Comment. (2) The
definition of "asset" is substantially to the same effect as
the definition of "assets" in § 1 of the Uniform Fraudulent
Conveyance Act. The definition in this Act, unlike that in the earlier
Act, does not, however require a determination that the property is liable
for the debts of the debtor. Thus, an unliquidated claim for damages
resulting from personal injury or a contingent claim of a surety for
reimbursement, contribution, or subrogation may be counted as an asset
for the purpose of determining whether the holder of the claim is solvent
as a debtor under § 2 of this Act, although applicable law may not
allow such an asset to be levied on and sold by a creditor. Cf. Manufacturers & Traders
Trust Co. v. Goldman (In re Ollag Construction Equipment Corp.), 578
F.2d 904, 907-09 (2d Cir. 1978).
Subparagraphs (i), (ii), and (iii)
provide clarification by excluding from the term not only generally exempt
property but also an interest in a tenancy by the entirety in many states
and an interest that is generally beyond reach by unsecured creditors
because subject to a valid lien. This Act, like its predecessor and the
Statute of 13 Elizabeth, declares rights and provides remedies for unsecured
creditors against transfers that impede them in the collection of their
claims. The laws protecting valid liens against impairment by levying
creditors, exemption statutes, and the rules restricting levyability
of interest in entireties property are limitations on the rights and
remedies of unsecured creditors, and it is therefore appropriate to exclude
property interests that are beyond the reach of unsecured creditors from
the definition of "asset" for the purposes of this Act.
A creditor of a joint tenant or
tenant in common may ordinarily collect a judgment by process against
the tenant's interest, and in some states a creditor of a tenant by the
entirety may likewise collect a judgment by process against the tenant's
interest. See 2 American Law of Property 10, 22, 28-32 (1952); Craig,
An Analysis of Estates by the Entirety in Bankruptcy, 48 Am.Bankr.L.J.
255, 258-59 (1974). The levyable interest of such a tenant is included
as an asset under this Act.
The definition of "assets" in
the Uniform Fraudulent Conveyance Act excluded property that is exempt
from liability for debts. The definition did not, however, exclude all
property that cannot be reached by a creditor through judicial proceedings
to collect a debt. Thus, it included the interest of a tenant by the
entirety although in nearly half the states such an interest cannot be
subjected to liability for a debt unless it is an obligation owed jointly
by the debtor with his or her cotenant by the entirety. See 2 American
Law of Property 29 (1952); Craig, An Analysis of Estates by the Entirety
in Bankruptcy, 48 Am.Bankr.L.J. 255, 258 (1974). The definition in this
Act requires exclusion of interests in property held by tenants by the
entirety that are not subject to collection process by a creditor without
a right to proceed against both tenants by the entirety as joint debtors.
The reference to "generally
exempt" property in § 1(2)(ii) recognizes that all exemptions
are subject to exceptions. Creditors having special rights against generally
exempt property typically include claimants for alimony, taxes, wages,
the purchase price of the property, and labor or materials that improve
the property. See Uniform Exemptions Act § 10 and the accompanying
Comment. The fact that a particular creditor may reach generally exempt
property by resorting to judicial process does not warrant its inclusion
as an asset in determining whether the debtor is insolvent.
Since this Act is not an exclusive
law on the subject of voidable transfers and obligations (see Comment
(8) to § 4 infra), it does not preclude the holder of a claim that
may be collected by process against property generally exempt as to other
creditors from obtaining relief from a transfer of such property that
hinders, delays, or defrauds the holder of such a claim. Likewise the
holder of an unsecured claim enforceable against tenants by the entirety
is not precluded by the Act from pursuing a remedy against a transfer
of property held by the entirety that hinders, delays, or defrauds the
holder of such a claim.
Nonbankruptcy law is the law of
a state or federal law that is not part of the Bankruptcy Code, Title
11 of the United States Code. The definition of an "asset" thus
does not include property that would be subject to administration for
the benefit of creditors under the Bankruptcy Code unless it is subject
under other applicable law, state or federal, to process for the collection
of a creditor's claim against a single debtor.