FCC National Bank v. Gilmore (In Re Gilmore)

221 B.R. 864, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 768, 1998 WL 345065
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Alabama
DecidedJune 17, 1998
Docket19-00430
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 221 B.R. 864 (FCC National Bank v. Gilmore (In Re Gilmore)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
FCC National Bank v. Gilmore (In Re Gilmore), 221 B.R. 864, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 768, 1998 WL 345065 (Ala. 1998).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION ON COMPLAINT TO DETERMINE DIS-CHARGEABILITY

BENJAMIN COHEN, Bankruptcy Judge.

The matter before the Court is the 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(2)(A), Complaint for Nondis-chargeability filed on August 18,1997, by the plaintiff, FCC National Bank doing business as First Card. After notice, a trial was held on February 17, 1998. McCollum Halcomb, the attorney for the plaintiff; David Alan Gespass, the attorney for the debtor; and the Chapter 7 debtor, Honey Gilmore, appeared. The matter was submitted on the testimony of Ms. Gilmore, various exhibits admitted into evidence, arguments and briefs of counsel, and the record in this case.

The debtor contends that her debt to the plaintiff is dischargeable. The plaintiff contends that the debt is nondisehargeable. The plaintiff argues that the debtor had no intent to repay the charges the debtor made on the plaintiff’s credit card and in particular that the debtor had no intent to repay charges made to that card which were associated with the debtor’s hobby of raising domestic cats and entering those cats in competition.

I. FINDINGS OF FACTS

A. Ms. Gilmore’s Employment, Income and Debts

Ms. Gilmore is employed as an “administrative assistant to the Assistant Vice President over the conforming wholesale division” for New South Federal Savings Bank, a mortgage lending institution in Birmingham, Alabama. She has held that position for four years. In her most recent years, from August 1996 through March 1997 her net wages were $550.00 bi-weekly, and her net wages are now, and have been since April 1, 1997, $670.00 bi-weekly.

Ms. Gilmore’s duties include producing marketing flyers and assisting the bank’s production manager and staff. She also administers the broker approval process, which *867 involves processing applications made by mortgage brokers for underwriting loans and involves investigating the credit references of those mortgage brokers.

Credit card debts comprise the majority of Ms. Gilmore’s debts. That majority totals $29,055.20 and is owed to four credit card companies. Specifically, Ms. Gilmore owes $5,016.89 to the plaintiff, First Card; $10,-861.99 to City Bank; $8,132.89 to First Union; and $5,043.43 to People’s Bank. All were scheduled by Ms. Gilmore in her bankruptcy petition. First Card is the only creditor filing a dischargeability complaint.

Ms. Gilmore was married in October 1996. She and her husband separated on March 19, 1997. They divorced sometime after Ms. Gilmore filed her Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition.

Ms. Gilmore’s former husband had charging privileges on the City Bank card but none others. He was not contractually liable on any. 1

B. Ms. Gilmore’s Hobby

Ms. Gilmore enjoys raising cats and entering them in cat shows. She has, in fact, been “showing cats” since 1990. This is her hobby, but it is the major reason for her current financial crisis.

Ms. Gilmore owns a cat named Ollie. She and her husband acquired Ollie on July 1, 1995 when Ollie was an eight month old kitten. Ollie was at the time, in Ms. Gilmore’s words, “darn cute,” apparently the only justification Mr. and Ms. Gilmore needed to decide to enter Ollie in a series of competitions, or cat shows. 2 As it turned out, their decision was a good one; but it was also a costly one.

In his first show, Ollie was named “third best household pet kitten in the southeast region.” 3 With this success, Ms. Gilmore decided to show Ollie as an adult cat. In his first adult show, Ollie finished second (only to the cat that had won best international household pet several years before) in the “best household pet” category. Given this success, Ms. Gilmore entered Ollie in six more shows that season. At the end of that season in the spring of 1996, Ollie was recognized, in his category, as the fourth best adult cat in the southeast region.

Ollie’s success fueled Mr. and Ms. Gilmore’s enthusiasm. In the spring of 1996, they determined that they would show Ollie as many times as possible during the 1996-1997 cat show season, a season from May 1996 through April 1997. Their goal was best household adult cat in the southeast region.

During the 1996-1997 show season, Ms. Gilmore, sometimes accompanied by her husband, entered Ollie in, and attended 24 cats shows. Some of the shows were local, or “drive” shows (as described by Ms. Gilmore), that is they were held in Alabama or nearby states. For these shows, Ms. Gilmore, and sometimes her husband, would travel by car, limiting their expenses to entry fees, gasoline, hotels, and meals. But Ms. Gilmore also attended many other shows around the country, which required travel by commercial airlines. The expenses for these non-local shows included, entry fees, gasoline, hotels and meals, plus airfares and rental cars. During the year and a half preceding bankruptcy, Ms. Gilmore attended cat shows in Houston, Texas; Denver, Colorado; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Alexandria, Virginia; Bay St. Louis, Missouri; Chicago, Illinois; Monterey, California; Lafayette, Louisiana; Seeaucus, New Jersey; Orange Park, Florida, and Spokane, Washington. 4

Mr. and Ms. Gilmore showed Ollie as an adult cat from the beginning of 1996 through *868 April 1997. According to Ms. Gilmore’s testimony, they financed Ollie’s campaign through the use of Ms. Gilmore’s credit cards. Those charges constituted the bulk of her credit card debt and at the point in October 1996 that Ms. Gilmore began using the plaintiffs card, she owed almost $22, - 000.00 on three other credit cards. The individual card balances included $4,838.71 to People’s Bank; $9,228.10 to CitiBank; and $7,899.50 to First Union. From October 23, 1996, the date Ms. Gilmore first used the First Card, to May 3, 1997, the date she last used the First Card (a period of approximately 8 months) Ms. Gilmore charged purchases, on the First Card, totaling $5,022.29, and made payments to the debt on that card of $585.00. During this same eight month period, Ms. Gilmore charged $3,190.54 to her other three cards, including $893.41 to her People’s Bank card, $1,836.38 to her Citi-Bank card, and $460.75 to her First Union card.

First Card revoked Ms. Gilmore’s charging privileges by letter, dated June 6,1997.

C. Findings Regarding the Plaintiffs Solicitation of Ms. Gilmore’s Participation in its Credit Card Business

Specific findings of fact regarding the plaintiff’s encouragement of Ms. Gilmore’s use of its credit card are discussed below in connection with this Court’s conclusions of law. Generally, the Court finds that the plaintiff induced Ms. Gilmore to receive its credit card, persuaded her to use the card and encouraged her to borrow the full amount of her credit limit.

II. THE PLAINTIFF’S CONTENTION: PROMISSORY FRAUD

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221 B.R. 864, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 768, 1998 WL 345065, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fcc-national-bank-v-gilmore-in-re-gilmore-alnb-1998.