In rе: David A. STINNETT, Debtor. David A. Stinnett, Debtor-Appellant, v. R. Stephen Laplante, Trustee-Appellee. David A. Stinnett, Debtor-Appellant, v. R. Stephen Laplante, Trustee, United States of America, and Guardian Life Insurance Company, Appellees.
Nos. 05-1335, 05-1733
United States Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit
September 27, 2006
465 F.3d 309
Harry L. Mathison (argued), King, Deep & Branaman, Henderson, KY, for Debtor-Appellant.
Kenneth W. Rosenberg (argued), Dept. of Justice Tax Div., Appellate Section, Washington, DC, for Appellee.
Before FLAUM, Chief Judge, аnd RIPPLE and SYKES, Circuit Judges.
In 1995 David Stinnett was diagnosed as suffering from depression and as a result has been collecting substantial monthly benefits from two different policies of long-term disability insurance. In 1996, and again in 1997, the Internal Revenue Service made assessments against Stinnett for unpaid federal income taxes. In May 2000 Stinnett filed for bankruptcy under Chap
I. Background
David Stinnett worked for Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company (“Northwestern“) for twenty-three years and was covered by long-term disability insurance issued by that company. In 1994 Stinnett‘s employment with Northwestern was terminated. Shortly thereafter, on November 1, 1994, he commenced employment as a salesman for Guardian Life Insurance (“Guardian“). At that time, he became covered by a policy of disability insurance issued by Guardian. In September 1995 Stinnett sought treatment for and was diagnosed as suffering from depression. He applied for benefits under the Northwestern disability insurance and began receiving monthly payments of approximately $11,400 from Northwestern beginning in September 1995.
Despite receiving these payments from Northwestern, Stinnett continued his employment and received a salary from Guardian for approximately the next five years. He did not seek disability benefits under the Guardian policy during this period because he was financially better off rеmaining an employee and receiving a salary.
During the five-year period Stinnett was employed by Guardian, the IRS made two assessments for unpaid income tax relating to the 1995 and 1996 tax years.1 When the assessments went unpaid, the IRS filed notices of federal tax liens regarding these liabilities pursuant to
In July 2001, over a year after his employment ceased and his bankruptcy petition was filed, Stinnett submitted a disability claim to Guardian seeking benefits retroactive to September 13, 1995 (apparently the date he was deemed disabled by dеpression for purposes of the Northwestern policy). Guardian denied his claim for the period during which he had been receiving a salary from the company, relying on a provision in the policy providing that an insured is not entitled to benefits “for any day of disability during which the
In the course of the bankruptcy action, the Trustee commenced an adversary proceeding seeking to establish that the Guardian disability payments were assets includable in the bankruptcy estate and that the payments should consequently be turned over to the Trustee. The IRS intervened, seeking to establish that its federal tax lien attached to the payments. In the main bankruptcy case, Stinnett and the Trustee litigated the extent to which Stinnett was entitled to an exemption from the bankruptcy estate for the disability payments from both Guardian and Northwestern.
On appeal of several orders of the bankruptcy court, the district court held that (1) the bankruptcy court properly concluded that the Guardian disability payments are property of the bankruptcy estate, despite the fact that Stinnett did not begin receiving them until after his bankruptcy petition was filed; (2) the government‘s tax lien attached to these payments because the timing of their receipt (prepetition or postpetition) was within Stinnett‘s control; and (3) the bankruptcy court properly concludеd that Stinnett was entitled to exempt $6000 per month of his combined disability payments-not 100%, as he claimed-from the bankruptcy estate under Indiana law.
II. Discussion
A. Property of the Bankruptcy Estate
The threshold issue is whether the Guardian disability payments, for which Stinnett did not file a claim until after the petition was filed, are includable as property of the bankruptcy estate. The applicable statutory definition providеs in pertinent part that property of the estate includes “all legal or equitable interests of the debtor in property as of the commencement of the case,” plus “[p]roceeds ... or profits of or from property of the estate, except such as are earnings from services performed by an individual debtor after the commencеment of the case,” and “[a]ny interest in property that the estate acquires after the commencement of the case.”
As a general matter, insurance contracts in which the debtor has an interest at the time the petition is filed constitute property of the estate for purposes of
Further, payments from insurance policies in which the debtor had a prepetition interest, to the extent that the debtor has or would have a right to receive
The overriding question when determining whether insurance proceeds are property of the estate is whether the debtor would have a right to receive and keep those proceeds when the insurer paid on a claim. When a payment by the insurer cannot inure to the debtor‘s pecuniary benefit, then that payment should neither enhance nor decrease the bankruptcy estate. In other words, when the debtor has no legally cognizable claim to the insurance proceeds, those proceeds are not property of the estate.
... Proceeds of such insurance policies, if made payable to the debtor rather than a third party such as a creditor, are property of the estate and may inure to all bankruptcy creditors.
In re Edgeworth, 993 F.2d at 55-56 (footnotes omitted). Therefore, because Stinnett held a prepetition interest in the Guardian policy, and also had the right to receive and keep the proceeds of the policy at the time the insurer paid on the claim, the Guardian payments are property of the bankruptcy estate under
On appeal, Stinnett does not raise a serious objection to this analysis and instead argues that his disability payments should fall within the exception contained in
We cannot agree. Disability payments may be intended to substitute for wages, but they are available only when the policyholder is incapаble of “performing services” in exchange for compensation, a necessary element of the exception under
B. State Law Exemption
The Bankruptcy Code provides, in
Stinnett contends that his disability insurance payments are exempt from the bankruptcy estate in their entirety pursuant to Indiana exemption law. The district court rejected this contention and concluded that under Indiana law Stinnett was only entitled to an exemption sufficient for the enjoyment of the “reasonable comforts of life.” In this case, the bankruptcy court set that amount at $6000 per month.
The Indiana exemption statute in question,
The money or benefit provided or rendered by any corporation, association, or society authorized to do business under this chapter shall not be liable to attachment by garnishee or othеr process, and shall not be seized, taken, appropriated, or applied by any legal or equitable process, nor by any operation of law, to pay any debt or liability of a policy or certificate holder or any beneficiary named therein.
Stinnett argues that on its face this statute exempts 100% of his disability payments. However, the Indiana Supreme Court has interpreted the statute in light of a provision in the Indiana Constitution that establishes a debtor‘s privilege to exempt a “reasonable amount of property” in order to “enjoy the necessary comforts of life.”
The state constitutional provision in question provides as follows:
The privilege of the debtor to enjoy the necessary comforts of life, shall be recognized by wholesome laws, exempting a reasonable amount of property from seizure or sale for the payment of any debt or liability hereafter contracted: and there shall be no imprisonment for debt, except in case of fraud.
In the present case, the bankruptcy court undertook the analysis directed by Foster, determined that Stinnett required
Stinnett‘s contention on appeal is that Foster‘s rejection of unlimited exemptions was intended to apply only to situations in which a debtor engages in abusive prepetition conduct such as the conversion of nonexempt assets into exempt assets in anticipation of bankruptcy. We do not read Foster to be so limited. The holding in Foster was not motivated by a concern for the potential abuse of an unlimited exemption by unscrupulous debtors, but rather by the facial incompatibility between a limitless exemption statute and thе Indiana Constitution‘s “dictate that the amount set by the legislature be reasonable.” Id. at 1240. The holding is rooted in what the court perceived to be a conflict between a limitless exemption statute and the constitutional limitation on the power of the state legislature to enact such a statute. The court thus resolved a purely legal question untethered to thе conduct of any particular litigant. Accordingly, we reject Stinnett‘s attempt to relegate Foster to cases involving allegations of asset manipulation by the debtor. (Stinnett raises no challenge to the bankruptcy court‘s factual conclusion that $6000 is a reasonable exemption.)
C. IRS Tax Lien
The preceding two issues were raised by Stinnett in appeal No. 05-1335. In a separate appeal that we ordered consolidated for oral argument and decision, No. 05-1733, Stinnett challenges the district court‘s conclusion that the federal tax lien attaches to his disability payments from Guardian Insurance. Our holding on the issues raised in the first appeal, however, renders Stinnett without standing to maintain his claim concerning the tax lien.
We have agreed with the bankruptcy and district courts that all but $6000 per month of the combined disability payments is property of the bankruptcy estate. This means Stinnett is unable to realize any economic benefit from a potential reversal of the district court‘s decision that the IRS‘s lien attaches to the Guardian payments. We have previously addressed the question of a dеbtor‘s standing to object to a bankruptcy order in the following terms:
Bankruptcy standing is narrower than Article III standing. To have standing to object to a bankruptcy order, a person must have a pecuniary interest in the outcome of the bankruptcy proceedings. Only those persons affected pecuniarily by a bankruptcy order have standing to appeal that order. Debtors, particularly Chapter 7 debtors, rarely have such a pecuniary interest because no matter how the estate‘s assets are disbursed by the trustee, no assets will revert to the debtor.
... If the debtor can show a reasonable possibility of a surplus after satisfying all debts, then the debtor has shown a pecuniary interest and has standing to object to а bankruptcy order.
In re Cult Awareness Network, Inc., 151 F.3d 605, 607-08 (7th Cir.1998) (citations omitted).
It is undisputed that Stinnett‘s Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition listed assets in the amount of $394,530 and liabilities in the amount of $4,495,420. Clearly, all creditors will not be paid 100%, there will be no surplus remaining after all creditors’ claims have been paid, and Stinnett has no reasonable possibility of emerging from
Accordingly, in appeal No. 05-1335, the order of the district court is AFFIRMED. Appeal No. 05-1733 is DISMISSED for lack of jurisdiction.
