In re Spencer

Decision Date27 June 2006
Docket NumberNo. 05-18421.,05-18421.
PartiesIn re: Brent SPENCER, Cheryl Spencer, Debtors.
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Courts. Tenth Circuit. U.S. Bankruptcy Court — District of Kansas

J. Michael Morris, Wichita, KS, pro se.

Gilbert B. Weisman, Becket & Lee LLP, Malvern, PA, for American Express Bank, FSB, American Express Centurion Bank, Creditors.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

ROBERT E. NUGENT, Chief Judge.

J. Michael Morris, trustee of the bankruptcy estate of Brent and Cheryl Spencer, seeks an order requiring the debtors to turnover certain funds he alleges remained in their bank accounts on the date of their bankruptcy petition. The debtors raise the familiar objection that they had written checks or otherwise committed these funds prior to filing their case and, moreover, that they are under no duty to turnover the funds to the trustee when he retains the power to recover the funds from their various payees. After conducting a brief evidentiary hearing on May 17 2006 and reviewing authority submitted by the parties, the Court is ready to rule.

Jurisdiction

This turnover motion is a core proceeding over which the Court has subject matter jurisdiction.1

Factual Background

Debtors filed their chapter 7 petition on October 13, 2005. They proceed pro se. The Trustee's exhibits, admitted by stipulation, demonstrate that on the petition date, the debtors had four bank accounts, two at the Home Bank & Trust and two at Intrust Bank. The debtors' balances at those banks were as follows:

                Home Bank Checking         $2,402.69
                Home Bank Savings          $    5.26
                Intrust Checking           $2,562.12
                Intrust Savings            $1,365.28
                                           _________
                Total                      $6,335.35
                

On Schedule B, the debtors reported their ownership of three accounts at these two banks, but neither specified the address of the banks nor supplied any account numbers. Debtors scheduled the accounts as having a combined value of $3,300, and on Schedule C, claimed these accounts as exempt under KAN. STAT. ANN. § 60-2304(a) (2005), also valuing the exemption at $3,300.2

At trial, Brent Spencer testified that he wrote various checks on the checking accounts for a variety of living expenses. While the bank statements admitted in evidence show the withdrawals being made, there was little evidence presented about who the payees were. The Home Bank statement reflects payments to grocery stores and a credit card company, along with several ATM withdrawals. The Intrust statements show several preauthorized payments to creditors, but do not in every case disclose the identities of the payees. Spencer's testimony did not include any specifics about how the money in these accounts was spent.

Analysis

The trustee has the burden to prove that the property sought is in fact property of the bankruptcy estate and that the debtor was in possession, custody or control of the property sought.3 11 U.S.C. § 542(a)4 requires an entity having such possession, custody or control to deliver the property to the trustee for the benefit of the creditors. Section 521(4) requires debtors to surrender any property of the estate to the trustee.

Debtors contend that, with the writing of their checks pre-petition, the money left their accounts, was no longer in their possession or control at the petition date, and is therefore no longer property of the estate. The, Court disagrees. All legal and equitable interests of the debtor in property as of the date of the bankruptcy petition are property of the debtor's bankruptcy estate under § 541(a)(1). The trustee argues here that, because the checks written by the Spencers before filing had not cleared at the petition date, the funds in the account on that date remained legal interests of the debtor. While the determination of whether a transfer has occurred for bankruptcy purposes is a matter of federal law, courts look to state law to determine the respective property interests in, the transferred property.5

The appropriate state law here is Article 3 of the Uniform Commercial Code as adopted by Kansas. KAN. STAT. ANN. § 84-3-408 (1996) states that a check does not of itself operate as an assignment of funds in the hands of the drawee [bank] and that the drawee is not liable on the instrument until the drawee accepts it, The Kansas Comment to § 84-3-408 speaks to the situation, here — where the bankruptcy trustee asserts the funds are property of the estate:

Similarly, the drawer's trustee, in bankruptcy may claim the account as an asset of the estate if the petition in bankruptcy is filed after the check was drawn but before final payment ... As another variation on the, bankruptcy theme, this section probably means that a "transfer" of funds in the account to the payee for voidable preference purposes occurs upon final payment by the drawee bank, not upon execution of the check.6

Indeed in the preference context, the Supreme Court has held that the date of a transfer of funds in a checking account is the date the checks are honored rather than the date they are delivered.7 There is no logical reason why this same rule should not apply here in the context of turnover.8 Thus, while the Spencers may have intended to expend the funds in their accounts prior to filing their case, the funds remained in their possession and control at the date of the petition, were property of the estate, and Were therefore subject to turnover.

Had the trustee objected to the debtors' exemption of $3,300 of the funds, that objection would undoubtedly have been sustained. Debtors exempted the funds under KAN. STAT. ANN. § 60-2304(a) which is the exemption provided under Kansas law for household goods. As this Court has held before, there is no applicable Kansas exemption for funds in a bank account.9 They are certainly not within the definition of household goods. However, the trustee's failure to object to the exemption renders the exemption enforceable even if legally invalid.10 Even so, debtors' exemption here only extends to the amounts they have exempted, not the entire balance of the bank accounts.11 At trial, the trustee conceded that he only sought to recover $3,035.35, the difference between the amount in the accounts at filing and the 83,300 amount exempted by the debtors.

Debtors argue that they should not be made to turnover funds they have already spent because the trustee has other means of recovering the money. He could, they argue, seek return of the funds from the various payees as being unauthorized post-petition transfers under § 549. They also assert that the trustee could have instructed the banks to desist paying the checks and that he is in fact required to do so "as soon as possible" under Fed. R. Bankr.P. 2015(a)(4).

At least two courts, one sitting in Kansas, have espoused this view. In In re Figueira, former Chief Judge Pusateri opined that the Code and Rules only require debtors to provide information about the whereabouts of bank accounts and their contents to trustee, not to withdraw the funds and deliver them.12 Because a bank account "was not actual cash held by the bank for the benefit of the debtors, but simply a debt the bank owed them," all the trustee received at filing was the right to seek payment of the funds from the bank, and not the funds themselves.13 A bankruptcy court sitting in the Western District of Missouri has followed Figueira's lead. In In re Taylor, the court essentially held that the trustee's duty to give notice of his interest in the funds to the banks under Rule 2015(a)(4) burdens the trustee, not the debtor, with the responsibility to recover the funds from the payees using his § 549 powers.14 Under this theory, the debtor would have no liability to the estate for the transfer of estate property resulting from the post-petition honoring of pre-petition checks, nor would the debtor have a duty to turn the property over.

A number of bankruptcy courts have rejected this view, however. Perhaps the most detailed treatment of this issue is found in In re Sawyer.15 In Sawyer, the bankruptcy court faced a situation similar to this one, albeit without the exemption issue, and concluded that the debtors had the requisite control over the funds because, their bank had not authorized final payment on the checks until after the petition date. Concluding that the funds were assets of the estate, the court concluded that the debtors are entities under § 542 and therefore obligated to turnover those funds. Disagreeing with Figueira, the Sawyer court stated that while it "has an enormous amount of sympathy for the pro se. Debtors in this case who apparently acted in good faith, the Court cannot disregard those provisions of federal and state law which provide ... that the Debtors' interest in the ... account became property of the bankruptcy estate when they filed their petition...."16

Other courts addressing like turnover requests have held that a check is not a binding assignment of funds until the drawee accepts it and that, as a result, funds remaining on deposit to satisfy outstanding checks at the date a debtor files his bankruptcy are property of the estate.17 These courts also apply § 521(4) to require the debtor to surrender the funds on hand at filing.18 At least one of these courts also notes that, under § 550(a), the trustee may choose to recover transferred property not only from mediate or immediate transferees, but also from those for whose benefit the transfers were made.19 In the present case, those transfers were made for benefit of the debtors.

This Court believes that the courts ordering turnover have the better view. Trustees facing this situation have several non-exclusive choices. They can give and rely upon the Fed. R. Bankr.P.2015(a)(4) notification to the banks, if they have sufficient information to do so. They can seek to recover the transferred funds from the payees of the checks by pursuing an avoidance action under § 549. Or, they can seek recovery of the funds from the...

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