Davis v. Baker

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Kansas
DecidedMay 20, 2021
Docket20-05006
StatusUnknown

This text of Davis v. Baker (Davis v. Baker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. Baker, (Kan. 2021).

Opinion

Bank xes OES □□

QV by □□□□□ oO S| Vevey SO ORDERED. y Sa □□ Se AS SIGNED this 20th day of May, 2021. oN NGS @ □ e >> Distria □

CM L. Herren United States Bankruptcy Judge

DESIGNATED FOR ONLINE PUBLICATION IN THE UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF KANSAS

IN RE: MONICA L. BAKER Case No. 19-12015 Debtor. Chapter 7

L. JOY DAVIS Plaintiff, vs. Adv. No. 20-5006 MONICA L. BAKER Defendant.

MEMORANDUM OPINION Section 727 objections to a Chapter 7 debtor’s discharge are difficult to

prove, and for good reason. A denial of debtor’s discharge is the “death

penalty” in bankruptcy. A creditor’s objections to discharge under § 727(a)(2) and § 727(a)(4)(A) and (D)—based upon the debtor’s singular failure to

disclose a “customer list” from her accounting business on Schedule A/B— require proof that the debtor concealed the customer list with the intent to hinder, delay, or defraud a creditor or the trustee, knowingly and fraudulently made a false oath, or knowingly and fraudulently withheld

recorded information from the Chapter 7 trustee. Fraudulent intent is an element of each of those objections. While fraudulent intent can be shown by circumstantial evidence, the plaintiff’s evidence of such was lacking or unpersuasive in this case. Having failed to meet her burden of proof on any of

the objections, the plaintiff’s § 727(a) claims must be denied.1 Jurisdiction A proceeding objecting to a Chapter 7 debtor’s discharge under § 727 is a core proceeding arising under the Bankruptcy Code, 28 U.S.C. §

157(b)(2)(J), for which the bankruptcy court has subject matter jurisdiction.2 Findings of Fact Background and Sale of Accounting Business

1 The plaintiff L. Joy Davis appeared by her attorney Joshua VC Nicolay. The defendant- debtor Monica L. Baker appeared by her attorney Cody R. Smith. 2 See 28 U.S.C. §§ 1334 and 157(a) and (b)(1) and the Kansas District Court’s amended standing order of reference, S.O. 13-1 incorporated in D. Kan. Rule 83.8.5 set forth in the United States District Court, District of Kansas Rules of Practice and Procedure for District and Bankruptcy Court (March 17, 2021). Debtor-defendant Monica Baker is the sole proprietor of Baker Professional Accounting Services. She is indebted to plaintiff Joy Davis

pursuant to a state court consent judgment arising out of her breach of contract for the purchase of an accounting business. In the latter part of 2014 plaintiff Davis sold her accounting business (Kahmeyer Accounting) to defendant Baker, a ten-year employee of the business, for a purchase price of

$255,031, of which $245,031 was allocated for tax purposes to the “client base.” The parties memorialized the transaction by a Business Sale Agreement dated November 1, 2014.3 Neither party was represented by an attorney in the negotiation or sale of the business.

Neither party is a certified public accountant. At the time of the sale, Davis was a part-time school teacher and worked part-time at the accounting business, but was planning to retire. Baker worked full-time at the business and had been employed there for about ten years. Baker maintained that she

was the one who “cultivated” the clients. She held herself out as a public accountant. The business provided state and federal income tax preparation services, sales tax returns, monthly payroll services, preparation of profit and loss statements and depreciation schedules, and performed general

bookkeeping functions for some clients.

3 Trial Ex. 1. When Davis had the business, she did not maintain a client list. She acknowledged that an accounting business has no “customers;” the people to

whom they provide accounting services are properly referred to as “clients.” When Davis acquired the business from her predecessor in 1986, she had client files, generated manually. Over time the business transitioned to databases of client information and their historical data generated and

accessed through computer software programs. The “Client Base” referenced in the sale contract was this database and historical client information and records. According to Davis, this was the most valuable asset of the business that was transferred to Baker. Baker counters that the value of the business

lies in the value of services performed for the client. Though Davis planned to retire, Baker sought and the parties agreed to a non-compete provision in the contract that prohibited Davis from competing with Baker for a five-year period in a 50-mile radius. This non-compete provision is what made the

client base valuable according to Baker. Since the sale, Baker has operated the accounting business as a sole proprietorship, dba Baker Professional Accounting Services (BPAS). After paying some $60,000 toward the sale contract, Baker defaulted in

her payments under the contract and Davis sued her in Pratt County District Court for breach of contract. The parties ultimately settled the dispute in the fall of 2019 and entered into a consent judgment against Baker in the amount of $174,516.4 Neither the sale transaction, nor the consent judgment was secured or collateralized in any fashion.

The Bankruptcy Filing and Objection to Discharge Baker filed a Chapter 7 bankruptcy on October 21, 2019. Davis filed an unsecured proof of claim in the bankruptcy case based on her state court judgment. Debtor disclosed in her bankruptcy petition that she was the sole

proprietor of BPAS and listed its EIN.5 She also listed her ownership interest in BPAS on the Statement of Financial Affairs (SOFA) and represented that her accounting business was the primary source of her income.6 On Schedule A/B, Baker listed her accounting licenses and the business website or

internet domain name (with $0 value).7 In Part 5, she scheduled her business-related property:8 accounts receivable of $9,000 (line 38) and “computers, printers, copiers, software, other office equipment” of $6,830 (line 39). Baker represented she had no “customer lists, mailing lists, or other

compilations” (line 43), nor any other business-related property (line 44). On Schedule G, Baker listed a copier lease, an office lease, and an IT service agreement, all of which she intended to assume.9 She disclosed Davis’ lawsuit

4 Trial Ex. 7. 5 Doc. 1, p. 2, line 4 and p. 4, line 12. 6 Doc. 1, pp. 31-32. 7 Doc. 1, p. 14, lines 26 and 27. 8 Doc. 1, pp. 15-16. 9 Doc. 1, p. 24 and pp. 38-39 for breach of contract in Part 4 of her SOFA.10 Baker contends that she checked the “no” box on line 43 because she

has no “customer list.” And without a non-compete agreement, she believed the client list had no value. In a Chapter 7 liquidation, the client list or client database, if sold, would be free of a non-compete clause. Davis commenced this adversary proceeding on January 20, 2020, objecting

to Baker’s discharge under § 727(a)(2) and § 727(a)(4)(A) and (D). This proceeding boils down to the issue of whether Baker’s discharge should be denied for failing to disclose the existence of a “customer list” on line 43 of Schedule A/B. During the pendency of this proceeding, plaintiff’s complaint evolved from omission of the “customer list” (frequently equating a customer list to a client list by reference to the “customer/client list”) as alleged in the complaint,11 and “client list” as alleged in the amended complaint,12 to failure to list her “customer/client list and

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