AGRIBANK, FCB v. Gordon (In Re Gordon)

277 B.R. 796, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 1923, 2001 WL 1855338
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Georgia
DecidedJune 13, 2001
Docket14-70952
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 277 B.R. 796 (AGRIBANK, FCB v. Gordon (In Re Gordon)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
AGRIBANK, FCB v. Gordon (In Re Gordon), 277 B.R. 796, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 1923, 2001 WL 1855338 (Ga. 2001).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

ROBERT F. HERSHNER, Jr., Chief Judge.

AGRIBANK, FCB, Plaintiff, filed a Complaint For Determination of Dis-chargeability of Debt on October 16, 2000. Janet Carter Gordon, Defendant, filed a response on November 9, 2000. A trial was held March 28, 2001. The Court, having considered the evidence presented and the arguments of counsel, now publishes this memorandum opinion.

FINDINGS OF FACT

Defendant and George T. Gordon were married in 1973. Mr. Gordon began farming in 1973. Defendant helped with chores on the farm. The Gordons have farmed the same land since 1973. After several years of marriage, Defendant obtained a college degree and became a full-time teacher. She has continued to help with chores on the farm.

In 1997, Mr. Gordon filed a bankruptcy petition as a “family farmer” under Chapter 12 of the Bankruptcy Code. In 1998, Mr. Gordon needed additional funds to continue farming. Mr. Gordon, on February 25, 1998, was socializing at a farm supply store in Rochelle, Georgia. The store is part of a national chain known as Terra International, Inc. Richard Rhodes was the general manager of the store. Mr. Rhodes told Mr. Gordon about a new financing program for farmers called AgS-mart. Mr. Rhodes represented that AgS-mart was a simple loan process that operated similar to a credit card account.

*799 Plaintiff is a Farm Credit Bank and is part of the national farm credit system. Plaintiff developed the AgSmart program to provide operating loans to qualified farmers. 1 AgSmart loans do not exceed $100,000. The AgSmart loan process is designed to advise an applicant within a couple of hours whether his or her loan will be approved. Terra International became a “Dealer” in the AgSmart program in December of 1997. Terra International’s employees are trained to process loan applications and loan documents.

In their conversation, Mr. Gordon observed to Mr. Rhodes that it would not do any good for him to fill out an application because he was in Chapter 12 bankruptcy. Mr. Rhodes suggested to Mr. Gordon that he could apply for the loan in his wife’s name. Defendant was teaching school that day. Mr. Gordon telephoned Defendant and told her about AgSmart. Defendant told her husband to apply for the loan. Defendant authorized her husband to sign her name on the loan application. Defendant understood that her financial information would be reviewed. Defendant testified that she gave no instructions to her husband as to what information to put on the loan application. Defendant testified that she and her husband had been married for twenty-seven years and that she had no reason to suspect that her husband would misstate any information.

Mr. Gordon and Mr. Rhodes completed an AgSmart Operating Loan Application, which was dated February 25, 1998. The applicant is shown as Janet C. Gordon. Mr. Gordon signed Defendant’s name on the loan application. All the information on the application, except for Defendant’s street address, was handwritten by Mr. Rhodes. The application provided in relevant part, as follows:

Section I: Applicant Classification
(Answer as appropriate.)
Q Agricultural
? Farmer/rancher
Q Part Time
Year began farming 1977
Section IV: Income/Revenue (Please complete all blanks in this section.)
Gross Agricultural and/or Business income/revenue $234,,000 (most recent full year)
Total Assets $620,000
Total Liabilities $118,000
Section V: Loan Specifics
Total Loan Amount: $70,000
From this Dealer: Loan Purpose(s) Amount for Each Purpose
Chemicals & Fertilizers $70,000
Collateral: Crops Maturity: Number of months until loan is due ... 12 ....
Applicant Signature: Janet C. Gordon
Date: 2-25-98

Plaintiff had no prior business dealings with Defendant. Plaintiff did not contact Defendant to verify any information on the application. Defendant did not see the completed loan application. Defendant did not personally provide any of the information on the application.

Defendant concedes that her gross agricultural income and total assets were misstated. The loan application shows Defendant’s gross agricultural income as $234,000. Mr. Gordon testified that he *800 came up with that amount “off the top of his head.” Defendant’s salary from teaching in 1997 was $26,404. The Gordons’ farm, in 1997, had gross income of $75,309 and, after expenses, had a net loss of $16,328. 2

The loan application shows the value of Defendant’s total assets as $620,000. Mr. Gordon testified that he told Mr. Rhodes that the assets included farm equipment that belonged to him and his mother. Mr. Gordon told Mr. Rhodes that Defendant had access to the equipment. Mr. Gordon testified that Mr. Rhodes acted like that did not matter as long as Defendant had good credit. Defendant testified that her assets probably were worth $120,000. Mr. Gordon testified that the amount shown on the loan application for Defendant’s liabilities, $118,000, was correct.

The loan application shows that Defendant began farming in 1977. Plaintiff, however, argues that Defendant was not a farmer. Defendant testified that she is a farmer and a full-time teacher. Defendant has helped with chores on the farm since 1973. 3 Mr. Gordon does most of the actual farming. Defendant concedes that certain financial information on her application was misstated. The Court is persuaded that it need not decide whether Defendant was a farmer.

Mr. Gordon and Mr. Rhodes blame each other for the misstatements on Defendant’s loan application. Mr. Gordon testified that he was asked questions by Mr. Rhodes who in turn wrote the information on the application. Mr. Gordon concedes that he did not object to any of the information that Mr. Rhodes wrote on the application. The Court, from the testimony and the evidence presented, is persuaded that Mr. Gordon was eager to obtain a loan and that Mr. Rhodes was eager to have the loan approved so that his business could sell farm supplies to the Gordons. The Court is persuaded that the loan application was a joint effort of Mr. Gordon and Mr. Rhodes. The Court is persuaded that Mr. Gordon and Mr. Rhodes share responsibility for the misstatements.

Mr. Rhodes sent by facsimile Defendant’s loan application to Plaintiff. Plaintiff notified Mr. Rhodes within about twenty minutes that Defendant’s loan was approved.

Plaintiff processed Defendant’s loan application using a scorecard system.

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Related

Agribank, FCB v. Gordon (In Re Gordon)
293 B.R. 817 (M.D. Georgia, 2003)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
277 B.R. 796, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 1923, 2001 WL 1855338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/agribank-fcb-v-gordon-in-re-gordon-gamb-2001.