Christen v. Himber (In Re Himber)

296 B.R. 217, 2002 Bankr. LEXIS 1730, 2002 WL 32137514
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, C.D. California
DecidedDecember 10, 2002
DocketBankruptcy No. SV 01-16343-KL, Adversary No. SV 01-01575-KL
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 296 B.R. 217 (Christen v. Himber (In Re Himber)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, C.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Christen v. Himber (In Re Himber), 296 B.R. 217, 2002 Bankr. LEXIS 1730, 2002 WL 32137514 (Cal. 2002).

Opinion

*220 MEMORANDUM OF DECISION ON TRIAL OF COMPLAINT FOR DETERMINATION OF DISCHARGE-ABILITY OF DEBT

KATHLEEN T. LAX, Bankruptcy Judge.

This adversary proceeding is about a $65,000 check which the plaintiff, Dennis Christen (“Christen”), asked the defendant, Leontina Himber (“Himber”), to cash through her bank and which she represented she would do for him. She deposited the check into her account and refused to give him the proceeds after the check cleared. These facts are not in dispute. What is in dispute is the following:

1. Whether the defendant intended to keep the proceeds when the plaintiff gave her possession and control of the check based on her representations that she would cash the check and give him the proceeds, thereby rendering the claim a nondischargeable debt under Section 523(a)(2)(A);

2. Whether the plaintiff preserved a cause of action under Section 523(a)(4) or Section 523(a)(6) by seeking a determination that the defendant’s actions constituted conversion; and

3. If conversion is at issue, whether the defendant’s actions constituted conversion within the meaning of Section 523(a)(6), which this court determines to be the appropriate subsection if a cause of action has been preserved.

The court raised another issue with a potential bearing on the case: Did the underlying transaction described by the plaintiff involve participation in an illegal scheme such that the plaintiff is precluded from coming to this court for redress?

Legality of the Underlying Transaction

What makes this case unusual is the transaction in which the parties were involved that lead to the $65,000 check. The testimony of the plaintiff and the defendant about the underlying transaction is diametrically opposed.

Christen’s Underlying Story — The Hungarian Project

The gist of Christen’s testimony is as follows. Christen was trying to make a movie based on a story which he was turning into a novel. For a long time, he was unsuccessful in raising any money. Then, in December 1999, Christen’s friend, Charlie, told Christen about a possible source of funding from a man in Budapest, David Butelezi (“Mr.B”). Mr. B would be willing to invest in Christen’s movie if Christen would help him recover approximately $15,000,000 in $100 dollar bills being held in a storage vault in Budapest. They were introduced by telephone. Mr. B., a citizen of South Africa, had brought the currency from South Africa to Budapest. He needed $37,000 to get the money out of storage.

Christen then called Himber’s husband, Paul Hayland. They met and convinced Himber, then known as Tina Hayland, to put up the $37,000 needed to liberate Mr. B’s cash. In return, the Haylands got a “Demand Promissory Note” providing for them to receive $100,000 within 20 days if Christen got the funds they expected from Mr. B in Budapest. If the funds were not received and the $37,000 lost, then the Haylands were to be paid from the “first revenues” of Christen’s novel. In addition, Christen signed a “Credit Line Agreement” which provided for the Haylands to have a $500,000 line of credit when the funds for producing the movie were transferred from Budapest to the United States.

Christen flew to Budapest on Christmas Day, 1999. The day after he arrived, *221 Charlie introduced Christen to Mr. B and a translator, Kenny, at a Pizza Hut in downtown Budapest. They went to the storage vault and were shown four metal cylinders, each 3 to 3$ feet tall. When Mr. B. opened one of the containers, Christen saw black pieces of paper the size and shape of U.S. paper currency. Mr. B. picked out two or three bills, took out a syringe and applied a solution to the bills. When he did so, Christen testified, “Benjamin Franklin appeared.” They took the recovered bills to a bank and were told they were genuine. Christen turned over the $37,000 to Mr. B.

Sometime later, in front of the South African embassy, Mr. B introduced Christen and Charlie to Mr. Abbot, who was said to be a chemist from the embassy (“Mr.A”). They went to a hotel room to which the containers had been moved. Another bill was tested. Then Mr. A showed them a piece of paper with a South African mint logo on it and a price. He told them that the chemicals needed to recover one container of bills would cost them $120,000. Mr. B. appeared to be shocked. 1

Christen contacted Himber and her husband to get more money. They did so and went to Budapest.

This effort produced a Motion Picture Seed Funding Agreement, dated January 4, 2000, between Mr. B. and the Haylands in which the Haylands agreed to provide the $120,000 “for the purpose of securing the safe and successful transfer of $15,000,000” to a production company in the U.S. set to produce Christen’s movie. In return, Mr. B agreed to pay the Hay-lands $500,000 in addition to returning their $120,000 principal. The agreement states that “[t]he $120,000 U.S. Dollars will be paid up front for the purpose of ordering the product at the Embassy... [and that Mr. B] will escort Paul Hayland to the storage facility and show him that the container in which [sic] Mr. Dennis Christen saw is still there and available.” Himber initialed each page of this agreement and signed the last page.

Christen testified that Himber requested and received a demonstration of the chemical cleaning process in another hotel room in Budapest. Himber then handed a shoebox containing the $120,000 to Mr. B in the lobby of the Budapest Hilton. Directly thereafter, Himber, Paul Hayland, Christen, and Mr. B met Mr. A in another hotel room. Mr. A showed them a fax from the mint which informed them that the $120,000 size of the chemical solution was not available for another two weeks. However, they could have immediate delivery of the $165,000 size. They decided they could not wait two weeks. Himber then arranged for her friend Elena to *222 bring over another $45,000 from the United States.

The money arrived. They paid it over. They met in another hotel room and started the cleansing process. Christen testified that Himber and Mr. A were in the bathroom applying the chemical solution to the bills. Kenny, Christen, and Mr. B were in the bedroom drying the bills as they were processed. Then, somehow, the bottle of solution was dropped. It broke. The solution was lost. In the midst of the ensuing screaming, according to Christen, Himber took control and said that she would find more money.

They returned to the United States. Himber’s efforts were not successful and the parties disagree about whether Himber tried to get money from business associates on a false story about redeeming family property in Romania. In any case, Christen testified that he found a source who would invest $100,000 if Christen could raise $65,000. Christen then borrowed $65,000 from his friend, Stockton Gaines, from whom he got the cashier’s check which is the subject of these proceedings.

Himber’s Underlying Story — A Mere Investor

Himber agrees that she raised $202,000 which she gave to Christen in the installments described above as an investment in Christen’s movie.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
296 B.R. 217, 2002 Bankr. LEXIS 1730, 2002 WL 32137514, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/christen-v-himber-in-re-himber-cacb-2002.