Chase Manhattan Bank v. Alnajjar (In Re Alnajjar)

276 B.R. 844, 2002 WL 850109
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedJanuary 16, 2002
Docket19-30485
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 276 B.R. 844 (Chase Manhattan Bank v. Alnajjar (In Re Alnajjar)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chase Manhattan Bank v. Alnajjar (In Re Alnajjar), 276 B.R. 844, 2002 WL 850109 (Ohio 2002).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND DECISION

RICHARD L. SPEER, Bankruptcy Judge.

This cause comes before the Court after a Trial on the Plaintiffs Complaint to Determine Dischargeability. At the Trial held on this matter, the Parties were afforded the opportunity to present evidence and make any arguments that they wished the Court to consider in reaching its decision. This Court has now had the opportunity to review the arguments of Counsel, the exhibits, as well as the entire record of the case. Based upon that review, and for the following reasons, the Court finds that the debts at issue herein are dischargea-ble.

FACTS

The Plaintiff, Chase Manhattan Bank (hereinafter referred to as the “Plaintiff’), is in the business of issuing and financing credit card transactions. As a part of this business, the Plaintiff in or around April of the year 2000 purchased, as part of a bulk transaction, a credit card account in the name of the Defendant/Debtor, Ghalib Al-najjar (hereinafter referred to as the “Debtor”). The facts presented in this case show that the Debtor was in no way involved in this transaction.

*846 At the time the Debtor’s credit card account was purchased, it appears that the Debtor was current on his obligation to the Plaintiff. In this respect, a billing statement provided to the Court from June of the year 2000 revealed that the Debtor, after having made two payments totaling over Six Hundred dollars ($600.00), had a zero balance on his credit card account with the Plaintiff. In the succeeding months, however, the evidence presented in this case shows that the Debtor began to incur rather significant charges on his account with the Plaintiff. In particular, the billing statements provided to the Court for those months immediately following June of the year 2000 reveal that up until the time the Debtor made his last credit transaction on October 13, 2000, the Debtor became indebted to the Plaintiff for almost Twelve Thousand dollars ($12,-000.00). The basis for this indebtedness can be broken down into four different components.

First, in June and July of the year 2000 the Debtor incurred Two Thousand Six Hundred Thirty-six and 42/100 dollars ($2,636.42) in credit card charges when he went on a trip to the country of Jordan. The Debtor explained that the purpose for this trip was to visit family. Second, on October 9, 2000, the Debtor made a balance transfer of Three Thousand Two Hundred Twelve dollars ($3,212.00) from a credit card account he maintained with another company to his account with the Plaintiff. According to the evidence presented in this case, this transaction was initially solicited by the Plaintiff who, through the promise of a lower interest rate, encouraged this balance transfer. The third type of debt involved in this case concerns certain minor purchases together with a few miscellaneous finance charges which were incurred by the Debtor; these debts in all totaled Eight Hundred Fifty-seven and 81/100 dollars ($857.81).

The fourth and final component of the Debtor’s credit card debt, and the one which lies at the heart of the matter, involves the following cash advances which were taken by the Debtor at various casinos in Detroit, Michigan:

8-20-2000 $ 530.99

8-20-20006 $1,051.99

8-28-2000 $1,051.99

9-3-2000 $ 530.99

9-24-2000 $ 317.99

9-24-2000 $ 525.99

9-30-2000 $ 530.99

10-13-2000 $ 530.99

Total $5,071.92

With respect to these transactions, the Debtor admits that all the money he received on credit from the Plaintiff was lost in playing games of chance. It was also brought to the Court’s attention that, in addition to losing his own money, the Debtor had also lost, at the Detroit Casinos, money obtained from other credit card companies.

In explaining his gambling losses, the Debtor related to the Court that he continued to bet money in the hope that he could win back his initial losses. Further, according to the Debtor, this desire to win his initial money back caused him to lose control over his behavior. The Debtor, however, stated that notwithstanding his gambling losses, he still had every intention of paying the Plaintiff back for the money that he had obtained on credit. In support of this position, the Debtor asserted that his bankruptcy filing was caused not by his mounting gambling losses, but instead by the loss of his job. The specific circumstances surrounding this assertion were presented to the Court as these:

*847 In July of the year 2000, the Debtor obtained a job as a truck driver with a company known as Sylvester Material Companies; in this capacity, the Debtor worked between 40 and 50 hours per week at an hourly salary of Fourteen dollars ($14.00) per hour. This job, according to the Debtor, provided him with a sufficient amount of disposable income to service his credit card obligations. (It was also set forth that at this time, the Debtor’s monthly rent stood at just $375.00 per month.) The Debtor, however, explained that his job with Sylvester Material Companies was conducted on a notice basis; that is, he was informed on a periodic basis of if and when to report to work. In this regard, the Debtor testified that on October 6, 2000, he was told not to report to work the following week. Although the Debtor contends that it was not known to him at the time, this layoff turned out to be permanent in nature. As a result, the Debtor stated that he was forced to obtain another job at a considerable cut in pay.

The Plaintiff, however, while not disputing the Debtor’s loss of a job, argues that sufficient badges of fraudulent behavior exist in this case for this Court to make a finding that the Debtor’s credit card obligations should be found to be nondis-chargeable debts under the fraud exception to discharge contained in § 523(a)(2)(A). The Plaintiffs position relies primarily on the premise that, -without the ability to service his credit transactions, the Debtor ran up a considerable amount of gambling debt in the period immediately preceding the filing of his bankruptcy petition, an event which occurred on January 22, 2001. (PreTrial Brief of Plaintiff, at pg. 4). As support for this position, the Plaintiff called this Court’s attention to the lack of regular remunerations made by the Debtor once he began to incur his gambling debt. In this respect, it is not disputed that over the course of a five-month period of time— from July to November of 2000 — the Debt- or made only three minor payments on his credit card debt: One Hundred Thirty-six and 42/100 dollars ($136.42) on August 15, 2000; Sixty-two dollars ($62.00) on September 19, 2000; and Twenty dollars ($20.00) on November 10, 2000. Furthermore, the Plaintiff asserts that its reliance on the Debtor’s representations of repayment were justifiable given that the Debt- or “incurred the credit advancements in such a short period of time, the Plaintiff could not verify the ability of the [Debtor] to repay the indebtedness.” (PreTrial Brief of Plaintiff, at pg. 4).

LAW

11 U.S.C. § 523. Exceptions to Discharge.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
276 B.R. 844, 2002 WL 850109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chase-manhattan-bank-v-alnajjar-in-re-alnajjar-ohnb-2002.