At & T Universal Card Services Corp. v. Reynolds (In Re Reynolds)

221 B.R. 828, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 712, 1998 WL 321928
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Alabama
DecidedMarch 9, 1998
Docket19-70166
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 221 B.R. 828 (At & T Universal Card Services Corp. v. Reynolds (In Re Reynolds)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
At & T Universal Card Services Corp. v. Reynolds (In Re Reynolds), 221 B.R. 828, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 712, 1998 WL 321928 (Ala. 1998).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION

C. MICHAEL STILSON, Bankruptcy Judge.

These two matters came before the court on AT & T Universal Card Services Corporation’s (hereinafter AT & T) lawsuits against debtors in séparate Chapter 7 cases. AT & T sought to have the court declare the debtors’ obligations to it nondisehargeable in bankruptcy under 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(2)(A). Separate hearings were held on the cases November 24,1997.

The legal issue in both cases is the same, so the court has consolidated legal discussion for both in this Memorandum of Decision pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 42 1 to avoid unnecessary costs or delay. The court has reviewed the facts in the context of applicable law and finds AT & T failed to prove either of- these debts should be excepted from discharge pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(2)(A).

FINDINGS OF FACT: Reynolds

The debtor, Donald Reynolds; and Andrea Ware, employee of AT & T, testified at the November 24, 1997 hearing on this nondis-chargeability lawsuit. Various written documents related to the Chapter 7 debtor’s application for an AT & T credit card and subsequent charges made on the account were also admitted as evidence. The facts' are not in dispute. The issue is the application of the law to the facts.

The debtor, Donald Reynolds, has been receiving Social Security disability income since 1991. His attorney described Reynolds’ disability as a chemical imbalance of the brain. The debtor receives $840.00 per month in Social Security disability benefits, approximately the income ($10,000.00 per year) he received in 1996 when AT & T issued him the credit card.

AT & T had nevertheless mailed Reynolds a credit card solicitation offering a pre-ap-proved credit line of up to $10,000.00. (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 1) AT & T’s representa *831 tive at the hearing indicated she did not know where the company got the debtor’s address.

Reynolds completed the forms in the credit card solicitation. He truthfully listed his annual income at $10,000.00, and gave AT & T his Social Security number, date of birth and telephone number. (Plaintiffs Exhibit 1) The debtor testified that he did have roommates at various times who would sometimes pay him $50.00 per week for rent and that he also had other credit cards in addition to AT & T. There was no evidence AT & T inquired about the source of his stated income, his past credit history or his ability to repay credit card obligations.

In January of 1996, AT & T issued Reynolds a credit card with a $5,000.00 credit line (one-half of debtor’s annual income from Social Security disability). February 6, 1996, the debtor began using the credit card, as shown by Plaintiffs Exhibit 2. The debtor obtained a $600.00 cash advance on the card at First State Bank of Tuscaloosa on February 6, 1996 and made purchases totaling $513.73 that same day. By February 20, 1996, the credit card had already been “maxed out” and was, in fact, over the $5,000.00 credit limit by approximately $200.00.

Ms. Ware, testifying for AT & T, said that on February 13, 1996, a week before the “max out”, AT & T had reviewed Reynolds’ account because of the unusual activity. However, she said the review was only to determine if the credit card had been stolen. A review of the charges did not suggest the card had been stolen, she said, so no contact was made with the debtor at that point.

AT & T’s witness also said that the account had a “pad” built into it which allowed a debtor to exceed his/her credit limit by a certain, small predetermined amount without action by AT & T. That is what happened in the Reynolds case. While the debtor said he made most of the charges on the credit card, he did testify his girlfriend also made some charges with his authorization. February activity in the account included purchases totaling $1,647.82; and cash advances totaling $3,524.00.

There was no evidence of attempted activity in the account after February. After that one month, AT & T’s minimum payment was $327.04, more than a third of his monthly net income. Reynolds made no payments on this account prior to filing his bankruptcy petition.

That first payment on the account was due March 23, 1996. When AT & T received no payment, on April 3, 1996 it attempted to contact Reynolds for the first time. Ms. Ware testified that the creditor’s records showed that AT & T was successful in contacting the debtor April 18, 1996. At that time, he advised AT & T that he was on disability, was "unable to pay the account balance, and did not know how or when he might be able to pay in the future. He stated that he needed the money. (Plaintiffs Exhibit 4)

When AT & T again contacted Reynolds on May 21,1996, he stated that he was filing Chapter 7 bankruptcy, Ms. Ware said. He identified his current bankruptcy attorney, although he said he had not then paid a retainer fee. Court records show that the bankruptcy petition was filed October 28, 1996.

The debtor testified that his income and expenses were approximately the same at the time AT & T approved his credit card application as they were when he filed his bankruptcy petition. He stated that he was “doing good” if he had $25.00 left after paying monthly expenses. Schedules I and J of the bankruptcy file reflect $840.00 per month income and $840.00 per month expenses. Ms. Ware testified she did not know if AT & T had run a credit check on the debtor or had checked his income prior to issuing the credit card. It is not disputed that Reynolds accurately disclosed on his application that he had only $10,000.00 per year in income before-AT & T issued him the card with the $5,000.00 line of credit.

The debtor’s Schedule F (unsecured debt) lists the AT & T account with a balance of $5,217.00 (however, the balance due at filing, according to Ms. Ware, was actually $5,681.77). In addition to the AT & T card, Reynolds also scheduled First Card for $7,475.00; and First Union credit card, for *832 $1,700.00. The Associates was also listed with two accounts, one with a $500.00 balance; the other, with a $350.00 balance for Reynolds’ use of “checks” sent to him in other mail credit solicitations. No other unsecured creditors are listed in the debtor’s Schedule F.

Reynolds listed two secured creditors: BankAmerica on his mobile home; and Sears on a television. The debtor has filed agreements reaffirming both secured debts with the court. (BK Docs. 4 and 8)

The debtor testified that he had planned to pay his credit card bill with the extra money he received from his roommate, but that his roommate moved before he could make payment on this account. He also stated that his girlfriend was to help by repaying the charges that she made, but that she left him, paying nothing for the account.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
221 B.R. 828, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 712, 1998 WL 321928, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/at-t-universal-card-services-corp-v-reynolds-in-re-reynolds-alnb-1998.