Davis v. Weddington (In Re Weddington)

457 B.R. 102, 2011 WL 4001075
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Kansas
DecidedSeptember 7, 2011
Docket19-06001
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 457 B.R. 102 (Davis v. Weddington (In Re Weddington)) 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. Weddington (In Re Weddington), 457 B.R. 102, 2011 WL 4001075 (Kan. 2011).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

ROBERT E. NUGENT, Chief Judge.

The Chapter 7 Trustee, Carl B. Davis (Trustee), generally objects to Timothy Weddington’s discharge and seeks to expand his chapter 7 estate to include all of the property Weddington obtained from the time he filed this case as a chapter 13 *105 in October of 2009 to the date of its conversion to chapter 7. 1 In addition, the Trustee objects to Weddington’s exemption of his hunting equipment as a tool of the trade because guiding hunts is only-one of three trades the debtor pursues. The fundamental issue in this case is whether Weddington should receive a chapter 7 discharge despite his failure to disclose his employment to his trustees. There are other issues, but the main factual and legal questions revolve around Wed-dington’s post-petition conduct and particularly his candor with the trustees and this tribunal. The facts that control the discharge objection and estate expansion motion may be best expressed in temporal order. A brief discussion of Weddington’s occupations and banking practices will follow.

All of these matters were tried on June 15, 2011. 2 After hearing Weddington’s testimony and reviewing the documents introduced as evidence, the Court is prepared to rule. 3

Jurisdiction

Each of the Trustee’s claims arises under Title 11 or in a case under Title 11 and are core proceedings. 4 The Court has the power to hear and enter a final judgment. 5

Facts

The Bankruptcy Filings

Before March of 2009, Timothy Wed-dington operated two businesses, Water Designs, L.L.C. and 7 Fingers Outfitters. 6 Water Designs created and installed water features at residences. The outfitting business mainly consisted of Weddington guiding deer hunts in Western Kansas. By early 2009, the housing crash had taken its toll on the water business and, in March, Weddington filed his first chapter 13 in this District. 7 Without a plan being confirmed, that case was dismissed on July 23, 2009 because Weddington failed to provide a creditor with a copy of his 2008 tax return. 8 Weddington subsequently received a refund of undistributed payments from the March case in the amount of $3,459. 9 In the four months the March case was on file, Weddington paid the trustee $5,000, a little more than one plan payment. 10

After the March ease was dismissed, Weddington got a job at Spurrier Chemi *106 cal Co. He began work September 14 and received his first paycheck on September 30, 2009. On October 29, 2009, he filed a second chapter 13 case in this District. Represented by William H. Zimmerman, the same lawyer who filed the March ease, Weddington again filed an ambitious plan, promising to repay his creditors by making sixty $2,800 monthly payments. But by the time of the December 16, 2009 first meeting of creditors in the October case, he still had not made even one plan payment. Only at the trustee’s urging did Weddington commence payments to her and, from December of 2009 to May of 2010, he paid in $11,200, the equivalent of only four plan payments.

In the schedules, statement of financial affairs, and Official Form 22C filed in the October case, Weddington omitted any mention of his new employment at Spurrier. He filed a Pay Advice Declaration that recited, under oath, that he had “not been employed” in the six months before filing. On Schedule I, Weddington merely reported that he was a self-employed hunting guide operating under the name “10-Guage [sic] Outfitters.” Weddington says that he did not read his petition and supporting papers carefully when he signed them at Zimmerman’s office and that Zimmerman was not present. Zimmerman did not testify, but stated on the record at trial and in Weddington’s deposition that the omission of the new job was attorney error for which he would “fall on his sword.” Zimmerman did not amend any of the papers to remedy the omission.

From October 29 until December 16, 2009, the debtor enjoyed chapter 13’s protections, but made no plan payments. 11 On December 16, he appeared for his first meeting of creditors with chapter 13 Trustee Williams. 12 When Ms. Williams asked him if his “employment had changed,” Weddington said “No, ma’am.” This statement is only semi-accurate: Wedding-ton had the same job on December 16, 2009 that he had at filing, but he never told the trustee about that job. And, he had another chance to do that when she asked whether “all the information in your petition, schedules, and statement of financial affairs [is] true or correct,” but he didn’t. Instead, he told her that he had reviewed his papers and they were correct. In fact, none of these statements was true.

Weddington had made no plan payments in the two months running up to this meeting and hedged when the trustee demanded they be made. Even when she expressed her considerable doubt about his prospects for confirming the plan as filed because of its lack of feasibility, Wedding-ton said nothing about his “new” job. When his chapter 13 case first came up for hearing on January 13, 2010, Weddington was still in payment default (and had been for three months). He was ordered to cure that default by January 31 or the case would be dismissed. The hearing on confirmation was continued to March 10, 2010. On that date the confirmation hearing was set over to a one hour evidentiary hearing on May 25, 2010.

By the early winter of 2010, Weddington had developed a new interest. According to his bank records, beginning in February of 2010, the debtor became a frequent online visitor to Anastasia International via a website where one can “communicate” with “thousands of beautiful ladies from *107 Russia and the Ukraine.” Weddington used these services extensively from February 16, 2010 until at least June 2, 2010. On many days he incurred multiple debits in excess of hundreds of dollars and, over the entire period, he spent $11,464.26 from one of his bank accounts. 13

Apparently the siren song of Ukraine was irresistible. On March 30, 2010, Wed-dington obtained a passport so that he could visit in person. Fortuitously, Wed-dington began to receive additional funds to augment his still-undisclosed salary at Spurrier around this time. In early April of 2010, the chapter 13 trustee filed her final report in the dismissed March case and paid Weddington a refund of $3,459. On April 22 and 23, Weddington received his 2009 Kansas income tax refund via direct deposit of $1,892. On April 30, he received his federal refund of $7,330.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
457 B.R. 102, 2011 WL 4001075, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-weddington-in-re-weddington-ksb-2011.