Gaughan v. Cavan (In Re Strasser)

303 B.R. 841, 51 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1263, 2004 Bankr. LEXIS 194, 2004 WL 77763
CourtDistrict Court, D. Arizona
DecidedJanuary 13, 2004
DocketBankruptcy No. 00-14146-PHX-GBN. Adversary NO. 02-00154
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 303 B.R. 841 (Gaughan v. Cavan (In Re Strasser)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gaughan v. Cavan (In Re Strasser), 303 B.R. 841, 51 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1263, 2004 Bankr. LEXIS 194, 2004 WL 77763 (D. Ariz. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION

GEORGE B. NIELSEN, JR., Bankruptcy Judge.

The complaint of Chapter 7 Trustee Maureen Gaughan, to avoid a transfer of sale proceeds by debtor Camilla Jean Strasser (“debtor”) to her parents, defendants David W. and Karen Cavan as constructively fraudulent to her existing creditors, was tried to the court as a bench trial. The court has found and concluded that plaintiffs complaint should be sustained. The facts and discussion necessary for an understanding of this decision follow.

I.

Debtor filed for divorce from Steven L. Strasser on April 2,1998. A consent decree of dissolution was entered on July 15,1998. By quit-claim deed dated May 15, 1998, recorded May 18, 1998, Steven L. Strasser transferred all his interest in the family home in Scottsdale, Arizona to debtor. Debtor resided at the residence with her two children, but was unable to make payments on more than $274,000 in consensual liens recorded on the property. As of August 81, 1998, debtor’s father, David W. Cavan, had made payments of $32,951.67 to certain creditors of debtor. On that same date, to avoid foreclosure, debtor sold the residence to her father for $345,000. Following payment to secured creditors and closing costs, $62,188.95 in net sales proceeds remained.

The escrow agent issued a check to debtor for $62,188.95. Ms. Strasser did not use these funds to invest in a new homestead or to pay her existing, non-insider creditors. Instead she endorsed the check to her father. Starting after August 31 of 1998, debtor’s father made payments of $41,278.50 to a law firm for legal services that benefitted debtor. After the close of the sale, defendants also made funds available to debtor for support of herself and her children, through checks made payable to her, by direct payments to certain creditors and by providing a credit card for her personal use.

Debtor filed a voluntary chapter 7 bankruptcy case in this judicial district on December 28, 2000. She scheduled 69 unsecured claims, including a claim of $150,000 owed to her father. The majority of claims were incurred in connection with her former husband’s business or personal credit card debt. The case trustee instituted this adversary proceeding against debtor’s parents on February 25, 2003.

David W. Cavan testified that in August of 1998 his daughter, Camilla Jean Stras-ser was going through a difficult time. Her husband had stopped supporting the family, unpaid creditors were contacting her, the family residence was in foreclosure, her children’s expenses were unpaid and she was not employed. To assist her, defendants purchased her home at its appraised value of $345,000, yet allowed debtor and her children to continue to reside there. Defendants were giving her money for food at the time.

Defendants purchased the home with a $69,000 down payment. After payment of liens, a check of $62,188.95 was issued to debtor. Ms. Strasser immediately en *844 dorsed the check to her father, pursuant to an alleged prior agreement, to repay his previous loans. Defendant’s trial testimony of the existence of a prior agreement was impeached by Mr. Cavan’s deposition testimony that Ms. Strasser had volunteered to give him the check and he was unaware why she did so.

At this time, debtor was unemployed, in poor physical and mental condition, under the care of a psychiatrist and unable to pay her debts. It is defendant’s testimony that he and debtor had previously agreed he was to take back all her equity of more than $62,000, thus leaving his unemployed daughter and her children nothing to live on, because she was afraid her former husband would take these funds. The fact finder does not find this testimony credible. 1 Defendant also testified debtor wanted him to manage the $62,188.95 proceeds for her, stating “Because, well, partly she owed me part of it, and she just didn’t want... at that, juncture she just did not want to have any responsibility of any money and she wanted me, she wanted me to give it back to her over time, which I did, because she had, you know, had kids school to pay and et cetera.” Testimony (“test”) of David W. Cavan of September 8, 2003, dkt. 51 at p. 5 (citing transcript).

Previously defendants had paid certain of debtor’s bills, including costs for a divorce attorney, a private investigator and private school tuition for the children. Defendant Cavan describes this support as a loan, although it was unwritten, carried no interest rate and had no due date. He testified he would never sue his daughter for the money if she failed to repay him. He made similar loans to his other three children, all undocumented and not bearing interest or maturity dates, in amounts of up to $500,000. Defendant would record his loans and track repayments by his children only through notes in checkbook or yellow post notes. Mr. Cavan was absolutely committed to his daughter and grandchildren and would provide for them whether or not she could pay him back.

Prior to the close of the realty sale, defendants made payments of at least $32,951.67 to certain of debtor’s creditors. Mr. Cavan has not demanded his daughter repay this amount, although debtor has stated she will reimburse him. He believes he paid creditors more than $32,951.67, but is unable to provide documentation to establish a larger amount. After the sale closed, defendants paid additional sums to debtor’s creditors, utilizing the law firm to negotiate settlements. Payments to the law firm for its representation of debtor in her divorce are reflected in Ex. A. Defendant’s practice was to pay the firm when billed. At the closing he was unaware that debtor owed the firm any money. In 1999, he paid $11,800 in tax debts that had been assigned to the debtor in the divorce decree.

The decree required the former spouse to pay debtor approximately $5,000 a month in support, which was paid. Mr. Cavan has never agreed to assume all his daughter’s debts or pay creditors more than she agreed to repay. He believes his daughter wanted him to be repaid his $32,951.67 in loans from the equity check she endorsed. He intended to give the remaining $31-32,000 to her over time. Defendant would support his daughter and grandchildren regardless of whether he was repaid. His involvement was due to compelling family reasons.

*845 Currently the home is back in his daughter’s name. She has refinanced and retired his loan on the property. Debtor now works for her father as a salaried employee. She still owes him approximately $100,000.

Defendant Karen Cavan was aware of her husband’s assistance to debtor because of the love and affection they both hold for their daughter and the children. Although she was not directly involved in his husband’s dealings with debtor, she believes there are no conditions on the money they provided. Defendants have never stated they would only provide this support if debtor would pay them back.

Camilla Jean Cavan-Strasser turned to her father for assistance when Steven Strasser stopped paying the family’s bills. Defendant assisted her due to his love and affection for her and the children. She intended, at the time she received his assistance, to pay him back someday. Her father did not say he would only help if she repaid him. Her testimony is that she gave her equity check to him because he was handling her financial affairs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
303 B.R. 841, 51 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1263, 2004 Bankr. LEXIS 194, 2004 WL 77763, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gaughan-v-cavan-in-re-strasser-azd-2004.