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Sec. 403(b) annuity included in bankruptcy estate.


E had a retirement account through an employer, which was a qualified annuity annuity: see insurance.
annuity

Payment made at a fixed interval. A common example is the payment received by retirees from their pension plan. There are two main classes of annuities: annuities certain and contingent annuities.
 under Sec. 403(b). E filed a voluntary petition under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code Bankruptcy Code may refer to:
  • Bankruptcy in Canada
  • Bankruptcy in the United States
  • Bankruptcy in China
 and chimed that pension/annuity should be excluded from the bankruptcy estate under Section 541 (c)(2). The Bankruptcy Court bankruptcy court n. the specialized Federal court in which bankruptcy matters under the Federal Bankruptcy Act are conducted. There are several bankruptcy courts in each state, and each one's territory covers several counties.  excluded the annuity, and the trustee appealed to the District Court.

Analysis

Section 541(c)(1) of the Bankruptcy Code broadly provides a bankruptcy estate includes "all legal or equitable interests An equitable interest is right in equity subject to satisfaction by an equitable remedy should the equitable interest suffer a harm. This concept only exists in the common law.  of the debtor in property" as of the commencement of the bankruptcy estate "except as provided in subsections (b) and (c)(2) of this section." Under Section 541(c)(2):

A restriction on the transfer of a beneficial interest of the debtor in a trust that is enforceable under applicable nonbankruptcy law is enforceable in a case under this fide. The courts are in conflict over whether annuity pension plans that are tax-qualified under the provisions of Sec. 403(b) should be excluded from a bankruptcy estate by Section 541(c)(2). In Patterson v. Shumate, 504 US 753 (1992), the Supreme Court held an antialienation provision in an ERISA-qualified pension plan constituted an enforceable restriction on transfer under "applicable nonbankruptcy law" (Id. at 757). In the wake of Patterson, several courts have seized on the phrase "in a plan or trust" to hold a broad range of retirement plans other than "trusts" excludible from the bankruptcy estate as long as the instrument contains a qualifying transfer restriction provision. For example, In re Johnson, 191 BR 75 (Bankr. MD PA 1996), a case relied on by the debtors, used this approach to find that a Sec. 403(b) annuity was not property of the bankruptcy estate. However, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 the District Court, the Third Circuit has since rejected this broader inquiry. In Orr, 104 F3d 612 (3rd Cir. 1997), it interpreted Patterson, and announced five requirements that must be satisfied before a pension plan can be excluded from the bankruptcy estate. First and foremost, it held "the IRA Ira, in the Bible
Ira (ī`rə), in the Bible.

1 Chief officer of David.

2,

3 Two of David's guard.
IRA, abbreviation
IRA.
 must constitute a 'trust' within the meaning of 11 U.S.C. [section] 541(c)(2)" and, secondly, "the funds in the IRA must represent the debtor's 'beneficial interest' in that trust ..."

Following Orr, courts within the Third Circuit have strictly required the existence of a trust to satisfy the statutory exclusion; see, e.g., In re Williams, 290 BR 83 (Bankr. ED PA 2003) (the debtor's IRA was not excluded because it was not a "trust" within the meaning of Section 541(c)(2)); and Pineo, 240 BR 854 (Bankr. WD PA 1999) (concluding that IRA annuities are not excluded under Section 541(c) (2)).

In In re Adams, 302 BR 535 (6th Cir. BAP BAP - 1. An early system used on the IBM 701.

[Listed in CACM 2(5):16 (May 1959)].
 2003), the court rejected the notion any pension plan with "an enforceable transfer restriction ... designed to function in a manner 'analogous' to a spendthrift trust An arrangement whereby one person sets aside property for the benefit of another in which, either because of a direction of the settlor (one who creates a trust) or because of statute, the beneficiary (one who profits from the act of another) is unable to transfer his or her right to " could be excluded from the bankruptcy estate, holding instead "only an interest in a trust can be the subject of an enforceable transfer restriction within the meaning of 11 U.S.C. [section] 541(c)(2). "The Sixth Circuit then concluded an annuity was not a "mast mast, large metal or timber pole secured vertically or nearly vertically in a ship, used primarily for supporting sails and rigging. The mast is as old as sailing vessels, and the oldest sailboats depicted (those of ancient Egypt) had a small mast placed forward and " within the meaning of the statutory exclusion because "[t]he purchase of an annuity ordinarily or·di·nar·i·ly  
adv.
1. As a general rule; usually: ordinarily home by six.

2. In the commonplace or usual manner: ordinarily dressed pedestrians on the street.
 creates the relationship of debtor/creditor, not trustee/beneficiary" (Id. at 541); see also In re Wendt, 320 BR 904 (Bankr. D MN 2005) (a debtor's interest in a Sec. 403(b) annuity was not excluded because it did not constitute a trust); In re Quinn, 299 BR 450 (Bankr.WD MI 2003) (concluding that the debtor's interest in a Sec. 403(b) annuity was not excluded); and In re Barnes, 264 BR 415, 421 (Bankr. ED MI 2001) (discussing the "mast" requirement at length and concluding that "[section] 541 (c)(2) applies only to trust interests").

Thus, the District Court concluded that only a debtor's beneficial interest in a mast may be excluded from the bankruptcy estate under Section 541(c)(2).

GARY SKIBA, WD PA (8/8/2005)

David O'Driscoll, J.D., LL.M LL.M Legum Magister (Master of Laws) .
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Author:O'Driscoll, David
Publication:The Tax Adviser
Date:May 1, 2006
Words:677
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