UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT
NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA
In re
ORLANDO PAUL BAKER, No. 97-48334 TS
RS No. 97-2918
Chapter 7
Debtor.
___________________________/
MEMORANDUM OF DECISION On March 26, 1997, Oakland Municipal Credit Union ("Credit Union") obtained a
judgment (the "Judgment") against the above-captioned debtor (the "Debtor").
Thereafter, the Credit Union applied for and obtained an earnings withholding
order (the "EWO"). The Credit Union served the EWO on the Debtor's employer on
May 12, 1997. Under state law, service of the EWO created a garnishment lien (the
"Garnishment Lien") on the Debtor's wages. Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 706.029 (West
1987).
On August 26, 1997, the Debtor filed a chapter 7 petition commencing the above-captioned case. On or about December 4, 1997, the Debtor received a discharge of
his dischargeable debts, including his debt to the Credit Union. On November 5,
1997, the Credit Union filed a motion for relief from the automatic stay pursuant
to 11 U.S.C. § 362. In the motion, the Credit Union sought relief to levy the
Garnishment Lien on the Debtor's post-petition wages to satisfy the discharged
debt. The motion was heard on November 21, 1997, taken under submission, and
denied by order dated January 6, 1998. In this Memorandum, the Court explains the
reasons for its ruling.
DISCUSSION
As stated above, under California law, "[s]ervice of an earnings withholding order
creates a lien upon the earnings of the judgment debtor that are required to be
withheld pursuant to the order ...." Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 706.029 (West 1987).
An employer is required to withhold the amounts required by the EWO from all
earnings of the employee during the "withholding period." Cal. Civ. Proc. Code §
706.022(b) (West 1987). The "withholding period" is defined as a period that
commences on the 10th day after service of the EWO on the employer and that
continues until the employer has held a sufficient amount to satisfy the judgment
(unless the EWO contains an earlier termination date or the employer receives a
notice of termination before the end of the withholding period). Cal. Civ. Proc.
Code § 706.022(a) (West 1987).
The Credit Union contends that the Garnishment Lien created by these provisions
survives the Debtor's bankruptcy discharge and that it is entitled to continue to
enforce the Garnishment Lien against the Debtor's post-petition wages. This
contention was rejected in Local Loan Co. v. Hunt, 292 U.S. 234 (1934). In Local
Loan, prior to the commencement of his bankruptcy case, the debtor had borrowed
$300 from a finance company and, as security for the loan, assigned his future
earnings. Like the Credit Union, the finance company in Local Loan contended that
the voluntary wage assignment remained in effect after the debtor received his
discharge and attached to his future wages. The Supreme Court rejected this
contention and held that the wage assignment terminated when the debtor filed his
bankruptcy petition.
The Supreme Court reasoned that there was no lien on debtor's future earnings when
the bankruptcy petition was filed because those earnings did not yet exist.
Moreover, the underlying debt was discharged before the debtor's future earnings
came into existence. The Supreme Court stated further as follows:
The earning power of an individual is the power to create property; but it is not
translated into property within the meaning of the Bankruptcy Act until it has
brought earnings into existence. An adjudication of bankruptcy, followed by a
discharge, releases a debtor from all previously incurred debts ... and it
logically cannot be supposed that the act nevertheless intended to keep such debts
alive for the purpose of permitting the creation of an enforceable lien upon a
subject not existent when the bankruptcy became effective or even arising from, or
connected with, preexisting property, but brought into being solely as the fruit
of the subsequent labor of the bankrupt.
Id. at 243. The Supreme Court noted that a contrary holding would undermine the
debtor's fresh start and thus be contrary to a fundamental policy objective of
bankruptcy. Id. at 245.
Two other bankruptcy courts have reached the same conclusion. See In re Gilpin,
209 B.R. 490 (Bankr. W.D. Mo. 1997); In re Warren, 7 B.R. 201, 205 (Bankr. N.D.
Ala. 1980). Warren is factually indistinguishable from the instant case. In
Warren, the debtor filed a bankruptcy petition seeking relief under the Bankruptcy
Code after two creditors obtained judgments against him and levied garnishment
liens against his wages. The bankruptcy court ordered the creditors to release
the liens as to future wages, and the creditors appealed. In affirming the
bankruptcy court, the appellate panel cited Local Loan. It discussed at length
the importance of the debtor's fresh start and the damaging effect on that fresh
start of permitting the garnishment to continue. Gilpin also involved a Bankrupty
Code case and an involuntary garnishment lien.(1)
The Credit Union does not address these authorities. Its argument proceeds as
follows: First, it notes that state law controls the validity of liens created
prior to the commencement of a bankruptcy case under state law. It contends (and
the Debtor does not dispute) that the Garnishment Lien was valid under state law
when the bankruptcy case was filed.
Next, the Credit Union notes that the Garnishment Lien was not avoided in the
bankruptcy case. Again, there is no dispute concerning this factual contention.(2)
Finally, the Credit Union contends that liens that are valid under state law when
the bankruptcy is filed and that are not avoided in the bankruptcy case survive
the bankruptcy process unaffected. This is the weak link in the Credit Union's
argument. The Credit Union has cited no authority supporting the application of
this principle to permit a lien obtained pre-petition to attach to property
obtained by the debtor post-petition after the underlying debt has been
discharged.
The cases cited by the Credit Union in support of its contentions are all
distinguishable. They all involve pre-petition liens that attached to property in
existence prior to the discharge of the underlying debt. In its original brief,
the Credit Union relied principally on the recent case of In re Hilde,120 F.3d 950
(9th Cir. 1997). The issue presented in Hilde was whether a lien on a judgment
debtor's nonexempt personal property created under state law by service on the
debtor of an order of examination was unperfected and thus avoidable by the
bankruptcy trustee pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 544(a)(1). The Hilde court held that
lien was perfected and was thus not avoidable. However, the property to which the
lien attached was property of the estate. There was no dispute that the lien had
attached to the specific personal property before the commencement of the case.
In its supplemental brief, the Credit Union cited legislative history and two
additional cases as further support for its position: i.e., the Legislative
Commission Comment to Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 706.029(West 1987); In re County of
Orange, 189 B.R. 499 (Bankr. C.D. Cal. 1995); and Matter of Pacific Far East Line,
Inc., 654 F.2d 664 (9th Cir. 1981). The Legislative Commission Comment simply
states that: "The [wage garnishment] lien may give the levying creditor priority
over competing claims by third parties (e.g. in bankruptcy)...." This comment has
no relevance to the issue presented here. It is clearly accurate as applied to
property to which a garnishment lien has attached prior to commencement of the
bankruptcy case. There is no indication that the comment was intended to apply to
property obtained by the debtor after the underlying debt had been discharged.
Pacific Far East Line does not support the Credit Union's position either. The
issue presented in Pacific Far East Line was whether a law firm that had been
employed by the debtor pre-petition on a contingent fee basis could claim a
charging lien on the proceeds of a settlement received during the chapter XI case.
The Creditors' Committee contended that an attorneys' charging lien did not come
into effect until the settlement proceeds were paid post-petition. Then
applicable law did not permit the attorney to be retained during the chapter XI
case on a contingent fee basis. Therefore, the Committee argued, the claim for
attorneys' fees was unsecured.
The Ninth Circuit held that, for priority purposes, the lien came into existence
pre-petition, when the debtor entered into contingent fee agreement, even though
it did not attach to the settlement proceeds until after the bankruptcy case was
filed. This holding arguably supports the proposition that a lien created pre-petition may attach to property obtained by the bankruptcy estate post-petition.
However, the property in question in this case--the debtor's post-petition wages--will have been obtained by the post-petition debtor, not by the bankruptcy estate.
See 11 U.S.C.A. § 541(a)(6)(West 1993)(stating that the bankruptcy estate does not
include debtor's post-petition wages). Moreover, the property in question will
have been obtained after the underlying debt has been discharged. The attorneys'
claim in Pacific Far East Line had not been discharged at the time the settlement
proceeds were received.(3)
For similar reasons, County of Orange is also inapposite. In that case, the
debtor, Orange County, had issued certain tax and revenue notes pursuant to
California Government Code §§ 53850-53858. Section 53856 permits the County to
pledge certain types of assets as security for the notes. It provides that the
obligations evidenced by the notes would be a first lien and charge against the
first moneys received from this category of assets. After the debtor filed its
chapter 9 bankruptcy petition, the debtor stopped making payments under the notes
from the pledged funds. The pledgees moved for relief from automatic stay to file
an action in state court to compel the County to continue making the payments.
The debtor contended that 11 U.S.C. § 552(a) applied to cut off the pledgees' lien
as to future collections. The bankruptcy court agreed and denied the pledgees'
motion for relief. The district court reversed. It held that the lien in
question was a statutory lien, not a security interest, and that § 552(a) applied
only to security interests. Id. at 502. It further held that statutory liens
survived bankruptcy unless avoided pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 545. Id. at 500. It
remanded the proceeding to the bankruptcy court for the purpose of determining
whether adequate protection could be provided to the pledgees. Id. at 505.
As in Pacific Far East Line,and unlike the instant case, in County of Orange the
underlying debt had not been discharged. In a chapter 9 case, as in a chapter 11
case, the debtor is not discharged until the plan is confirmed. 11 U.S.C.A. §
944(b)(West 1993). Until the debtor receives a discharge, any future revenues
would constitute property of the bankruptcy estate to which the pledgees' lien,
still supported by an undischarged debt, could attach.
Second, the Garnishment Lien is a judicial lien, not a statutory lien. The
Bankruptcy Code defines a "statutory lien" as a "lien arising solely by force of a
statute on specified circumstances or conditions...." 11 U.S.C.A. § 101(53)(West
1993). It defines a "judicial lien" as a "lien obtained by judgment, levy,
sequestration, or other legal or equitable process or proceeding...." 11 U.S.C.A.
§ 101(36)(West 1993). The Garnishment Lien was obtained by a judgment and levy
and therefore qualifies as a judicial lien.
An issue similar to that presented here was addressed in In re Thomas, 102 B.R.
199 (Bankr. E.D. Cal. 1989). In Thomas, a creditor obtained a judgment against an
individual and recorded an abstract of judgment in the County Recorder's Office.
Pursuant to section 697.310(a) of the California Code of Civil Procedure, the
recordation created a lien on any real property owned by the judgment debtor in
that County. However, at the time the abstract was recorded, the judgment debtor
owned no real property. The judgment debtor filed a chapter 7 bankruptcy petition
and discharged the judgment debt. However, the judgment debtor took no action to
expunge the lien.
After filing the bankruptcy case and receiving a discharge of the judgment debt,
the judgment debtor acquired real property in the county in which the abstract had
been recorded. Section 697.340(b) of the California Code of Civil Procedure
provides that, if any real property is acquired after the judgment lien is
recorded, the judgment lien attaches to the property at the time it is acquired.
When the debtor attempted to sell the subsequently acquired real property, the
judgment lien purportedly securing the discharged debt appeared on the title
report as a lien that was required to be paid in order to convey clear title.
The judgment lien creditor in Thomas made the same argument made by the Credit
Union in this case. It contended that, because the judgment lien had not been
avoided in the bankruptcy case, it survived the bankruptcy as a valid lien. The
bankruptcy court rejected this contention as follows:
The California courts have long recognized the maxim that a lien cannot survive
(much less be created in the first place) absent the existence of an enforceable
underlying obligation. [Citations omitted.]....
Working chronologically, this court finds that no lien could have existed as a
matter of law on the date the Debtors filed their respective petitions in
bankruptcy because of the absence of attachable property at that date.
Conversely, no judgment lien could have been created post-discharge even though
the Debtors had acquired attachable property because the underlying judgment was
previously discharged and rendered void. Consequently, this court must find that
the FTC lien currently encumbering the proceeds from sale of the Debtors'
residence is void and unenforceable.
Id. at 201(footnotes omitted).
This Court views the Thomas court's logic as unassailable. The Bankruptcy Code
defines a "lien" as a "charge against or interest in property to secure payment of
a debt or performance of an obligation." 11 U.S.C.A. § 101(37)(West 1993). For a
lien to exist, both the property and the obligation must exist at the same time.
A lien may not "survive" bankruptcy unless it first exists. Here, the Garnishment
Lien and the debtor's post-petition wages never existed at the same time and
therefore the Garnishment Lien may not be said to "survive" the debtor's
bankruptcy.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, the Credit Union's motion for relief from the
automatic stay is denied, and the Credit Union is directed to release the
Garnishment Lien with respect to the debtor's post-petition wages.
Dated: February 17, 1998
/s/ Leslie Tchaikovsky
United States Bankruptcy Judge
1. The facts and issues in Gilpin are somewhat more complex. However, the basis for
its decision was essentially the same. In Gilpin, the debtors filed originally
under chapter 13 of the Bankruptcy Code. Thereafter, they incurred a post-petition debt for rent. After obtaining relief from stay, the landlord obtained a
judgment against the debtors and levied on the wages of one of the debtors. In
response, the debtors converted their case to chapter 7 and asked the bankruptcy
court to reimpose the stay. The Court granted their request. It noted that,
pursuant to section 348(d), upon conversion of the case, the post-petition debt
became a pre-petition debt and thus dischargeable. Citing Local Loan, the Court
concluded that the garnishment lien terminated when the case was converted because
permitting the landlord to continue to enforce a discharged debt would destroy the
debtors' fresh start.
2. Although not central to its argument, the Credit Union also appears to contend that the Garnishment Lien could not have
been avoided as a preference because the EWO was served more than 90 days before the petition date. See 11 U.S.C.A. §
547(b)(4)(West 1993). This is not necessarily true. The cases are in conflict over whether a garnishment lien that is levied
more than 90 days before the bankruptcy case is filed may be avoided as a preference as to those wages earned within the
last 90 days. Some courts have held that it may not be. See In re Riddervold, 647 F.2d 342 (2d Cir. 1981). Others have
held that it may be. See In re Carlsen, 63 B.R. 706 (Bankr. C.D. Cal. 1986). The Court's analysis of the issue presented in
this case is consistent with the latter view.
3. It is also debatable whether the charging lien was unsecured at the time the
bankruptcy case was commenced. Arguably, the charging lien attached to the
debtor's cause of action. The settlement proceeds were simply the proceeds of
that cause of action. See In re Prudence, 96 F.2d 157 (2d Cir. 1938), cited in
Pacific Far East Line, 654 F.2d at 668, noting that an attorney employed by a
debtor had "as security for his fees a charging lien on his client's cause of
action....[and that] Bankruptcy does not invalidate such liens." Prudence, 96
F.2d a