First State Bank v. Braathen (In Re Braathen)

364 B.R. 688, 2006 Bankr. LEXIS 4027, 2006 WL 4388745
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. North Dakota
DecidedFebruary 1, 2006
Docket19-30014
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 364 B.R. 688 (First State Bank v. Braathen (In Re Braathen)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. North Dakota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First State Bank v. Braathen (In Re Braathen), 364 B.R. 688, 2006 Bankr. LEXIS 4027, 2006 WL 4388745 (N.D. 2006).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

WILLIAM A. HILL, Bankruptcy Judge.

By Complaint filed August 22, 2005, Plaintiff First State Bank of Munich initiated this adversary proceeding seeking determinations that Debtor/Defendant Gordon Hans Braathen is not entitled to a discharge pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 727(a)(2), (3), (4) and (5) and that an outstanding debt owed by the Debtor to the Bank in the amount of $14,707 is non-dischargeable pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(2). By Answer filed September 1, 2005, the Debtor denies the allegations.

The matter was tried on December 1, 2005. The following constitutes the Court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law.

I. FINDINGS OF FACT

The Debtor is a farmer and a truck driver. The Bank made several operating and equipment loans to the Debtor over the years, and as of June 6, 2005, the Debtor owed the Bank $133,356.36. The property securing the debt included a vehicle, a tractor, a semi trailer, all equipment, all government payments, all accounts receivable, and all other property listed on the Bank’s security agreement.

Brian Anderson, a Bank loan officer, testified that the Bank became aware in the fall of 2004 that the Debtor would not be able to repay his 2004 operating loan. The Debtor’s crop yields were down because of a bad soybean crop. Anderson met with the Debtor in the fall of 2004 to discuss the shortage, and the plan was for the Debtor to sell his grain inventory and to put any crop insurance proceeds or government program payments toward the loan balance.

Anderson met with the Debtor again in the spring of 2005. Realizing the Debtor *694 could not repay the 2004 operating loan, the Bank decided not to renew the Debt- or’s operating loan for 2005. After applying the grain proceeds to the debt, there remained a $20,000-30,000 shortfall. The Debtor testified he turned over all his equipment to the Bank, and decided to quit farming. He asked the Bank to write off the rest of his debt, but the Bank refused.

A. The Disaster Payment

The Debtor received a crop disaster program payment from the Department of Agriculture on May 16, 2005, in the amount of $10,707. The Debtor had already decided to file for bankruptcy at this time and had discussed exemptions with his attorney when he received the payment. He testified he knew he would lose the money to creditors if he did not do something with it, so he used the money from the disaster payment to catch up on his mortgage payments because he had fallen behind. He also knew he had an outstanding obligation to the Bank and that the Bank would suffer financial harm if he did not turn over the check. The Bank’s name was not on the check, though, and the Debtor denied knowing the Bank had a lien against the disaster payment. The Bank told him it wanted the money, but did not tell him they had a lien on the disaster payment. According to the Debt- or, when hard times hit, he needed the money for his expenses and decided not to give it to the Bank. According to Anderson, he specifically told the Debtor that the Bank’s security agreement included the disaster payment and that the Debtor needed to give the Bank the payment to reduce his indebtedness.

The Debtor received disaster payments just twice in his 20 years of farming. The last time he received a disaster payment, he deposited the payment into his checking account and wrote a check to the Bank because it was “the thing to do” even though no one from the Bank told him he had to turn the money over. The difference, according to the Debtor, was that last time he did not need the money and this time he did.

Anderson explained that the Bank has a form that typically is sent to the Farm Service Agency informing it to send any disaster payment check directly to the Bank and not a borrower. This procedure was not followed by the Bank in the Debt- or’s case in 2004 because although the Bank had a form filled out and in the Debtor’s file, it was not signed by the Debtor.

B. The Debtor’s Tools

Anderson testified that in determining whether to renew an operating loan each year, he and a borrower meet each spring to update the borrower’s balance sheet schedules and to assess the operation’s cash flow projections. The Bank’s software saves the information from each pri- or year, and a loan officer and the borrower amend the schedule as appropriate to reflect changes in the property listed and its market value. The particular balance sheet schedule at issue in this case is Schedule 23 which lists the Debtor’s machinery, equipment and vehicles. Every year Schedule 23 listed the Debtor’s tools with a market value of $4,000.

Although the Debtor farmed for 20 years, he owned few tools because his father farmed for 40 years and had most of the tools the Debtor needed. The Debtor conceded at trial that he did not have the $4,000 worth of tools that were listed on his balance sheet, but he contended he never told the loan officer he had $4,000 worth of tools. He testified, “The Bank said I had $4,000 of tools. I never said that.” The Debtor characterized the *695 $4,000 figure as the banker’s “magic figure,” and said that he simply did not disagree with the figure. He said he left the valuation of the tools to the loan officer because he is not an appraiser, and the Bank never asked to see his tools nor asked about the specific types of tools he owned.

Anderson visited the Debtor’s farm and saw the Debtor’s shop that contained the tools. Anderson testified he thought $4,000 was a fair representation of the value of the tools and that the Debtor never told him the tools in the shop were his father’s. He conceded, however, that he was aware the shop was also used by the Debtor’s father and that the property in the shop was a mixture of the Debtor’s and his father’s. Anderson never itemized the Debtor’s tools.

The Debtor’s 2004 operating loan request was considered and approved by the Bank’s loan committee. The president of the Bank, John Vollmer, testified that the lending committee looked very closely at the Debtor’s loan application in 2004. The Debtor was short on collateral and at the edge of his credit limit. According to Vollmer, the lending committee may not have approved the Debtor’s 2004 operating loan if they had known the truth about the tools because of the importance of the character of a borrower and the Bank’s trust in borrowers.

In liquidating the Debtor’s property covered by its security agreement, the Bank abandoned any property at the farm worth less than $500 including the tools, press drills, a cultivator, and a harrow. Each of these items was listed on the Debtor’s Schedule 23 as worth more than $500.

The Debtor filed a voluntary Chapter 7 petition for bankruptcy relief on June 6, 2005. The Debtor did not list any tools in his bankruptcy petition. At the meeting of creditors in connection with his bankruptcy case, the Debtor testified he had $150 worth of tools. He stated at trial that $150 was the amount the Bank’s auctioneer told him they were worth.

C.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
364 B.R. 688, 2006 Bankr. LEXIS 4027, 2006 WL 4388745, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-state-bank-v-braathen-in-re-braathen-ndb-2006.