Buckeye Candy Co. v. Ritzer (In Re Ritzer)

105 B.R. 424, 1989 Bankr. LEXIS 1693, 1989 WL 116664
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedOctober 4, 1989
DocketBankruptcy No. 2-88-02900, Adv. No. 2-88-0241
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 105 B.R. 424 (Buckeye Candy Co. v. Ritzer (In Re Ritzer)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buckeye Candy Co. v. Ritzer (In Re Ritzer), 105 B.R. 424, 1989 Bankr. LEXIS 1693, 1989 WL 116664 (Ohio 1989).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER ON COMPLAINT TO DETERMINE DISCHARGEABILITY OF DEBT

R. GUY COLE, Jr., Bankruptcy Judge.

This matter is before the Court following trial of a complaint filed by Buckeye Candy Company to determine the dischargeability of debts owed it by the debtor. The Court has jurisdiction over this proceeding pursuant to 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1334(b) and the General Order of Reference entered in this judicial district. This is a core proceeding which the Court may hear and determine in accordance with 28 U.S.C. Sec. 157(b)(1) and (2)(I). The following opinion and order shall constitute the Court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law.

I. Statement of Facts

In 1982 the debtor, Gary Clyde Ritzer (“Ritzer”), purchased the Utica IGA grocery store in Utica, Ohio (the “IGA Store”). Ritzer began working in the grocery business at the age of 16 and progressed through several positions over the years. In the five years prior to his purchase of the IGA Store, Ritzer served as manager at an IGA grocery in Johnstown, Ohio. Upon purchase of the IGA Store, Ritzer opened a business checking account at The Croton Bank, now known as Heartland Bank (the “Bank”).

Buckeye Candy Company (“Buckeye Candy”) is a wholesaler of candy, tobacco products and related so-called “front-counter goods.” The IGA Store’s previous owners had purchased goods from Buckeye Candy and Ritzer saw no reason to change suppliers. Ritzer purchased the majority of the store’s inventory from Super Foods *426 Services of Bellefontaine, which also supplied accounting and bookkeeping services to him for a fee.

The course of business between Buckeye Candy and Ritzer remained the same for the periods relevant to our inquiry. William Tier (“Tier”), a salesman for Buckeye Candy, routinely visited the IGA Store on Monday — one of the 110 accounts he visited every week — to obtain that week’s order of goods from, the Debtor. Typically, Tier would examine the supply of front-counter goods and, based upon his experience, determine the types and amounts of such goods to be ordered. After completing the order form, Tier would ask Ritzer or one of his cashiers to make any additions or deletions they deemed appropriate; however, they usually relied on Tier’s judgment. Tier then would deliver Ritzer’s completed order to Buckeye Candy that evening. The next day, on Tuesday, Buckeye Candy delivered the goods to the IGA Store by truck. Payment for the goods delivered on Tuesday was due in cash or by check on the succeeding Monday when Tier arrived to fill out that week’s order form. In other words, Ritzer and Buckeye Candy had agreed that Ritzer would deliver cash or a check to Tier seven days after the goods were ordered, or six days following delivery.

Buckeye Candy’s challenge to the dis-chargeability of debts owed it arises from seven checks written by Ritzer between September 9 and November 4, 1985, in the total amount of $10,899.80, on which there were insufficient funds in the Bank for payment to Buckeye Candy. The amount and dates of the checks are as follows:

9/ 9/85.$ 1,961.29

9/16/85 . 1,392.88

9/23/85 . 1,415.44

10/14/85 . 1,200.21

10/21/85 . 1,778.16

10/28/85 . 1,724.10

11/14/85 . 1,427.72

Total $10,899.80

Checks written by Ritzer on September 30 and October 7, 1985, for front-counter goods apparently were honored by the Bank. Buckeye Candy also asserts that the sum of $5,109.90 is nondischargeable, which represents the amount Ritzer owed Buckeye Candy under a separate, delinquent account. This account included debt for supplies delivered but for which payment had not been received. Ritzer often would make a cash installment on his delinquent account at the same time he tendered a check to pay for a prior week’s goods.

The IGA Store was never a profitable enterprise for Ritzer. Any possible profits for the initial year — 1982—were consumed by start-up costs. The business showed signs of improvement by 1984 until several competitors, such as Meijers, Big Bear and Kroger stores, opened larger, full-service groceries in Ritzer’s general area. From that point on, until the IGA Store closed in 1986 or 1987, Ritzer’s business declined steadily.

The summer and fall of 1985 were difficult times for Ritzer, his family, and the business. Ritzer had staked his family’s financial future on the success of the IGA Store, but was unable to abate its financial hemorrhaging. As his business losses mounted during this period, Ritzer made every effort to pay his creditors and keep the IGA Store open. He believed, and had been reassured, that the IGA Store was well-located and a viable business. By 1986, however, he realized that the store’s financial condition was irreversible and he closed the business.

Debtor’s business account at the Bank during September through November, 1985, rarely contained sufficient funds to pay all of the creditors who had accepted checks in payment of goods and services. Ritzer’s practice during this time period was to deposit in the Bank the gross proceeds, less daily expenses, from each day’s sales while, at the same time, writing checks against that account. Ritzer received a bank statement once, and sometimes twice, a month but rarely checked his bank balance at other times. Ritzer knew, or suspected, that there were insufficient funds in the account to cover each and every check that was written; notwithstanding this fact, he continued to write checks because the Bank usually covered his checks with an overdraft payment. *427 Moreover, creditors, including Buckeye Candy, would simply resubmit the dishonored check to the Bank or allow him to write a replacement check when sufficient funds were in the account. In fact, depending on when a given check was presented for payment, there often were sufficient funds in the account to pay check payees, e.g. the September 30 and October 7 checks to Buckeye Candy were presented for payment at times when there were sufficient funds in the account for the checks to be honored.

Buckeye Candy claims that Ritzer obtained property based upon false pretenses, false representations or actual fraud by presenting the aforedescribed seven checks to plaintiff for payment knowing there were insufficient funds in the bank account to cover any of the checks. Buckeye Candy claims further that the delivery of the checks to it as payment for goods is a false pretense, false representation, or actual fraud (Complaint, Para. 5). Buckeye Candy also claimed entitlement to relief under Sec. 523(a)(6) because Ritzer deliberately and intentionally injured it by purchasing and taking goods without funds to pay for them by presentation of the seven checks. (Complaint, Para. 6). Buckeye Candy apparently abandoned this claim at trial and did not argue it in its' post-trial brief.

Ritzer denies that the debts to Buckeye Candy were incurred through any misrepresentation, false pretense, or fraud. Rit-zer believed, he says, that the seven checks made payable to Buckeye Candy would be honored by the Bank even if there were insufficient funds in his account.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
105 B.R. 424, 1989 Bankr. LEXIS 1693, 1989 WL 116664, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buckeye-candy-co-v-ritzer-in-re-ritzer-ohsb-1989.