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No. 10015210
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
In Re: Monte Masingale v. John D. Munding
No. 10015210 · Decided July 26, 2024
No. 10015210·Ninth Circuit · 2024·
FlawFinder last updated this page Apr. 2, 2026
Case Details
Court
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Decided
July 26, 2024
Citation
No. 10015210
Disposition
See opinion text.
Full Opinion
FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
In re: MONTE L. MASINGALE; No. 22-60050
ROSANA D. MASINGALE,
BAP No.
Debtors. 22-1016
______________________________
JOHN D. MUNDING, Chapter 7 OPINION
Trustee,
Appellant,
v.
ROSANA D. MASINGALE; STATE
OF WASHINGTON,
Appellees.
In re: MONTE L. MASINGALE; No. 22-60053
ROSANA D. MASINGALE,
BAP No.
Debtors. 22-1016
______________________________
STATE OF WASHINGTON,
2 MASINGALE V. MUNDING
Appellant,
v.
ROSANA D. MASINGALE;
GREGORY M. GARVIN, Acting U.S.
Trustee; JOHN D. MUNDING,
Chapter 7 Trustee,
Appellees.
Appeal from the Ninth Circuit
Bankruptcy Appellate Panel
Faris, Lafferty III, and Brand, Bankruptcy Judges,
Presiding
Argued and Submitted February 5, 2024
Portland, Oregon
Filed July 26, 2024
Before: Ronald M. Gould, Daniel A. Bress, and Lucy H.
Koh, Circuit Judges.
Opinion by Judge Bress
MASINGALE V. MUNDING 3
SUMMARY*
Bankruptcy
Reversing a decision of the Bankruptcy Appellate Panel
and remanding, the panel held that, under the circumstances
of this case, a Chapter 7 debtor could not exempt from the
bankruptcy estate a homestead interest in her residence in an
amount above the statutory limit.
The panel held that, in some circumstances, if a debtor
attempts to exempt more than the statutory amount and no
party in interest objects within thirty days of the creditors’
meeting, the debtor retains an above-limit homestead
exemption, even if the debtor has no colorable basis for
claiming the exemption. In this case, the debtors filed a
Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition and stated on a bankruptcy
schedule that they were exempting “100% of FMV,” or fair
market value, in their homestead. No party in interest
objected within the 30-day period. One of the debtors died,
and the bankruptcy court later converted the case to Chapter
7.
Distinguishing Taylor v. Freeland & Kronz, 503 U.S.
638 (1992), and Schwab v. Reilly, 560 U.S. 770 (2010), the
panel held that, in the circumstances presented, the initial
failure to object did not mean that the debtor could exempt
more than the statutory limit. Because this case began as a
Chapter 11 bankruptcy, in which the debtors owed fiduciary
duties to their creditors, and in light of specific and
conflicting representations that the debtors made within the
*
This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
4 MASINGALE V. MUNDING
30-day objection window, the debtors did not properly claim
an above-limit exemption. Resultingly, no early objection to
the homestead exemption was required. The panel held that
the homestead exemption was limited to the statutory cap,
and the remaining proceeds from the sale of the home were
part of the bankruptcy estate.
COUNSEL
John D. Munding (argued), Munding PS, Spokane,
Washington, for Appellant.
Darren M. Digiacinto (argued), Winston & Cashatt,
Spokane, Washington; Dina L. Yunker (argued), Susan
Edison, and Colleen M. Melody, Assistant Attorneys
General; Robert W. Ferguson, Attorney General of
Washington; Office of the Attorney General, Seattle,
Washington; for Appellee.
Norma L. Hammes, Gold & Hammes, San Jose, California;
for Amicus Curiae National Consumer Bankruptcy Rights
Center.
Christina L. Henry, Seattle Consumer Justice PS, Seattle,
Washington; for Amicus Curiae Northwest Consumer Law
Center.
MASINGALE V. MUNDING 5
OPINION
BRESS, Circuit Judge:
Debtors may exempt from the bankruptcy estate an
interest in their residence, up to a statutory limit. But in
some circumstances, if a debtor attempts to exempt more
than the statutory amount and no party in interest objects
within thirty days of the creditors’ meeting, the debtor
retains an above-limit exemption, even if the debtor had no
colorable basis for claiming the exemption. See Taylor v.
Freeland & Kronz, 503 U.S. 638 (1992).
In this case, the debtors stated on a bankruptcy schedule
that they were exempting “100% of FMV,” or fair market
value, in their homestead. No party in interest objected
within the 30-day period. The question is whether the
debtors successfully exempted an above-limit interest, so
that the statutory cap for the homestead exemption no longer
applies. We hold that in the circumstances presented, the
initial failure to object does not mean the debtor can exempt
more than the statutory limit. Because this case began as a
Chapter 11 bankruptcy, in which the debtors owed fiduciary
duties to their creditors, and in light of specific and
conflicting representations that the debtors made within the
30-day objection window, the debtors did not properly claim
an above-limit exemption. Resultingly, no early objection
to the homestead exemption was required.
The debtors’ homestead exemption is limited to the
statutory cap; the remaining proceeds from the sale of the
home are part of the bankruptcy estate. We reverse the
decision of the Bankruptcy Appellate Panel.
6 MASINGALE V. MUNDING
I
A
“When a debtor files for bankruptcy, it ‘creates an estate’
that includes virtually all the debtor’s assets.” Harrington v.
Purdue Pharma L.P., 144 S. Ct. 2071, 2081 (2024) (quoting
11 U.S.C. § 541(a)). But to help debtors get back on their
feet, the Bankruptcy Code permits them to exempt interests
in specified property from the estate, with debtors having the
option of choosing federal exemptions or exemptions
created by state law. See 11 U.S.C. § 522(b). The Code sets
a statutory cap on the value that may be exempted for certain
types of assets. Id. § 522(d); see also Rousey v. Jacoway,
544 U.S. 320, 325 (2005) (“To help the debtor obtain a fresh
start, the Bankruptcy Code permits him to withdraw from the
estate certain interests in property, such as his car or home,
up to certain values.”).
The debtor “shall file a list of property that the debtor
claims as exempt” under § 522(b), and, “[u]nless a party in
interest objects, the property claimed as exempt on such list
is exempt.” 11 U.S.C. § 522(l). “The effect of an exemption
is that the debtor’s interest in the property is ‘withdrawn
from the estate (and hence from the creditors) for the benefit
of the debtor.’” In re Gebhart, 621 F.3d 1206, 1210 (9th Cir.
2010) (quoting Owen v. Owen, 500 U.S. 305, 308 (1991)).
B
In 2015, Rosana and Monte Masingale filed for Chapter
11 bankruptcy in the Eastern District of Washington. The
Masingales proposed a partial liquidation of their property
but emphasized that in allowing them to continue managing
their businesses, they expected that a Chapter 11 plan would
provide more value to creditors than a Chapter 7 total
MASINGALE V. MUNDING 7
liquidation. As part of the Chapter 11 Plan, the Masingales
further proposed that they would retain their home in
Greenacres, Washington.
The Masingales also claimed a federal “homestead”
exemption in their Greenacres residence. See 11 U.S.C.
§ 522(d)(1) (creating an exemption for “[t]he debtor’s
aggregate interest . . . in real property . . . that the debtor or
a dependent of the debtor uses as a residence”). The value
of that exemption is subject to a fixed cap of $15,000 that
has been adjusted every three years since 1998 to reflect
changes in the Consumer Price Index for All Urban
Consumers. See id. §§ 104(a), 522(d)(1). In joint
bankruptcy cases, as with a married couple, the value of the
debtors’ exemptions can be combined. Id. § 522(m). The
parties agree that the maximum homestead exemption the
Masingales could claim under federal law at the time their
petition was filed was $45,950.
Schedule A of the Masingales’ Chapter 11 petition listed
their real property, including their home. The Masingales
claimed it was worth $165,430 and encumbered by a
$130,724 mortgage:
8 MASINGALE V. MUNDING
Exemptions are listed on Schedule C of the bankruptcy
petition, see Fed. R. Bankr. P. 4003(a), which on the
applicable form required the debtor to provide a description
of the property, the law justifying the exemption, the value
of the claimed exemption, and the current property value.
The Masingales’ Schedule C listed their homestead
exemption in this manner:
“100% of FMV,” as listed under “Value of Claimed
Exemption,” means “100% of Fair Market Value.”
Under the Bankruptcy Rules, a party in interest (such as
a trustee or creditor) has thirty days from the date of the
creditors’ meeting to object to the claimed homestead
exemption. Fed. R. Bankr. P. 4003(b)(1). The Masingales’
meeting of creditors was held on November 25, 2015. The
State of Washington was a creditor in the bankruptcy.
On December 16, 2015, before the 30-day objection
window closed, the Masingales filed two additional
documents in the Chapter 11 proceeding that are relevant
here. First, the Masingales filed a Disclosure Statement to
“disclose that information deemed . . . material, important,
and necessary to Creditors to arrive at a reasonably informed
decision” in determining whether to accede to the
Masingales’ proposed Chapter 11 Plan. See 11 U.S.C.
§ 1125. Second, the Masingales filed a proposed Chapter 11
Plan. See id. § 1121; see also Purdue Pharma, 144 S. Ct. at
2081 (“Under Chapter 11, the debtor can work with its
creditors to develop a reorganization plan governing the
MASINGALE V. MUNDING 9
distribution of the estate’s assets; it must then present that
plan to the bankruptcy court and win its approval.”). In these
documents, the Masingales made several representations
that are important to our assessment of whether the debtors
claimed an above-limit homestead exemption to which
parties in interest had an obligation to object within thirty
days of the creditors’ meeting.
Article VII of the Disclosure Statement set forth “[a] list,
with values of all Debtors’ property claimed exempt,” with
the Masingales explaining in Article VIII that the list
reflected their belief that “they [were] retaining only those
exemptions allowed by law.” The Masingales also stated
that “to the extent Debtors are retaining property exceeding
their exemptions, only as described in Article VII supra,
Debtors are paying for the right,” through the payment
obligations detailed in the Plan. (Emphasis added). The
Masingales’ list of exemptions in Article VII, which set forth
“[t]he property to be retained, its value as listed in the
Schedules . . . and [the] amount by which the property
exceeds the allowable exemptions, if any,” indicated that, for
the Greenacres home, the Masingales were not asserting an
amount above the exemption. The Disclosure Statement
included the following information about their homestead
exemption (under item 2), listing the “Amount by which
Exemption Exceeded” as “$ 0.00”:
10 MASINGALE V. MUNDING
For other items in their list of “Property to be Retained,” the
Masingales’ Disclosure Statement did indicate their intent to
exclude amounts exceeding the allowable exemptions.
In their Chapter 11 Plan, the Masingales represented that
creditors would be paid before any above-limit exemptions
were permitted. Per the Plan, the Masingales’ “exemptions
are not allowed, to the extent they exceed the statutory limit,
until full payment is made pursuant to this Plan.” If the
Masingales did not “make the payments proposed” in the
Plan, they would claim exemptions, but “the property which
exceeds allowable exemptions would be available to
Creditors.” The Plan also said that because some of their
exempted property “does exceed th[e] amount allowable,”
“Debtors shall pay an amount to Creditors, which is greater
than the amount by which the claimed exemptions exceed
those allowable by statute,” through the payments outlined
in the Plan. More generally, the Plan represented that
“Debtors believe the payment and distribution under this
Plan will benefit and pay all Creditors in full.”
No party in interest objected to the Masingales’
homestead exemption before the 30-day objection window
closed. In August 2017, by which point Mr. Masingale had
died, the bankruptcy court entered an order confirming the
Chapter 11 Plan, with immaterial modifications. Because of
Mr. Masingale’s passing, all future references to
“Masingale” in this opinion are to Mrs. Masingale.
C
In 2018, after Masingale failed to file required financial
reports, the United States Trustee moved to convert the case
to a Chapter 7 liquidation. In November 2018, over a year
after the original plan confirmation, the bankruptcy court
granted the Chapter 7 conversion. The court subsequently
MASINGALE V. MUNDING 11
appointed a Chapter 7 trustee, John Munding, to administer
the case. Under the Bankruptcy Rules, no new objections to
the Masingales’ claimed exemptions could be filed upon
conversion to Chapter 7 because the conversion had
occurred over a year after the Plan had been confirmed. See
Fed. R. Bankr. P. 1019(2)(B)(i). Thus, Munding was unable
to object to the homestead exemption.
In 2021, Masingale moved to sell the homestead
property and receive all the proceeds, with none of the
money going to the bankruptcy estate. She claimed the
property had appreciated in value and that she could sell it
for over $400,000. The Trustee and the State of Washington
objected to the sale, arguing that the home was property of
the estate. Masingale withdrew the sale motion.
A month later, Masingale moved to compel the Trustee
to abandon the property because, she claimed, her listing
“100% of FMV” as the value of the exemption on her
Schedule C made the property fully exempt, and no party in
interest had objected within the 30-day period. The Trustee
objected that Masingale’s exemption was statutorily capped
at $45,590 when her petition was filed, and that any post-
petition appreciation inured to the benefit of the bankruptcy
estate. The Trustee then filed a motion to sell the property.
The Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of
Washington granted the Trustee’s motion to sell and denied
Masingale’s motion to compel abandonment. The
bankruptcy court found that Masingale was only entitled to
the $45,950 statutory cap on her homestead exemption, with
12 MASINGALE V. MUNDING
the remaining value belonging to the bankruptcy estate.1
The Trustee then sold the home for $422,000 (the home had
significantly appreciated in value over the years). The
bankruptcy estate currently holds $357,022.94, of which
$223,033.34 was derived from the sale of the Greenacres
property. We are told that, to date, Masingale has not paid
her creditors much of anything and the Greenacres home is
the main asset that could enable some amount of payment.
D
With the Trustee ordered to hold the home’s sale
proceeds pending appeal, Masingale appealed to the Ninth
Circuit’s Bankruptcy Appellate Panel (BAP). In a published
opinion, the BAP reversed the bankruptcy court and held that
Masingale was entitled to all the sale proceeds on the home
($422,000), without regard for the statutory limit. In re
Masingale, 644 B.R. 530 (B.A.P. 9th Cir. 2022).
The BAP treated the Supreme Court’s decisions in
Taylor v. Freeland & Kronz, 503 U.S. 638 (1992), and
Schwab v. Reilly, 560 U.S. 770 (2010), as controlling. It
reasoned that because the Masingales claimed “100% of
FMV” exempt on their Schedule C, they successfully
removed their home’s entire fair market value from the
bankruptcy estate, including post-petition appreciation, after
no party in interest objected within the 30-day period. 644
B.R. at 538–44. In the BAP’s view, “100% of FMV” was
dispositive, as “parties must timely object to any improper
exemption claim, no matter how frivolous.” Id. at 534.
1
The Trustee did not argue that Masingale’s exemption should be limited
to $34,706, the amount of equity Masingale had in the home. The
bankruptcy court accordingly concluded that “the Trustee consents to an
exemption of $45,950.” Appellants do not challenge this finding on
appeal.
MASINGALE V. MUNDING 13
Masingale was thus not limited to the amount of the statutory
cap. The BAP reached this conclusion notwithstanding what
it described as “the confusing and contradictory nature of the
plan.” Id. at 543 n.7.
Though it ruled for Masingale, the BAP expressed
concern with debtors “[i]mproperly claiming exemptions”
above the statutory cap. Id. at 544. According to the BAP,
“[w]e do not condone the conduct of the Masingales and
their counsel, and we do not mean to immunize them from
all consequences for making a baseless claim of exemption,”
suggesting the possibility of sanctions. Id. The BAP further
noted that “[h]ad a party in interest timely objected to the
Masingales’ homestead exemption that blatantly exceeded
the statutory limits, the bankruptcy court probably would
and should have sustained that objection.” Id. at 541 n.6.
The Trustee and State timely appealed. We have
jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 158(d). We review the BAP’s
decision de novo. Wilson v. Rigby, 909 F.3d 306, 308 (9th
Cir. 2018); In re Padilla, 222 F.3d 1184, 1190 (9th Cir.
2000).
II
The question we must decide is whether the failure of
any party in interest to object to the Masingales’ claimed
homestead exemption within thirty days of the creditors’
meeting means that the debtor can now exempt more than
the statutory limit. If no such objection was then required to
preserve the estate’s ability to retain above-cap value in the
home, those amounts that exceed the homestead exemption’s
statutory limit are instead part of the bankruptcy estate.
This issue implicates two Supreme Court cases, Taylor
v. Freeland & Kronz, 503 U.S. 638 (1992), and Schwab v.
14 MASINGALE V. MUNDING
Reilly, 560 U.S. 770 (2010). For the reasons we explain, the
BAP read too much into these decisions. In our view, the
Masingales did not properly claim an exemption above the
statutory limit. As a result, no early objection to the claimed
homestead exemption was required to preserve the estate’s
ability to retain above-limit value in the home.
A
We begin with an overview of Taylor and Schwab.
Taylor concerned a debtor, Emily Davis, who was
pursuing an employment discrimination claim in state court
against Trans World Airlines (TWA). 503 U.S. at 640.
While her discrimination claim was on appeal, Davis filed a
Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition. Id. Her bankruptcy schedule
claimed an exemption for the damages she expected to win
in her employment discrimination case. Id. The bankruptcy
schedule listed the value of the claimed exemption as
“unknown.” Id. When the creditors’ meeting was held, the
bankruptcy trustee, Robert Taylor, was informed that Davis
might win $90,000 in the suit. Id. He was later told that
Davis’s counsel was optimistic that a $110,000 settlement
could be secured. Id.
Believing that Davis’s discrimination lawsuit would not
yield a payout, the trustee did not object to Davis’s claimed
exemption. Id. at 641. But Davis won her appeal and TWA
settled with her for $110,000. Id. Once the trustee learned
of the settlement, he filed a complaint in the bankruptcy
court and claimed that the settlement proceeds were property
of the estate. Id. The parties “agree[d] that Davis did not
have a right to exempt more than a small portion of these
proceeds,” even though she had “claimed the full amount as
exempt.” Id. at 642. The Supreme Court was thus faced
with the issue of “whether the trustee may contest the
MASINGALE V. MUNDING 15
validity of an exemption after the 30-day period if the debtor
had no colorable basis for claiming the exemption.” Id. at
639.
Taylor held that the trustee’s failure to object to the
claimed exemption within the 30-day timeframe prevented
the trustee from challenging the validity of the exemption.
Id. at 642. Because Davis had claimed the lawsuit proceeds
as exempt on her schedule, § 522(l) “made the property
exempt” once the 30-day window had passed without an
objection. Id. at 643. As a result, the trustee could not later
“contest the exemption[,] . . . whether or not Davis had a
colorable statutory basis for claiming it.” Id. at 643–44.
Taylor recognized that “[d]eadlines may lead to
unwelcome results, but they prompt parties to act and they
produce finality.” Id. at 644. If the trustee “did not know
the value of the potential proceeds of the lawsuit,” he could
have sought a hearing or asked the bankruptcy court for an
extension of the objection period. Id. But having failed to
do either, the trustee could not deprive the debtor of the
exemption. Id. Thus, under Taylor, “[i]f an interested party
fails to object within the time allowed, a claimed exemption
will exclude the subject property from the estate even if the
exemption’s value exceeds what the Code permits.”
Schwab, 560 U.S. at 775–76 (citing Taylor, 503 U.S. at 642–
43). The Court in Taylor acknowledged that this could lead
debtors to claim improper exemptions but reasoned that
existing protections against fraudulent claims provided some
safeguards against this. Taylor, 503 U.S. at 644. And, “[t]o
the extent that they do not, Congress may enact” further rules
to prevent it. Id.
Eighteen years later, in Schwab, the Supreme Court held
that a debtor could not claim an exemption above the
16 MASINGALE V. MUNDING
statutory limits, even though no objection was made within
the 30-day period. The debtor, Nadejda Reilly, filed for
Chapter 7 bankruptcy after her catering business failed. Id.
at 774. On her bankruptcy schedules, Reilly listed cooking
and kitchen equipment, to which she assigned an “estimated
market value” of $10,718. Id. at 775. Reilly claimed two
exempt interests in this equipment: a “tools of the trade”
exemption of $1,850, 11 U.S.C. § 522(d)(6), and a federal
miscellaneous “wildcard” exemption of $8,868, id.
§ 522(d)(5). Schwab, 560 U.S. at 775. Combined, these two
exemptions equaled the total “market value” Reilly listed for
the equipment: $10,718. Id. No creditor objected to these
claimed exemptions because the dollar value that Reilly
assigned to each exemption fell within the monetary limits
that the Code provided. Id. at 776.
An appraisal later valued the equipment at
approximately $17,200. Id. The bankruptcy trustee,
William Schwab, then moved to auction the equipment,
award Reilly the $10,718 she claimed as exempt, and
distribute the equipment’s remaining surplus value to the
creditors. Id. Opposing the motion, Reilly argued that “by
equating on Schedule C the total value of the exemptions she
claimed in the equipment with the equipment’s estimated
market value,” Reilly “had put Schwab and her creditors on
notice that she intended to exempt the equipment’s full
value, even if that amount turned out to be more than the
dollar amount she declared, and more than the Code
allowed.” Id. Relying on Taylor, Reilly asserted that the
trustee’s failure timely to object to her claimed exemption
meant that she could receive the excess value from the
equipment’s sale. Id.
The Supreme Court considered whether the trustee was
required to object when the debtor in her schedule of exempt
MASINGALE V. MUNDING 17
property declared the value of the assets “to be an amount
within the limits that the Code prescribes.” Id. at 774. The
Court held that the trustee in these circumstances was not
required to object within the 30-day window. Id. at 794–95.
As the Bankruptcy Code typically allows a debtor to exempt
only a monetary interest “in the assets described in the
category, not as the assets themselves,” id. at 782 (citing 11
U.S.C. § 522(d)), the trustee was not required to object to
property claimed as exempt when the stated value of the
interest “was within the limits the Code allows.” Id.
The Court distinguished Taylor based on the facial
validity of the debtor’s exemption in Schwab. “Critically . . .
the debtor in Taylor did not, like the debtor here, state the
value of the claimed exemption as a specific dollar amount
at or below the limits the Code allows.” Id. at 788. Instead,
“[t]he interested parties in Taylor agreed that this entry
rendered the debtor’s claimed exemption objectionable on
its face.” Id. at 789. Taylor thus “concerned a trustee’s
obligation to object to the debtor’s entry of a ‘value claimed
exempt’ that was not plainly within the limits the Code
allows.” Id. But in Schwab, “the opposite is true. The
amounts . . . are facially within the limits the Code
prescribes and raise no warning flags that warranted an
objection.” Id. Because of this distinction, Schwab allowed
the trustee to retain the excess sale proceeds for distribution
to creditors, even though no party in interest had lodged an
objection within the 30-day window. Id. at 789–91.
Reilly responded that such an approach “creates perverse
incentives for trustees and creditors to sleep on their rights.”
Id. at 792. In a passage that is important for Masingale’s use
18 MASINGALE V. MUNDING
of the “100% of FMV” notation, the Supreme Court offered
the following guidance:
Where, as here, it is important to the debtor
to exempt the full market value of the asset or
the asset itself, our decision will encourage
the debtor to declare the value of her claimed
exemption in a manner that makes the scope
of the exemption clear, for example, by
listing the exempt value as “full fair market
value (FMV)” or “100% of FMV.” Such a
declaration will encourage the trustee to
object promptly to the exemption if he wishes
to challenge it and preserve for the estate any
value in the asset beyond relevant statutory
limits. If the trustee fails to object, or if the
trustee objects and the objection is overruled,
the debtor will be entitled to exclude the full
value of the asset. If the trustee objects and
the objection is sustained, the debtor will be
required either to forfeit the portion of the
exemption that exceeds the statutory
allowance, or to revise other exemptions or
arrangements with her creditors to permit the
exemption. See Fed. Rule Bkrtcy. Proc.
1009(a). Either result will facilitate the
expeditious and final disposition of assets,
and thus enable the debtor (and the debtor’s
creditors) to achieve a fresh start free of the
finality and clouded-title concerns Reilly
describes.
Id. at 792–94 (footnotes omitted).
MASINGALE V. MUNDING 19
In 2015, changes were made to the Schedule C form,
now numbered Official Form 106C and entitled “Schedule
C: The Property You Claim as Exempt.” See U.S. Admin.
Off. of the Cts., Bankr. Forms: Official Form 106C (April
2022). Under a column labeled “Amount of the exemption
you claim,” debtors are instructed to check only one of two
boxes:
If debtors do choose “100% of fair market value” on Official
Form 106C, that amount is limited to any applicable
statutory cap—seemingly reducing the incidence of facially
invalid exemptions and any corresponding need to object.
The Advisory Committee Notes to Official Form 106C
explained the relevant revisions to the form as follows:
The form has also been changed in light of
the Supreme Court’s ruling in Schwab v.
Reilly, 560 U.S. 770 (2010). Entries in the
“amount of the exemption you claim”
column may now be listed as either a dollar
limited amount or as 100% of fair market
value, up to any applicable statutory limit.
For example, a debtor might claim 100% of
fair market value for a home covered by an
exemption capped at $15,000, and that limit
would be applicable. This choice would
impose no dollar limit where the exemption
is unlimited in dollar amount, such as some
20 MASINGALE V. MUNDING
exemptions for health aids, certain
governmental benefits, and tax-exempt
retirement funds.
U.S. Admin. Off. of the Cts., Advisory Comm. on Rules of
Bankr. Proc., Official Form 106C (Committee Note) at 4
(April 2022). Official Form 106C was not in place when the
Masingales filed for bankruptcy, so we must consider the
implications of a debtor claiming a “100% of FMV”
exemption on a Schedule C without checking a box that
limits the value to the applicable statutory limit.
B
We now turn back to the facts of our case and consider
whether the lack of objection to the Masingales’ claimed
homestead exemption within the 30-day period means that
Masingale is entitled to sale proceeds exceeding the statutory
cap.
1
The BAP concluded that the debtor was not limited to
the statutory cap because the Masingales listed “100% of
FMV” for the homestead on their Schedule C. Relying on
the same passage from the end of Schwab that we set forth
in block-quote above, the BAP reasoned that by using
“100% of FMV,” “[t]he Masingales followed the Supreme
Court’s suggestion to the letter.” In re Masingale, 644 B.R.
at 540. The BAP thus treated the “100% of FMV” notation
as dispositive of whether the Masingales claimed an above-
limit exemption sufficient to require an objection under
Taylor. The BAP reasoned that because “100% of FMV” “is
not a dollar value” and “can only refer to the value of the
entire asset,” it is just as facially invalid as the “unknown”
value listed in the Taylor schedule. Id. at 541. The BAP
MASINGALE V. MUNDING 21
thus believed this notation required an objection within the
30-day window, just as the notation in Taylor did.
The State protests that the Supreme Court’s discussion
of “100% of FMV” at the conclusion of Schwab was dicta.
But we agree with the BAP that this portion of Schwab
cannot be so easily dismissed. The Supreme Court there
provided explicit direction that debtors who want to “exempt
the full market value of the asset” may be able to do so by
“listing the exempt value as ‘full fair market value (FMV)’
or ‘100% of FMV.’” Schwab, 560 U.S. at 792–93. We do
not discount this clear guidance from the Supreme Court. It
seems more than apparent that, in a given case, a “100% of
FMV” notation, without more, could be sufficient to require
an early objection to a claimed exemption.
But we need not consider the full import of a stand-alone
“100% of FMV” notation on a Schedule C, and we do not do
so in this case. We will assume that if all we had here was
the debtors’ schedules, the failure to object within thirty days
of the creditors’ meeting would have meant that Masingale
was not limited to the homestead exemption’s statutory
dollar limit. Where we part ways with the BAP is on whether
the Masingales’ “100% of FMV” notation was sufficient to
require an objection in this particular case.
2
This case is different from both Taylor and Schwab in
that it began as a Chapter 11 proceeding (and produced a
confirmed Chapter 11 plan) before later being converted to
a Chapter 7 liquidation after Masingale failed to meet her
Chapter 11 obligations. This case is also different than
Taylor and Schwab because during the Chapter 11
proceedings—and with the goal of getting a Chapter 11 plan
confirmed—the Masingales made critical representations
22 MASINGALE V. MUNDING
within the 30-day objection period. As we now explain, the
initial Chapter 11 posture and the Masingales’ Chapter 11-
related representations affect whether the “100% of FMV”
notation on their Schedule C created the type of “clear”
above-limit exemption or “warning flag[]” that required a
make-it-or-lose-it objection within thirty days of the
creditors’ meeting. Schwab, 560 U.S. at 789.
Most importantly, after submitting their Schedule C, the
Masingales made several representations to their creditors
within the objection period indicating that they were not
claiming an above-limit homestead exemption, or that they
would not be entitled to such an exemption until the creditors
were paid in full. Article VII of the Masingales’ Disclosure
Statement specifically represented for the homestead that the
“amount by which the property exceeds the allowable
exemption[]” was “$0.00.” In the section immediately
following this representation, the Disclosure Statement says
that the “Debtors believe they are retaining only those
exemptions allowed by law,” and that property retained in
excess of their exemptions is “only as described in Article
VII.” And, unlike the Greenacres residence, for other items
in their Article VII list of “Property to be Retained” the
Masingales did indicate amounts by which the property
exceeded the allowable exemptions.
The Masingales’ proposed Chapter 11 Plan, meanwhile,
represented that creditors would be paid before any
exemptions above the statutory limit were permitted. The
Plan stated that “Debtors’ exemptions are not allowed, to the
extent they exceed the statutory limit, until full payment is
made pursuant to this Plan,” and that if the Masingales did
not follow through, “the property which exceeds allowable
exemptions would be available to Creditors.” The Plan also
said that because some of their property claimed as exempt
MASINGALE V. MUNDING 23
did “exceed that amount allowable,” “Debtors shall pay an
amount to Creditors, which is greater than the amount by
which the claimed exemptions exceed those allowable by
statute,” through the payments outlined in the Plan. As the
BAP explained, the Plan “acknowledged that the property
would not be exempt until all creditors were paid in full.”
644 B.R. at 534.
These representations were not mere legalese. They
were included in the Chapter 11 documents to convince the
Masingales’ creditors to proceed with the Plan and so that
the Masingales could, in their words, “prevent the forced
sale and liquidation of [their] property” and avoid a tax
liability that would be created by liquidation. These
representations were made to the Masingales’ creditors
before the objection window on exemptions closed. And the
representations were made in the context of Chapter 11
proceedings, in which the Masingales were serving as
debtors-in-possession and owed attendant fiduciary
obligations to their creditors. See In re Perez, 30 F.3d 1209,
1214 n.5 (9th Cir. 1994) (explaining that a Chapter 11 debtor
in possession has “a fiduciary relationship to the estate’s
creditors”); Wolf v. Weinstein, 372 U.S. 633, 649 (1963)
(“[S]o long as the Debtor remains in possession, it is clear
that the [debtor] bears essentially the same fiduciary
obligation to the creditors as does the trustee for the Debtor
out of possession.”); see also 11 U.S.C. § 1107(a).
Under these circumstances, we do not think it correct to
apply Taylor’s rule of decision. Even if “100% of FMV” on
a Schedule C can be sufficient standing alone to demonstrate
a debtor’s intention to exempt the full market value of the
asset, here the Masingales said more than this. Within the
30-day period, they also represented in Chapter 11 papers
that, for the homestead, the “amount by which the property
24 MASINGALE V. MUNDING
exceeds the allowable exemption[]” was “$0.00,” and that
creditors would be fully paid before above-limit exemptions
were allowed.
The idea expressed at the end of Schwab was that a
notation like “100% of FMV” would make the “scope of the
exemption clear.” Schwab, 560 U.S. at 792. Given the
Masingales’ representations on their Disclosure Statement
and Chapter 11 Plan—representations that were heightened
in significance by the Masingales’ fiduciary duties as
debtors-in-possession—“100% of FMV” on this Schedule C
does not have nearly the clarity the Supreme Court was
suggesting it could. See 4 Collier Bankr. Practice Guide
§ 74.09 (2024) (explaining that the 30-day deadline “may
not apply if the debtor fails to make clear an intent to exempt
the debtor’s full interest in property”). The “100% of FMV”
notation here thus does not carry the same “warning flag”
connotation that it otherwise might in a case lacking these
features. See Schwab, 560 U.S. at 789; Masingale, 644 B.R.
at 543 n.7 (describing “the confusing and contradictory
nature of the [Masingales’] plan”).
Masingale argues that notwithstanding the originating
Chapter 11 context of this case, Supreme Court precedent
requires that we focus only on the Schedule C to the
exclusion of all other representations the Masingales made
within the relevant time period. In particular, Masingale
relies on Schwab’s statement that the trustee there “was
entitled to evaluate the propriety of the claimed exemptions
based on three, and only three, entries” on a Schedule C. 560
U.S. at 785.
This misunderstands Schwab. Schwab made this
statement in the context of a facially valid Schedule C,
holding that the trustee was not required to rummage through
MASINGALE V. MUNDING 25
other documents to determine if the debtor had a different
intent to claim an exemption greater than the within-limit
amounts listed on the schedule. Id. at 779 (rejecting this
“complicated view of the trustee’s statutory obligation”).
Here, Masingale claims that the exemption was facially
invalid under Taylor, which, if true, could require a prompt
objection. That parties in interest are “entitled to rely upon”
a facially valid Schedule C, see Schwab, 560 U.S. at 794,
does not mean they are required to act upon a potentially
invalid one regardless of whatever else the debtor may say
about the exemption within the 30-day period. Schwab did
not address that issue.
Schwab, moreover, did not originate in Chapter 11, and
we have found no case involving this question that did. We
can assume that the Masingales’ homestead exemption on
Schedule C was facially invalid standing alone. But at least
in the context of a case that begins in Chapter 11, when
debtors make later contradictory statements within the 30-
day period—including that they will pay their creditors in
full before taking any above-limit exemptions—those later
statements can inform whether the debtor sufficiently
claimed an objection-warranting exemption. Here again,
Schwab does not dictate otherwise.
Taylor provides further support for looking outside the
Schedule C in this case. Taylor noted that the debtor and her
counsel there had informed the trustee that the “unknown”
value of the debtor’s pending lawsuit might bear fruit, but
that the trustee did not believe them. 503 U.S. at 640–41.
The Court faulted the trustee for failing to rely on that
information, which was information outside of the
bankruptcy schedule on which the exemption was claimed.
Id. at 644 (“In this case, despite what respondents repeatedly
told him, Taylor did not object to the claimed exemption.”).
26 MASINGALE V. MUNDING
Taylor is thus consistent with the notion that when it comes
to facially invalid exemptions on a bankruptcy schedule,
courts may consider other representations made within the
30-day period in considering whether “100% of FMV”
reflects a Taylor-style exemption and, relatedly, the need for
a party in interest to object.
Masingale further argues that even with the potentially
contradictory representations in the Chapter 11 documents
and the Chapter 11 genesis of this case, the better rule is still
that whenever a debtor says “100% of FMV” on a
bankruptcy schedule, an objection within the 30-day period
is required, no matter what. The Masingales’ objection-
forcing rule is not without some merit. Given the Supreme
Court’s guidance in Schwab about the use of “100% of
FMV” when a debtor wants to exempt the full market value
of an asset, see Schwab, 560 U.S. at 792–93, parties in
interest take a considerable risk when they do not levy an
early objection to a “100% of FMV” exemption on a
schedule, when that notation is unaccompanied by any other
information.
At the same time, at least in the context of a bankruptcy
proceeding that originated in Chapter 11, in which debtors
owe fiduciary duties to their creditors, precedent does not
suggest that we should endorse what happened here: debtors
saying one thing about the homestead exemption on their
Schedule C, saying something contradictory in their
Disclosure Statement and proposed Chapter 11 Plan, and
then capitalizing on the lack of any objection within the 30-
day period. Masingale has no explanation for the statements
in the debtors’ Disclosure Statement and Chapter 11 Plan
except to say that we should ignore them.
MASINGALE V. MUNDING 27
Indeed, at oral argument, Masingale all but confirmed
her position that, after noting “100% of FMV” on her
Schedule C—and regardless of what other contrary
representations she might later make within the 30-day
period—if creditors did not object to the exemption they
were out of luck. Even though Taylor allows debtors to
secure above-limit exemptions that lack any colorable basis,
503 U.S. at 643–44, it does not justify the far greater inequity
of Masingale’s proposed rule. Though Taylor will control
in many situations, Schwab itself did not enforce Taylor’s
objection deadline. Neither Taylor nor Schwab require the
extreme result that Masingale seeks.
Masingale’s proposed rule is not costless, either, as it
would require objections anytime “100% of FMV” is used.
A rule that incentivizes protective objections en masse can
reduce the efficiency of the bankruptcy process. See In re
Biondo, 59 F.4th 811, 814–16 (6th Cir. 2023)
(“[P]rophylactic objections can slow down bankruptcies and
waste judicial resources.”). Indeed, it is such a regime—in
which debtors use “100% of FMV” to claim an invalid
exemption, only to be met with a valid objection—that new
Official Form 106C is seemingly trying to avoid by directing
debtors to choose “100% of fair market value, up to any
applicable statutory limit.” U.S. Admin. Off. of the Cts.,
Bankr. Forms: Official Form 106C (April 2022) (emphasis
added); see also Peter Spero, Fraudulent Transfers,
Prebankruptcy Planning and Exemptions § 12:35
(September 2023) (noting that “[n]ew Bankruptcy Form
28 MASINGALE V. MUNDING
Schedule C may have eliminated much of the controversy”
post-Schwab).2
* * *
The debtors did not properly claim an above-limit
homestead exemption that required an objection within the
30-day period. Masingale’s homestead exemption is thus
limited to the amount of the statutory cap. The remaining
proceeds of the sale of the Greenacres residence are property
of the estate. The decision of the BAP is reversed, and this
matter is remanded for proceedings consistent with this
opinion.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
2
After concluding that Masingale was not limited to the federal cap for
homestead exemptions, the BAP further held that Masingale was entitled
to the fair market value of the home at the time it was sold, not its fair
market value at the time the bankruptcy petition was filed. The State and
Trustee argue that even if the statutory cap does not apply, under the
“snapshot rule” Masingale was only entitled to the fair market value of
the homestead as of the date of the petition, with any post-petition
appreciation inuring to the estate. We do not reach this issue of post-
petition appreciation in light of our conclusion that Masingale may
receive only the statutorily capped amount.
Plain English Summary
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT In re: MONTE L.
Key Points
01FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT In re: MONTE L.
0222-1016 ______________________________ STATE OF WASHINGTON, 2 MASINGALE V.
03MUNDING 3 SUMMARY* Bankruptcy Reversing a decision of the Bankruptcy Appellate Panel and remanding, the panel held that, under the circumstances of this case, a Chapter 7 debtor could not exempt from the bankruptcy estate a homestead intere
04The panel held that, in some circumstances, if a debtor attempts to exempt more than the statutory amount and no party in interest objects within thirty days of the creditors’ meeting, the debtor retains an above-limit homestead exemption,
Frequently Asked Questions
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT In re: MONTE L.
FlawCheck shows no negative treatment for In Re: Monte Masingale v. John D. Munding in the current circuit citation data.
This case was decided on July 26, 2024.
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