Comprehensive Accounting Corp. v. Morgan (In Re Cycle Accounting Services)

43 B.R. 264, 1984 Bankr. LEXIS 4907
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Tennessee
DecidedOctober 1, 1984
DocketBankruptcy No. 3-82-01700, Adv. No. 3-83-0964
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 43 B.R. 264 (Comprehensive Accounting Corp. v. Morgan (In Re Cycle Accounting Services)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Comprehensive Accounting Corp. v. Morgan (In Re Cycle Accounting Services), 43 B.R. 264, 1984 Bankr. LEXIS 4907 (Tenn. 1984).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

CLIVE W. BARE, Bankruptcy Judge.

Plaintiff Comprehensive Accounting Corp., holder of the largest unsecured claim against the estate, objects to discharge of the debtor. See 41 B.R. 259. Plaintiff asserts discharge should be denied pursuant to 11 U.S.C.A. §§ 727(a)(2), 727(a)(3), 727(a)(4)(A), and 727(a)(5) (1979). 1 *267 Though conceding the omission of an automobile from his schedule of assets, nondisclosure of certain prepetition transfers, and his failure to report all income received as a debtor in possession, debtor nonetheless maintains that he is entitled to a discharge because he did not intend to hinder, delay, or defraud his creditors through these errors or omissions. Further, the debtor contends his records, are sufficient to enable creditors to ascertain his business transactions and financial condition. He also denies plaintiffs assertion that he has failed to satisfactorily explain any loss of assets or deficiency of assets to meet his liabilities.

I

On November 5, 1982, the debtor, an accountant since 1971, filed his voluntary chapter 11 petition. He acted as a debtor in possession until November 7, 1983, when, due to his inability to formulate a plan of reorganization, an order was entered converting the case to a case under chapter 7. Plaintiff filed its complaint objecting to the debtor’s discharge on December 30, 1983. 2 In its original complaint, plaintiff alleged that the debtor: (1) with intent to hinder, delay, or defraud his creditors, transferred or concealed property of the estate on or after one year before the petition filing date, Code § 727(a)(2); (2) failed to keep or preserve recorded information from which his financial condition and business transactions might be ascertained, Code § 727(a)(3); and (3) failed to satisfactorily explain any loss of assets or deficiency of assets to meet his liabilities, Code § 727(a)(5). The court permitted plaintiff to amend its complaint to include an allegation that the debtor had knowingly or fraudulently made a false oath or account in connection with his case, Code § 727(a)(4)(A). 3

Statement of Financial Affairs and Schedules

The debtor admittedly failed to include a 1976 Ford motor vehicle among his scheduled assets. An insured loss of this vehicle occurred in December 1982, the month after debtor’s petition was filed. Debtor’s monthly operating statement for December 1982, shows a $1,433.00 payment from his insurer as income. The same statement also includes a reported expense of $1,433.00 for “auto collision repair.” However, the reported expense is unrelated to the 1976 Ford, which was transferred to debtor’s insurer in consideration of the $1,433.00 payment. The insurance proceeds were used to pay a $1,409.22 repair bill and secure an artisan’s release of debt- or’s 1979 Chevrolet automobile, which is scheduled as exempt. Since these facts are not apparent from the December 1982 monthly report, plaintiff contends the debt- or attempted to conceal his interest in the *268 1976 Ford automobile. Debtor insists that he failed to schedule the 1976 Ford among his assets because he mistakenly believed his wife, who routinely drove the car, owned it. According to the debtor, only after the postpetition insured loss did he learn, or remember, that the vehicle was titled solely in his name. Further, debtor denies any intent to defraud his creditors by not completely disclosing the facts in his December 1982 monthly report.

Though reported as income in some of the monthly operating statements, the debtor also failed to list in his schedule of assets: (1) rights to oil royalties from Ash-land Oil Company and Oil Purchasing, Inc., and (2) rights to periodic payments from Charles Payne and Michael O’Dette pursuant to real estate contracts. The omission in his schedules of these rights is not cured by disclosure in the monthly operating statements because income attributable to oil royalties and the Payne and O’Dette contracts is understated. The value of these rights to payment is not established in the record.

Further, the debtor did not disclose $10,-012.12 in prepetition payments made during the “insider” preference period to Catherine Morgan, his wife, by Products Serving People, Inc., a corporation through which the debtor conducted business. 4 The debtor asserts these payments, in the form of corporate checks payable to his wife and signed by him, were made in the ordinary course of business. Specifically, he asserts the payments represent funds advanced to Catherine Morgan to purchase inventory and to compensate her for bookkeeping services. To substantiate the contention inventory was purchased with funds received from Products Serving People, Inc., the debtor proffered cancelled checks, totaling $4,894.13, issued by his wife against their joint personal account and payable to various vendors. According to the statement of financial affairs in her own bankruptcy case (Case No. 3-84-00255), commenced on February 21, 1984, Catherine Morgan received only $1,903.95 as income in 1982 from Products Serving People, Inc. The $3,214.04 difference between the amount paid to Catherine Morgan and the sum of inventory purchases and her wages is unexplained.

A prepetition transfer to the Church of God in Whiteville, North Carolina, of thirty cases of toothpaste, valued at $1,620.00 by the transferee, is also not reported in the debtor’s statement of financial affairs. Asserting this was a charitable donation, debtor insists the omission was not an intentional attempt to hinder, delay or defraud his creditors. He testified he had purchased the toothpaste in the autumn of 1980 and that he had unsuccessfully attempted to sell it on several occasions.

Plaintiff also introduced four checks, totaling $55.00, written against the account of Checkerboard, Ltd. Each check is payable to and signed by the debtor, who did not report Checkerboard, Ltd. among his trade names. One check is dated November 5,1982, debtor’s bankruptcy filing date; the remaining checks are dated either November 9 or November 10, 1982. At least two other trade names, Morgan Leasing Company, Ltd. and Rainbow’s End, were also not reported in debtor’s statement of financial affairs. Debtor seeks to explain these omissions by asserting that: (1) Checkerboard, Ltd. was the same company as Regal Oil Corporation, a business name disclosed in the statement of financial affairs; (2) Morgan Leasing Company was engaged in business with Comprehensive Accounting Services, a reported business name of the debtor; and (3) no business was carried on under the trade name Rainbow’s End, which is merely a name for an unfulfilled concept.

Chapter 11 Monthly Operating Statements

From November 5, 1982, until November 7, 1983, debtor served as a debtor in pos *269 session. Plaintiff has adduced proof establishing numerous errors or falsities in the debtor’s monthly reports. Joe Irvine, a certified public accountant, reviewed the debtor’s records and reconstructed monthly income and expense reports for the period between November 1982 through October 1983.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 B.R. 264, 1984 Bankr. LEXIS 4907, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/comprehensive-accounting-corp-v-morgan-in-re-cycle-accounting-services-tneb-1984.