I have a pretty complicated question. Kudos to anyone who can answer it. The creditor got a judgment against the debtor and recorded a judicial lien in the county recorder's records. A year later the debtor got married, and two months later he filed bankruptcy. In the bankruptcy, the debtor claimed an exemption as a married person. The exemption amount was more than when he was single. But, the lien was recorded when the debtor was single. In the bankruptcy, the debtor then filed a motion to strip the lien using his married exemption. The Court granted the motion and gave the creditor the higher exemption amount for married persons. After the motion was granted, the Court granted judgment against the debtor and in favor of the creditor on a complaint for nondischargeability filed by the creditor. The Court found that debt was non dischargeable because it was for attorneys fees awarded against the debtor for a malicious lawsuit pursued by the debtor against the creditor in state court.
Question: Can the lien stripping order be reversed? The exemption amount at the time the judicial lien was recorded was only $50,000. But, the debtor got the judge to grant him a $75,000 exemption because he got married after the lien was recorded but before he filed bankruptcy. This seems unfair because the debt was deemed nondischargeable. Should the debtor get the benefit of a higher married exemption amount in a lien stripping motion simply because he filed bankruptcy? He would not have had this benefit had he not filed bankruptcy because the exemption amount is fixed as of the date the judicial lien is recorded (which was before he got married, so he would only be entitled to the $50,000 exemption).
Again, kudos to anyone who knows what I am talking about. I look forward to your response.
Thanks.
Question: Can the lien stripping order be reversed? The exemption amount at the time the judicial lien was recorded was only $50,000. But, the debtor got the judge to grant him a $75,000 exemption because he got married after the lien was recorded but before he filed bankruptcy. This seems unfair because the debt was deemed nondischargeable. Should the debtor get the benefit of a higher married exemption amount in a lien stripping motion simply because he filed bankruptcy? He would not have had this benefit had he not filed bankruptcy because the exemption amount is fixed as of the date the judicial lien is recorded (which was before he got married, so he would only be entitled to the $50,000 exemption).
Again, kudos to anyone who knows what I am talking about. I look forward to your response.
Thanks.
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