Frankford Bank v. Chryst (In Re Chryst)

177 B.R. 486, 1994 Bankr. LEXIS 2243, 1994 WL 760583
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 3, 1994
Docket16-11373
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 177 B.R. 486 (Frankford Bank v. Chryst (In Re Chryst)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frankford Bank v. Chryst (In Re Chryst), 177 B.R. 486, 1994 Bankr. LEXIS 2243, 1994 WL 760583 (Pa. 1994).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

DIANE WEISS SIGMUND, Bankruptcy Judge.

Before the Court is the Complaint filed by Frankford Bank a/k/a Frankford Trust Company (the “Bank”) under 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(2) objecting to the discharge of a debt arising out of the Debtor Barbara Chryst’s guaranty of certain loans made by the Bank to her various businesses. 1 Trial wa,s held on April 7, 1994, April 8, 1994 and May 12, 1994. 2 After a protracted briefing schedule, this matter is now ready for decision. 3

*491 BACKGROUND

Prior to filing for bankruptcy, 4 the Debtor operated two retail travel agencies, Custom Travel Service, Inc. (“Custom I”) and CMCEX, Inc. d/b/a Custom Travel Service II (“Custom II”), and a wholesale travel agency, Voyage International (“Voyage” together with Custom I and Custom II, the “Companies”), which marketed European tours to retail travel agencies, including Custom I and II. The Debtor was an officer and the majority owner of each of these corporations, with family members and/or acquaintances owning the remainder of the stock.

The Debtor’s relationship with the Bank began on December 10, 1984 when Custom I was granted a $15,000 line of credit from the Bank (“1984 LOC”). The Debtor personally executed an unlimited Guaranty of the 1984 LOC. Exhibit T-3. On July 9, 1991, the 1984 LOC was increased by $25,000 to $40,-000 (the “Custom I LOC”). The Debtor personally executed an unlimited Guaranty of the Custom I LOC. Exhibit T-10. The Bank’s representative with whom the Debtor dealt was Jane Ward, a commercial loan officer and vice president. She testified that the personal guaranty was a condition of extending the Custom I LOC. Record I at 21-22. In order to induce the Bank to increase the availability under the 1984 LOC to $40,000 under the Custom I LOC, the Debtor submitted to the Bank, and the Bank claims to have relied upon, Debtor’s personal financial statement dated July 8, 1991, Exhibit T-6, and a detailed aged analysis of open invoices of Custom I through June 27, 1991, Exhibit T-7. Record I at 19-20. 5

The Debtor next approached the Bank in September, 1991 and requested a $50,000 loan to open a second store, Custom II. The Bank agreed to loan only $25,000 (the “Custom II LOC”). The Bank further suggested that the loan be made to Custom I and that Custom I downstream the money to Custom II. Record I at 26. In connection with the Custom II LOC, the Debtor executed an unlimited Guaranty dated September 18, 1991, Exhibit T-13.

Next, in December, 1991, the Bank established a $30,000 line of credit for Voyage to provide working capital (the “Voyage LOC” and with the Custom I LOC and the Custom II LOC, the “Loans”). Record I at 29. The Debtor personally executed an unlimited Guaranty of the Voyage LOC. Exhibit T-19. In order to induce the Bank to make the loan to Voyage, the Debtor gave the Bank Voyage’s income statement for the year 1991 through September 30, 1991, Exhibit T-15, and a detailed aged analysis of Voyage’s open invoices, Exhibit T-18. In addition, the Debtor sent the Bank a letter dated November 15, 1991 stating that while business “has been the lowest, it has been the most profitable”. Exhibit T-17. In May, 1992, the Debtor sent the Bank Voyage’s income statement for the calendar year ending December 31, 1991, Exhibit T-22, Voyage’s balance sheet, Exhibit T-22, and her personal financial statement as of May 14,1992, Exhibit T-23.

On June 25, 1992, Ward and the Debtor met to discuss, inter alia, Ward’s concerns regarding the financial information transmitted in May. The Bank’s analysis of this information indicated that Custom I and Voyage had negative net worths as of year end 1991. Exhibit T-25. Ward claims that the Debtor told her that Custom I’s and Voyage’s financial statements were not representative of the conditions of the businesses because they were cash statements which did not reflect accounts receivable which were at an all time high while accounts payable were low. Record I at 38; Record II at 25. Following the meeting, the Bank agreed to extend the Custom I LOC which expired in May or June of 1992 until August 31, 1992 in order to allow the Debtor time to prepare accrual based financial statements. Record I at 39-40. The Debtor did not tell Ward that she had recently laid herself off *492 and was collecting unemployment. The Debtor collected her first unemployment check on or about June 6, 1992. Exhibit T-37.

In July 1992, the Debtor used $65,000 of $147,000 collected by Custom I as a deposit for a large group trip (the “Commonwealth Trip”) to pay down the Custom I and Custom II LOCs to zero. These funds were ultimately to be used to pay for the trip being booked. However, Ward advised Debtor that it would be in the interest of Custom I and II to pay down the LOCs in order to save on the accrual of interest. Record I at 45; Record II at 149. The Debtor was willing to do so so long as she could reborrow the funds since the money “is not my money; this is my client’s money.” Record II at 149.

On September 28, 1992, Ward, noting that the extended Custom I LOC had expired, contacted the Debtor to discuss her progress in securing accrual based financial statements. Ward and the Debtor arranged to meet on October 5, 1992. Record I at 47. On October 2, 1992, the Debtor reported to Ward that she had closed Custom I and Voyage and filed for personal bankruptcy that morning. Record I at 48.

The Bank claims that the Debtor made the following fraudulent representations and failed to disclose the following material information, as the case may be, for the purpose of inducing the Bank to make and extend the Loans:

(1) the Debtor made oral and written false representations that Custom I, Custom II and Voyage were doing well and sales for Custom I were skyrocketing;

(2) the Debtor fraudulently represented that Custom I’s and Voyage’s financial statements were not representative of the business because they were cash based financial statements, rather than accrual based, and did not reflect those Companies’ high level of accounts receivable and low level of accounts payable;

(3) the Debtor fraudulently misrepresented the purposes for the Loans, and in particular that the purpose for the Voyage LOC was working capital when she intended to use it for other purposes, including the repayment of loans to herself and other insiders;

(4) the Debtor fraudulently represented that Custom II would be a wholly owned subsidiary of Custom I;

(5) the Debtor failed to inform the Bank that she had been laid off by Custom I and Voyage in the beginning of June, 1992 and was collecting unemployment;

(6) the Debtor failed to disclose to the Bank in August 1992 that her accountant advised her to close Custom I and Voyage and that she subsequently did so; and

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Bluebook (online)
177 B.R. 486, 1994 Bankr. LEXIS 2243, 1994 WL 760583, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frankford-bank-v-chryst-in-re-chryst-paeb-1994.