American Express Travel Related Services Co. v. Vinhnee (In Re Vinhnee)

336 B.R. 437, 2005 Bankr. LEXIS 2602, 2005 WL 3609376
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedDecember 16, 2005
DocketBAP CC-04-1284-KMOP; Bankruptcy LA 03-29549-SB; Adversary LA 03-02660-SB
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 336 B.R. 437 (American Express Travel Related Services Co. v. Vinhnee (In Re Vinhnee)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Express Travel Related Services Co. v. Vinhnee (In Re Vinhnee), 336 B.R. 437, 2005 Bankr. LEXIS 2602, 2005 WL 3609376 (bap9 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

KLEIN, Bankruptcy Judge.

This appeal involves the elements of the evidentiary foundation for introducing electronic business records and whether a trial court is entitled to insist upon a complete foundation, even in the absence of an objection.

The court declined to admit plaintiffs computerized business records as inadequately authenticated at a bench trial, but gave plaintiff a chance to cure the foundational defects in a post-trial submission. When the ensuing submission proved unsatisfactory to the court, it entered judgment for defendant and added salt to the wound by noting that plaintiff would have prevailed on one of two counts if the records had been admitted.

While the result may seem harsh, we hold that the court was within its rights to insist, even in the absence of an objection, that all elements of a proper evidentiary foundation be correctly established. Under the circumstances, including the extra post-trial opportunity to cure the defect, we cannot say that the court abused its discretion. Hence, we AFFIRM.

FACTS

Vee Vinhnee filed a chapter 7 bankruptcy case on July 24, 2003. His 2003 income through the date of filing was $14,800, and he earned $24,000/year in 2001 and 2002. *441 He had no secured debt. Priority tax debt was $33,861.14, dating back to 1992.

American Express was owed more than 80 percent of the unsecured debt based on two credit cards: a “gold” card (with two sub-accounts) issued in 1989 and a “platinum” card issued in February 2003. The gold card had an additional user, Kim A. Ly.

Vinhnee scheduled both American Express cards with correct account numbers. The $21,098.00 listed as owed on the platinum card was the balance due per his June 2003 statement. The sum listed as owed on the gold card, $3,245.00, was the minimum payment due on the June 2003 statement and not the full balance of $25,-485.92 1 due on the two gold card sub-accounts.

The gold card sub-account that required payment in full each month was current until May 2003. The $2,825.47 balance for that sub-account on the June statement reflected charges made April 3 to May 6, 2003, of which Kim A. Ly had charged $204.47.

The $23,377.43 owed on the gold card “flexible payment” sub-account, which was a typical credit card account at interest and with minimum payments, reflected charges made primarily between January and May 4, 2003, of which Kim A. Ly had charged $1,783.97. Vinhnee paid more than the monthly mínimums in February and March 2003 and made a minimum payment in April 2003.

The debt on the platinum card that was issued in February 2003, was based on $21,115.24 charged during the period April 5-18, 2003, and was $21,728.87 as of July 24, 2003.

Vinhnee had stopped charging on American Express accounts by May 7, 2003. Kim A. Ly was deleted from the gold card account on May 10. Vinhnee filed his bankruptcy case on July 24, 2003.

American Express filed a two-count adversary proceeding seeking to have $41,597.63 of the debt excepted from discharge under 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(2)(A). Implicitly conceding that $5,617.16 of the $25,485.92 gold card balance is dischargea-ble, one count sought to except only the remaining $19,868.76 from discharge. The other count sought to have the full platinum card balance, $21,728.87, held nondis-chargeable.

The court held a status conference on December 23, 2003, at which it fixed a trial date, noting that, if Vinhnee did not appear, it would exercise its discretion to require the plaintiff to adduce evidence to prove its case.

Vinhnee’s default was entered at American Express’ request on February 11, 2004. No motion for default judgment was filed.

Trial was held on March 25, 2004. American Express appeared and was prepared for trial. Vinhnee did not appear. The court, without objection by American Express, proceeded with the trial consistent with its prior announcement that it would require proof of entitlement to the relief requested.

An American Express employee testified that he was the custodian of records for the monthly statements, that the entries thereon were made at or about the time of the transactions, that the records were kept in the regular course of business, and that the regular practice was to retain the records.

*442 The witness, in response to the court’s inquiry, testified that the term “duplicate copy” appeared on the exhibits because the records were maintained electronically.

The court then explained that the electronic nature of the records necessitated, in addition to the basic foundation for a business record, an additional authentication foundation regarding the computer and software utilized in order to assure the continuing accuracy of the records.

When the witness knew little about the computer software or hardware, the court deferred ruling on the admission of the exhibits. Offering American Express an opportunity to cure the foundational defect later, and calling counsel’s attention to an evidence treatise on point, it completed the rest of the trial.

At the close of trial, the court held the evidentiary record open so that American Express could supplement its foundation for admission of the computer records.

Once American Express made its post-trial submission and the' evidentiary record closed, the court rendered written findings.

The court refused to admit the electronic business records because it concluded that the defective evidentiary foundation was not cured by the supplemental materials. The declaration did not establish the declarant’s qualifications to testify. Nor did the court perceive testimony that the business conducts its operations in reliance upon the accuracy of the computer in the retention and retrieval of the information in question.

The refusal to admit the billing statements in evidence left American Express with only Vinhnee’s admissions on his schedules as evidence. He had admitted to a gold card debt of only $3,245.00, which was less than the $5,617.16 American Express conceded was discharged. His admission to a platinum card debt of $21,098.00 did not reveal the dates or nature of specific charges.

The court declined to except the gold card debt from discharge. It added, however, that “[i]f the account evidence were properly before the court,” it would hold nondischargeable all charges on the flexible payment sub-account made after February 1, 2003. Thus, the evidentiary foundation issue was crucial to the outcome of the count seeking to except from discharge $19,868.76 of the gold card account.

Although Vinhnee’s admission that he owed $21,098.00 on the platinum card made that aspect of the evidentiary problem less acute, dates and details were still missing. The court also discerned a failure of proof as to the substantive element of nondischargeability under § 523(a)(2)(A) under which a creditor must prove justifiable reliance.

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Bluebook (online)
336 B.R. 437, 2005 Bankr. LEXIS 2602, 2005 WL 3609376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-express-travel-related-services-co-v-vinhnee-in-re-vinhnee-bap9-2005.