Dawar Syed Nawab

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Texas
DecidedJanuary 4, 2022
Docket21-10462
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Dawar Syed Nawab, (Tex. 2022).

Opinion

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TONY M. DAVIS UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY JUDGE

IN THE UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS AUSTIN DIVISION

IN RE: § CASE NO. 21-10462-tmd § DAWAR SYED NAWAB § § DEBTOR § CHAPTER7

MEMORANDUM OPINION

To determine whether debtors have “primarily consumer debt,” and thus whether their cases are subject to dismissal for abuse under section 707(b), should courts consider (1) whether more than 50% of the total dollar amount of the debt is consumer in nature, (2) whether the number of consumer creditors exceeds the number of business creditors, or (3) some combination of the two?

1. BACKGROUND

Dawar Syed Nawab, a medical device salesman, filed bankruptcy under Chapter 7 asserting that he has primarily business debt.’ According to the Debtor, he filed for bankruptcy after incurring significant high-interest business loans investing in a fraudulent Ponzi scheme now under investigation by the FBI.”

In his bankruptcy schedules, the Debtor identified eight of his thirteen creditors—the majority—as business debt creditors.° Out of his total indebtedness of $626,086, the Debtor’s schedules list $388,560 as consumer debt and $237,526 as business debt.* Thus, in dollar value, consumer debt is 62% of the total debt.° Of this consumer debt, roughly $337,000 is for a mortgage on the Debtor’s homestead and $48,500 is for a Tesla Model S that the Debtor purchased in March 2021.° Number of Creditors Claim Totals

Because the Debtor’s total amount of consumer debt is larger than the total amount of business debt, the U.S. Trustee says that the debt 1s primarily consumer and that the case should be dismissed as abusive under 11 U.S.C. § 707(b).

' Means Test, ECF 8, pg. 47; Petition, ECF 1 pg. 6. 2 DR Affidavit, ECF 28, pg. 1 3 Am. Schedules, ECF 17, pgs. 2-6. 4 Stip. of Facts, ECF 27, pg. 2-3. 5 Stip. of Facts, ECF 27, pg. 2-3. ® Schedules, ECF 8 pgs. 13-14.

In response, the Debtor says that he has primarily business debt because more than half of his creditors are business creditors. He also argues that the only reason the dollar amount of the consumer debt exceeds the dollar amount of the business debt is because he has a mortgage on his home and a loan on his vehicle, both of which he intends to keep by continuing to make the monthly payments due each creditor.’ The Debtor doesn’t dispute that these claims are consumer debt. Instead, he argues that Congress enacted 707(b) to prevent high income debtors from running up credit card debt and then trying to discharge that debt in bankruptcy, and that Congress did not intend to discourage people from taking business risks.* He says he filed bankruptcy because he was a victim of a fraud scheme and incurred almost all his unsecured debt investing in a business venture.’ Thus, he argues, his debt is primarily business debt and section 707(b) should not apply to him.’°

Il. ANALYSIS

Section 707(b) provides that the Court may dismiss a case filed by a debtor “whose debts are primarily consumer debts . . . if it finds that the granting of relief would be an abuse of the provisions of [Chapter 7].” Under 11 U.S.C. § 707(b)(2), a presumption of abuse arises where a debtor’s debts are found to be “primarily consumer debts.” While special circumstances may act to rebut this presumption of abuse, the parties agree that none are present here.'! The Debtor concedes that if his debts are found to be “primarily consumer” in nature, he will not be eligible for relief under Chapter 7 given his $196,464 annual income.’

7 Stmt of Intentions, ECF 8, pg. 43. ® Resp. to Mtn to Dismiss, ECF 22, pg. 4. ° Resp. to Mtn to Dismiss, ECF 22, pg. 4. 10 Resp. to Mtn to Dismiss, ECF 22, pg. 4. 'l Stip. of Facts, ECF 27, pg. 2. 2 DR Affidavit, ECF 28, pg. 1; Stip. of Facts, ECF 27, pg. 2. $196,464 is much more than the median income for a one-person household in Texas.

In support of his position that the debt is primarily business, the Debtor relies on a Fifth Circuit case from 1988, In re Booth.13 In Booth, the debtors had consumer debts of $310,303 owed to nine creditors,14 and business debts of $332,187 owed to six creditors.15 And so the amount of the debtors’ consumer debt was less than the amount of their business debt, but was owed to more creditors.16 The Fifth Circuit found that the term “primarily” “suggests an overall

ratio of consumer to non-consumer debts of over fifty percent,” and that, in applying section 707(b), “consumer debts should be evaluated not only by amount, but by their relative number.”17 Looking at the Booths’ debts, the Fifth Circuit held that they were primarily business debts.18 Besides the Fifth Circuit, the Ninth and Tenth Circuits have also addressed this issue.19 In In re Kelly, the Ninth Circuit concluded that “primarily consumer debts” should be understood to mean more than half of the dollar amount owed.20 Applying a dictionary definition of the word

“primarily,” which was defined as “for the most part,” the Ninth Circuit held that “when ‘the most part’—i.e., more than half—of the dollar amount owed is consumer debt, the statutory

13 In re Booth, 858 F.2d 1051 (5th Cir. 1988). 14 Id. at 1055. This amount did not include state and federal taxes because they were undetermined when the motion to dismiss was considered. Somewhat inconsistently, the Fifth Circuit said, in dicta, that the ratio of consumer to non-consumer debt in the Booths’ case, “even allowing for $50,000 in additional taxes,” was “not great enough under these facts” to warrant dismissal under section 707(b). Id. But if $50,000 in taxes were added to their consumer debt, they would have $360,303 in consumer debt owed to nine creditors and business debt of $332,187 owed to six creditors, meaning more than fifty percent of the total number and amount of the Booths’ debt would have been consumer debt. And yet, the Fifth Circuit found the Booths’ debt to be primarily business. 15 Id. 16 Id. 17 Id. 18 Id. 19 In re Kelly, 841 F.2d 908 (9th 1988); Stewart v. U.S. Tr. (In re Stewart), 175 F.3d 796 (10th Cir. 1999). 20 In re Kelly, 841 F.2d at 913. threshold is passed.”21 Because consumer debts comprised $152,000 of the debtors’ total debt of $172,000, the Ninth Circuit found the debtors to have primarily consumer debt.22

Following the Ninth Circuit, the Tenth Circuit, in In re Stewart, also defined “primarily” in the context of section 707(b) to mean more than fifty percent of the dollar amount of the debtor’s debt.23 The Tenth Circuit examined how “primarily” was defined in a non-bankruptcy context, finding that a similar term, “primary duty,” in the labor law context had been defined as “over fifty percent, of the employee’s time.”24 The Tenth Circuit concluded that the meaning of “primarily” should be defined as “consumer debt exceeding fifty percent of the [dollar amount of] total debt.”25 Because $633,000 of the debtor’s total indebtedness of $837,009 was consumer in nature, the Tenth Circuit held that the debtor had “primarily consumer debts.”26

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