In this bаnkruptcy appeal, the debtors, James and Karen Wornick, ask us to reverse a district court order holding that certain assets in connection with life insurance policies they each held for the benefit of the other were not exempt from the joint administration of their bankruptcy estates. Because the inchoate interest that a spouse beneficiary holds in a reciprocal life insurance policy does not constitute an asset of the beneficiary’s estate, the judgment of the district court is reversed.
Background
The facts of this case are simple. On October 15, 2005, the Wornicks filed a joint petition for bankruptcy protection under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code. At the time, James and Karen Wornick each owned whole life insurance policies on their own lives for the benefit of the other, and each of these policies had a cash surrender value. 1 James owned three policies payable on his death to Karen, with a total cash surrender value of $8,627.45, and Karen owned one policy payable on her death to James, with a cash surrender value of $8,994.71. The Wornicks claimed that the cash surrender values of these policies should be exempt from bankruptcy administration. The trustee objected to these exemptions. The bankruptcy court sustained the objections, ordering the Wornicks to turn over to the trustee the cash surrender values of the policies. The Wornicks appealed to the district court, which affirmed. This appeal followed.
Discussion
The only question this appeal presents is whether in a joint bankruptcy case of spouses who own reciprocal life insurance policies the bankruptcy estate of the beneficiary spouse is entitled to the cash surrender value of an insurance policy taken out by and insuring the other spouse. In other words, if A buys an insurance policy on A’s life and designates B as the beneficiary, and if A and B file jointly for bankruptcy protection, are B’s creditors entitled to the cash surrender vаlue of the policy? The district court decided this question in the affirmative, and we review the district court’s decision
de novo. See
The Wornicks claim that the cash surrender value of their life insurance policies should be exempt under Section 3212 of New York Insurance Law, which provides in pertinent part,
[ (a) ](1) The term ‘proceeds and avails’, in reference to policies of life insurance, includes death benefits, accelerated payments of the death benefit or accelerated payment of a special surrender value, cash surrender and loan values....
(b)(1) If a policy of insurance has been or shall be effected by any person on his own life in favor of a third person beneficiary, or made payable otherwise to a third person, such third person shall be entitled to the proceeds and avails of such policy as against the creditors, personal representatives, trustees in bankruptcy and receivers in state and federal courts of the person effecting the insurance.
[ (b) ](2) If a policy of insurance has been or shall be effected upon the life of another person in favor of the person effecting the same or made payable otherwise to such person, the latter shall be entitled to the proceeds and avails of such policy as against the creditors, personal representativеs, trustees in bankruptcy and receivers in state and federal courts of the person insured. If the person effecting such insurance shall be the spouse of the insured, he or she shall be entitled to the proceeds and avails of such policy as against his or her own creditors, trustees in bankruptcy and receivers in state and federal courts.
N.Y. Ins. Law § 3212 (emphasis added); see also 11 U.S.C. § 522(b)(2) (providing that states may exempt certain property from bankruptcy administration); N.Y. Dr. & Cr. Law § 282 (providing that insurance policies are exempt from bankruptcy administration as provided in Section 3212 of the Insurance Law). In essence, subsection (b)(1) says that if A buys insurance on A’s life and designates B as the beneficiary, then any interest B has in the proceeds and avails of the policy is protected against A’s creditors. And subsection (b)(2) says that if A buys insurance on B’s life and designates A as the beneficiary, then any interest A has in the proceeds and avails of the policy is protected against B’s creditors, and moreover, if A and B are married, then A’s interest is protected against A’s creditors as well.
The Wornicks’ claim presents the slightly different question of whether the cash surrender value of an insurance policy purchased by A on A’s life for the benefit of B is protected against B’s creditors, and thus does not fit precisely into either of the exemptions provided by Section 3212(b)(1) & (2). In rejecting their claim to an exеmption, the district court concluded that the cash surrender values of these insurance policies were insulated only against the creditors of the insured and not against the creditors of the beneficiary. 2 We disagree.
With regard to thе insurance policies at issue here, the insured could have changed the beneficiary at any time prior to filing for bankruptcy, and the beneficiary would have had no claim to the cash surrender value. It must be remembered that the trustee stands in the shoes of the debtor and can only assert claims that the debtor could have asserted prior to filing for bankruptcy.
See, e.g., In re CBI Holding Co.,
It has been suggested, however, that the Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1978, by allowing for the first time spouses to file jointly, worked a fundamеntal change in the powers of a bankruptcy trustee to administer the estates of spouses in cases like this.
See Teufel,
a million-dollar Stradivari-crafted viоlin sitting in a safe-deposit box with its owners, husband and wife, each holding one of two necessary keys to the box; and then the couple filing joint bankruptcy to get rid of their debts and arguing to their creditors and the bankruptcy court that neither one alone has a “choate” or attachable right to the Stradivarius, but only a “mere expectаncy” that the other will co-operate when needed.
Id. at 292. In such a case, according to In re Jacobs, “the trustee may agree with himself or herself as trustee in two different estates to retrieve the million-dollar Stradivarius from the safe-deposit box.” Id. at 294. Following this general line of reasoning, the lower courts in this case concluded that the trustee of the Wornieks’ estates, standing in the shoes of both spouses, could agree with himself to cash out the insurance policies for the benefit of the beneficiaries’ creditors. In other words, because the Wornieks as a couple could have agreed to cash out these insurance policies, the lower courts concluded that the trustee was also еmpowered to do so by virtue of the joint filing. We do not think this analysis is correct.
While Section 302 of the Bankruptcy Code allows spouses to file jointly, it does not automatically consolidate their estates. 11 U.S.C. § 302(b) (“After the commencement of a joint case, the court shall determine the extent, if any, to which the debtors’ estates shall be consolidated.”);
see also In re Jorczak,
Conclusion
In sum, the trustee wants to administer the cash surrender values of insurance policies as non-exempt assets of the beneficiary. Any leviable interest in this property, however, belongs to the owner/insured, not to the beneficiary. Section 3212(b)(1) protects the cash surrender value from the creditors of the owner/insured, and because the beneficiary owns no administra-ble interest, the property is not subject to administration. Therefore, the order of the district court is reversed.
Notes
. The "cash surrender value” of a life insurance policy is "[t]he amount of money pаyable when an insurance policy having cash value, such as a whole-life policy, is redeemed before maturity or death.” Black's Law Dictionary 1586 (8th ed.2004).
. The district court’s holding was consistent with a prior decision of the Western District of New York,
Teufel v. Schlant,
No. 02 Civ. 81S,
. Whether either of these transfers could be deemed fraudulent need not be parsed here. Nonetheless, it bears noting that "even the conversion of nonexempt property into exempt property by an insolvent contemplating bankruptcy has been held a transaction not intended to defraud creditors in the absеnce of evidence of extrinsic fraud."
In re Adlman,
