Frankfort Digital Services, Ltd. v. Neary (In Re Reynoso)

315 B.R. 544, 2004 Bankr. LEXIS 1497, 2004 WL 2270763
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 20, 2004
DocketBAP No. NC-03-1262-BSP, Bankruptcy No. 02-41108-NT, Adversary No. 02-07197-AN
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 315 B.R. 544 (Frankfort Digital Services, Ltd. v. Neary (In Re Reynoso)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frankfort Digital Services, Ltd. v. Neary (In Re Reynoso), 315 B.R. 544, 2004 Bankr. LEXIS 1497, 2004 WL 2270763 (bap9 2004).

Opinion

AMENDED OPINION 1

BRANDT, Bankruptcy Judge.

Appellants Henry Ihejirika and Frankfort Digital Services sold licenses over the Internet for software which generated completed bankruptcy petitions, schedules, and statements of financial affairs from information users entered into dialog boxes on appellants’ websites. After trial on a complaint brought by the United States Trustee (“UST”), the bankruptcy court held that appellants were bankruptcy petition preparers (“BPPs”) within the definition of § 110(a)(1), 2 had engaged in the unauthorized practice of law, and in fraudulent, unfair, or deceptive conduct. The court ordered appellants to pay fines and disgorge fees, enjoined them from acting as BPPs or otherwise assisting in the preparation of documents to be filed in a bankruptcy case, and certified the facts to the district court for entry of an order for damages pursuant to § 110(i). This appeal followed. We AFFIRM.

I. FACTS

Pro se debtor Jayson Reynoso used the Internet websites “7001aw.com” and “Ziin-et.com” to prepare his bankruptcy petition and schedules. Those sites (which counsel advises have been closed down) were operated by appellant Ihejirika doing business as Frankfort Digital Services, Ltd. Neither appellant is an attorney. The websites allowed the user to purchase a license to access bankruptcy document preparation software, and made the following representations:

• “KEEP BK OFF YOUR CREDIT”
• “KEEP EVERYTHING EVEN 4 OR 5 CARS”
• “File bankruptcy and keep it out of your credit report!”
• “Ziinet is an expert system and knows the law. Unlike most bankruptcy programs which are little more than customized word processors the Ziinet engine is an expert system,. It knows bankruptcy laws right down to those applicable to the state in which you live. Now you no longer need to spend weeks studying bankruptcy laws.”
• “Ziinet simplifies the process by automating most tasks. For example, you can have it automatically select bankruptcy exemptions for you.”
• “Ziinet eliminates the need to choose which schedule to use for each piece of information. You just enter the information and Ziinet automatically figures where to put the data.”

Findings of Fact Nos. 4, 6, and 7.

On 30 January 2002, Reynoso received an e-mail from “fdsauto@hotmail.com” in *548 viting him to access “The Vault,” purportedly containing “bankruptcy secrets” such as how to keep a bankruptcy off a credit report, and how to protect “more than your fair share of assets.” Reynoso opted not to utilize this option because he thought it would be more confusing, and he felt “it wasn’t right to do things like that.” Transcript, 7 April 2003, 21:1-4.

The Ziinet software prompts the user via dialog boxes for information as to personal identification, assets, debts, income, etc. Once the user submits answers, the software produces a set of completed bankruptcy forms with instructions on how to print them.

Reynoso paid $219 for the license and used the software to prepare his schedules. No BPP was identified in his petition, schedules, or statement of financial affairs, nor did the documents disclose the fee he had paid for using the software. Reynoso testified that the software prompted him to answer questions regarding whether he wanted to keep certain assets. Depending on the response, the software would bring up a drop-down list of exemption statutes for the user to choose from. Although Reynoso testified that he independently researched some of the exemptions, he did not type the references to exemption statutes into the schedules.

Reynoso filed his petition, schedules, and statements on 28 February 2002. Those schedules initially listed neither household goods nor wearing apparel, because the software instructions led him to believe he was not required to list those assets. He later amended his schedules at the trustee’s request.

In response to question no. 9 (“Payments related to debt counseling or bankruptcy”), the software automatically inserted this statement into Reynoso’s (and two other testifying debtors’) statement of financial affairs:

Realizing that this document is signed under penalty of perjury, I declare that I prepared my own bankruptcy by myself using a computer and that I was not assisted by an attorney, paralegal or bankruptcy preparer. I downloaded the software into my computer’s browser as a web page, typed in my bankruptcy information and printed my bankruptcy documents on my printer in the privacy of my home without any human intervention other than mine. The software printed the official Federal bankruptcy forms with the information I typed in within a few seconds of my pressing the print button and no one other than myself inputted, edited or reviewed my bankruptcy information or handled my bankruptcy documents at any point in the process. The contents of my documents are based entirely on my own research and no one gave me legal advice or told me to include or omit any information from my documents.

Finding of Fact No. 19.

The UST brought an action in Reynoso’s case against appellants and others for § 110 violations, seeking fines, disgorgement, a permanent injunction, and certification to the district court for imposition of sanctions, fees, and costs.

At trial, counsel discussed stipulating to many of the proposed findings, but there is no clear stipulation in the record. Transcript, 7 April 2004, 13:21-24. In addition to Reynoso’s testimony, three other debtors who had used appellants’ websites testified, and statements of several other debtors who had filed in the district, along with their bankruptcy petitions and schedules were admitted without objection. That evidence showed that those debtors’ experience with appellants’ websites was similar to Reynoso’s, and that neither appellants’ involvement in the document *549 preparation nor the fees charged were disclosed in the documents. In all cases, fees charged for use of the software were in excess of the $125 authorized under the Northern District of California’s Bankruptcy Petition Preparer Guidelines (“BPP Guidelines”).

The bankruptcy court ruled that similar decisions against appellants in other districts precluded (“collaterally estopped”) them from arguing that they were not BPPs and that they had not engaged in the unauthorized practice of law. The court also found that in any event they were BPPs engaging in the unauthorized practice of law; that they had intentionally concealed their involvement as BPPs and engaged in fraudulent, unfair and deceptive conduct; and that they had continually and intentionally violated § 110 in each case. Accordingly, the court assessed fines, ordered disgorgement of all fees received from Northern District of California debtors in the previous 12 months; and permanently enjoined appellants from acting as BPPs and related activities. Finally, the court certified the facts to the district court for determination of damages under § 110(i).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
315 B.R. 544, 2004 Bankr. LEXIS 1497, 2004 WL 2270763, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frankfort-digital-services-ltd-v-neary-in-re-reynoso-bap9-2004.