Federman v. Davison (In Re Davison)

73 B.R. 726, 1987 Bankr. LEXIS 708
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Missouri
DecidedMarch 12, 1987
Docket14-20062
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 73 B.R. 726 (Federman v. Davison (In Re Davison)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Federman v. Davison (In Re Davison), 73 B.R. 726, 1987 Bankr. LEXIS 708 (Mo. 1987).

Opinion

FINDINGS OF FACT, CONCLUSIONS OF LAW AND FINAL JUDGMENT DENYING DEFENDANTS’ DISCHARGES IN BANKRUPTCY

DENNIS J. STEWART, Chief Judge.

The trustee in bankruptcy, in the action at bar, seeks denial of the debtors’ discharges in bankruptcy on two separate and independent grounds: (1) that the debtors failed and refused to list indebtedness incurred and payable on their monthly operating reports filed with the court in accordance with the standing rules and orders of the court and (2) that the debtors failed satisfactorily to explain the diminution of assets to meet liabilities.

The action came on before the court for hearing of its merits on February 3, 1987, whereupon the plaintiff trustee in bankruptcy appeared personally and as his own counsel. The defendants appeared personally and by Richard L. Knight, Esquire, their counsel.

*727 The evidence which has been adduced by the parties demonstrated that the debtors filed a petition for relief under chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code on March 16,1983; that, as chapter 11 debtors, they were obligated to file monthly operating reports under the local rules of practice 1 ; that, according to the form of the monthly operating report prescribed by the court, on which the debtors were required to file their monthly operating reports, the debtors were to disclose each month each and all of the debts which they had incurred but not paid 2 ; that they had been advised at one of the initial hearings held in the case that they should not incur long-term debt, but rather should live on a “cash” basis during the course of the chapter 11 proceedings, unless the court granted special permission to incur long-term indebtedness 3 ; that the monthly operating reports filed by the debtors pursuant to these rules and instructions were correctly filed until August 1983 4 ; that, beginning with that month, the debtors failed to list the debts incurred and unpaid; that they thereafter continued to fail to list the ever-growing debts incurred — inventory purchases, mostly, but also some sizeable obligations to relatives and others on account of loans which were extended to them 5 — until, at the time of conversion of the chapter 11 proceedings to chapter 7 proceedings on September 10, 1985, the incurred but unpaid indebtedness had reached a figure totaling in excess of $800,000 6 ; that the debtor Marvin W. Davison, in the trial of the action at bar, contended testimonially that the reason that the debtors commenced the practice of not listing accounts payable on the monthly operating reports was that they relied on advice given them by former bankruptcy Judge Frank P. Barker, Jr.; that it was Judge Barker who formerly presided over the within chapter 11 proceedings; that, at the commencement of one of the hearings conducted by Judge Barker, Judge Barker advised Mr. Davison, according to Mr. Davison’s testimony, to list merchandise which he had purchased during the month at a different place on the form of the monthly operating statement 7 ; that, from the instructions which were thus issued by Judge Barker, it reasonably appeared to the Davisons, according to Mr. Davison’s testimony, that they were simply to list, on the monthly operating reports, the purchases of inventory and supplies which they had made during the month and the payments which they had made, thus leaving the difference between the two sums as the accounts incurred and *728 unpaid and payable 8 ; that the records of the hearings which were held before Judge Barker do not disclose any on-the-record evidence of such advice having been given by Judge Barker 9 ; that Judge Barker, in a deposition taken on December 2, 1986, testified that he did not recall having given such advice to the debtors 10 ; that Judge Barker further stated in the same deposition that he did not know that the debtors were, throughout the course of the chapter 11 proceedings, building up a massive amount of postpetition debt and that, had he known it, he “would have done something about it” 11 ; that Judge Barker further testified in his deposition that this chapter 11 case was assigned to him by the usual method of random assignment whereas the files and records of the court show that the case was transferred by the undersigned to Judge Barker at his request for reassignment 12 ; that, in his statements to the accountant for the trustee prior to the trial of this action, Mr. Davison stated that he not expressly set out the accounts payable in the monthly operating reports because he had been instructed not to do so by his counsel, but there is no substantive evidence to this effect, and the contention does not appear to have been advanced by the debtors in the course of the trial of this action 13 ; that, as of December 31, 1982, prior to the date of bankruptcy of the debtors (March 16, 1983), the debtors reported that they had $2,437,000.00 in value of inventory; that, as of the abovementioned date of bankruptcy, the debtors scheduled a much lower value of inventory, $1,907,-000.00; that, to explain this sizeable diminution of assets, the debtors presented the testimony of a relative of the debtors, one Loren Howerton, who stated that the apparent shortage of inventory at the time of the filing of the petition resulted from an accounting error whereby some $251,000 was reported twice in the initial statement. 14 But this accounting, even if accepted, would still leave a total of some $279,000 in inventory not accounted for. 15

Conclusions of Law

The facts thus found demonstrate that resolution of the trustee’s first objection to discharge — that of intentional failure and refusal to list the unpaid accounts payable on the recurring monthly operating reports — turns on the issue of whether it is Judge Barker’s testimony which is to be believed or whether Marvin Davison’s testimony is to be believed. For, if it is true, as Mr. Davison contends, that Judge Barker gave instructions which excused the debtors from their duty to make explicit disclosure of incurred but unpaid accounts, their *729 discharge cannot lawfully be denied. 16 The critical importance of this issue makes it imperative that the trial court analyze the evidence with care, for its determination of the credibility issue will be difficult to overcome on appeal. “[T]he District Court [bears] the same relationship to the Bankruptcy Court as we usually do to the District Court — it sat as an appellate tribunal, not as a finder of fact.

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Related

PNC Bank, National Ass'n v. Buzzelli (In Re Buzzelli)
246 B.R. 75 (W.D. Pennsylvania, 2000)
Matter of Davison
79 B.R. 859 (W.D. Missouri, 1987)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
73 B.R. 726, 1987 Bankr. LEXIS 708, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/federman-v-davison-in-re-davison-mowb-1987.