Issue link: https://mbozikis.ufcontent.com/i/1422521
55 (i) a power held by the debtor that may be exercised solely for the benefit of another entity, such as that of a trustee of a trust fund; (ii) any interest of the debtor as lessee under a lease of nonresidential real property after the expiration of the lease term; (iii) the debtor's eligibility to participate in Higher Education Act programs or accreditation or licensure status as an educational institution; (iv) certain interests in liquid or gaseous hydrocarbons; (v) any amounts withheld by an employer from wages for payments as contributions to certain employee benefit plans, deferred compensation plans, tax-deferred annuities, or health insurance plans; (vi) any interest of the debtor in property where the debtor pledged or sold tangible personal property as collateral for a loan or advance of money (a) where the tangible personal property is in the possession of the pledgee or transferee, (b) the debtor has no obligation to repay the money or buy back the property at a stipulated price, and (c) the debtor has not exercised any right to redeem; and (vii) certain cash or equivalent proceeds from the sale of a money order made within fourteen days prior to the commencement of the case if the proceeds are required to be segregated from the debtor's other property. The debtor's interest in property will become property of the estate regardless of any contractual provisions that seek to limit or prevent property that would otherwise be included in the estate from becoming property of the estate. 11 U.S.C. ยง 541(c)(1). However, restrictions placed on a trust, such as spendthrift

