 1970 soon after the 1968 enactment of the CCPA. Although there is no legislative history on point, it seems clearly intended to avoid any constitutional problems with respect to California garnishment proceedings. (See B. Witkin, 5 California Procedure § 60, at 3436-37 (2d ed. 1971) (statute amended to reflect change in federal law).) It is also of some significance that in an unrelated amendment of § 690.6 in 1974, the California Law Revision Commission noted, “These changes do not, of course, affect the federal exemptions from garnishment. See Consumer Credit Protection Act, §§ 301-307, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1671-77.” (Cal. Code Civ.Proc. § 690.6 (Comment; West Supp. 1977).)
