First Texas Savings Ass'n v. Reed (In Re Reed)

11 B.R. 683
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Texas
DecidedJune 12, 1981
Docket19-50010
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 11 B.R. 683 (First Texas Savings Ass'n v. Reed (In Re Reed)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Texas Savings Ass'n v. Reed (In Re Reed), 11 B.R. 683 (Tex. 1981).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

BILL H. BRISTER, Bankruptcy Judge.

First Texas Savings Association, Inc. (“First Texas”), Texas Bank and Trust Company (“Bank”), Small Business Administration (“SBA”), and Jack P. Driskill, Trustee (“Trustee”), each filed complaint to deny discharge to Hugh D. Reed and Sharon Marcus Reed. Each complaint alleged that the debtors had, within one year before the date of filing the petition in bankruptcy, transferred, removed, or concealed property of the estate with intent to hinder, delay or defraud a creditor or the trustee as denounced by 11 U.S.C. § 727(a)(2), that the debtors concealed, destroyed, mutilated, falsified, or failed to keep and preserve books and records from which their financial condition and business transactions might be ascertained within the meaning of § 727(a)(3), and that debtors failed to explain satisfactorily losses or deficiencies of assets to meet their liabilities within the meaning of § 727(a)(5). The same transactions were alleged by each creditor in support of his respective complaint to deny discharge. 1 Therefore the complaints were consolidated for non jury trial which commenced on March 9, 1981, and which was completed on April 29,1981. The following factual summary constitutes the findings of fact contemplated by Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure, Rule 752.

Hugh D. Reed had opened Reed’s Men’s Wear, a proprietorship, in Lubbock, Texas, in about March 1977. He financed the operation in part with a loan in the sum of $150,000.00 from Texas Bank and Trust Company, the loan being guaranteed by Small Business Administration. After the store had been in operation for approximately three months Reed realized that the store was undercapitalized. He returned to the bank, seeking additional monies. He was afforded a $50,000.00 line of credit by the bank, and SBA subordinated its guaranteed loan to that line of credit.

At all times germane to this memorandum Reed (or his hereinafter mentioned personal corporation) was employed as a sales representative for Scully Leathers (“Scully”). In the first year of his store’s operation in 1977 he worked in the store (Reed’s Men’s Wear) approximately 75% of the time and traveled for Scully approximately 25% of the time. The records for the close of the year in 1977 showed that the business operation was profitable.

*685 In 1978 he worked in the store 50% of the time and traveled for Scully 50% of the time. The end of the year statement for 1978 reflected that the operation was not profitable.

In 1979 he worked in the store 40% of the time, traveled for Scully 60% of the time, and ended the year by filing the petition in bankruptcy on December 21, 1979.

Reed’s earnings as sales representative for Scully were significant. In December 1978 his accountant advised him to set up a corporation in order that a tax advantage might be enjoyed. Reed caused Reyata Corporation (“Reyata”) to be incorporated. Reyata was then placed on the Scully payroll for the receipt of commissions from sales produced by Reed, and Reed, in turn, was paid a salary by Reyata. In 1979, the year the bankruptcy petition was filed, the commissions from Scully to Reyata totalled $180,000.00, or $15,000.00 per month.

By February 1979, it was apparent to Reed that the business was insolvent. Reed met with the major trades creditors, with the bank, and with SBA officials, and entered into an agreement for operation of the business by a consultant. The major creditors agreed to suspend all collection efforts on their existing debts upon the promise by Reed to commence payments to them on those debts in January 1980.

The operation by the consultant did not cure the financial woes of Reed’s Men’s Wear. On December 15,1979, Reed entered into an agreement with the bank and SBA to turn the store over to them and on December 21, 1979, Hugh D. Reed and Sharon Marcus Reed filed petition for order for relief under Chapter 7 of Title 11, United States Code. ,

The consolidated plaintiffs have detailed a number of challenges to discharge. They claim that Reed started planning the bankruptcy in February 1979, ten months before the petition was filed. They point to the fact that in February 1979 he had persuaded the major creditors to place their respective accounts in suspense until January 1980, when commencement of payments was promised. They produced evidence of an $11,000.00 note which Reyata Corporation had executed for the benefit of Reed, personally, but which was repaid to Bank of the West shortly before bankruptcy with monies from the Reed’s Men’s Wear bank account. They were suspicious of the fact Reed, two months before bankruptcy, had opened a new bank account at Bank of the West, without the knowledge or consent of the officials of Texas Bank and of SBA, and from that date until the store was closed in mid December 1979 the debtors had deposited the daily store receipts in that unsupervised account. They attributed a fraudulent purpose to the fact that Reed had caused his employer, Scully Leathers, to prepay a $15,000.00 commissions check in November 1979, one month prior to the filing of the bankruptcy petition, when that commission check was not due until January 1980.

Each of those claimed malfeasances is some evidence which will support a conclusion that the debtors were planning to file the bankruptcy petition. Each of those acts can be evidentiary of a scheme and design on the part of the debtors to hinder, delay or defraud their creditors. However, the primary purpose of the bankruptcy law is to afford debtors a new opportunity in life and a clear field for future efforts, unhampered by the pressure and discouragement of preexisting debts. Local Loan Company v. Hunt, 292 U.S. 234, 244, 54 S.Ct. 695, 699, 78 L.Ed. 1230 (1934). That concept of a “fresh start” is embodied in the Bankruptcy Code and is consistently expressed in the cases construing its diverse provisions. In order that effect may be given to the “fresh start” notion, the provisions of § 727(a) relating to discharge must be liberally construed in favor of the debtors. Any objection to discharge must be based on one or more of the nine specified conditions of § 727(a) — a general charge of dishonest conduct does not suffice. Therefore, the claimed infractions above mentioned, without more, present no bases for denial of discharge.

In this case, however, “more” exists.

*686 The plaintiffs have raised two additional tangible objections — the conversion of nonexempt assets to exempt assets and the failure of the debtors to account for approximately $19,500.00 in cash. 2

CONVERSION OF NONEXEMPT ASSETS TO EXEMPT ASSETS

The law is unsettled in the area which produces the first of those tangible objections.

The evidence established that Hugh D. Reed had a gun collection which he had valued on an April 1, 1979, financial statement at $20,000.00. He sold that collection to a friend, Steve Gallagher, on December 11,1979, ten days prior to filing the petition in bankruptcy, for $5,000.00 cash.

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Bluebook (online)
11 B.R. 683, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-texas-savings-assn-v-reed-in-re-reed-txnb-1981.