Archer v. Archer (In Re Archer)

277 B.R. 825, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 1914, 2001 WL 1855335
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Georgia
DecidedAugust 24, 2001
Docket19-30128
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 277 B.R. 825 (Archer v. Archer (In Re Archer)) 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
Archer v. Archer (In Re Archer), 277 B.R. 825, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 1914, 2001 WL 1855335 (Ga. 2001).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

ROBERT F. HERSHNER, Jr., Chief Judge.

Edwin D. Archer, Plaintiff, filed on April 9, 1999, a Complaint Objecting to Discharge and to Determine Dischargeability of Certain Debts. Láveme B. Archer, Defendant, filed a response on May 10, 1999. Plaintiffs complaint came on for trial on June 19, 2001. The Court, having considered the evidence presented and the arguments of counsel, now publishes this memorandum opinion.

FINDINGS OF FACT

Plaintiff and Defendant were married in 1976. Plaintiff and Defendant are hairdressers. Plaintiff and Defendant began working in the same hairdressing business around 1990. Plaintiff and Defendant made good incomes while working together. Plaintiff and Defendant had marital problems and separated in February of 1996. 1 Defendant filed a complaint for divorce in state court. Plaintiff and Defendant continued to live in the marital residence and to work in their hairdressing business.

The state court entered, in the divorce proceeding, a Temporary Consent Order on April 11, 1996. The order provided, in part, that Plaintiff and Defendant were entitled to share, in a peaceful manner, the marital residence and their hairdressing business. The order “restrained and enjoined” Plaintiff and Defendant from selling, transferring, or encumbering any of their assets, including their marital assets.

Defendant moved out of the marital residence in October of 1996. 2 Plaintiff continued to live in the marital residence. Defendant left the hairdressing business that she shared with Plaintiff. Plaintiff closed the hairdressing business about one month later and went to work at a different hairdressing business.

First Investors Mortgage Company held the mortgage on the marital residence. The mortgage had a balance of about $47,000 in September of 1997. Defendant, in violation of the Temporary Consent Order, refinanced the mortgage. Defendant signed a deed to secure debt dated September 23,1997, in favor of Finance America Corporation. The principal amount of the new mortgage was $56,200. Defendant received net proceeds of about $8,000. Defendant testified that she used the $8,000 to pay bills and to set up her new hairdressing business. Defendant’s efforts to establish her own hairdressing business were not very successful.

Defendant, again in violation of the Temporary Consent Order, refinanced the *828 mortgage held by Finance America Corporation. Defendant signed two deeds to secure debt dated December 19, 1997, in favor of EQ Financial, Inc. 3 The principal amounts of the mortgages were $60,000 and $15,000. Defendant again received net proceeds of about $8,000. Defendant does not clearly remember what happened to the $8,000. Defendant made a number of false representations to EQ Financial, Inc. Defendant represented that she was in exclusive possession of the marital residence, that she would occupy the property as her primary residence, and that she was not a judgment debtor in a certain civil action.

Defendant admits that she did not tell Plaintiff when she refinanced the mortgages in September and December of 1997. Plaintiff testified that neither he nor Defendant made any payments on the mortgages after the refinancing.

Plaintiff and Defendant signed a Separation Agreement that was filed in the divorce proceeding in state court on January 13, 1998. The Separation Agreement provides, in part, that Defendant was to convey her interest in the marital residence to Plaintiff. Plaintiff was to be responsible for the monthly mortgage payments to First Investors Mortgage Company. 4

Plaintiff and Defendant owed a tax obligation to the Internal Revenue Service for the years 1993, 1994, and 1995. The obligation arose from the profits of their hairdressing business. The obligation, as of August 27, 1997, totaled $14,255.95. Plaintiff and Defendant reached an agreement with the IRS that called for monthly payments of $250 until the obligation was satisfied. The Separation Agreement provided that Plaintiff was to pay one-half of the obligation by making monthly payments of $250 to the IRS. 5 After Plaintiff satisfied his part of the obligation, Defendant was to make monthly payments of $250 to the IRS until the “remainder of the obligation was paid in full, including any additional penalties and interest that accrued after August 27,1997.

Plaintiff eventually learned that Defendant had refinanced the mortgage on the marital residence. Plaintiff filed a motion for contempt in the divorce proceeding. The state court entered an order on November 16, 1998, finding Defendant to be in willful contempt of the Temporary Consent Order by refinancing the marital residence. The state court noted that the refinancing had increased the debt on the marital residence by $27,000. 6 The state court ordered Defendant to make all payments on the mortgages held by EQ Financial, Inc.

Defendant filed for relief under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code on January 5, 1999. This Court entered an order on October 20, 1999, granting relief from the automatic stay to allow the divorce proceeding between Plaintiff and Defendant to continue in state court.

Plaintiff added EQ Financial, Inc. and First Greensboro Home Equity, Inc. as third-party defendants in the divorce proceeding. Plaintiff testified that he has *829 reached a proposed settlement with the third-party defendants. 7 The proposed settlement calls for First Greensboro to release the deeds to secure debt signed by Defendant on December 19, 1997. Plaintiff is to sign a promissory note and deed to secure debt in favor of First Greensboro for the mortgage balance that was owed prior to the refinancing, $47,122.80, plus certain closing costs and interest. Simply stated, the debt on the marital residence is to be returned to the same amount as before the refinancing.

The state court entered an order in the divorce proceeding on February 23, 2001. The state court held that Defendant’s actions in refinancing the marital residence were fraudulent and in contempt of the Temporary Consent Order. The state court held that Defendant’s “fraudulent actions were done deliberately in bad faith.” The state court found that Defendant’s fraudulent actions had caused the unnecessary expansion of an otherwise relatively uncomplicated divorce action. The state court further found that Plaintiff had incurred additional attorney’s fees because of Defendant’s fraud and contemptuous behavior.

The state court held that Plaintiff had made his payments on the obligation owed to the IRS, but that Defendant had not made her payments. 8 The state court noted that Plaintiff had paid $3,357 to the IRS in excess of his obligation under the Separation Agreement. The state court ordered Defendant to reimburse Plaintiff that amount.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
277 B.R. 825, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 1914, 2001 WL 1855335, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/archer-v-archer-in-re-archer-gamb-2001.