Robert A. Mercer, Jr., challenges a district court judgment affirming a bankruptcy court order disallowing most of Mercer’s exemption claim relating to a $50,000 settlement fund in a personal injury action. We affirm.
I
BACKGROUND
After Mercer was injured in an automobile accident in January 1990, he sued for compensatory damages, then filed a chapter 7 petition while the lawsuit was still pending. His amended schedules of assets valued the personal injury claim at $40,000, and Schedule asserted related exemptions in the manner set out in the margin.
1
The chapter 7 trustee interposed no Rule 4003(b) objection to the list of property claimed as exempt.
See
Fed.R.Bankr.P. 4003(b) (fixing 30-day limitation period for filing objection);
see also
Bankruptcy Code §
522(l),
11 U.S.C. § 522(l). The personal injury action eventually generated a $50,000 settlement fund, with no specification as to what, if any, portion represented compensation for a “dis
Mercer nevertheless contended that the
entire
$50,000 was exempt because he had claimed the entire fund exempt as compensation for a “disability” under Bankruptcy Code § 522(d)(10)(C) or compensation for lost future earnings under Bankruptcy Code § 522(d)(ll)(E).
See supra
note 1. Since no Rule 4003(b) objection was submitted within the 30-day limitation period, Mercer argued that the bankruptcy court lacked jurisdiction to entertain the motion to disallow his exemption claim. He relied on
Taylor v. Freeland & Kronz,
The chapter 7 trustee in the instant case responded that he had filed no Rule 4003(b) objection because Mercer had claimed allowable exemptions in the settlement proceeds representing compensation for “disability” or lost future earnings. Consequently, it remained for the bankruptcy court to determine whether the $42,500 in dispute did, in fact, constitute compensation for disability and/or lost future earnings.
The bankruptcy court took the position that a Rule 4003(b) objection is not required unless the exemption claim — as was the case in
Taylor,
The bankruptcy court therefore ruled that
Taylor
did not preclude its assertion of jurisdiction to determine whether the settlement fund represented compensation for disability or lost future earnings.
Mercer,
II
DISCUSSION
Although in complete agreement with the result reached below, we write to illustrate that Taylor in no sense suggests that the bankruptcy court is divested of jurisdiction to hear and determine the issue presented on appeal: whether the “property of the estate” actually in dispute was listed as exempt on Schedule B^4, thereby triggering the 30-day limitation under Rule 4003(b). See Bankruptcy Code §§ 522(l), 542(a), 11 U.S.C. §§ 522(1), 542(a); Fed.R.Bankr.P. 4003(c). In the end, we reject Mercer’s implicit assumption that Taylor licenses debtors unilaterally to transform property of the estate into property of the description appearing on Schedule B-4.
The debtor shall file a list of property that the debtor claims as exempt under subsection (b) of this section.... Unless a party in interest objects, the property claimed as exempt on such a list is exempt.
Bankruptcy Code §
522(1),
11 U.S.C. §
522(1)
(emphasis added). That is, absent inclusion on “a list of
property that the debtor claims as exempt,”
“property of the estate” is not exempted by operation of law under section
522(1),
regardless whether a Rule 4003(b) objection was filed.
Id.; see, e.g., Seror v. Kahan (In re Kahan),
The “property of the estate” plainly listed as exempt in
Taylor,
The threshold question is whether the property in dispute is in fact the property of the estate listed as exempt. In stark contrast to Taylor, the bankruptcy court found — and Mercer does not contest on appeal — that no part of the disputed $42,500 listed on Schedule B-4 is either eompensation for a disability — § 522(d)(10)(C) — or lost future earnings — § 522(d)(ll)(E) — as distinguished from compensation for personal bodily injury (the maximum $7,500 exemption under § 522(d)(ll)(D) as compensation for personal bodily injury is not at issue). Rather, in a giant interpretive leap beyond Taylor, Mercer asks us to assume that the amount in dispute became exempt by operation of law under section 522(Z) notwithstanding the uncontested finding that it is not compensation for a disability or lost future earnings.
True,
Taylor
requires that we interpret and apply section 522(Z) and Bankruptcy Rule 4003(b) according to their literal intendment. But section 522(Z) neither states nor implies that property of the estate
becomes property of the kind
the debtor describes on Schedule B-4. Rather, as the Court recognized in
Taylor,
Notwithstanding Mercer’s argument that he
intended
to exempt the entire settlement fund, Schedule B-4 plainly listed discrete statutory citations supporting the various exemption claims, thereby
restricting
both the focus of the exemptions claimed and the description of the particular right or interest in property of the estate to which the claims applied. Consequently, pursuant to its exclusive summary jurisdiction,
see, e.g., In re Stumpff,
Neither
Taylor,
the Code, nor the Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure require parties in interest to interpose Rule 4003(b) objections to Schedule B-4 exemption claims in order to preserve their right to invoke the summary jurisdiction of the bankruptcy court to determine whether property of the estate became exempt by operation of law. What parties in interest may not do, however, is let the limitation period for objections under Rule
Ill
CONCLUSION
In sum, we affirm on the ground that the property of the estate at issue on appeal was neither listed as exempt on Schedule B-^t, nor became exempt by operation of law under Bankruptcy Code § 522(1).
The district court judgment is affirmed; costs to appellee.
Notes
. The pertinent entries in Schedule B-4 were as follows:
Type of Property: Location, Description, Use
Possible personal injury Settlement
Disability
Payment on account of personal bodily injury
Payment in compensation for loss of future earnings
Any property selected by debtor
Exempt Statute Amount
DEBTOR
11 USC § 522(d)(10)(C) 100%
11 USC § 522(d)(ll)(D) $7,500
11 USC § 522(d)(ll)(E) 100%
11 USC § 522(d)(5) $3,750
. Unlike the unlimited exemptions for “disability” and "lost earnings,” the exemption for "personal bodily injury" compensation had been capped at $7,500. See Bankruptcy Code § 522(d)(ll)(D), 11 U.S.C. § 522(d)(ll)(D) (subsequently increased to $15,000). The trustee did not contest the $7,500 exemption. Thus, $42,-500 remains in dispute on appeal.
. The $7,350 figure reflects certain other adjustments to Mercer’s exemption claim not material to the present appeal. See supra note 2.
. The Supreme Court has not excluded the possibility that Bankruptcy Code § 105(a), 11 U.S.C. § 105(a), might enable a bankruptcy court to set aside exemptions not claimed in good faith.
See Taylor,
