In Re Karber

25 B.R. 9, 1982 Bankr. LEXIS 5064
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Texas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1982
Docket11-03513
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 25 B.R. 9 (In Re Karber) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Karber, 25 B.R. 9, 1982 Bankr. LEXIS 5064 (Tex. 1982).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

BILL H. BRISTER, Bankruptcy Judge.

Petitioners, Tom McGee conducting business under the common name and style of TEMCO, Lemon Insurance Agency, and First State Bank and Trust Company of Booker, Texas (“Bank”), filed petition for involuntary order for relief against Valerie Karber pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 303.

Alternative theories of entitlement to relief are presented. The petitioners jointly contend that they are creditors of the community estate of Valerie Karber and her husband, Braden Jay Karber, that Braden Jay Karber has been discharged in bankruptcy, and that Valerie Karber has not been generally paying those community debts for which also she is liable. In the alternative, the Bank contends that if Valerie Karber cannot be charged with the community debts she is indebted to the Bank on unpaid notes which she signed and delivered to the Bank. Also, the Bank contends that Valerie Karber has made undisclosed transfers of property without paying debts for which she is liable and, because it has no adequate relief in the state courts, Valerie Karber should be declared bankrupt involuntarily.

Nonjury trial was conducted on December 17, 1981. The following summary constitutes the findings of fact required by Rule 752.

The date of the marriage between Valerie Karber and Braden Jay Karber was never fixed by the evidence. It is uncontro-verted, however, that prior to the marriage Valerie Karber owned substantial assets, including an apartment complex in Woodward, Oklahoma. She continued to operate the apartment complex after her marriage and her husband, Braden Jay Karber, did not participate in any manner in that operation.

In 1976, after the marriage, an opportunity arose for Braden Jay Karber to purchase Ochiltree Equipment Company in Ochiltree County, Texas. Valerie Karber assisted in that acquisition by investing $85,000.00 of her separate funds and, until she was seriously injured in an explosion at her home on April 30, 1977, she served as the bookkeeper of that business. Braden Jay Kar-ber managed the business. No evidence was adduced which reflects that Ochiltree Equipment Company, an implement business, was anything other than a business enterprise of the community of Braden Jay Karber and Valerie Karber.

In 1978 Braden Jay Karber acquired another business enterprise which he operated under the name and style of “Johnnie’s Oilfield Service.” It was this venture which incurred the debts of the petitioning creditors in this case. Unlike the implement business to which Valerie Karber had willingly contributed her time and funds she adamantly opposed the acquisition of that new business enterprise. Notwithstanding her objections Braden Jay Karber made financial arrangements for the acquisition of the business with First State Bank and Trust Company of Booker, Texas, and with the First National Bank of Bartles- *11 ville, Oklahoma, with which the Booker Bank had a “strong relationship.”

In the ensuing months the oilfield service business required operating monies. Valerie Karber did co-sign some, but not all, 1 of the notes of Johnnie’s Oilfield Service to the Bank. However, she refused the Bank’s demand that she secure the notes with a lien against her Woodward, Oklahoma, apartment complex and she refused to sign a personal guaranty of the notes to the Bank.

Johnnie’s Oilfield Service was not a profitable operation. On March 31, 1980, Bra-den Jay Karber filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy. In Re Braden Jay Karber, d/b/a Karber Farms, Johnnie’s Oilfield Service, and Ochiltree Equipment Company, Debtor, Case No. 280-00039 (Bkrtcy., N.D. Tex., Amarillo Division 1980). All creditors with community claims against the farms, the implement company and the oilfield service company, including the three petitioners herein, were scheduled as creditors in his case. His schedules reflected $85,360.00 in general unsecured debts, $7,683.00 in priority unsecured debts and $908,743.00 in secured debts.

No challenge to discharge of Braden Jay Karber under 11 U.S.C. § 727 and no exceptions to discharge under § 523 were filed by any party in interest. On August 7, 1980, an order of discharge was entered in Bra-den Jay Karber’s case.

Approximately one month after Braden Jay Karber filed the petition in bankruptcy the Bank filed suit in Lipscomb County, Texas, against Valerie Karber on her notes. She defended on a number of bases, including, among others, the contention that there was no consideration for her execution of the notes.

In June, 1980, two months after the Bank filed suit against her, Valerie Karber sold the apartment complex in Woodward, Oklahoma for the gross sum of $485,000.00. From the proceeds of sale she liquidated approximately $225,000.00 in notes secured by liens against the Woodward apartments, she paid all of the creditors of the apartment operation, she paid over $100,000.00 to Internal Revenue Service, and she netted approximately $141,000.00, the disposition and whereabouts thereof being undisclosed. She paid no money whatsoever to the Bank, and, with one exception 2 , she paid none of the creditors of the community enterprises.

When the cognizant officials of the Bank discovered that Valerie Karber had sold her separate property, paid no monies to the Bank, and refused to disclose to the Bank officers the disposition made by her of the net proceeds of $141,000.00, the instant petition for involuntary order for relief was filed.

First, all three petitioning creditors argue that Valerie Karber’s separate property should be subject to all of the community debts, citing as authority the opinion of the Texas Supreme Court in Cockerham v. Cockerham, 527 S.W.2d 162 (Tex.1975). In that case the wife, during a time of marital discord, opened a dress shop which she operated while the husband operated a dairy business. The dress shop business was a total failure, resulting in bankruptcy being filed by the wife. The trustee in bankruptcy attempted to hold the husband’s separate property liable for the dress shop debts, arguing that the dress shop debts are joint liabilities for which both spouses are liable. The Supreme Court sharply split on the issue, but the majority opinion noted:

*12 The fact of physical operation of a business is not wholly determinative of the character, as sole or joint, of the debts incurred in its operation. This is especially true since both husband and wife now have full capacity to contract. § 4.08 Family Code.
To determine whether a debt is only that of the contracting party or if it is instead that of both the husband and wife, it is necessary to examine the totality of the circumstances in which the debt arose. Of particular importance in the instant case is the consideration of implied assent to the debt by the noncontracting party, the husband.
The debts in the instant case arose, of course, during marriage.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Diana R Beard-Williams
C.D. California, 2021
Kelley v. Dahle-Fenske (In re Dahle-Fenske)
525 B.R. 912 (E.D. Wisconsin, 2015)
SANWA BANK CALIFORNIA v. Chang
105 Cal. Rptr. 2d 330 (California Court of Appeal, 2001)
In Re Schmiedel
236 B.R. 393 (E.D. Wisconsin, 1999)
Campolieto Bielicki v. Anaya Portuondo
142 P.R. Dec. 582 (Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, 1998)
In Re Strickland
153 B.R. 909 (D. New Mexico, 1993)
NORWEST FINANCIAL v. Lawver
849 P.2d 324 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1993)
Gonzales v. Costanza (In Re Costanza)
151 B.R. 588 (D. New Mexico, 1993)
Midi Music Center, Inc. v. Smith (In Re Smith)
140 B.R. 904 (D. New Mexico, 1992)
Judge v. Braziel (In Re Braziel)
127 B.R. 156 (W.D. Texas, 1991)
In Re Sweitzer
111 B.R. 792 (W.D. Wisconsin, 1990)
In Re Central Hobron Associates
41 B.R. 444 (D. Hawaii, 1984)
In Re First Energy Leasing Corp.
38 B.R. 577 (E.D. New York, 1984)
Matter of Goldsmith
30 B.R. 956 (E.D. New York, 1983)
In Re Tarletz
27 B.R. 787 (D. Colorado, 1983)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 B.R. 9, 1982 Bankr. LEXIS 5064, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-karber-txnb-1982.