Irish Bank Resolution Corp. v. Drumm (In re Drumm)

524 B.R. 329
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedJanuary 6, 2015
DocketBankruptcy No. 10-21198-FJB; Adversary Nos. 11-1267, 11-1268
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 524 B.R. 329 (Irish Bank Resolution Corp. v. Drumm (In re Drumm)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Irish Bank Resolution Corp. v. Drumm (In re Drumm), 524 B.R. 329 (Mass. 2015).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION

FRANK J. BAILEY, Bankruptcy Judge.

By their complaints in the above-captioned adversary proceedings, creditor Irish Bank Resolution Corporation Limited (in Special Liquidation) (“IBRC”) and chapter 7 trustee Kathleen P. Dwyer (the “Trustee”) (collectively “the Plaintiffs”) object to the discharge of debtor David K. Drumm (“Drumm” or “the Debtor”) on numerous bases. For the most part, the Plaintiffs allege that Drumm, under oath, knowingly and fraudulently failed to disclose and otherwise concealed prepetition transfers to his wife of cash and real estate that would be subject to avoidance and recovery in bankruptcy. Drumm admits many of the misrepresentations but denies that they were knowing or fraudulent. After a six-day consolidated trial of the two adversary proceedings, I now enter the following findings of fact and conclusions of law. Finding Drumm not remotely credible and his conduct both knowing and fraudulent, I conclude that the Plaintiffs have established cause to deny him a discharge many times over. Drumm’s statements to this Court were replete with knowingly false statements, failures to disclose, efforts to misdirect, and outright lies. Such conduct disqualifies a debtor from the privilege of a discharge in our system of bankruptcy.

PARTIES AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

a. Complaints and Trial

Drumm filed a voluntary petition for relief under chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code on October 14, 2010 (the “Petition Date”), thereby commencing the present bankruptcy case. Kathleen Dwyer was appointed trustee in the case on October 15, 2010 and since then has served continuously in that capacity.

IBRC was formerly known as Anglo Irish Bank and, under that name, was a commercial bank in Ireland. From 2005 through most of 2008, Drumm was its chief executive officer. After a catastrophic few months for the bank, Drumm resigned this position on December 19, 2008. The bank was nationalized in January 2009, renamed more than once, and entered into “special liquidation” under Irish law. It is now referred to as “Irish Bank Resolution Corporation Limited (in Special Liquidation).” On the Petition Date, Drumm was indebted to IBRC in an amount exceeding $11 million on account of loans made to him by the bank.1 IBRC is by far Drumm’s largest creditor. Drumm does not dispute IBRC’s standing to object to his discharge.

On August 31, 2011, the Trustee and IBRC filed the complaints commencing the present adversary proceedings. Each asserts various objections under 11 U.S.C. § 727(a)(4)(A) (false oaths), (a)(2)(A) (pre-petition fraudulent transfers and concealment), and (a)(2)(B) (postpetition concealment of property of the estate) to granting Drumm a discharge. IBRC’s complaint also asserts an objection under § 727(a)(4)(B) (presentation or use of a false claim). Drumm moved to dismiss the Trustee’s complaint as untimely, and the court denied that motion. The Court then consolidated the two adversary proceedings for discovery, pretrial proceedings, and trial. IBRC has also filed a separate [336]*336complaint to determine the dischargeability of its claim against Drumm; the adversary proceeding thereby commenced is being held in abeyance by agreement until resolution of the present matters.

The Plaintiffs’ complaints in the present adversary proceedings are arranged into counts corresponding to the subsections of 11 U.S.C. § 727(a) under which their various objections to discharge are asserted, but under subsection (a)(4)(A), the complaints assert numerous false oaths, each of which, if proven, would constitute a basis for denial of discharge. Though the complaints did not fail to plead each with sufficient particularity, the sheer number of discrete bases for denial of discharge that they collectively asserted cried out for organization. Accordingly, at the final pretrial conference, the Court ordered the Plaintiffs to jointly file an itemized list of the acts of fraud, misrepresentations, con-cealments, transfers, and other predicate acts that provide their bases for relief under 11 U.S.C. § 727(a). They filed this itemized list on May 19, 2014 (the “Itemized List”).

The adversary proceedings were tried over six days. Six witnesses testified: (1) Drumm; (2) Stewart Grossman (“Gross-man”), an attorney and partner at the firm of Looney & Grossman, LLP (“L & G”), who represented and counseled Drumm in the bankruptcy case; (3) Heather Zelevin-sky (“Zelevinsky”), an attorney and a former associate at L & G, who also worked with Drumm on his case; (4) Lorraine Drumm (“Mrs. Drumm”), Drumm’s spouse; (5) Peter-Paul Covo (“Covo”), an attorney who represented the Drumms in connection with their purchase of a home in Wellesley, Massachusetts; and (6) the Trustee. The parties submitted stipulated facts, and numerous exhibits were admitted into evidence. The Plaintiffs further introduced into evidence designations of Drumm’s prior deposition testimony and Drumm’s responses to Plaintiffs’ Requests for Admission.

At the close of the trial, the Plaintiffs jointly moved to amend their complaints to incorporate the evidence presented at trial and to incorporate each of the allegations set forth in Plaintiffs’ Itemized List. The motion, being unopposed, was granted on June 3, 2014.

b. The Counts

As articulated in their Itemized List, the Plaintiffs have proceeded on and now seek adjudication of fifty-two discrete objections to discharge. There are few disputes of law; most counts turn on findings of fact. The counts, and the factual issues each presents, are as follows:2

i. False Oaths Under § 727(a)(4)(A)

Counts 1-9: The Plaintiffs allege that Drumm knowingly and fraudulently omitted from his original Statement of Financial Affairs (“Original SOFA”), item 10a (“item 10a” or “SOFA-10”3), nine discrete transfers of cash from himself to his wife. Drumm admits the false representations under oath but denies that they were knowing or fraudulent and blames his attorneys for these errors.

Count Date of Transfer Originating Account Receiving Account Amount
[337]*3371 November 3,2008 Joint account at Allied Mrs. Drumm’s Allied Q80,000 Irish Bank (“Allied”), Fixed Term account _account ending in 010 ending in 080_
2 November 3,2008 Debtor’s Anglo account Mrs. Drumm’s Anglo Q50,000 _ending in 668_account ending in 39/01_
3 December 12, 2008 Joint Allied account, Mrs. Drumm’s Allied Q180,000 ending in 010 Fixed Term account _ending in 247_
4 December 15,2008 Joint Allied account, Mrs. Drumm’s Allied Q372,561 ending in 010 Fixed Term account _ending in 247_
5 June 15,2009 Joint Cape Cod Five Mrs. Drumm’s Allied $99,991.05 Cents Savings Bank U.S. Dollar hold ac-(“Cape Cod”) account, count, ending in 500 _ending in 8424_
6 September 12, 2009 Debtor’s Cape Cod ac- Joint Cape Cod ac- $1,500.00 _count, ending in 9109 count, ending in 7073_

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
524 B.R. 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/irish-bank-resolution-corp-v-drumm-in-re-drumm-mab-2015.