Indian Head National Bank v. Mitchell (In Re Mitchell)

74 B.R. 457
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. New Hampshire
DecidedJune 4, 1987
Docket19-10210
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 74 B.R. 457 (Indian Head National Bank v. Mitchell (In Re Mitchell)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Indian Head National Bank v. Mitchell (In Re Mitchell), 74 B.R. 457 (N.H. 1987).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

JAMES E. YACOS, Bankruptcy Judge.

The two above-captioned adversary proceedings came on for trial on January 27, 1987. Pursuant to this court’s pre-trial order of July 29, 1986, regarding Adversary Proceeding No. 85-80, commenced by the plaintiff’s Complaint To Determine Dis-chargeability Of Debt, was tried solely on the charge made pursuant to § 523(a)(2)(B) —that the defendant-debtor’s indebtedness to plaintiff is nondischargeable due to a false written financial statement.

Pursuant to this court’s pre-trial order of July 29, 1986, regarding Adversary Proceeding No. 85-81, that matter, commenced by plaintiff’s Complaint Objecting To Discharge, was to be tried at the same time as the trial in Adversary Proceeding No. 85-80. In the 85-81 adversary proceeding, the plaintiff alleged that the debtor should be denied a discharge due to his failure to explain satisfactorily the loss of assets from the sale of property in Canterbury, New Hampshire which sale took place within one year before the date of the filing of the bankruptcy petition in this case, i.e., a charge pursuant to § 727(a)(5) of the Bankruptcy Code.

ADVERSARY 85-80

In Adversary Proceeding No. 85-80, the plaintiff’s § 523(a)(2)(B) charge was that in order to obtain a loan from plaintiff bank, the defendant-debtor executed a written personal loan application which was materially false in that it did not list various outstanding loans which the debtor actually owed. For present purposes it is sufficient to focus on one debt admittedly omitted from a March 1984 financial statement submitted to the plaintiff bank, i.e. a second mortgage loan owed to another bank in the amount of approximately $10,-000.

The plaintiff’s § 523(a)(2)(B) charge also alleges that the personal loan application was relied upon by the plaintiff in making said loans to defendant, and that at the time of his execution of the personal loan application the debtor knew the statements contained therein were not true and complete and intended to deceive the plaintiff.

The plaintiff’s evidence at trial on the Complaint To Determine Dischargeability Of Debt tended to establish that the Bank had made loans to defendant-debtor total-ling some $12,000 from March to June 1984. More specifically, Mr. LaFlamme, the Bank’s witness, testified on cross-examination that the Bank made an initial $5,000 advance to the debtor on March 5, 1984. According to Mr. LaFlamme’s testimony, it was this loan which the Bank asserts it would have required to be done on a secured basis, but for the false financial statement submitted by the debtor. This $5,000 loan made in March 1984 was a 90-day note and was paid off by the extension of a new loan to the debtor in June 1984. This June 4, 1984 renewal loan was never repaid by the debtor. Mr. LaFlamme also testified to the Bank’s advancing the debtor funds on a installment loan on May 10, 1984, in the amount of $7,000, which constituted the combination and refinancing over 48 months of two previous loans which the Bank had made to the debtor on an unsecured basis on April 29, 1982 and August 29, 1983. Of the proceeds of the May 10, 1984 $7,000 loan, all but $848.76 went to the Indian Head Bank to pay off these two previous unsecured loans. The remaining $848.76 was deposited to a demand deposit account of the debtor’s. See also, Plaintiff’s Ex. 4 establishing the particulars of these transactions between plaintiff and defendant.

The plaintiff’s evidence at trial on its § 523(a)(2)(B) Complaint established that on March 5, 1984 the debtor submitted a *459 written financial statement to the Bank. The Bank requested the new statement at that time because the most recent one which the Bank had was from 1982, and the Bank needed to have an updated statement of the debtor’s financial condition. At trial the Bank’s evidence was that this March 5, 1984 financial statement was materially false primarily due to the fact that the debtor omitted therefrom the $10,000 second mortgage loan which he owed at that time to the New Hampshire Savings Bank, as indicated above, notwithstanding three separate places on the financial statement form at which the NHSB loan should have been listed.

The Bank’s witness, Mr. LaFlamme, testified that if he had known that the debtor had a $10,000 secured loan from New Hampshire Savings Bank, he would not have granted the debtor the $5,000 loan in March 1984 as an unsecured loan, but rather would have secured that $5,000 loan with a third mortgage on the defendant’s homestead real estate in Canterbury, New Hampshire. While initially Mr. LaF-lamme’s testimony seemed to be that in March 1984 the debtor persuaded Mr. LaF-lamme not to secure the $5,000 loan on the basis of the debtor’s promise that his home was being sold and that the Bank would be paid shortly on all its loans from the proceeds thereof, Mr. LaFlamme ultimately clarified his testimony to specify that the debtor’s promise to pay the Bank from the sale of his home was made only at the time of the May 10, 1984 $7,000 installment loan. Mr. LaFlamme also testified that until March 1984 the debtor had been a good customer of the Indian Head National Bank and until that time all the debtor’s loans had been paid as agreed.

In any event, the Bank obtained no new financial statements from the debtor in connection with the funds it advanced him in May 1984 and June 1984, but rather it was Mr. LaFlamme’s testimony that the Bank relied on Mr. Mitchell’s March 1984 financial statement in making the May and June 1984 loan advances of $7,000 and $5,000 respectively.

The debtor’s own testimony as to the specifics of the amounts which he borrowed from the Indian Head National Bank was somewhat unclear due to a number of factors, one of which was that he had had many short term loans from the Indian Head National Bank, mostly on a 90-day note basis, between 1976 and 1984. The debtor did testify that most of those loans were in the $1,000 to $3,500 range but that there were some for $4,000 or $5,000.

As to his failure to list the outstanding $10,000 secured loan with New Hampshire Savings Bank on his March 1984 financial statement, the debtor now readily admits that he did leave this loan out of his application to the Indian Head Bank. The debt- or attributed his failure in this regard to the fact that he filled out the application with the Indian Head Bank quickly and following a “three martini lunch.” He thus attributes his failure to disclose the second mortgage loan with New Hampshire Savings Bank to the Indian Head National Bank, to a mistake rather than omitting it to fool anyone.

While the plaintiff, in support of its charge pursuant to § 523(a)(2)(B), also offered some evidence concerning undisclosed loans from the debtor’s son, from a David Pollard, and from the debtor’s former wife, Shirley Mitchell, the Bank’s evidence in this regard was inconclusive at best and the court hereby finds that any failure to disclose loans from these other people on the debtor’s March 1984 financial statement to the Indian Head Bank, so as to make a materially false written statement to the plaintiff Bank, were simply not proven at trial. Hence, the court hereby finds any allegations in this respect to be inadequate to support the determination that the debtor indebtedness to the Indian Head National Bank is nondischargeable under 11 U.S.C.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
74 B.R. 457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/indian-head-national-bank-v-mitchell-in-re-mitchell-nhb-1987.