Farmers State Bank v. Diel (In Re Diel)

277 B.R. 778, 2002 Bankr. LEXIS 513, 2002 WL 1009161
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Kansas
DecidedMay 16, 2002
Docket04-43149
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 277 B.R. 778 (Farmers State Bank v. Diel (In Re Diel)) 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
Farmers State Bank v. Diel (In Re Diel), 277 B.R. 778, 2002 Bankr. LEXIS 513, 2002 WL 1009161 (Kan. 2002).

Opinion

*780 MEMORANDUM AND OPINION

ROBERT E. NUGENT, Bankruptcy Judge.

This matter came before the Court for evidentiary hearing on April 2, 2002 on Farmers State Bank of Hardtner’s Complaint to Determine Dischargeability of Debt. In its complaint, Farmers State Bank sought to have Diel’s debt excepted from discharge under 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(2) 1 for making false financial statements and under § 523(a)(6) for willful and malicious injury to the Bank’s property. In addition, Farmers State Bank sought to have Diel’s discharge denied alleging that Diel defrauded the bank under § 727(a)(2), concealed and falsified recorded information from which his financial condition or business transactions might be ascertained under § 727(a)(3), and that Diel knowingly and fraudulently made a false oath or account in connection with his case under § 727(a)(4). At the conclusion of its evidence, Farmers State Bank withdrew its § 727 objections to discharge. The Court is therefore concerned with whether Farmers State Bank’s debt should be excepted from discharge undgr §§ 523(a)(2)(A) and (a)(6). After careful review of the record and relevant law, the Court finds that Diel’s debt to Farmers State Bank is excepted in the amount of $8,409.65, the sum of the Boevers checks as funds obtained by actual fraud.

FACTS

Lanny Diel, debtor, began farming independent of his father, Virgil Eugene Diel, in 1992. He farmed in the area around Kiowa, Kansas, near to the Oklahoma state line. At or about this túne, he commenced a banking relationship with plaintiff, Farmers State Bank of Hardtner. Diel owned no ground and conducted his entire cropping operation on rented land which he leased from his father and others. Diel also engaged in custom baling work, custom cattle work, and he worked for wages in the farming operation of Mike Yazel.

In 1997, Diel’s farming operation ran into financial problems. Farmers State Bank asked him to move his loan to another institution due to continuing delinquency issues. Farmers State Bank holds two security agreements, one dated June 30, 1992 and the other dated January 20, 1995. The 1992 Security Agreement was executed by Virgil Diel only and purports to hypothecate to Farmers State Bank an interest in the father’s anhydrous ammonia applicator and a New Holland swather. This security agreement was given to secure Lanny Diel’s notes. The 1995 security agreement grants to Farmers State Bank a security interest in all of Lanny Diel’s livestock, machinery, equipment, crops and general intangibles. Notably, the agreement fails to reference accounts and omits any description of the land on which Diel’s crops were growing. Both security agreements are on standard bank forms and bear a legend at the bottom reciting “THIS AGREEMENT INCLUDES AND IS SUBJECT TO THE ADDITIONAL PROVISIONS SET FORTH ON THE REVERSE SIDE HEREOF, SUCH PROVISIONS BEING INCORPORATED HEREIN BY REFERENCE.” Regrettably, neither the copies of these agreements placed in evidence, nor those filed as exhibits to the Bank’s motion for stay relief or its proof of claim include the reverse sides and the “incorporated” provisions allegedly set forth are nowhere in the record before the Court *781 today. The Court suspects that these provisions included matters conditioning or limiting Diel’s right to use the collateral and its proceeds. Both Diel and David Collins, his former loan officer (no longer working for the Bank), testified that the course of dealing between them was that when Diel sold collateral of any kind, he was to bring the proceeds to the Bank for application on his notes. Sometimes, he would be permitted to utilize some of the proceeds to pay farming bills. As his financial condition deteriorated, however, he was rarely granted this permission.

In May 1999, the Diels opened a checking account at the Alva State Bank & Trust Company in Alva, Oklahoma. Christine Diel was employed in Alva at that time. Several of the transactions questioned by the Bank were run through this account. Diel testified that he opened this account after the Bank refused to either advance him funds for his operation or allow him to use any collateral proceeds. He stated unequivocally that he used the account to avoid the Bank taking all of his deposits. After Diel harvested his wheat in June of 1999, his father took over his leased ground and, as Diel testified, he knew he would shortly be out of farming. Diel did no cultivation in 1999 or afterward, instead working as a custom baler and cattleman, and also working for wages for Mark Yazel. It is clear that, by mid-1999, Diel’s operation was headed for liquidation.

The Bank complains of several specific transactions which it contends demonstrate either Diel’s fraudulent conduct or his willful and malicious damage to the Bank’s security interest. In July of 1998, Diel sold hay to Cody Boevers of Yerden, Oklahoma. Boevers paid by checks in the amount of $4,048.20 and $4,361.45. Diel deposited these checks in the Bank. Both checks were returned by Boevers’ bank marked “insufficient funds.” Collins encouraged Diel to take further collection action against Boevers and to file bad check charges. Diel advised Collins that he would take further collection action, but instead, Die! obtained cash from Boevers in the amount of the bad checks. This cash was.never turned over to the Bank. Indeed, even at Diel’s Rule 2004 examination on June 5, 2000, Diel testified that he had made no sales of hay for cash. However, at trial, Diel admitted that he had not accounted to the Bank for the cash because he did not want the Bank to know he had spent the money. He stated that he did not think this was wrongful conduct, merely that he needed the money and that the money was channeled into farm expenses, building corrals, paying wages and buying fuel.

Additionally, during the 1999 — 2000 period, Diel worked for and with Mark Yazel in a variety of ways. He was paid wages for farm labor. In addition, he cared for Yazel’s cattle. He did this by allowing the cattle to run on his leased ground while it was planted in wheat. The Bank claims a security interest in his crops. Apparently what wheat was not “grazed up” by Yazel’s cattle was chopped before it matured and turned into “wheatlage” and kept in sacks for later feeding or sale. Yazel testified at trial that he believed most of the feed given to his cattle was in fact his own, and not Diel’s. There is no definitive evidence whatsoever concerning the amount of Diel’s wheat fed to Yazel’s cattle. Yazel did testify that he bought silage from Diel for $8,251 and that he bought cattle from Diel for $7,818. These purchases, made in 1997 and 1998, were paid for with checks that, according to Diel’s undisputed testimony, were deposited in the Bank. There are a series of checks from Yazel to Diel which were deposited in the Alva account after May of 1999, but, with one exception, there is no proof as to the extent to which *782 these checks included actual proceeds of Bank collateral. On December 10, 1999, Diel deposited a check from Yazel in the amount of $4,797.12 which Diel testified was the proceeds of the sale of hay to Yazel.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
277 B.R. 778, 2002 Bankr. LEXIS 513, 2002 WL 1009161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-state-bank-v-diel-in-re-diel-ksb-2002.