MEMORANDUM DECISION
The matter before the Court is the Joint Motion to Determine Assets of the Bank *184 ruptcy Estate filed by the Plaintiff, Louis D. Jenkins, and the Defendants, A.T. Massey Coal Company, Massey Energy Corporation, Marfork Coal Company, and Michael Bays. The parties’ joint motion seeks a determination of whether six claims filed by the Plaintiff in West Virginia state court and removed to this Court are property of the bankruptcy estate of Mr. Jenkins and his wife, Naomi S. Jenkins. Those claims are for malicious prosecution, abuse of process, tort of outrage, tortious interference with a business relationship, defamation, and negligent investigation and misrepresentation. Based on the following, this Court concludes that the claims for malicious prosecution and abuse of process are not property of the bankruptcy estate and that the remaining four claims are property of the estate.
FINDINGS OF FACT
Louis Jenkins (“Plaintiff’), a joint debt- or along with his wife in the bankruptcy proceeding and the plaintiff in this adversary proceeding, filed a voluntary petition under chapter 7 on April 28, 2002 and the case was given the case number 02-01755. In his contemporaneously filed schedules, Plaintiff did not name any of the Defendants as creditors nor did he provide them notice of the filing. The bankruptcy case was administered by the trustee who filed a Report of No Distribution on June 10, 2002. On July 30, 2002, the debtors received a discharge and the case was closed. The case was reopened on May 4, 2007 upon the trustee’s motion due to the following circumstances.
Prior to bankruptcy filing, Plaintiff operated Virginia Supply Company which was in the business of buying used conveyor belts from coal mining companies, including A.T. Massey Coal Company, Massey Energy Corporation, and Marfork Coal Company (together with Michael Bays, “Defendants”), and refurbishing them to sell to other coal companies for profit. In 2001, Plaintiff agreed to purchase rolls of conveyor belt at $1.50 per foot for a total of 9,053 feet of belts.
Pursuant to this agreement with Mar-fork, Plaintiff arrived to pick up the belts on Saturday and Sunday of the weekend of September 29-30, 2001 and took six belts each day for a total of twelve belts that weekend. Plaintiff again returned and picked up six belts on a Saturday and five belts on a Sunday in early October. In total, Plaintiff removed twenty-three rolls of conveyor belt. 1
The belts were determined missing on October 31, 2001, which prompted Mar-fork’s Superintendent of Outside Services, Michael Bays, to conduct an internal investigation which concluded that Plaintiff had stolen the missing belts. After the completion of his investigation, Bays met with Senior Trooper G.J. Cook of the West Virginia State Police regarding the alleged theft and provided Trooper Cook with a copy of his report, titled “Report of Criminal Investigation,” on November 6, 2001. Trooper Cook proceeded to contact Plaintiff and in the course of their meetings, Plaintiff gave a written statement in which he admitted to taking twenty-three rolls of conveyor belt and only paying for ten rolls but denied any wrongdoing. After finalizing his investigation, Trooper Cook turned over his report to the prosecuting attorney for Raleigh County, West Virginia to be presented to a grand jury.
The grand jury indicted Plaintiff on May 13, 2002 on four felony counts relating to *185 the theft of conveyor belts from Marfork’s property. The indictment came approximately three weeks after Plaintiff and his wife filed their joint petition in bankruptcy on April 23, 2002. On December 11, 2002, upon motion by the Chief Deputy Prosecuting Attorney for Raleigh County, the Circuit Court of Raleigh County dismissed the charges against Plaintiff without prejudice. This date was over five months after the bankruptcy case was closed on June 30, 2002. The charges and all records regarding Plaintiffs prosecution were ultimately expunged with the consent of the prosecuting attorney under W. Va.Code § 61-11-25 on March 10, 2003.
The immediate adversary proceeding began with the Plaintiff filing a complaint in the Circuit Court of McDowell County, West Virginia on September 23, 2003 and, thereafter, in the Circuit Court of Boone County, West Virginia on December 17, 2003. The complaint alleges malicious prosecution, abuse of process, tort of outrage, tortious interference with a business relationship, defamation, and negligent investigation and misrepresentation. The four defendants filed separate answers, and Marfork amended its answer .on June 14, 2005 to include a counterclaim against Plaintiff seeking reimbursement for the conveyor belts which Marfork asserts that Mr. Jenkins took without payment. Discovery in the civil case proceeded until October 31, 2006 when Plaintiff stated, in a response to one of the Defendants’ interrogatories, that he had filed for bankruptcy in 2002.
This revelation prompted the Defendants to investigate the bankruptcy proceeding and what effect it might have on the civil action. Defendants’ counsel notified the bankruptcy trustee by a letter dated December 14, 2006 of the pending civil case and inquired as to whether the civil case could proceed in light of the potential inclusion of the proceeds from the case in the bankruptcy estate. The trustee eventually filed a motion to reopen the Plaintiffs bankruptcy case on May 2, 2007 on the basis that Plaintiff had a civil suit pending, which had its genesis in pre-petition conduct. The motion was granted by an order dated May 4, 2007, and the bankruptcy case was reopened.
After the bankruptcy case’s reopening in the Bankruptcy Court for the Western District of Virginia, the Defendants filed a Notice of Removal on May 31, 2007 in the Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of West Virginia. Plaintiff responded to the notice of removal by filing a Motion to Remand the case to the Circuit Court of Boone County on June 15, 2007. Plaintiff asserted in his motion to remand that mandatory abstention under 28 U.S.C. § 1334(c)(2) applied because, among other things, the state court had jurisdiction to hear the claim and the claim was based on state law. Additionally, Plaintiff asserted that permissive abstention under 28 U.S.C. § 1334(c)(1) applied because it would promote the interest of justice and serve the interest of comity with the state court. Defendants opposed the motion to remand and filed their response on August 9, 2007. The motion for remand, along with the Defendants’ opposition to it, was heard by the Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of West Virginia on August 17, 2007, at which time the court concluded that it did not have jurisdiction to determine the motion to remand.
Prior to that hearing, on August 9, 2007, the Defendants filed a Motion to Transfer the Proceeding to the Virginia Bankruptcy Court, on which the West Virginia Bankruptcy Court heard arguments on October 24, 2007. After the hearing, the court issued an order dated November 5, 2007 finding that the Virginia bankruptcy court is the proper venue for this adversary *186 proceeding and the Defendants’ request to transfer would be granted over Plaintiffs objection. The order explains that the Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of West Virginia makes no determination as to any issue pending before the court other than the transfer of the proceeding to the Virginia Bankruptcy Court and that all rights of the parties with respect to remand or any other issues pending before the court are preserved for determination in the Virginia court.
After the parties filed their initial briefs, the Court set a pre-trial telephonic hearing on June 11, 2008 at which the parties agreed to file a joint motion requesting the Court to decide whether the claims advanced by the Plaintiff are assets of the bankruptcy estate by virtue of the timing of the critical events in question.
CONTENTIONS OF THE PARTIES
In his memorandum supporting the finding that the malicious prosecution claim is not property of the estate filed on July 11, 2008, Plaintiff argued that the cause of action had not accrued on the petition date because all of the elements of the cause of action were not in existence on the filing date. Under West Virginia law regarding claims for malicious prosecution, the plaintiff must prove the prosecution was malicious, was without reasonable or probable cause, and was terminated favorably for the plaintiff. The Plaintiff observes that there can be no cause of action for malicious prosecution until and unless an actual criminal prosecution has occurred and terminated favorably to the defendant. Therefore, until the grand jury returned an indictment, there was, in effect, no prosecution, much less one that had terminated with a dismissal of the criminal charges. In support of his argument that no cause of action for malicious prosecution even existed at the time of the bankruptcy petition filing, plaintiff cites
Preiser v. Mac-Queen,
Plaintiff relied heavily on the case of
Brunswick Bank & Trust Co. v. Atanasov (In re Atanasov),
Defendants also filed their memorandum of law on July 11, 2008 in which they assert that all the causes of action are assets of the bankruptcy estate because they are firmly rooted in pre-petition conduct and are, therefore, estate property under
Segal v. Rochelle,
The parties filed their reply briefs on July 21, 2008. In his reply, Plaintiff argued first that his causes of action are not assets of the estate because they are exempt under Virginia Code § 34-28.1, which exempts personal injury claims and their proceeds from the bankruptcy estate. Plaintiff argues that, because the Defendants conceded in their brief that these claims are personal injury causes of action, they are exempt and not assets of the estate. Second, Plaintiff responds to Defendants’ reliance on Segal. Segal, Plaintiff asserts, was decided under the former Bankruptcy Act which was subsequently superseded by the Bankruptcy Code. Plaintiff argues that the test set out in Segal that included the “firmly rooted” analysis on which Defendants rely, created uncertainty in the process and prompted Congress to set a definite temporal limit on property of the estate consisting of “all legal or equitable interests of the debtor in possession as of the commencement of the case” when it created § 541 of the Bankruptcy Code. In support of his assertion that Segal is no longer good law, Plaintiff distinguishes the eases on which Defendants relied. Additionally, Plaintiff cited decisions from the Fifth, Eighth and Eleventh Circuits for this proposition that Se-gal had been superseded. 2 Finally, Plaintiff addressed whether the causes of action for his claims of malicious prosecution, abuse of process, and tort of outrage had accrued as of the petition date. In asserting they did not, Plaintiff argues that the claim for malicious prosecution did not accrue until the prosecution was favorably terminated, that the claim for abuse of process did not accrue until the criminal process was improperly used, and that the claim for tort of outrage did not accrue until he had suffered an actionable level of emotional distress. For these reasons, Plaintiff argues the Court should find that none of these claims is property of the bankruptcy estate.
Defendants’ reply brief argues that federal bankruptcy law determines whether causes of action are property of the estate and state law determines the debtor’s interest in the property. State law determinations regarding the timing of accrual do not affect whether causes of action are property of the estate; instead, that analysis is governed by bankruptcy law. Under the
Segal
holding and the Fourth Circuit and Virginia cases adopting the
Segal
anal
*188
ysis, claims that are sufficiently rooted in the pre-petition past are property of the estate. Here, all the Defendants’ actions leading to the claims being filed were completed nearly five months prior to Plaintiffs petition. The timing of the criminal indictment and its ultimate dismissal were actions by the West Virginia judicial system and not the Defendants, so the cause of action against the Defendants was sufficiently rooted in pre-petition events to be considered an asset of the estate. Defendants then distinguish the
Atanasov
case and argue that its precedential value was undercut by the Third Circuit’s decision in
O’Dowd v. Trueger (In re O’Dowd),
CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
This Court has jurisdiction over this proceeding by virtue of the provisions of 28 U.S.C. §§ 1334(a) and 157(a) and the delegation made to this Court by Order from the District Court on July 24, 1984. The determination of whether state court civil claims are property of the estate is a matter concerning the administration of the estate and a “core” bankruptcy matter pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(A).
Plaintiff asserts two arguments in favor of his position that his causes of action against the Defendants are not property of the estate. First, he argues that, because personal injury actions are exempt from creditor process under Virginia Code § 34-28.1, any interest he may have in the actions against Defendants is not property of the bankruptcy estate, by reason of the exemption. Second, he argues that, because his causes of action had not yet accrued under West Virginia state law by the date of the commencement of his bankruptcy case, his interest in those actions is not property of the estate under 11 U.S.C. § 541(a). The Court will address these arguments in turn.
The Plaintiffs argument that his causes of action are exempt under Virginia law and, therefore, not property of the estate is misguided. Under the Bankruptcy Code, the commencement of a case creates an estate comprised of the properties and interests enumerated in 11 U.S.C. § 541. 3 After commencement of the case, property of the estate is then administered in a manner consistent with the Bankruptcy Code. Such administration includes determinations as to which properties of that estate are exempt under 11 U.S.C. § 522. Thus, while Plaintiff is correct that the Virginia Code exempts personal injury awards, it is the Trustee’s duty and any creditor’s right to determine whether to object to any claim of exemption, and it is solely within the province of the Court to determine whether any such exemption claimed is valid. See, e.g., S.Rep. No. 95-989, at 82 (1978), U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 1978, p. 5787 (“After the property comes into the estate, then the debtor is *189 permitted to exempt it under ... 11 U.S.C. § 522.”); Norton Bankruptcy Law and Practice 2d § 51:7 (2d ed.1997) (same); 5 Collier on Bankruptcy ¶ 541.02 (Alan N. Resnick & Henry J. Sommer eds., 15th ed. rev.) (same). The Court, therefore, rejects the Plaintiffs first argument, which, in essence, places the cart before the horse.
The Plaintiffs primary argument, however, presents a more difficult question. As noted above, the parties disagree as to whether the Plaintiffs causes of action against the Defendants are property of the estate. Answering that question requires a close examination of whether the Plaintiff had any property rights in those actions at the “commencement of the case.” 11 U.S.C. § 541(a). To this point, the Defendants argue that Segal controls the analysis, while the Plaintiff argues that Segal did not survive passage of the Bankruptcy Code.
In
Segal,
the Court was faced with the question of whether a loss-carryback tax refund claim was part of the bankruptcy estate where the loss underlying the refunds occurred pre-petition but the refund was issued post-petition.
An examination of the Fourth Circuit’s case law reveals that the Defendants correctly note that
Segal
is still good law in this Circuit. For example, in
Andrews v. Riggs National Bank (In re Andrews),
the Fourth Circuit was faced with a case in which the debtor had entered into a non-compete agreement (NCA) with his former employer, who agreed to pay him $1 million, to be paid in quarterly installments with ten percent annual interest.
Assuredly, the decision in Andrews is not on all fours with the questions presented by the current case because the Fourth Circuit was deciding the question of whether future payments owing the Debt- or under the NCA were akin to earnings derived from post-petition services rendered (which would have been excluded from the estate under § 541(a)(6)). Id. at 909. To answer the question, however, the Court looked to the language of § 541 and observed that the Section attempts to balance, as does the rest of the Code, the interests of the creditors and the debtors. Id. at 909-910. In so doing, the Court recognized that § 541 establishes a bright line between pre-petition and post-petition assets. Id. at 910. The Court ultimately answered the question before it by referring to Segal and expressly citing its “sufficiently rooted” test in finding that the payments were firmly rooted in pre-petition conduct and, therefore, property of the estate. Id. at 910-911.
Certainly, the Court followed this analysis in order to determine whether the term “services performed” as contained in sub *190 section (a)(6) included the Debtor’s continuing fulfillment of his obligations under the NCA, which was entered into pre-petition, but any distinction between Andrews and the present case on the basis that the specific question in Andrews is much different than the question presented today is undercut by the fact that Andrews was decided by reference to § 541. In interpreting the meaning of the term “estate” as used in the Code, it is of no small consequence that the Court still references Segal. 4
That the Fourth Circuit continues to follow
Segal
is further evidenced by its table decision and accompanying unpublished opinion in
Field v. Transcontinental Insurance Co.,
In resolving the issue over ownership of the claim, the district court properly focused on the question of whether the claim was property of the estate. Id. More to the point, the court focused on whether the debtor had a cause of action against the defendant as of the date of the commencement of the ease. Id. The court observed that the question could present difficult issues of whether the debtor had a viable, ripe claim at the time of the petition were it not for the Segal test. Id. at 119. The court found that, because his right to coverage by the defendant insurer was sufficiently rooted in pre-petition conduct, the question of whether he had a ripe cause of action as of the petition date was inconsequential in determining whether the cause of action against the defendant was property of the estate. Id. Importantly, the court held that the cause of action was property of the estate based solely on the application of the Segal test to the circumstances before it.
Plaintiff argues still that
Segal
was superseded by the passage of the Code.
*191
More specifically, he argues that, when passing the Bankruptcy Code, Congress rejected and overruled
Segal.
Even though the legislative history of § 541 severely undercuts this argument,
see
S. Rep. 95-989, at 82 (1978) (“The result of
Segal v. Rochelle
... is followed.”),
6
Plaintiff accurately points to two different Circuits that have held that
Segal
was superseded by § 541.
See In re Bracewell,
Following
Segal,
it appears that at least three of the six claims in the Plaintiffs complaint are easily disposed of as property of the bankruptcy estate, and the Plaintiff does not make any serious argument otherwise.
8
The facts alleged supporting the Plaintiffs claims of tortious interference with business relationship, defamation, and negligent investigation and misrepresentation all took place before the commencement of the bankruptcy case. Similar to the district court in
Field,
this Court recognizes that many of these claims may well present difficult questions of whether they were ripe on the date the bankruptcy petition was filed. However, these questions would arise under state law, and bankruptcy, not state, law “determines whether a debtor’s interest is property of the estate.”
In re Strada Design Associates,
Similarly, Plaintiffs claim of tort of outrage is also property of the estate. For a tort of outrage claim to be successful under West Virginia law, an individual must establish “(1) that the defendant’s conduct was atrocious ...; (2) that the defendant acted with the intent to inflict emotional distress ...; (3) that the actions of the defendant caused the plaintiff to suffer emotional distress; and (4) that the emotional distress ... was so severe that no reasonable person could be expected to endure it.”
Travis v. Alcon Laboratories, Inc.,
The claims for abuse of process and malicious prosecution, however, present a much closer issue. With respect to his claim for abuse of process, Plaintiff argues that such a claim requires that formal process be issued against the claimant. Here, Plaintiff argues that because no such process was issued as of the commencement of his bankruptcy case, the claim was not legally cognizable pre-petition. Plaintiff notes that, under West Virginia law, “abuse of process consists of the willful or malicious misuse or misapplication of lawfully issued process to accomplish some purpose not intended by that process.”
Williamson v. Harden,
With respect to the plaintiff’s final claim, the fact that, under West Virginia law, a successful malicious prosecution claim requires a prosecution that terminated favorably to the plaintiff,
Preiser,
Here, however, this Court cannot conclude that the claim for malicious prosecution was “sufficiently” rooted in prepetition conduct. While it is certainly true that all of the Defendants’ actions had occurred pre-petition, the slightly unusual nature of a claim for malicious prosecution requires that a third party also engage in some act, namely the prosecution of Plaintiff. As such, two vital elements to the malicious prosecution claim were missing at the commencement of the case: the prosecution itself and a favorable termination of such prosecution. Based on this observation, it becomes apparent that this claim was not rooted sufficiently in prepetition conduct as neither the right to bring the claim nor the possibility that such a claim might shortly arise was in existence “at the commencement” of Plaintiffs bankruptcy case within the meaning *194 of § 541. 10 Undoubtedly, the interests considered property of the estate are expansive under § 541; however, this Court cannot support any position which would bring into the bankruptcy estate causes of action not existing as of the commencement of the case. See S.Rep. No. 95-989, at 82 (1978). Here, a conclusion that the claim for malicious prosecution is property of the estate would have such an effect, and such a result, even under Segal, was not intended by Congress when enacting § 541.
Moreover, this Court is reluctant to reach any conclusion which would alter the line Congress has drawn between pre-petition and post-petition interests in § 541. Within this section Congress made only one provision for inclusion of a post-petition entitlement in the bankruptcy estate. 11 As to such post-petition occurrences included within § 541(a)(5), the Rules provide an express obligation upon the debtor to file amended schedules disclosing the event, even if the case has been closed. See Bankr.R. 1007(h). Within § 541(a)(5), Congress included a limited, specific exception to the rule that property interests acquired after the filing date are not property of the estate. To go beyond that seems to expand the Code in an area in which Congress has specifically legislated, and this Court does not choose to embrace a rule or pass a judgment which would have such an effect.
Based on the foregoing, this Court concludes that the Plaintiffs claims of abuse of process and malicious prosecution are not property of the bankruptcy estate. The remaining claims, however, are property of the estate. The parties shall have fifteen (15) days from this date to file any motions or renew any previously-filed motions which any of them may determine advisable as a result of the Court’s ruling. A separate order will be entered by this Court reflecting the same and setting a date for a status conference in this adversary proceeding and the related adversary proceeding, No. 08-07010.
Notes
. The parties do not appear to disagree over the number of rolls of belting removed by the Plaintiff. Rather, the parties dispute the lawfulness of that conduct. This Court makes no finding and offers no conclusion on this issue.
.
Bracewell v. Kelley (In re Bracewell),
. Neither party disputes, nor could they, that the estate includes potential claims and causes of action.
Inner City Mgmt., LLC v. JKV Real Estate Serv. (In re Bogdan),
. In fact, the Fourth Circuit reaffirmed its position in
Andrews
and applied the
Segal
analysis to the more general question of whether assets which would be received post-petition but that were rooted in the debtor’s pre-bankruptcy past were property of the estate.
Beaman v. Shearin (In re Shearin),
. Additionally, while the Plaintiff argues that the addition of the "temporal requirement” in § 541 explicitly rejects and overrules the decision in Segal, a review of § 70a of the Bankruptcy Act shows that the temporal requirement was not added by § 541. Instead, the Code merely reworded the temporal requirement that was already present in the Act. The Act reads, in pertinent part, "The trustee of the estate of a bankrupt ..., upon his or their appointment ..., shall ... be vested by operation of law with the title of the bankrupt as of the date of the filing of the petition initiating a proceeding.” § 70a of the Bankruptcy Act (emphasis added). Insofar as it pertains to the questions presently before this Court, the difference between the language used in the Act and the Code ("as of the commencement of the case”) appears to be nothing more than a semantic one.
. This Court was able to find only one case within the Fourth Circuit that concludes that
Segal
was superseded by statute, and that case predates the decisions of the Fourth Circuit following
Segal.
In
Hovis v. Wright (In re Wright),
the District Judge found that
Segal
had been superseded by passage of the Code.
.In his reply brief, Plaintiff argues only that the claims for malicious prosecution, abuse of process, and tort of outrage are not property of the estate.
.
See Cunard v. Mylan Pharms., Inc.,
. As the Plaintiff observed,
In re Atanasov
supports this Court’s conclusion.
. That Section reads, in pertinent part: "[Property of the] estate is comprised of ... [a]ny interest in property that would have been property of the estate if such interest had been an interest of the debtor on the date of the filing of the petition, and that the debt- or acquires or becomes entitled to acquire within 180 days after such date — (A) by bequest, devise, or inheritance; (B) as a result of a property settlement agreement with the debtor's spouse ...; or (C) as a beneficiary of a life insurance policy or death benefit plan.” 11 U.S.C. § 541(a)(5).
