Gross v. Osborne (In re Osborne)

520 B.R. 861
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. New Mexico
DecidedOctober 31, 2014
DocketBankruptcy No. 7-13-12162 TL; Adversary. No. 13-1082 T
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 520 B.R. 861 (Gross v. Osborne (In re Osborne)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. New Mexico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gross v. Osborne (In re Osborne), 520 B.R. 861 (N.M. 2014).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

DAVID T. THUMA, Bankruptcy Judge.

Dana Gross seeks a declaration that the amounts owed by Jeffrey and Kendra Osborne are nondischargeable under § 523(a)(2)(A) and § 523(a)(6).1 The Os-bornes seek to avoid Gross’s liens on their real property under § 522(f)(1)(A) or § 547(b). The Court tried the dispute on September 23-24, 2014 and now holds that a portion of the Osbornes’ debt to Gross is nondischargeable, and also that Gross’s liens must be avoided.

I. FACTS

The Court finds:

Gross and Kendra Osborne met in 2005 while working for Spartan Electronics in Deming, New Mexico. Gross and the Os-[866]*866bornes also did volunteer work building houses for Habitat for Humanity. Gross has a Bachelor of Science degree in engineering and a Master of Business Administration.

In the spring of 2006, Kendra Osborne approached Gross with a set of blueprints for a house and expressed her desire to build it. Kendra Osborne showed Gross estimates from Lowe’s and Home Depot that the cost of construction materials for the house would be between $135,000 and $140,000.2 The Osbornes were unable to obtain conventional construction financing because, inter alia, Kendra Osborne filed bankruptcy in 2006 and both Osbornes were recently divorced from prior spouses.

Gross believed Kendra Osborne had experience in construction management, as she had worked with her father, a contractor and homebuilder in Colorado. Gross also thought Jeffrey Osborne had expertise in construction, based in part on his extensive collection of building tools. Given his perceptions and a desire to find a good investment opportunity, in the summer of 2006 Gross agreed to lend money to the Osbornes and help them build the proposed house on a Deming lot the Osbornes bought at a tax sale (as improved, the “Property”).

Part of the agreement was that Gross and the Osbornes would work together building the Property in their free time, doing most of the construction themselves. This way, they would build up substantial “sweat equity.”3 When the Property was done, the Osbornes agreed to get a permanent loan and use the loan proceeds to repay Gross’s loan. They would also pay Gross an additional $5,000 as consideration for the loan.

Further, once the Property was completed and permanently financed, and Gross’s loan repaid, the remaining “sweat equity” would be used to fund a business investing in, repairing, and “flipping” houses.

The Osbornes agreed to keep the Property unencumbered until Gross was repaid. They knew Gross was counting on the Property to ensure repayment. In addition, Kendra Osborne told Gross her father was near death and that her share of the estate would be more than enough to repay Gross. Gross relied on this representations. Gross made no investigation of this'representation.

The parties never reduced any portion of their agreement to writing. The Os-bornes never signed a promissory note or mortgage.4 No loan or other agreement was ever executed. The Osbornes discouraged Gross from getting a mortgage to secure his loan because they said it would hinder their efforts to obtain take-out financing when the time came. Gross did not require the Osbornes to demonstrate their ability to repay the loan, nor did he check to see if any other liens or mortgages encumbered the Property.

Gross had a home equity line of credit (the “HELOC”), with a credit limit of $75,000. At the time he entered into the loan agreement with the Osbornes, the HELOC had a $0 balance. Beginning in July, 2006, Gross began drawing on the HELOC and loaning money to the Os-bornes, usually $5,000 at a time. When his [867]*867HELOC was folly drawn, Gross used other funds to make advances to the Osbornes.-

Gross did not require the Osbornes to segregate the funds he advanced, nor to account for how they spent the money.. Gross did not require draw requests, cost estimates, or the like.

Construction on the Property began in July, 2006. The plans for the Property called for two houses, a small pool house and a larger main house. The Osbornes planned to build the pool house first and move into it while completing construction on the main house.5 The Osbornes moved into the pool house in 2007 when a certificate of occupancy was issued.

In 2009, Gross got a job that required him to be out of town much of the time. Thereafter, he did little work on the Property. Although the parties hoped they could provide much of the labor for building the Property, the Osbornes had to hire a substantial portion of the labor.

By June 23, 2009, Gross had loaned the Osbornes $221,100.

On June 26, 2009, the Osbornes obtained a $67,500 line of credit from State Farm Insurance, secured by a first mortgage on the Property (the “State Farm Mortgage”). The mortgage was recorded July 14, 2009. The Osbornes did not disclose Gross’s $221,100 loan on the State Farm Mortgage application, and their excuse for this very material omission is not credible.6 The Osbornes drew down the entire $67,500.

There was conflicting testimony about Gross’s knowledge of the State Farm Mortgage. Based on the credibility of the witnesses and the other evidence in the record, the Court finds that the Osbornes did not tell Gross about the State Farm Mortgage, and that Gross did not find out about it until well after his loan to the Osbornes was fully extended.

On August 3, 2010, the Osbornes modified the State Farm Mortgage (the “Modification”). The Modification gave the Os-bornes a principal increase of $29,500 and increased the lien on the Property to $94,000. As with the original loan, Gross was not told about the modification and did not find out about it until it was too late. The Osbornes did not disclose Gross’s loan on the Modification application.

A certificate of occupancy for the large house was issued September 30, 2010.

On November!, 2011, the Osbornes borrowed $156,000 from Charles Schwab Bank, secured by a first mortgage on the Property (the “Schwab Mortgage”). The Osbornes used $94,000 of the loan proceeds to pay off the State Farm loan, devoting the remaining proceeds to finishing the Property and building a pool. The Osbornes did not tell Gross about the Schwab Mortgage, and Gross did not learn of it until he prepared to sue the Osbornes. The Osbornes did not disclose Gross’s loan to Schwab. The loan balance on the petition date was $151,777.

After the Osbornes signed the State Farm note and Mortgage, Gross loaned the Osbornes $66,600, bringing the loan total to $287,700.7

[868]*868Kendra Osborne received about $40,000 from her parents’ estate in 2012. Instead of paying Gross this money, as she had promised, she bought a new truck, because “my mom had asked me to go ahead and buy a new truck ... she knew I wanted to have a new truck and she didn’t want me to have any car payments.’.’ In the same breath, however, Kendra Osborne testified that she hadn’t spoken to her parents for ten years.

On March 21, 2013, Gross filed a complaint against the Osbornes in the Sixth Judicial District Court Luna County, New Mexico.8 The Osbornes did not respond to the complaint.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
520 B.R. 861, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gross-v-osborne-in-re-osborne-nmb-2014.