In Re McAllister

211 B.R. 976
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Alabama
DecidedApril 16, 1997
DocketBankruptcy No. 95-03468-BGC-7, Adversary No. 95-00419
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 211 B.R. 976 (In Re McAllister) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re McAllister, 211 B.R. 976 (N.D. Ala. 1997).

Opinion

211 B.R. 976 (1997)

In re John R. McALLISTER, Debtor.
HOC, INC., Plaintiff,
v.
John R. McALLISTER, Defendant.

Bankruptcy No. 95-03468-BGC-7, Adversary No. 95-00419.

United States District Court, N.D. Alabama, Southern Division.

April 16, 1997.

*977 *978 *979 Wayne Wheeler, Birmingham, AL, for plaintiff.

Leo E. Costello, Birmingham, AL, for debtor.

MEMORANDUM OPINION ON COMPLAINT TO ESTABLISH NON-DISCHARGEABILITY OF DEBTS AND ON OBJECTION TO DISCHARGE

BENJAMIN COHEN, Bankruptcy Judge.

The matters subject to this Memorandum Opinion and accompanying Order are the plaintiff's Complaint to Establish Non-Dischargeability of Debt and its Amended Complaint objecting to the debtor's discharge. A trial on both matters was held on February 5, 1997. Mr. John R. McAllister, the debtor; Mr. George Gould, the plaintiffs representative; Mr. Wayne Wheeler, the attorney for the plaintiff; and Mr. Leo E. Costello, the attorney for the debtor, appeared. The matters were submitted on the testimonies of Mr. McAllister and Mr. Gould; the record in the case; numerous exhibits offered by the parties; and the arguments and briefs of counsel.[1]

I. ISSUES

Issue No. 1 is whether the debts created by the debtor's failure to remit proceeds from the sale of automobiles financed by the plaintiff are nondischargeable either under the "willful and malicious" provision of 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(6) or the "fraud" provision of 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(2)(A) or the "embezzlement" provision of 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(4).

Issue No. 2 is whether the debtor should be denied a discharge under the "false oath" provision of 11 U.S.C. § 727(a)(4)(A).

II. FACTS

A. The Operation

The debtor operated a used car dealership under the trade name "Distinctive Motor Cars." Cars purchased with funds advanced by the plaintiff and other non-institutional lenders, were placed for sale on a lot leased and maintained by the debtor.

As between the plaintiff and the debtor, from September 1992 through the middle of 1994, the parties operated under a contract regarding the purchase and sale of used automobiles. Pursuant to that contract, the plaintiff advanced funds to the debtor for use by the debtor for the wholesale purchase of used automobiles. After the purchase of an automobile, the debtor was required under the contract to deliver the automobile's title to the plaintiff. The debtor would then attempt to resell the automobile for a profit. When the debtor sold an automobile, he was required to reimburse the plaintiff, from the *980 sale proceeds, the amount advanced by the plaintiff for the wholesale purchase of the automobile. On reimbursement by the debtor from the proceeds of the sale of an automobile, the plaintiff was required to deliver the automobile's title to the debtor who, in turn, was to deliver the title to the retail purchaser.

Specifically, the debtor would purchase a car at wholesale, usually from an automobile auction and would pay for the car with a check drawn on his Distinctive Motor Cars account. The debtor would in turn receive from the seller of the automobile either the title to the automobile or a bill of sale pending transfer of the title. The debtor would then deliver to the plaintiff either the title, or, if the debtor had not received the title, the bill of sale from the auction company with a promise to the plaintiff to deliver the title once received from the auction company. The plaintiff would then provide funds to the debtor in an amount sufficient to cover the Distinctive Motor Cars check given by the debtor to the seller for the car. Upon his sale of the automobile, the debtor would give the plaintiff a portion of the sale proceeds equal to the amount advanced by the plaintiff to the debtor for the purchase of the automobile. Any amount received by the debtor from the purchaser over and above the amount advanced by HOC was retained by the debtor as his "profit." Upon receipt of its share of the proceeds from the debtor, the plaintiff would deliver the title to the car back to the debtor, who would then transfer the title to the purchaser. Of course, if the debtor sold the car before delivering the title to the plaintiff, he would deliver the title, upon receipt of the same, directly to the purchaser of the automobile rather than the plaintiff.

The plaintiff and debtor did not necessarily "settle up" with one another on a daily or per car basis. Mr. Gould, the plaintiffs representative periodically met with Mr. McAllister to reconcile any outstanding transactions by exchanging checks and car titles. Mr. McAllister would, at a typical meeting, give Mr. Gould either the titles or bills of sale with promise of titles, to any cars that he had purchased since their last meeting. In return, Mr. Gould would give Mr. McAllister a check from HOC for the amount paid to the auction company or other seller for the automobiles, an amount calculated by Mr. Gould from the bills of sale received by Mr. McAllister from the auction company or other seller. These typical meetings also allowed Mr. McAllister an opportunity to give Mr. Gould a Distinctive Motor Cars' check from the proceeds of the cars that had been sold by him since the last meeting.

Under the parties' contract, the debtor was required to pay a specified sum each month to the plaintiff in lieu of interest on the unpaid principle balance of cumulative unreimbursed funds advanced to the debtor. Over the course of their dealings, the unpaid principle balance of funds advanced to the debtor was as high as $150,000 and the monthly payment required of the debtor ranged from a low of $3,600 to a high of $4,800. This monthly payment was, however, the only profit or return on investment that HOC was to receive under the agreement with Mr. McAllister.

The arrangement between the plaintiff and the debtor worked without problems until December 1993. According to Mr. Gould's records, from September 1992 until December 26, 1993, Mr. McAllister sold 127 cars that had been purchased with funds advanced by HOC, and turned over to HOC the $930,372 in proceeds due from those sales under the terms of the contract. After December 26, 1993, Mr. McAllister sold 19 cars that had been purchased with funds advanced by HOC, but only turned over the proceeds due under the contract from 13 of those sales, an amount totaling $82,620. HOC was due, under the contract an additional $89,470 from the other six car sales that occurred after December 26, 1993.

Until January 1, 1994, the contract between the debtor and the plaintiff was oral. On that date, the debtor, at the plaintiff's behest, signed a document which purported to embody the terms of the oral contract and *981 which granted the plaintiff security interests in the automobiles purchased by the debtor from funds advanced by the plaintiff.

As for the money the debtor failed to pay to HOC, Mr. McAllister testified that he used the funds to cover insufficient funds checks written to others.

B. The Unreimbursed Automobiles

The controversy in this case centers around the above-described six automobiles sold after December 23, 1993.[2]

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