Burtrum v. Laughlin (In Re Laughlin)
This text of 7 B.R. 924 (Burtrum v. Laughlin (In Re Laughlin)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
FINDINGS OF FACT, CONCLUSIONS OF LAW, AND FINAL JUDGMENT DENYING THE DEFENDANTS’ DISCHARGE IN BANKRUPTCY
The plaintiff in this action complains that the defendant transferred property within a year preceding bankruptcy with the intent to hinder, delay, or defraud her within the meaning of § 727(a)(2)(A) of the Bankruptcy Code.
A plenary evidentiary hearing on the issues joined by the pleadings was held in Joplin, Missouri, on November 7,1980. The plaintiff, appeared personally and by counsel, Abe R. Paul, Esquire, the defendant Melvin A. Laughlin appeared personally and by counsel, C. R. Rhoades, Esquire. *925 Evidence was taken and the case submitted on the basis of that evidence.
I
The facts of this action are simple but quite compelling. The defendants owned, as of July 1979, a tract of land of considerable value. 1 They also owed the plaintiff an unsecured indebtedness of considerable magnitude, 2 which she had long but unsuccessfully attempted to collect from them. 3 At length, on or about July 13, 1979, she filed suit to collect the indebtedness in the Circuit Court of McDonald County. After the defendants had been served with summons in that action and thereby had actual knowledge of its pendency (a fact which the defendant Melvin A. Laughlin initially denied in his testimony in this action, but eventually admitted 4 ) on August 1, 1979, Melvin A. Laughlin and his wife conveyed the subject real property to their son and daughter-in-law. The son and daughter-in-law subsequently transferred the property to the latter’s parents. 5 Now owned by them, according to the defendant’s testimony, it is neither occupied nor used by them nor by anyone else. 6
The defendants do not deny any of the above and foregoing facts. But they contend that, in undertaking this transfer within a year of the filing of the petition herein for relief (which was filed on May 7, 1980), they had no intention to hinder, delay or defraud any creditor or the estate herein in bankruptcy. Rather, the defendant Melvin A. Laughlin states that he had, some time prior to July 1979, given over effective control of the property to his son and daughter-in-law because of his inability to make the $109.80 per month mortgage payments. 7 Accordingly, he states, his son took over the mortgage payments on the property far in advance of July 1979.
When asked why he chose August 1,1979, (after he was served with summons in the state court action commenced by plaintiff), the defendant Melvin A. Laughlin answered that, previously, his wife had not been able to make the trip to the lawyer’s office in town to execute the deed. In fact, as he explains it, she was not really well enough *926 on August 1,1979, to make this trip, but, at his urging, she did it anyway. When they arrived at the lawyer’s office in town, it was necessary that the instruments be presented to her as she sat in the car, for she was unable to walk into the office. Admittedly, the only consideration which the defendant received for the property was $1, when the appraised value was forty thousand times higher. 8
The transfer of the property involved an equity in the defendant which otherwise would have been available to creditors and subject to any judgment lien obtained by the plaintiff as the result of the state court action. 9
II
On the basis of the foregoing facts, the applicable law requires that the discharge of the defendant in bankruptcy be denied. Section 727 of the Bankruptcy Code pertinently provides that it is grounds for denial of a discharge for a debtor, within the year next preceding bankruptcy, to have transferred property with the actual intent of hindering, delaying, or defrauding creditors. 10
When it is shown, as in the case at bar, that the transfer within the year preceding bankruptcy has been to a relative for inadequate consideration during the pendency of a lawsuit against the transfer- or, 11 and in the absence of an explanation by the transferor sufficient to dispel these badges of fraud, 12 the court cannot escape the conclusion that the transfer was with intent to hinder, delay and defraud creditors and Ms. Burtrum in particular. Considering the appearance and demeanor of the defendant Melvin A. Laughlin in the course of his testimony, it must be concluded that his testimonial disavowal of any intent to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors is not worthy of credit. 13 Neither do the factual contentions which he makes sensibly explain why he chose a date after the filing of plaintiff’s state court to make the conveyance (which he claims had actually been made before) a matter of official record. If anything, his testimony shows that his wife was as ill on August 1, 1979, as she had been previously and that, therefore, the decision to consummate the transfer must *927 have been for another reason — and the filing of the state court action by plaintiff is the only palpable reason in evidence.
For the foregoing reasons, it must be concluded that the defendants transferred property within a year prior to bankruptcy with intent to hinder, delay and defraud a creditor within the meaning of § 727(a)(2)(A) of the Bankruptcy Code. The intentional character of the misconduct and the seriousness of its consequences require the denial of the defendants’ discharge in bankruptcy. 14
The court notes that the plaintiff requests additional relief in her complaint herein in the form of an order avoiding the transfer. But this court does not purport now to determine the existence, character, or magnitude of the defendants’ indebtedness to plaintiff 15 nor to nullify the transfer, nor render any judgment beyond the denial of a discharge. The resolution of those issues must necessarily await a suit in which the proper parties are joined. 16
It is therefore, accordingly,
ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that the discharge of defendants in bankruptcy be, and it is hereby, denied.
. The property in question is described in the complaint and elsewhere as the northeast quarter of the southeast quarter and the southeast quarter of the northeast quarter in section 3, township 21, range 30, county of McDonald, State of Missouri.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
7 B.R. 924, 3 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 552, 1981 Bankr. LEXIS 5167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burtrum-v-laughlin-in-re-laughlin-mowb-1981.