Florence Savings Bank v. Scheer (In re Scheer)

140 B.R. 1016, 1992 Bankr. LEXIS 857
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJune 12, 1992
DocketBankruptcy No. 91 B 20902; No. 91 Adv. 6207
StatusPublished

This text of 140 B.R. 1016 (Florence Savings Bank v. Scheer (In re Scheer)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Florence Savings Bank v. Scheer (In re Scheer), 140 B.R. 1016, 1992 Bankr. LEXIS 857 (S.D.N.Y. 1992).

Opinion

DECISION ON COMPLAINT TO DETERMINE DISCHARGE-ABILITY OF DEBT

HOWARD SCHWARTZBERG, Bankruptcy Judge.

The parties in this nondischargeability controversy have presented diametrically opposite versions as to which day the debt- or delivered written financial statements for a loan which was granted on the morning of March 7, 1989. The debtor, Paul R. Scheer, contends that the statements could not have been relied on by the creditor bank, Florence Savings Bank (“the Bank”) in granting the loan because they were delivered in the afternoon of March 7,1989, after the loan had been granted. The Bank maintains that the statements were delivered in the late afternoon of March 6,1989, and that they were relied on in granting the loan the next morning. The Bank also claims that the personal financial statement as to the debtor’s financial condition was materially false. There are enough interesting little clues in this mystery to satisfy the appetite of Sherlock Holmes or activate the little grey cells of Hercule Poirot.

The Bank, located in Northampton, Massachusetts, objects to the dischargeability of its claim against the Chapter 7 debtor, Paul M. Scheer, in connection with his written guaranty of the obligations of his corporation, the Hampshire Dealer Group, Inc. (“Hampshire”), a franchised automobile [1017]*1017dealer in Northampton, Massachusetts. The Bank’s complaint is based upon 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(2)(B). The Bank alleges that it advanced a $250,000.00 loan to Hampshire on the basis of a materially false statement in writing respecting the financial condition of the debtor on which the Bank reasonably relied. The debtor denies, among other things, that the written statement was materially false and that the Bank reasonably relied on it.

The loan in question was made by the Bank to Hampshire on March 7,1989. One of the key issues is whether the debtor and Alan Kalish, the other principal of Hampshire, ever visited the Bank’s premises on March 6, 1989 to deliver the written financial statements in question to the Bank, as alleged by the Bank. The debtor asserts that the Bank never relied on the financial statements which he delivered to the Bank because he delivered them on March 7, 1989, after the Bank made the $250,000.00 loan to Hampshire, and not on March 6, 1989, as claimed by the Bank.

The debtor contends that Hampshire’s financial standing was well-known to the commercial enterprises in Northampton as a prosperous automobile business with annual sales in excess of $41 million. Additionally, Hampshire’s business reputation was familiar to the Bank because the Bank routinely purchased Hampshire’s commercial notes. The debtor asserts that his business associate, Alan Kalish, was a local personality in Northampton and enjoyed a favorable reputation as a successful businessman. Hence the debtor maintains that the Bank’s loan to Hampshire was based on Hampshire’s positive business reputation and was not made in reliance on the financial statements which the debtor and Kalish delivered to the Bank as a mere formality. The debtor bottoms this argument on the fact that no formal written loan application was sought by the Bank as a condition for approval of the loan. Additionally, the debtor contends that even if the court were to accept the Bank’s position that the financial statements were delivered late in the afternoon on March 6, 1989, which the debtor denies, the Bank made the loan the next morning on March 7, 1989 and issued the check for $250,000.00 by noon of that day. This sequence of events did not allow any time to investigate or digest the information contained in the financial statements.

Significantly, the Bank does not claim that the financial statement which the debt- or submitted as to his corporation’s financial condition was false or incorrect. The complaint alleges that the debtor’s personal financial statement, which he delivered in support of his guaranty of his corporation’s obligation under the loan, was materially false.

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. The debtor, Paul R. Scheer, filed a voluntary petition with this court on June 14, 1991 for relief under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code. Pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 301, the filing of a voluntary Chapter 7 case constitutes an order for relief.

2. The plaintiff Bank is a Massachusetts banking corporation organized and having a principal place of business in Northampton, Massachusetts.

3. The debtor had been a shareholder and the treasurer of Hampshire, a corporation engaged in the sale of automobiles in Northampton, Massachusetts through various affiliated entities, including Northampton Lincoln-Mercury, Inc., Hampshire Toyota, Inc., Hampshire BMW, Inc. and Hampshire Volkswagen, Inc. Alan Kalish was also a principal of Hampshire, both as a shareholder and its president.

4. Alan Kalish and Hampshire were well-known in Northampton, Massachusetts because of their substantial business activities in the automobile business. The Bank’s senior loan officer, Robert Koch, testified that Alan Kalish was a “local personality” in Northampton.

5. The Bank was also familiar with Hampshire and its activities because the Bank routinely purchased Hampshire’s commercial notes each month.

6. Shortly before March 7, 1989, Alan Kalish, as President of Hampshire, contacted Mr. Koch and informed him that Hamp[1018]*1018shire would like to request a $500,000.00 loan from the Bank. Kalish told Koch that the reason for the loan was to reduce Hampshire’s existing floor plan obligations to the Bank of New England (“BONE”). Koch thought that it was unusual for a business to seek one bank loan in order to pay down another bank loan. Koch reflected this request in his pink sheet diary dated March 14, 1989, as follows: “the loan proceeds are being used to reduce a floor plan line of credit of BONE.” Trial Exhibit A.

7. Neither Hampshire, Kalish, nor the debtor ever submitted a written request for a loan from the Bank. No written loan application form was ever used as a basis for the loan in question.

8. Irene David, a retired loan officer of the Bank, testified that on the morning of March 7, 1989, Koch asked her to call Kalish and the debtor at Hampshire’s office and to have them come in at noon and close the loan. When Kalish and the debtor came to the Bank at noon, Ms. David had them each sign a personal guaranty form and the promissory note evidencing a $250,-000.00 loan. She assumed that the Bank had in its records a loan file documenting this transaction. No evidence was presented as to any such loan file. After Kalish and the debtor signed the guaranties and the note, Ms. David gave them a check payable to Hampshire in the sum of $250,-000.00 in accordance with the approved loan.

9. Stacey Reinke, who was a secretary and receptionist at the Bank in March of 1989, testified that the debtor and Kalish came to the Bank late Monday afternoon, March 6, 1989, and left with her a manila envelope to be given to Mr. Koch, the Bank’s senior loan officer. She said that Mr. Koch had left the bank earlier that afternoon and that she put the envelope on Koch’s desk. She also testified that her normal working day included leaving the Bank between 4:30 and 5:00 p.m. each day. Thus, in order for the debtor to have been in the Bank on March 6, 1989 to give Ms. Reinke an envelope, it must have been before 5:00 p.m.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
140 B.R. 1016, 1992 Bankr. LEXIS 857, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/florence-savings-bank-v-scheer-in-re-scheer-nysd-1992.