406 B.R. 589

In re Diana L. ARMENAKIS, Debtor.

No. 05-13671 (AJG).

United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York.

May 22, 2009.

*594Harold S. Berzow, Ruskin Moscou Fal-tischek, P.C., Uniondale, NY, for Debtor.

ORDER AND OPINION

ARTHUR J. GONZALEZ, Bankruptcy Judge.

Before the Court is a request for relief contained within the motion of Diana L. Armenakis (the “Debtor”) to reconsider (the “Motion to Reconsider”) the Court’s order of August 14, 2008, lifting the automatic stay (the “Lift Stay Order”), pursuant to Rule 9024 of the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure (“FRBP”) and Rule 60 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The Debtor’s request is to avoid the judicial lien (the “Lien”) of Smithbuilt Financial, LLC (“Smithbuilt”), successor-in-interest to creditor National Loan Investors, L.P. (“NLI”), pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 522(f) and Rule 4003(d) FRBP (the “Request to Avoid”). Also before the Court is Smithbuilt’s motion for relief from the automatic stay (the “Lift Stay Motion”) pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 362(d) and Rules 4001(a) and 9014 FRBP. Smithbuilt seeks relief from the automatic stay so that it may exercise its rights and remedies under the Lien against the cooperative apartment (the “Apartment”)1 owned by Debtor and her non-debtor spouse (the “Non-Debtor Spouse”). For the reasons stated below, (i) the Lien against Debtor’s interest in the Apartment is reduced to not less than $8,923.07 (the “Reduced Lien”),2 (ii) the balance of the Lien is avoided, and (iii) *595the Lift Stay Motion is granted so that Smithbuilt may exercise its rights and remedies against Debtor with respect to the Reduced Lien.

BACKGROUND

1. Factual Background

On May 18, 2005 (the “Petition Date”), Debtor filed a voluntary petition (the “Petition”) for chapter 7 bankruptcy protection in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York. On May 19, 2005, Robert L. Geltzer was appointed as interim trustee, and on June 28, 2005, he held a § 341(a) meeting, after which he became the trustee (the “Trustee”) pursuant to § 702(d).3 On August 8, 2005, NLI moved for relief from the automatic stay (ie., the Lift Stay Motion) in order to enforce its rights and remedies under the Lien granted pursuant to a judgment entered in the Supreme Court of the State of New York, County of New York (the “State Court”), in an action entitled “National Loan Investors, L.P. v. James J. Armenakis and Diana L. Armenakis,” bearing Index No. 109166/04 (the “Judgment”). A hearing was scheduled for August 31, 2005.

The Judgment against Debtor and Non-Debtor Spouse was granted on April 15, 2005, in a special proceeding conducted pursuant to § 5206(e) of the New York Civil Practice Law and Rules (the “CPLR”) directing the sale of the Apartment to satisfy a money judgment entered against Debtor and the Non-Debtor Spouse on March 10, 2004, in the amount of $245,000.00 for their default on a promissory note to NLI’s predecessor-in-interest (the “Money Judgment”). The Judgment was filed on May 2, 2005, and it directed the Sheriff of New York County (the “Sheriff’) to sell the Apartment subject to and in compliance with Rivercross’s restrictions, rules, regulations, law, and requirements, and that (i) the proceeds of the “said sale” be paid to Debtor and Non-Debtor Spouse, jointly, in an amount not exceeding $10,000.00; (ii) the Money Judgment, plus interest from March 10, 2004, be adjudged to be a lien upon the “surplus” of the “said sale” (ie., the Lien); and (in) the “surplus” be applied to the Money Judgment and to any charges lawfully accruing to Rivercross for unpaid maintenance charges, fees, and expenses to Riv-ercross (ie., the “Maintenance,” as defined supra fn. 2). Debtor and Rivercross, in its own motion for relief from the stay, assert in substance that the Maintenance constitutes a consensual first lien on the Apartment. Smithbuilt does not concede this point and has reserved its rights to challenge it, see infra fn. 13.

The Petition stayed enforcement of the Judgment and prevented the sale of the Apartment. Rivercross’s amended secured proof of claim indicated that Debtor and Non-Debtor Spouse owed Rivercross $40,253.214 in Maintenance at the Petition Date. As of November 3, 2008, Debtor and Non-Debtor Spouse owed Rivercross $75,803.65 in Maintenance, but as of February 4, 2009, Debtor and Non-Debtor Spouse owed Rivercross $45,760.04 in Maintenance. At the Petition Date, the *596New York homestead exemption was $10,000.00, but, on August 30, 2005 (the “Enactment Date”), “the New York State Legislature amended [CPLR] § 5206 to increase the state’s homestead exemption from $10,000.00 to $50,000.00.” CFCU Cmty. Credit Union v. Hayward, 552 F.3d 253, 256 (2d Cir.2009) (citing 2005 N.Y. Laws Ch. 623) (hereinafter, the “2005 Amendment”). The new exemption amount became effective immediately on that date. See CFCU, 552 F.3d at 261.

Debtor amended Schedule C attached to the Petition and claimed the new homestead exemption of $50,000.00 on September 9, 2005. The time to object to the Debtor’s exemption was extended a number of times by stipulation with the Trustee to October 17, 2006. No timely objection to Debtor’s amended exemption claim was filed. Smithbuilt raised the issue of which exemption should apply in one of its pleadings and during at least one hearing related to the Lift Stay Motion, each of which occurred after the October 17, 2006 date.5

Since its filing, the Lift Stay Motion was adjourned numerous times on request of the parties as they attempted to work out a resolution. On January 12, 2007, Debtor received her discharge. On May 1, 2008, the Trustee certified that Debtor’s estate (the “Estate”) had been fully administered. Eventually, the parties informed the Court that they were unable to resolve the Lift Stay Motion and a hearing was held on July 16, 2008. On August 14, 2008, the Court granted the Lift Stay Order to Smithbuilt.

2. Motion to Reconsider

On August 18, 2008, Debtor filed the Motion to Reconsider, with a hearing date set for September 24, 2008. In the Motion to Reconsider, Debtor argued that the Court should relieve Debtor from the Lift Stay Order because Debtor either had no equity (i.e., an amount in excess of the Maintenance and her exemption, hereinafter the “Equity”) in the Apartment to which the Lien could attach, or to the extent the Lien attached, § 522(f) gave her the right to avoid the Lien because it impaired her claimed $50,000.00 homestead exemption for the Apartment. Debtor therefore requested that the Court avoid the Lien (i.e., the Request to Avoid). At the September 24, 2008, hearing, Debt- or argued that the Apartment had a fixed value, as of the Petition Date, of $78,099.35,6 which was set in accordance with the New York Private Housing Finance Law. Smithbuilt argued that the Judgment allowed the Sheriff to auction the right to purchase the Apartment for this purported fixed value and that this “right to purchase” had a fair market value of approximately $500,000.00. Because this question depended solely on New York state law,7 principally, the Private *597Housing Finance Law, the Court stated that it had lifted the stay so that the State Court could decide the value of the Apartment and thus whether there was Equity in the Apartment to which the Lien could attach. Further, when the Court determined the Lift Stay Motion, it focused on the adequate protection issue as opposed to whether Smithbuilt had an interest that was entitled to adequate protection. The Court also stated that Debtor had a right to have her exemption adjudicated in bankruptcy court. Apparently, rather than having this Court address the amount of the exemption and thereby delaying the issue of lifting the stay until the exemption issue was decided, Smithbuilt stated that it would not challenge Debtor’s claimed exemption in the State Court.8

The Court then determined that it would hold another hearing on the Motion to Reconsider because the value issue raised significant questions as to Smithbuilt’s interest in the Apartment and, therefore, whether it had “cause” for relief from the stay. The hearing was scheduled for November 6, 2008, and adjourned at the request of the parties to December 10, 2008. At the conclusion of the hearing on the Motion to Reconsider, the Court issued a minute order (the “Minute Order”) granting the Motion to Reconsider, vacating the Lift Stay Order, reimposing the automatic stay,9 and instructing the parties to brief the issue of Smithbuilt’s interest in the Apartment. Further, the Court stated that because it would hear the value issue, Smithbuilt would not be bound in considering the § 522(f) issue by its concession regarding whether it would raise the exemption issue in the State Court. The Court held another hearing on March 18, 2009, regarding the parties’ submissions on Smithbuilt’s interest in the Apartment.

3. Request to Avoid

As previously stated, Debtor made the Request to Avoid in the Motion to Reconsider. Debtor argued that the fixed value of the Apartment less the Maintenance, which constituted a consensual first lien on the Apartment, either left no Equity to which the Lien could attach, or to the extent the Lien attached, § 522(f) provided to Debtor the right to avoid the Lien be*598cause it impaired her claimed $50,000.00 homestead exemption for the Apartment. Smithbuilt noted that Debtor never formally moved to avoid the Lien,10 and at the September 24, 2008, hearing, the Court told Debtor’s counsel that a motion to reconsider could not be considered a motion to avoid a lien.11

Despite these possible procedural defects with respect to the Request to Avoid, as previously discussed, Debtor’s underlying argument challenges the basis of the Lift Stay Order, namely, that Smithbuilt had an interest in the Apartment entitled to protection, thus establishing “cause” for lifting the stay. Therefore, insofar as Debtor seeks avoidance of the Lien, the Court did not grant reconsideration on that basis but rather on the basis of whether Smithbuilt had met its burden of proving a factual and legal right to relief from the stay regarding its interest.12

The Court has determined that the state law issues as to the value of the Apartment and the bankruptcy issues of Debtor’s exemption are too intertwined for the Court to adjudicate each party’s rights without considering all the related issues. To determine if Smithbuilt has an interest in the Apartment entitled to protection, thus providing the basis upon which “cause” for lifting the stay may be established, the Court must also determine to what extent the Lien may be avoided. If Debtor’s value of the Apartment were to prevail, the unavoidable part, if any, of the Lien would be Smithbuilt’s only interest in the property entitled to protection. Even if Debtor had not made the Request to Avoid within the Motion to Reconsider, Debtor still could have moved to avoid the Lien by a separate motion. For the sake of judicial economy, the Court deems the Request to Avoid a motion to avoid the Lien in compliance with Rule 4003(d) FRBP.

The Court accordingly finds that despite its possible procedural defects, the *599Request to Avoid is properly before the Court because Debtor has met the pleading requirements of Rules 4003(d) and 9014 FRBP, namely requesting relief by motion and affording Smithbuilt reasonable notice and opportunity for hearing. Consistent with due process, both parties have had ample opportunity to litigate the central issues relevant to lien avoidance, namely the value of the Apartment and the proper amount of Debtor’s homestead exemption for purposes of a lien avoidance action. Further, Smithbuilt has reserved its rights to challenge the Maintenance, see infra fn.13, and the Court will provide Smithbuilt with an opportunity to do so, if such would be relevant to lien avoidance issue. Accordingly, neither party is prejudiced by the Court’s adjudicating the Request to Avoid herein. Further, both parties have benefited from the procedural protections that would have been afforded by a separate motion to avoid the Lien pursuant to Rule 9014 FRBP.13

DISCUSSION

1. Value of Apartment

Smithbuilt contends that it has an interest in the Apartment, in part by virtue of its interest in the “right to purchase.” To determine whether, and if so, to what extent, Smithbuilt has an interest in the Apartment, the Court must first determine the legal issues impacting the Apartment’s value as a threshold issue before addressing the Lift Stay Motion or the Request to Avoid.

A. Whether the Sheriff May Auction the Right to Purchase the Apartment Is a Question of Law

Smithbuilt argues that the Court is capable of taking judicial notice of the fact that the Apartment would have a fair market value well in excess of $500,000.00 when placed for public auction. Without reaching the issue of whether the Court may take judicial notice of the purported fact that the right to purchase an apartment as described above would be worth far in excess of $78,099.35, the Court will address the fundamental issue of whether the Sheriff may auction the right to purchase the Apartment distinct from the purchase of the Apartment at its fixed price. Further, related to that determination would be whether the Lien attached to such right even if the right in fact existed.

In this case, whether the right to purchase the Apartment can be separately auctioned by the Sheriff, as an interest to which the Lien attached, is a question of law, not a question of fact. In the Lift *600Stay Motion, NLI admitted that River-cross is a limited profit housing company duly organized and existing pursuant to the Private Housing Finance Law of the State of New York. Article II of the Private Housing Finance Law is commonly referred to as the Mitchell-Lama Law. See Matter of KSLM-Columbus Apartments., Inc. v. New York State Div. of Hous. Cmty Renewal, 5 N.Y.3d 303, 308, 801 N.Y.S.2d 783, 835 N.E.2d 643 (2005); see also Scruggs-Leftwich v. Rivercross Tenants Corp., 70 N.Y.2d 849, 850, 523 N.Y.S.2d 451, 517 N.E.2d 1337, 1338 (1987) (“Cooperatives such as Rivercross are commonly known as Mitchell-Lama housing.”).

However, Smithbuilt later states that Debtor “unpersuasively argue[s]” (i) that the Mitchell-Lama Law allegedly controls and limits the resale value of cooperative apartments within the Mitchell-Lama system, and (ii) that the Court would be unable to order the sale of a cooperative apartment due to a purported cap in resale value allegedly imposed by New York law. The Court agrees with Debtor’s argument on point (i) based on both established case law and New York State statutes and regulations, but the Court disagrees with Debtor’s argument on point (ii) based on Smithbuilt’s defense to Debtor’s application of the increased exemption amount in its Request to Avoid because Smithbuilt’s defense leaves Equity to which the Lien remains attached notwithstanding the fixed resale price of the Apartment.

B. Sheriff May Not Auction the Right to Purchase the Apartment

Smithbuilt argues in substance that the Sheriff could auction the right to purchase the Apartment for the purported capped resale value. Smithbuilt’s theory is that because of the size and desirable location of the Apartment, a prospective purchaser would pay as much as $500,000.00 at auction to purchase the right to get off the waiting list and pay the fixed price under the applicable regulations. Smithbuilt’s theory fails as both a matter of law and a matter of public policy.

i. Mitchell-Lama Housing

In order to provide the proper context, it is useful to first examine the public policy behind Mitchell-Lama housing: “The Mitchell-Lama program was designed to encourage private financing of low and middle income housing where affordable housing was not otherwise provided by the private real estate market, by the creation of limited-profit housing companies.” Real Estate Bd. of New York, Inc. v. City Council of City of New York, 16 Misc.3d 530, 533, 842 N.Y.S.2d 218, 221 (2007); see also KSLM-Columbus Apartments., 5 N.Y.3d at 308, 801 N.Y.S.2d 783, 835 N.E.2d 643; N.Y. Priv. Hous. Fin. Law §§ 11, 11-a, 13[13]. “In return for offering private developers long-term, low-interest government mortgage loans and real estate tax abatements, the developer had to agree to limited rents and profits and to regulation of tenant selection and the transfer of property.” Real Estate Bd., 16 Misc.3d at 533-34, 842 N.Y.S.2d 218 (citing N.Y. Priv. Hous. Fin. Law §§ 20-23, 28, 31); see also Lafayette Morrison Hous., Inc. v. Patterson, 57 Misc.2d 579, 582, 292 N.Y.S.2d 785 (Civ.Ct.1968) (“The landlord [of a ‘Mitchell-Lama Project’] is a very special creature of the statute, and is required to comply very strictly with the regulations prescribed, in fixing what amount of rent is to be paid, which tenants are permitted to occupy premises, and in determining most of the other conditions of the tenancy.”).

As for the regulations themselves, “there is a maximum price which a shareholder may receive as a refund of consideration upon the resale of his shares in the *601co-operative.” Korman v. Bayridge Air Rights, Inc., 116 Misc.2d 237, 238, 455 N.Y.S.2d, 345, 346 (Civ.Ct.1982); see N.Y. Priv. Hous. Fin. Law § 31-a.14 Specifically, N.Y. Priv. Hous. Fin. Law § 31-a “was designed and enacted to prevent speculators from investing in co-operative shares and holding those shares for sale at a profit at a later date. Purchasers do not share in any increase in the value of the stock but run the risk that the value of their shares may decrease. Thus, upon resale, a shareholder is not entitled to recover more than the initial purchase price paid for the shares.” Korman, 116 Misc.2d at 239, 455 N.Y.S.2d 345.

Additionally, “[t]he regulations governing Mitehell-Lama cooperatives provide that owners may resell their apartments only to prospective purchasers who are on a waiting list maintained by the housing company.” Scruggs-Leftwich, 70 N.Y.2d at 850-51, 523 N.Y.S.2d 451, 517 N.E.2d 1337 (citing 9 NYCRR 1727-1.1, 1727-1.3 15). Indeed, in finding that the express terms of the contract between the shareholders and Rivercross “provided that the right to resell an apartment was subordinated to the applicable statutory and regulatory scheme,” which in turn “provided that apartments must be resold to persons on a waiting list,” the New York Court of Appeals approvingly noted certain policy considerations underlying Mitchell-Lama housing, including the appellants concern in that case that “sale of units on the open *602market may lead to the exaction of illegal payments from prospective buyers, ...” Scruggs-Leftwich, 70 N.Y.2d at 852-53, 523 N.Y.S.2d 451, 517 N.E.2d 1337.16 Accordingly, Debtor only could resell the Apartment for a fixed resale price to the next eligible applicant on the waiting list whose number of prospective tenants or cooperators was sufficient to fill the vacancy-

ii. Judgment Creditor Steps Into the Shoes of Judgment Debtor

Smithbuilt’s argument that, despite these restrictions on Debtor’s ability to sell, the Sheriff could auction the right to purchase to someone on the waiting list and then the successful bidder would pay the purported fixed price is contrary to the law in New York. Namely, Smithbuilt’s argument that the Sheriff could auction the right to purchase the Apartment implies that Smithbuilt, as judgment creditor, has greater rights than Debtor, as judgment debtor. This is not the law in New York. Rather, “[t]he judgment creditor stands in the shoes of the judgment debtor.” Cohen v. First Nat’l City Bank, 49 Misc.2d 141, 144, 267 N.Y.S.2d 146, 150 (citing, inter alia, Cent. Suffolk Hosp. Assn. v. Downs, Sup. 213 N.Y.S.2d 192, for the proposition that a judgment creditor’s rights under a lien cannot rise higher than the rights of the judgment debtor (citation omitted)); see also Siegel, N.Y. Prac. § 488 (4th ed.) (stating that “all existing encumbrances, restrictions, and qualifications on the debtor’s property rights will as a rule modify the rights of the judgment creditor. The creditor who steps into the debtor’s shoes may walk only on terrain open to the debtor himself.”).

Smithbuilt’s argument that the Sheriff could auction the right to purchase the Apartment fails because this “terrain” is not open to Debtor herself. See id. The laws and regulations governing the resale of Mitchell-Lama cooperatives do not permit the owner of a cooperative apartment to auction the right to purchase it. Therefore, Smithbuilt, as judgment creditor, in stepping into Debtor’s shoes, could not auction the right to purchase the Apartment. Moreover, the Judgment by its own terms17 belies Smithbuilt’s claim that the *603Sheriff is entitled to auction the right to purchase the Apartment. The Judgment not only directed the Sheriff to auction Debtor’s and Non-Debtor Spouse’s interest in the Apartment (ie., the stock certificate and concomitant and appurtenant proprietary lease) rather than to auction the right to purchase it (ie., not part of Debt- or’s and Non-Debtor Spouse’s interest in the Apartment), but the Judgment also directed that such sale be subject to and in compliance with Rivercross’s restrictions, rules, regulations, law, and requirements. These in turn are subordinated to the New York Private Housing Finance Law and the regulations promulgated thereunder. See Scruggs-Leftwich, 70 N.Y.2d at 852, 523 N.Y.S.2d 451, 517 N.E.2d 1337. Finally, the public policy behind the Mitchell-Lama program, providing low and middle income housing, see Real Estate Bd., 16 Misc.3d at 533, 842 N.Y.S.2d 218, would be nullified if anyone could bid a premium (e.g., $500,000.00) at an auction for the right to purchase a Mitchell-Lama cooperative unit at a fixed price, notwithstanding the obvious inconsistency between having the wherewithal to tender such a bid and being eligible for a place on a Mitchell-Lama waiting list in the first place.

As previously stated, at the Petition Date, the fixed value or maximum resale price of the Apartment was $78,099.35. To the extent the Lien attaches, it can only attach to whatever interest Debtor may have in the Apartment, subject to the Judgment, see supra fn. 17 and accompanying text. The Judgment limited the attachment to any “surplus” of Debtor’s and Non-Debtor Spouse’s interest in the Apartment (ie., the stock certificate and concomitant and appurtenant proprietary lease), with the “surplus” being applied to the Money Judgment and the Maintenance. Additionally, subject to Smith-built’s reservation of rights, see supra fn. 13, Rivercross has a consensual first lien on the Apartment in the form of the Maintenance, thus leaving only the Equity, if any, to which the Lien can attach. Therefore, with respect to Debtor, the Lien attaches to the Equity, if any, in the Apartment and not, even if such right to purchase exists, to any right to purchase the Apartment.

2. Requirements for Lien Avoidance

Having concluded that the fixed value of the Apartment of $78,099.35 is the value to be considered in determining the lien avoidance issue, the Court will proceed to determine whether, and if so, the extent to which, any Equity exists such that Smith-built would have an interest in the Apartment.

A. Apartment is Property of the Estate

“As a general matter, upon the filing of a petition for bankruptcy, ‘all legal or equitable interests of the debtor in property’ become the property of the bankruptcy estate and will be distributed to the debtor’s creditors.” Rousey v. Jacoway, 544 U.S. 320, 325, 125 S.Ct. 1561, 1565, 161 L.Ed.2d 563 (2005) (quoting § 541(a)(1)). The Apartment is property of the Estate. However, “[p]ursuant to [§ ] 522(b), debtors may exempt certain *604property from the bankruptcy estate created by the petition, ‘allowing them to retain those assets rather than divide them among their creditors.’ ” CFCU, 552 F.3d at 258 (quoting Rousey, 544 U.S. at 322, 125 S.Ct. 1561 and citing In re Bell, 225 F.3d 203, 208 (2d Cir.2000)). Under § 522(b)(1), a debtor may choose federal or state exemptions, unless the state law applicable to the debtor has “opted-out” of the federal exemption scheme. See In re Corio, 190 B.R. 498, 499 (E.D.N.Y.1995); In re Hager, 74 B.R. 198, 201 (Bankr.N.D.N.Y.1987). Pursuant to N.Y. Debt. & Cred. Law § 284, New York has “opted-out” of the federal exemption scheme, see Corio, 190 B.R. at 500, and therefore, pursuant to N.Y. Debt. & Cred. Law § 282, “the real property exemptions of [CPLR] § 5206 take the place of [Bankruptcy] Code § 522(d)(1).” Hager, 74 B.R. at 201 (citations omitted). Shares of stock in a cooperative apartment corporation, as long as such apartment is owned and occupied as a principal residence, are one of the types of real property exempt from application to the satisfaction of a money judgment in New York. See CPLR § 5206(a)(3).

An “estate in bankruptcy [also] consists of ... those interests recovered or recoverable through transfer and lien avoidance provisions.” Owen v. Owen, 500 U.S. 305, 308, 111 S.Ct. 1833, 1835 (1991). However, “judicial liens encumbering exempt assets can be eliminated.” Owen, 500 U.S. at 308, 111 S.Ct. 1833 (citing § 522(f)).18 “Section 522(f)(1)(A) thus protects the debtor’s exemption rights from being diminished or even eliminated by liens that attached to the debtor’s property by means of judicial process prepetition.” In re VanZant, 210 B.R. 1011, 1013 (Bankr.S.D.Ill.1997).

Under § 522(f)(1)(A), “a debtor may avoid the fixing of a lien if three requirements are met: (1) there was a fixing of a lien on an interest of the debtor in property; (2) the lien impairs an exemption to which the debtor would have been entitled; and (3) the lien is a judicial lien.” In re Wilding, 475 F.3d 428, 431 (1st Cir.2007) (citing In re Chiu, 304 F.3d 905, 908 (9th Cir.2002)). “The debtor bears the burden of proof by a preponderance of the evidence on every element of [§ ] 522(f).” In re Banner, 394 B.R. 292, 300 (Bankr.D.Conn.2008) (citing In re Fox, 353 B.R. 388, 393 (Bankr.D.Conn.2006)). The second Wilding requirement is addressed last because it requires the most extensive discussion.

B. Lien Is Fixed on an Interest of Debtor in Property and Is a Judicial Lien

As for the first Wilding requirement, the Supreme Court has explained that “unless the debtor had the property interest to which the lien attached at some point before the lien attached to that interest, he or she cannot avoid the fixing of the lien under the terms of § 522(f)(1).” Farrey v. Sanderfoot, 500 U.S. 291, 296, 111 *605S.Ct. 1825, 1829, 114 L.Ed.2d 337 (1991) (emphasis in original, footnote omitted). Debtor and Non-Debtor Spouse have owned the Apartment since 1996, well before the Lien attached in 2005 (just prior to the Petition Date), thus meeting the first Wilding requirement.

As for the third Wilding requirement, the Lien is a judicial lien. Smithbuilt contends that “the May 2, 2005 Judgment to sell the apartment Shares and associated proprietary lease doe [sic] not qualify as a judicial lien. It permits movant to sell the stock and proprietary lease at public auction with the proceeds to be applied towards the March 10, 2004 money Judgment.” Smithbuilt’s contention conflicts with both the Judgment and the Bankruptcy Code. The Judgment provides as follows: “it is further ORDERED and ADJUDGED that the money judgment obtained by NLI in the sum of $245,000.00, together with interest from March 10, 2004, in that certain action in this Court entitled “NAB Asset Venture III, L.P. v. Diana L. Armenakis, James J. Armenakis and Armenakis & Armenakis ” bearing Index No. 603371/98, be and the same hereby is adjudged to be a lien upon the surplus of the said sale, and that the lien be enforced.... ” The “said sale” is the Sheriffs sale of the Apartment. Elsewhere, the Judgment refers to “payment/delivery of the asset(s) levied upon.” Accordingly, the Judgment falls squarely within the Bankruptcy Code’s definition of “judicial lien” as provided in § 101(36) (“[t]he term ‘judicial lien’ means lien obtained by judgment, levy, sequestration, or other legal or equitable process or proceeding”), and Smithbuilt is a lien creditor against the Estate, thus meeting the third Wilding requirement.

C. Lien Impairs Debtor’s Homestead Exemption

As for the second Wilding requirement, the Supreme Court has explained that “[t]o determine the application of § 522(f) [bankruptcy courts] ask not whether the lien impairs an exemption to which the debtor is in fact entitled, but whether it impairs an exemption to which he would have been entitled but for the lien itself.” Owen, 500 U.S. at 310-11, 111 S.Ct. 1833 (footnote omitted, emphasis in original). There is no doubt that regardless of the amount of the exemption, whether $10,000.00 or $50,000.00, the Lien would impair it. See infra fn. 41. However, the Supreme Court has further explained that “[u]nder the [Bankruptcy] Code ... the question is whether the lien impairs an ‘exemption to which the debtor would have been entitled under subsection (b),’ and under subsection (b), exempt property is determined ‘on the date of the filing of the petition.’ ” Owen, 500 U.S. at 314 fn. 6, 111 S.Ct. 1833 (quoting § 522(f), (b)[(3)](A)).

More specifically, as an “opt-out” state, “New York law governs the nature and scope of the exemption” “while federal law governs the date on which the exemption come into play”: “Debtors may exempt ‘any property that is exempt under ... State or local law that is applicable on the date of the filing of the petition....’” CFCU, 552 F.3d at 258-59 (quoting § 522(b)(3)(A)). Applying the plain language of § 522(b)(3)(A) to the facts in this case, it is clear that the $10,000.00 exemption amount was applicable on the Petition Date, May 18, 2005, because it came before the Enactment Date, August 30, 2005. See CFCU, 552 F.3d at 256. Nevertheless, as previously mentioned, Debtor “bears the burden of proof by a preponderance of the evidence on every element of [§ ] 522(f).” Banner, 394 B.R. at 300.

Debtor provides two related grounds for demonstrating that she has met this bur*606den with respect to the second Wilding requirement. Debtor first argues that she is entitled to the $50,000.00 exemption amount because Debtor claimed that amount as exempt pursuant to § 522(l) 19 and Smithbuilt failed to object within the timeframe set by Rule 4003(b) FRBP.20 Debtor supports her argument by referring to Taylor v. Freeland Kronz, 503 U.S. 638, 112 S.Ct. 1644, 118 L.Ed.2d 280 (1992), in which “the Supreme Court held that § 522(l) and [Rule] 4003(b) [FRBP] set a strict deadline for objecting to exemptions. The former provides that, unless a party in interest objects, property listed by the debtor as exempt ‘is exempt;’ the latter provides that creditors must file objections to exemptions within 30 days of the § 341 meeting. With or without a statutory basis for it, a debtor’s claim to exemption may not be challenged beyond Rule 4003(b)’s 30 day period. In the absence of timely objection, the debtor’s claimed exemptions are established under § 522(l).” In re Maylin, 155 B.R. 605, 610 (Bankr.D.Me.1993) (internal citation omitted, emphasis added). Debtor argues in substance that even if there were no statutory basis for her amended exemption claim, the claimed $50,000.00 exemption amount is exempt pursuant to § 522(l) because under both Taylor and Rule 4003(b) FRBP, no objection was filed and Smith-built has therefore lost its chance to object to it. The Court will address this argument after considering Debtor’s alternative but related argument that the 2005 Amendment applies retroactively to cases such as hers, where the bankruptcy petition was filed before the Enactment Date.

i. 2005 Amendment Only Applies Retroactively to Bankruptcy Cases Filed After the Enactment Date

Debtor also presents a seemingly alternative but related ground for demonstrating that she has met her burden with respect to the second Wilding requirement. Debtor argues that notwithstanding the plain language of § 522(b)(3)(A) (permitting debtors to exempt “any property that is exempt under ... State or local law that is applicable on the date of the filing of the petition ” (emphasis added)), the 2005 Amendment applies retroactively in cases where the bankruptcy petition was filed before the Enactment Date, citing three recent decisions rendered by bankruptcy courts, one of which was ultimately affirmed by the Second Circuit, in New York for support. Each of the three cases Debtor cites is distinguishable from this case, and the Court finds that the 2005 Amendment only applies retroactively to *607bankruptcy cases filed before the Enactment Date.

First, while the court in In re Little, 2006 WL 1524594 (Bankr.N.D.N.Y.2006), allowed a debtor to claim the increased exemption amount for a debt incurred before the Enactment Date, the debtor in that case filed her bankruptcy petition after the 2005 Amendment was enacted. In fact, the court in that case repeatedly mentioned that § 522(b) required the court to apply the law applicable on the debtor’s filing date. See id., at *14.

Second, in In re Hayward, 343 B.R. 41 (Bankr.W.D.N.Y.2006), the court held that, like in Little, the increased exemption could be claimed with respect to a “general unsecured debt, not reduced to judgment” incurred prior to the Enactment Date. However, also like in Little, the court in Hayward found that the “increased homestead exemption provided for under the Homestead Exemption Amendment [ie., the 2005 Amendment] is not available to New York debtors who filed prior to August 30, 2005.” Id., 343 B.R. at 47. Hayward was affirmed by both the district court, see CFCU Cmty. Credit Union v. Hayward, 2007 WL 4232721 (W.D.N.Y.2007), and the Second Circuit, see CFCU, 552 F.3d 253.21

Third, although the court applied retro-activity in In re Carpenter, 2006 WL 1518988 (Bankr.W.D.N.Y.2006), the facts in that case distinguish it from this case. In that case, the debtor filed an abandonment motion on the grounds that the trustee’s failure to timely object to the increased exemption amount she claimed pursuant to the 2005 Amendment, despite filing her bankruptcy petition before the Enactment Date, entitled her to the increased exemption, thus leaving no nonexempt equity in her property for her estate. The court held that despite its holding in Hayward, supra, limiting the increased homestead exemption, and its retroactive application, to cases filed on or after the Enactment Date, “Taylor and Rule 4003(b) trump the provisions of [§ 522(b)(3)(A)] and the decision in Hayward in this particular case where the Schedule C Amendment was not timely objected to by either the Trustee or the Debtor’s creditors.” Carpenter, 2006 WL 1518988, *4. Notably, the issue in Carpenter was whether a trustee could object to a claimed exemption after the Rule 4003(b) FRBP deadline in the abandonment context, rather than whether a secured creditor, like Smithbuilt in this case,22 could challenge a claimed exemption after the Rule 4003(b) FRBP deadline in the lien avoidance context.

ii. Smithbuilt May Defend Against Debtor’s Claimed Exemption Under Rule 4003(d) FRBP

By citing Carpenter*s holding, Debtor thus returns to the first ground *608she provided for demonstrating that she has met her burden with respect to the second Wilding requirement. The Court begins its analysis of this argument by noting that under § 522(l) and Rule 4003(b) FRBP, Debtor is correct that she is entitled to the $50,000.00 exemption amount. As a secured creditor, Smithbuilt could have waited until the case closed to exercise its rights and remedies against Debtor with respect to the Lien. Instead, Smithbuilt has participated in the case since it filed the Lift Stay Motion,23 and Smithbuilt had notice that Debtor was claiming the increased exemption amount because Debtor premised her opposition to the Lift Stay Motion partly on that basis. Because no objection was filed, Debtor is entitled to the increased exemption under § 522(i) and Rule 4003(b) FRBP.

However, as discussed below, Debtor seeks affirmative relief in the Request to Avoid, which falls under § 522(f) and Rule 4003(d) FRBP, but nonetheless contends that Smithbuilt is still limited by the Rule 4003(b) FRBP timeframe, which would preclude any challenge to Debtor’s claimed exemption at this time. On the other hand, Smithbuilt’s rights24 were not threatened until Debtor made the Request to Avoid in the Motion to Reconsider, and in defense of those rights, Smithbuilt has challenged whether on the Petition Date Debtor would have been entitled to the increased exemption. The challenge is not whether Debtor is entitled to the claimed exemption, but rather whether she has met her burden with respect to the second Wilding requirement (as previously stated, “the question is whether the lien impairs an ‘exemption to which the debtor would have been entitled under subsection (b), and under subsection (b),’ exempt property is determined ‘on the date of the filing of the petition.’ ” Owen, 500 U.S. at 314 fn. 6, 111 S.Ct. 1833 (quoting § 522(f), *609(b)[(3)](A))).25

While the Court will review the jurisprudence examining the tension between subparts (b) and (d) of Rule 4003 FRBP, the Court begins by noting that the “law is well settled that limitations do not normally run against a defense. This principle has often been expressed in the figure of speech that the statute is available only as a shield, and not as a sword.” Luckenbach S.S. Co. v. United States, 312 F.2d 545, 549 fn. 3 (2d Cir.1963) (citing Northern Pac. Ry. v. United States, 277 F.2d 615, 623-624 (10th Cir.1960) and cases cited). Specifically, the Supreme Court has stated that the “purpose of ... statutes [of limitations] is to keep stale litigation out of the courts.... To use the statute of limitations to cut off the consideration of a particular defense in the case is quite foreign to the policy of preventing the commencement of stale litigation.” United States v. Western Pac. R. Co., 352 U.S. 59, 72, 77 S.Ct. 161, 169, 1 L.Ed.2d 126 (1956).

Applying this principle to the facts of this case, Debtor attempts to use the Rule 4003(b) FRBP timeframe to cut off any consideration of Smithbuilt’s defense to the Request to Avoid. In other words, even though Debtor is seeking affirmative relief, she seeks to use the Rule 4003(b) FRBP timeframe as a “sword” to prevent Smithbuilt from defending its rights. She does not seek to use Rule 4003(b) FRBP as a “shield” to protect her entitlement to the claimed exemption from a tardy challenge by Smithbuilt. Indeed, Debtor is entitled to the increased exemption, and Smithbuilt does not challenge that entitlement.26 Smithbuilt merely seeks to raise a *610defense as to Debtor’s having met her burden of proof for one of the elements of lien avoidance. The Court finds that under Rule 4003(d) FRBP, Smithbuilt may-do so. This finding is consistent with the general principle discussed above as well as important principles underlying the Bankruptcy Code and Rules.

The 2008 Advisory Committee Notes explaining the newly-added last sentence of Rule 4003(d) FRBP (“Notwithstanding the provisions of subdivision (b), a creditor may object to a motion filed under § 522(f) by challenging the validity of the exemption asserted to be impaired by the lien,” hereinafter the “Clarifying Sentence”) supports this reading of the rule:

Subdivision (d) is amended to clarify that a creditor with a lien on property that the debtor is attempting to avoid on the grounds that the lien impairs an exemption may raise in defense to the lien avoidance action any objection to the debtor’s claimed exemption. The right to object is limited to an objection to the exemption of the property subject to the lien and for purposes of the lien avoidance action only. The creditor may not object to other exemption claims made by the debtor. Those objections, if any, are governed by Rule 4003(b). 9 Collier on Bankruptcy ¶ 4003 App. 4003[4] (15th ed. rev.2009) (emphasis added).

Although the Clarifying Sentence became effective on December 1, 2008, which is after Debtor made the Request to Avoid in the Motion to Reconsider on August 18, 2008, Smithbuilt had objected to Debtor’s entitlement to the exemption prior to the Request to Avoid. As stated above, the Court’s interpretation of Rule 4003(d) FRBP is the same notwithstanding the Clarifying Sentence, but the fact that the Clarifying Sentence became effective after Debtor sought relief in the Request to Avoid does not preclude the Clarifying Sentence from applying to the Request to Avoid.27

Prior to Rule 4003(d) FRBP’s amendment, courts considering the tension between subparts (b) and (d) of Rule 4003 FRBP provided various rationales for reaching the conclusion that was ultimately embodied in the Clarifying Sentence.28

The highest court to address this tension is the Seventh Circuit in In re Schoonover, *611331 F.3d 575 (7th Cir.2003) (“As far as we can tell, this is the first appellate consideration of the question whether Rule 4003(b) and Taylor affect the time available to lienholders.”). Beginning with an observation common to many of the courts addressing this issue, the Schoonover court noted that a judicial lienholder has a “valuable entitlement: to wait out the bankruptcy and enforce the lien at its conclusion, unless the debtor asked the bankruptcy court for relief. ‘[A] creditor’s right to foreclose on [a lien] survives or passes through the bankruptcy.’ ” Schoonover, 331 F.3d at 578 (quoting Johnson, 501 U.S. at 83, 111 S.Ct. 2150). The Schoonover court therefore distinguished the rules applicable to lienholders and general unsecured creditors:

Although general unsecured creditors must take the initiative by objecting, lienholders may wait for notice under § 522(f). Once they receive notice, lien-holders litigate on the schedule appropriate to a proceeding under § 522(f), not the schedule for general creditors .... [L]ienholders have more time [to object to claimed exemptions] than general unsecured creditors, a dispensation essential if lienholders are to enjoy any chance to watch the proceedings from afar and enforce their liens later. Just as § 522(0 and Rule 4003(b) put the onus of timely objection on general unsecured creditors, so § 522(f) and Rules 4003(d) and 9014 put the onus of contesting a lien on debtors; the clock for lienholders runs from the motion under § 522(f) and not from the meeting of unsecured creditors. Schoonover, 331 F.3d at 578.29

Likewise, the court in the widely-cited Maylin case30 concluded that “the Taylor [c]ourt, which considered only a trustee’s late-filed objection to the debtor’s exemption in light of § 522(l) and Rule 4003(b), did not overrule a fundamental pillar of bankruptcy law sub silentio. Taylor cannot mean that secured creditors lose important rights by doing exactly what the law has long said they do: Ignore the bankruptcy proceedings until hailed into court.” Maylin, 155 B.R. at 613 (footnote omitted noting that Taylor makes no mention of §§ 501 and 502(a), inter alia ).31 The Maylin court reasoned that “secured creditors responding to lien *612avoidance motions would be deprived of important defenses if they forfeited their right to contest the debtor’s entitlement to the exemption upon which the motion is based because they had, up until that time, exercised the accepted option not to participate in the bankruptcy proceedings.” Maylin, 155 B.R. at 612-13 (footnote omitted). Accordingly, the Maylin court held as follows:

Taylor extends as far as its holding, but not as far as its dictum. It confirms Rule 4003(b)’s deadline for exemption objections made by the bankruptcy trustee (and the unsecured creditors who look to the estate for payment). Its rule does not foreclose a secured creditor from defending a § 522(f) ... action by denying that the property involved is exempt under applicable law. Notwithstanding Rule 4003(b) and Taylor, affected secured creditors may contest the bona fides of an exemption in defense of a § 522(f) lien avoidance motion. Maylin, 155 B.R. at 613.

Both the Schoonover and Maylin courts focused on secured creditors’ right to not participate in bankruptcy proceedings as justification for allowing them to defend lien avoidance motions after the Rule 4003(b) FRBP deadline. While this rationale does not apply to the instant case because Smithbuilt did not exercise its option not to participate in the proceedings, the Schoonover and Maylin courts also focused on the defensive nature of an objection to a claimed exemption in the § 522(f) context as opposed a late objection in the § 522(0 context. Other courts have drawn a similar distinction.32

In holding that “a creditor may raise exemption issues in a lien avoidance motion under § 522(f)(1) to litigate whether the debtor would have been entitled to the exemption under § 522(b), even if the property at issue has been deemed exempt under § 522(0,” the court in Streeper focused on the “entirely different functions” served by §§ 522(l) and 522(f). Streeper, 158 B.R. at 786-87 (emphasis added).

Exemption under § 522(Z) quickly determines which property is available for distribution by the trustee to unsecured creditors and which property is available for the “fresh start” of the debtor. In contrast, § 522(f) extinguishes the property rights of a creditor. Due process requires notice to the creditor of a debt- or’s intention to avoid the lien. It would be inconsistent with due process to prevent the creditor from raising lien avoidance issues solely because of failure to object to the claim of exemption. Streeper, 158 B.R. at 787 (citing Indvik, 118 B.R. at 1006-7; Montgomery, 80 B.R. at 389; In re Frazier, 104 B.R. 255, 259 (Bankr.N.D.Cal.1989); In re Smith, 119 B.R. 757, 760 (Bankr.E.D.Cal.1990)) (emphasis added).

Indeed, other courts have also approached the question at hand from a rights-based perspective, particularly in their rejection of the argument that a secured creditor’s failure to object to an exemption within the Rule 4003(b) FRBP timeframe estops33 or *613precludes the secured creditor from challenging the exemption in the lien avoidance context.

[Ejquity requires that the court consider the underlying basis for an exemption in the lien avoidance context. It is “entirely appropriate that a debtor about to eliminate another’s property rights be put to his or her proof, and not be permitted to rely on a technical estoppel which is at best only tangentially related to the lien avoidance issue in any event.” In fact, despite the claim of exemption, a lien avoidance action may never be commenced. Thus, requiring a secured creditor to object to an exemption when it is claimed, rather than when the debt- or seeks to avoid the lien, fosters unnecessary litigation and may hinder the debtor’s fresh start. Morgan, 149 B.R. at 152 (quoting Montgomery, 80 B.R. at 389-90) (footnote omitted, emphasis added).34

*614In the instant case, Debtor did not even raise § 522(f) until the Motion to Reconsider. Debtor may never have commenced a lien avoidance action, and when she did, Debtor made the Request to Avoid in an unconventional fashion. Although Smith-built joined the issue in its opposition to the Motion to Reconsider, equity dictates that the Court allow Smithbuilt to defend its rights, which were not threatened until Debtor made the Request to Avoid in the Motion to Reconsider,35 and therefore to challenge whether Debtor has met her burden of showing that on the Petition Date she would have been entitled to the increased exemption.

Finally, one bankruptcy court has relied on current scholarship to reach this result while maintaining consistent treatment of lienholders and general unsecured creditors:

Morgan and Schoonover reach the right result but neither analysis is entirely satisfactory, and there is a more sound statutory basis on which to reach their results. The “would have been” language of § 522(f) imposes a time element on the types of exemptions that can be used to avoid liens. On this analysis, the debtor is only able to avoid liens by an exemption to which he would have been entitled at the time of filing his petition. Thus the lien creditors in Morgan and Schoonover would be permitted to show that the debtor could not satisfy the “would have been exempt” language from § 522(f) at the time he filed his petition.... This analysis achieves the Morgan and Schoonover result without suggesting that lienhold-ers have greater due process right [sic] or different deadlines than do general creditors. [The lienholder] is therefore entitled to make a showing that [the debtor] is unable to satisfy § 522(f)’s requirement that the property “would have been exempt” at the time of the petition date, notwithstanding her failure to timely object to his exemption claim. Jarski, 301 B.R. at 345-46 (citing Matthew Ellingson, Getting Around Taylor: A New Look at Judicial Lienholders and Exemptions by Default, Norton Bankr.L. Adviser, October 2003, at 7, 9-10).

The Court agrees with this analysis. Smithbuilt is entitled to make a showing that Debtor is unable to satisfy § 522(f)’s requirement that the property “would have been exempt” at the time of the petition date, notwithstanding its failure to timely object to her exemption claim.

*615Smithbuilt attempts to make this showing on two similar grounds, both related to the res judicata effect of the Judgment. Smithbuilt argues that the Judgment is res judicata as to the $10,000.00 exemption amount and that the Judgment is res judicata as to that amount being shared “jointly” between Debtor and Non-Debtor Spouse. It has long been the law in New York that the party claiming that a judgment in a prior case estops his adversary from “re-litigating” the issue in a subsequent case has the “burden of proof ... to show clearly that the question in issue in this case was litigated and determined in the former action.” Rudd v. Cornell, 9 Bedell 114, 127, 171 N.Y. 114, 127, 63 N.E. 823, 827 (1902) (citing Zoeller v. Riley, 55 Sickels 102, 100 N.Y. 102, 2 N.E. 388 (1885)). Without delving into the intricacies of res judicata in New York, it is clear that Smithbuilt’s res judicata arguments are facially deficient.

As to the Judgment’s provision that the homestead exemption be shared “jointly” between Debtor and Non-Debtor Spouse, that provision is not res judicata. The Judgment was granted in a special proceeding conducted pursuant to CPLR § 5206(e), with Debtor and Non-Debtor Spouse’s homestead exemption granted pursuant to CPLR § 5206(a). Section 5206(a) is only made applicable to debtors in bankruptcy by N.Y. Debt. & Cred. Law § 282, which was not at issue when the Judgment was rendered because at that time neither Debtor nor Non-Debtor Spouse had filed for bankruptcy. Therefore, the issue of the applicable homestead exemption for a debtor in bankruptcy was not litigated in the State Court and is not res judicata. That issue is addressed below.

As to the $10,000.00 exemption amount, the Second Circuit has conclusively stated that the 2005 Amendment is retroactive for bankruptcy cases filed after the Enactment Date. See CFCU, 552 F.3d at 256. The Trudell court extended the bankruptcy and district courts’ holdings,36 as ultimately affirmed by the Second Circuit in CFCU, 552 F.3d at 256, which applied to obligations or debts incurred but not reduced to judgment before the Enactment Date, to obligations or debts reduced to judgment (i.e., judicial liens) before the Enactment Date. See Trudell, 381 B.R. at 444 37 The retroactivity issue was not litigated in the State Court because the Judgment was rendered prior to the Enactment Date. Therefore, the amount of the exemption is not res judicata.

Nonetheless, even though the Court rejects Smithbuilt’s argument that the $10,000.00 exemption should be applied because the Judgment made it res judicata, the Court accepts Smithbuilt’s argument that the $10,000.00 exemption is the amount to which Debtor would have been entitled on the Petition Date. The 2005 Amendment does not apply to Debtor’s homestead exemption retroactively because the Petition Date came after the Enactment. Date. Therefore, Debtor has not met her burden as to the “time element” (i.e., the “would have been entitled” *616“on the petition date” element) of the second Wilding requirement, and she is limited to a $10,000.00 homestead exemption in the lien avoidance context.

iii. Debtor is Entitled to Full Homestead Exemption

As a final matter relating to the proper amount of Debtor’s homestead exemption, the Court rejects Smithbuilt’s argument that Debtor is only entitled to claim half of whichever exemption amount is applicable because Debtor owns the Apartment with Non-Debtor Spouse as a joint tenant with the right of survivorship.38

It is well established in New York that an individual debtor in bankruptcy is entitled to the full homestead exemption and not half merely because she is a joint tenant with her non-debtor spouse. The Second Circuit has spoken definitively on this issue in the context of whether joint debtors may aggregate homestead exemptions, finding that the “New York legislature intended to allow each of two joint debtors to claim the benefit of the $10,000 exemption.” John T. Mather Memorial Hospital, Inc. v. Pearl, 723 F.2d 193, 194 (2d Cir.1983) (noting that while the debtors’ schedules included an exemption of $20,000.00, they had “in other words, each claimed the $10,000 exemption of § 5206” (emphasis in original)). By negative implication, an individual debtor in bankruptcy has the same right to the full homestead exemption as she would have if she filed a joint petition with her husband. See, e.g., In re Onyan, 163 B.R. 21, 25 (Bankr.N.D.N.Y.1993). As the Second Circuit stated, the purpose of allowing joint debtors to aggregate their homestead exemptions “is made plain by the language of § 282 which states that ‘an individual debtor domiciled in this state may exempt’ (emphasis added) property exempt pursuant to § 5206, as well as by the legislative history of the opt-out statute.” John T. Mather, 723 F.2d at 195 (citing an exchange from the debate on the bill in the New York Assembly, Report of Proceedings in New York Assembly, May 17, 1982, 5364-65, in which an assemblyman specifically stated that a husband and wife would get “two times the ten”). The statutory language cited by the Second Circuit clearly demonstrates that each individual debt- or is entitled to the full homestead exemption under N.Y. Debt. & Cred. Law § 282.39

*617iv. Lien Avoidance Calculation

With the $10,000.00 exemption amount in mind, the next step is calculating the degree to which the Lien impairs Debtor’s homestead exemption. “Section 522(f)(2) now sets out a mathematical formula for the courts to apply to determine whether a lien impairs the debtor’s exemption. Specifically, liens impair an exemption to the extent that the sum of all liens on the property, including the lien under consideration, together with the value that the debtor could claim as exempt in the absence of liens on the property, exceed the value of the debtor’s interest in the property if it were totally unencumbered.” 4 Collier on Bankruptcy ¶ 522.11[3] (15th ed. rev.2009). Like the date for determining the proper exemption amount, “the petition date is the operative date for determining the various § 522(f) calculations.” Wilding, 475 F.3d at 433. “In § 522, ‘ “value” means fair market value as of the date of the filing of the petition or, with respect to property that becomes property of the estate after such date, as of the date such property becomes property of the estate.’ ” Wilding, 475 F.3d at 432 (quoting § 522(a) (emphasis added in Wilding)). “In order to determine whether a lien impairs an exemption, the Bankruptcy Court must calculate the value of the lien as of the filing of the petition. If the lien ‘impairs’ the exemption on that date, the court may thereafter address whether the lien should be avoided.” Wilding, 475 F.3d at 432. “If the [§ ] 522(f)(2) calculation yields a negative number as to a target lien, the lien is avoided but only to that extent.” Fox, 353 B.R. at 393 (citing In re Silveira, 141 F.3d 34 (1st Cir.1998); In re Soost, 262 B.R. 68, 74 (8th Cir. BAP 2001); In re Falvo, 227 B.R. 662, 666-67 (6th Cir. BAP 1998)).

Debtor makes the § 522(f)(2)(A) calculation by assuming “for argument’s sake” that Debtor and Non-Debtor Spouse each own a one-half interest in the Apartment, specifically by subtracting the total Maintenance from the total fixed value of the Apartment and then dividing the remainder between herself and Non-Debtor Spouse to obtain their respective Equity interests (of course, each of those values could be divided in half before subtracting them to obtain the same respective Equity interests, which is the approach the Court uses below). Despite using incorrect amounts (ie., Debtor uses current amounts for the fixed price of the Apartment and Maintenance rather than amounts as of the Petition Date as well as the $50,000.00 exemption amount), Debtor einploys the approach taken by a majority of courts for property co-owned by a debt- or and non-debtor. See In re Miller, 299 F.3d 183, 186 (3d Cir.2002).

The court in Miller found that while some courts have advocated a “literal application” of § 522(f)(2)(A)(ii) (“all other liens on the property”), see In re Cozad, 208 B.R. 495 (6th Cir. BAP 1997); In re White, 337 B.R. 686 (Bankr.N.D.Cal.2005), which would dictate that the total amount of “all other liens on the property” (in this case, the pre-petition Maintenance attributable to both Debtor and Non-Debtor Spouse) must be netted against Debtor’s one-half interest in the Apartment alone, this “literal application” leads to an “illogical” result wherein Debtor would benefit from a windfall at the secured creditor’s expense. See Miller, 299 F.3d at 186. Instead, the “correct approach” is to view Debtor as owning one half of the property to which one half of the consensual first hen (ie., the pre-petition Maintenance) is attributable and “therefore to regard ‘property’ in subsection (ii) to mean the debtor’s interest in the property and then to allocate the lien among the interests in the property proportionately.” Id. (agree*618ing with the Eleventh Circuit’s explanation in In re Lehman, 205 F.3d 1255, 1257-58 (11th Cir.2000), that using the literal interpretation would “disserve” the legislative intent behind § 522(f)(A)(2) and produce an “absurd” result). Bankruptcy courts in the Second Circuit have followed Miller's approach, see Fox, 353 B.R. at 393-94; In re Relyea, 2003 Bankr.LEXIS 2254, *8-11 (Bankr.N.D.N.Y.2003), and the Court chooses to do the same.

Using the template from Fox, 353 B.R. at 397, the § 522(f)(2)(A) calculation for the Lien is as follows (with all values as of the Petition Date):

$ 78,099.35 Value of the Apartment

$ 39,049.68 Value of Debtor’s Interest in the Apartment (the “Debtor Value”) % of $78,099.35/2

$ 40,253.21 Total Pre-Petition Maintenance (“all other liens on the property”)

$ 20,126.61 Portion of Pre-Petition Maintenance Apportioned to Debtor’s Interest in the Apartment (the “Debtor Maintenance”)

$271,217.94 40 The Lien (Smithbuilt)

$ 10,000.00 41 Homestead Exemption

($262,294.87) Debtor Value - Debtor Maintenance - The Lien — Homestead Exemption ($39,049.68 - $20,126.61 - $271,217.94 - $10,000.00)

$ 8,923.07 Reduced Lien ($271,217.94 - $262,294.87)

Accordingly, because the result of the § 522(f)(2)(A) calculation is negative, the Lien impairs Debtor’s homestead exemption, thus meeting the second Wilding requirement, and is accordingly avoidable to that extent (i.e., $262,294.87). See Fox, 353 B.R. at 393. The Lien is unaffected at least to the extent of $8,923.07. Therefore, the Court finds that the balance of the Lien is avoided and that the Reduced Lien is at least $8,923.07. That portion of the Lien constitutes an interest of Smith-built’s which is entitled to protection. However, given Smithbuilt’s reservation of rights to challenge the Maintenance as a valid lien on the Apartment, to which Debtor did not object, the Reduced Lien may be increased.42

3. Relief Under § 362(d)

A. Smithbuilt is a Party in Interest

Only a party in interest may request relief from the automatic stay. See § 362(d).43 Smithbuilt’s predecessor-in-in*619terest, NLI, stated that it is “beyond question that NLI is a party in interest.” “Party in interest” is not defined in the Bankruptcy Code, but the Second Circuit has interpreted the phrase narrowly, providing stay relief only to creditors. See In re Comcoach Corp., 698 F.2d 571, 573-74 (2d Cir.1983). In this case, Smithbuilt is a creditor of Debtor. “The [Bankruptcy] Code in pertinent part defines a creditor as an entity that has a claim against either the debtor or the estate, arising at certain specified times.... A claim means a right to payment.” Id. As previously discussed, the Lien gives Smithbuilt a right to payment (ie., “surplus” from the Sheriffs sale of the Apartment) and makes Smithbuilt a lien creditor of the Estate. Accordingly, Smithbuilt is a creditor and a party in interest.

B. Grounds for Relief and Burden of Proof

Section 362(d) provides two grounds for stay relief: “Sections 362(d)(1) and (d)(2) are disjunctive. This means the Court must lift the stay if the movant prevails under either of the two grounds.” In re Elmira Litho, Inc., 174 B.R. 892, 900 (Bankr.S.D.N.Y.1994) (emphasis added) (citing In re Touloumis, 170 B.R. 825, 827 (Bankr.S.D.N.Y.1994); In re de Kleinman, 156 B.R. 131, 136 (Bankr.S.D.N.Y.1993); In re Diplomat Electronics Corp., 82 B.R. 688, 692 (Bankr.S.D.N.Y.1988)). Section 362(g) allocates the burden of proof under a lift stay application. See id.; § 362(g).44

Nevertheless, “one considering the burden of proof must distinguish between the ultimate burden of persuasion (or the risk of non-persuasion) and the initial burden of going forward.... [T]he two are distinct, and a party can bear the initial burden of going forward even if it does not bear the ultimate burden of persuasion. If it fails to carry its initial burden, the Court will dismiss its application without requiring the party that bears the ultimate burden of persuasion to offer any evidence.” Elmira Litho, 174 B.R. at 900.

Accordingly, Smithbuilt must demonstrate a factual and legal right to the relief it seeks as part of its prima facie case: “every party seeking relief from the automatic stay under § 362(d)(1) must carry the initial burden of showing that it is entitled to relief before the debtor is obligated to go forward with its proof.” Elmira Litho, 174 B.R. at 902 (citing In re Planned Systems, Inc., 78 B.R. 852, 859 (Bankr.S.D.Ohio 1987); Sonnax Industries, Inc. v. Tri Component Products Corp. (In re Sonnax Industries, Inc.), 907 F.2d 1280, 1285 (2d Cir.1990); In re Keene Corp., 171 B.R. 180, 182 (Bankr.S.D.N.Y.1994)).

A party is entitled to relief under § 362(d)(1) for “cause,” which includes lack of adequate protection. See § 362(d)(1). Smithbuilt’s predecessor-in-interest, NLI, argued that it established a prima facie case supporting an order lifting the automatic stay because while NLI could show that the value of its purported collateral was declining (ie., the Maintenance continued to accrue during the stay, thereby decreasing the unencumbered part of the Apartment, which, subject to Debtor’s homestead exemption, could have been used to satisfy NLI’s judgment), Debtor could not show that NLI was adequately protected. Accordingly, NLI argued that *620it had met its burden of proof while Debtor had not met hers.

However, “[sjection 362(g)(2) places squarely on the debtor’s shoulders the burden of proving the absence of cause, and cause includes lack of adequate protection .... If the basis of the stay relief is lack of adequate protection of an interest in property, the nature of the movant’s interest defines the need for adequate protection, and the scope of the prima facie case.” Elmira Litho, 174 B.R. at 902. Thus, the Court must inquire into the nature of Smithbuilt’s interest in determining whether Smithbuilt has met its initial burden of going forward with the evidence such that it constitutes a prima facie case.

C. Smithbuilt Lacks Adequate Protection

Smithbuilt has met part of its initial burden of going forward with the evidence by demonstrating that it has an interest in the Apartment entitled to protection (i.e., the Reduced Lien). See Elmira Litho, 174 B.R. at 900, 902. However, a “secured creditor lacks adequate protection if the value of its collateral is declining as a result of the stay. It must, therefore, prove this decline in value — or the threat of a decline45 — in order to establish a pri-ma facie case.” Id., 174 B.R. at 902 (citing In re Sun Valley Ranches, Inc., 823 F.2d 1373, 1376 (9th Cir.1987); In re Marion Street Partnership, 108 B.R. 218, 225 (Bankr.D.Minn.1989); In re Raymond, 99 B.R. 819, 821-22 (Bankr.S.D.Ohio 1989); Planned Systems, 78 B.R. at 862-63; In re Borchers, 45 B.R. 69, 72 (Bankr.D.Iowa 1984); In re Irving A. Horns Farms Inc., 42 B.R. 832, 837 (Bankr.D.Iowa 1984)). Additionally, the “general rule is that for adequate protection purposes a secured creditor’s position as of the petition date is entitled to adequate protection against deterioration.” In re Ritz-Carlton of District of Columbia, Inc., 98 B.R. 170, 173 (S.D.N.Y.1989) (citing In re Datair Systems Corp., 42 B.R. 241, 243 (Bankr.N.D.Ill.1984); Metropolitan Life Insurance v. Monroe, 17 B.R. 934, 939 (D.Del.1982)). Accordingly, as previously discussed, as of the Petition Date, Smithbuilt had an unavoidable lien of not less than $8,923.07 against the Apartment that was entitled to adequate protection against deterioration.

Smithbuilt meets its burden of proving a decline or threat of decline in the value of the unavoidable part of the Lien. Smith-built argued that the Maintenance continued to accrue during the stay, thereby decreasing the unencumbered part of the Apartment, which, because of Debtor’s homestead exemption, potentially left nothing for Smithbuilt to recover. Smith-built’s argument is not based on mere speculation. Indeed, while much of the evidence for this decline or threat of decline comes from Debtor’s own pleadings and other filings,46 the most persuasive *621evidence for the deterioration of Smith-built’s interest is Rivercross’s claim of $30,619.42, plus late fees, for post-petition Maintenance. Rivercross’s claim was filed on September 14, 2006, so when this amount is added to Rivercross’s amended secured claim of $40,253.21 for pre-petition Maintenance, both of which are due to Rivercross before the Lien may be satisfied, the value of the Lien is wiped out completely by Debtor’s homestead exemption. Although the amount of Maintenance has fluctuated and Rivercross in its own separate motion for relief from the stay admits that Debtor has made “several partial payments” to Rivercross, Smith-built has clearly proven a decline or threat of decline in the value of the Reduced Lien.47 Smithbuilt has thus met the other part of its initial burden of going forward with the evidence by proving this decline in value or the threat of a decline and has established a prima facie case under § 362(d)(1) entitling it to relief from the stay. See Elmira Litho, 174 B.R. at 900, 902.

The burden now shifts to Debtor to prove absence of “cause” pursuant to § 362(g)(2), such as by proving “that the collateral is not declining in value, or that the secured party is adequately protected through periodic payments, an equity cushion, additional or replacement liens or good prospects for a successful reorganization.”48 Elmira Litho, 174 B.R. at 902 (citations omitted). Debtor has not offered any such proof and has failed to show that Smithbuilt is adequately protected. Accordingly, Smithbuilt has cause for relief from the stay, and the Court must grant Smithbuilt such relief under § 362(d)(1). See Elmira Litho, 174 B.R. at 900. The stay is therefore terminated so that Smithbuilt may exercise its rights and remedies with respect to the Reduced Lien in the amount of not less than $8,923.07, subject to Smithbuilt’s reservation of rights to challenge the Maintenance as a valid lien on the Apartment, see supra fn. 13, 42 and accompanying text.

CONCLUSION

For the foregoing reasons, (i) the Lien against Debtor’s interest in the Apartment is reduced to not less than $8,923.07 (ie., the Reduced Lien), (ii) the balance of the Lien is avoided, and (iii) the Lift Stay Motion is granted so that Smithbuilt may exercise its rights and remedies against Debtor with respect to the Reduced Lien. If Smithbuilt successfully challenges the Maintenance as a valid hen on the Apartment, the Reduced Lien may be increased. If Smithbuilt’s challenge is unsuccessful or Smithbuilt does not challenge the Maintenance as a valid lien on the Apartment in the time set forth below, the Court shall enter an order consistent with this opinion.

Accordingly, for the foregoing reasons, it is hereby

*622ORDERED, the Lift Stay Motion is granted so that Smithbuilt may exercise its rights and remedies against Debtor with respect to the Reduced Lien; and it is hereby further

ORDERED, Smithbuilt has until July 10, 2009 to commence an adversary proceeding pursuant to Rule 7001(2) FBRP challenging the validity, priority, or extent of the Maintenance as a consensual first lien as of the Petition Date. If a complaint is filed, a pre-trial hearing date will be set. If no complaint is filed, a final order consistent with this opinion will be entered regarding the amount of the Reduced Lien; and it is hereby further

ORDERED, to the extent Smithbuilt limits its challenge to the value of River-cross’s claim for pre-petition Maintenance pursuant to Rule 3012 FRBP, Smithbuilt has until July 10, 2009 to file such a motion pursuant to Rule 9014 FRBP. If a motion is filed, a hearing date will be set. If no motion is filed, a final order consistent with this opinion will be entered regarding the amount of the Reduced Lien.

In re Armenakis
406 B.R. 589

Case Details

Name
In re Armenakis
Decision Date
May 22, 2009
Citations

406 B.R. 589

Jurisdiction
United States

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