In the Matter of: CURTIS HAROLD DEBERRY, Debtor; JOHN PATRICK LOWE, Appellee v. KATHY DEBERRY; CURTIS HAROLD DEBERRY; GOLDSTEIN, GOLDSTEIN & HILLEY; GERALD H. GOLDSTEIN; CYNTHIA E. ORR, Appellants
No. 17-50315
United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
March 7, 2018
GREGG COSTA, Circuit Judge
Appeals from the United States District Court for the Western District of Texas
GREGG COSTA, Circuit Judge:
Curtis DeBerry filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy, listing his San Antonio home as exempt under Texas law. No objections were filed to this claimed exemption. Seven months later the bankruptcy court granted DeBerry‘s motion for authorization to sell the home, and he sold it for $364,592.21. DeBerry did not reinvest those proceeds in another home. Instead he transferred the money to his wife and to the law firm Goldstein, Goldstein & Hilley for the benefit of two partners who represented him in a criminal
The trustee thinks the proceeds are not exempt. He filed an adversary proceeding against the DeBerrys, the law firm, and the partners who received the funds (collectively “appellants“) alleging that creditors are entitled to the money because it was not reinvested in a homestead within six months. The appellants moved to dismiss the adversary proceeding, arguing that the proceeds were exempt as of the time of filing. The bankruptcy court agreed and held that when a Chapter 7 debtor sells his exempted Texas homestead postpetition, the proceeds of the sale are likewise exempted. The district court reversed. This appeal follows.
After both parties filed their briefs, our court decided Hawk v. Engelhart (In re Hawk), 871 F.3d 287 (5th Cir. 2017). Hawk held that funds withdrawn from an exempted retirement account after the filing of a Chapter 7 bankruptcy do not lose their exempt status even if the money is not redeposited in a similar account within 60 days pursuant to Texas‘s proceeds rule. Id. at 296. The appellants now contend that Hawk controls this case. The trustee attempts to distinguish Hawk on the basis that it involved retirement savings rather than homesteads.1
There has been confusion about how the proceeds rule works in the bankruptcy realm. It expands the homestead exemption available in Chapter 7 cases by not requiring that the home be owned on the date of filing. If a debtor sells her homestead a month before declaring bankruptcy and then uses that money to buy a new residence three months later—perhaps because like many she needs the equity from her old house to be able to afford the new
Unlike the situations just described in which the homestead is sold before bankruptcy, this debtor does not need to invoke the proceeds rule because he owned the homestead at the time of filing. Instead, it is the trustee who seeks to use the proceeds rule. He is trying to transform the rule from one that extends the homestead exemption to some situations when the home is not owned on the filing date into one that limits the homestead exemption even when the debtor owns the home on the filing date.
We recently rejected the same argument in the context of exemptions for retirement accounts. See Hawk, 871 F.3d at 295–96. Those Texas statutes, which we noted have “clear parallels” to those governing homestead exemptions, maintain exempt status for money withdrawn from retirement accounts so long as it is reinvested in such accounts within 60 days (the shorter window reflecting that it is usually less time consuming to transfer funds between liquid assets than real estate). Id. at 291; see
We see no reason why Hawk‘s analysis should not also apply to Texas‘s homestead exemption, which has much deeper roots than the protections afforded retirement accounts. See In re Perry, 345 F.3d 303, 316 (5th Cir. 2003) (“Homesteads are favorites of the law, and are liberally construed by Texas courts.” (citing Whiteman v. Burkey, 282 S.W. 788, 788–89 (Tex. 1926))). Indeed, Hawk relied heavily on homestead caselaw in holding that “an unconditionally exempted property interest that is subsequently transformed into a new nonexempt property interest remains excluded from a Chapter 7 bankruptcy estate.” 871 F.3d at 294. And it persuasively distinguished two homestead cases the trustee invokes here. The first is Zibman, which we have already alluded to for the principle that when a debtor fails to reinvest in a new home the sale proceeds of a homestead sold before the filing of a Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition, those proceeds lose their exemption and are reachable by creditors. 268 F.3d at 305. Because the Zibman debtor had sold the homestead prepetition, the proceeds were only conditionally exempted subject to the reinvestment Texas requires. In contrast, this homestead was owned on
The other case the trustee cites, In re Frost, is at least factually similar to this one in terms of the home being sold after the commencement of the bankruptcy. 744 F.3d 384, 389 (5th Cir. 2014). But Frost was a Chapter 13 case, which turns out to be a key distinction. As Hawk explained, Chapter 13 contains a provision mandating that all “property ‘the debtor acquires after the commencement of the case but before the case is closed, dismissed, or converted’” becomes part of the Chapter 13 estate. 871 F.3d at 293–94 (quoting
Just as the retirement account in Hawk was exempt because it was owned on the date the Chapter 7 petition was filed, so too is the homestead exempt because it was owned at the commencement of DeBerry‘s bankruptcy.
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We REVERSE the district court’s judgment and REINSTATE the order of the bankruptcy court dismissing the adversary proceeding.
