Lincoln Savings Bank v. Jay Freese

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedDecember 14, 2011
Docket11-6055
StatusPublished

This text of Lincoln Savings Bank v. Jay Freese (Lincoln Savings Bank v. Jay Freese) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lincoln Savings Bank v. Jay Freese, (bap8 2011).

Opinion

United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT

No. 11-6055

In re: * * Jay Freese, * * Debtor. * * Lincoln Savings Bank, * Appeal from the * United States Plaintiff-Appellee, * Bankruptcy Court for the * Northern District of Iowa v. * * Jay Freese, * * Defendant - Appellant. *

Submitted: November 18, 2011 Filed: December 14, 2011

Before SCHERMER, VENTERS and SALADINO, Bankruptcy Judges

SCHERMER, Bankruptcy Judge The Debtor, Jay Freese (the “Debtor”), appeals from the ruling of the bankruptcy court1 denying his discharge pursuant to 11 U.S.C. §727(a)(4).2 We have jurisdiction over this appeal from the final judgment of the bankruptcy court. See 28 U.S.C. § 158(b). For the reasons set forth below, we affirm.

ISSUE The issue on appeal is whether the bankruptcy court properly denied the Debtor’s discharge under §727(a)(4)(A).

BACKGROUND On September 10, 2009, the Debtor filed a voluntary petition for relief under Chapter 7 of Title 11 of the United States Code (the “Bankruptcy Code”). The Debtor’s Schedules and Statement of Financial Affairs were signed under oath and have not been amended. The Debtor listed one unsecured creditor and two secured creditors, one of which is the Appellee, Lincoln Savings Bank (the “Bank”).

The Bank brought an action seeking to deny the Debtor’s discharge based on, among other things, the making of a false oath in connection with numerous inaccurate statements made in his Schedules and Statements. In summary, the Bank produced evidence that the Debtor failed to disclose in his Schedules and Statements

1 The Honorable Paul J. Kilburg, United States Bankruptcy Judge for the Northern District of Iowa. 2 In his Notice of Appeal, the Debtor also indicates that he appeals from “any other preliminary orders therein, entered in this adversary proceeding on the 30th day of June, 2011, docket number 38 and docket number 39.” The only issue that the Debtor discussed in his briefs and at oral argument was the denial of his discharge under §727(a)(4), and this Court will consider any additional bases for appeal to be abandoned. We note that in the bankruptcy court, the Bank also sought denial of the Debtor’s discharge under §§727(a)(2), (3) and (5), but the bankruptcy court denied the Debtor’s discharge under only §727(a)(4). -2- and failed to satisfactorily explain the omissions of: (1) the existence of the Debtor’s livestock business; (2) the gross income from his livestock business; (3) over $25,000 of income from 2007; (4) transfers of two ATVs, a bobcat and a tractor; and (5) co- ownership of the car his wife drives.

According to the Bank, the Debtor provided false answers in response to Questions 1 and 18 on his Statement of Financial Affairs. Question 1 requires a debtor to “[s]tate the gross amount of income the debtor has received from employment, trade, or profession, or from the operation of the debtor’s business. . .” It requires this information for the calendar year when the bankruptcy petition was filed, and for the two years immediately preceding that calendar year. In response to Question 1, the Debtor included only income from his employment at USS Polaris, although he admitted in the parties’ Joint Pre-Trial Statement that “[d]uring the two years and nine months prior to the debtor’s filing of bankruptcy he engaged in a sole proprietorship under which he purchased and sold hogs.” The Debtor’s farming operations had gross income of $491,637 in 2007, and its expenses were $592,358 that year. The farming operations also operated at a loss in 2008, but it had gross income of $800,103 and expenses of $917,756.

The Debtor testified at the trial. He explained that he had a difficult time filling out the bankruptcy Schedules and Statements and claims that he did the best that he could, but that he read too much into the questions. He also explained that he was not attempting to mislead, conceal or defraud anyone and that he believes he answered the question on his Schedules and Statements correctly. At the same time, the Debtor has acknowledged that his Schedules and Statements do not disclose the following income for 2007: (a) $21,014 from First Choice Livestock LLC; and (b) $4,050 from Unique Swine System Inc.

The Debtor testified that he thought Question 1 on the Statement of Financial Affairs was asking for income that he made over his expenses. His understanding

-3- was that gross income was the amount if you make money and because he did not make money on his hog business, there was nothing for him to report. However, when asked about gross income from his employment at USS Polaris, the Debtor explained that he reported the amount he was paid before he paid his expenses, and the bankruptcy court found that with respect to his income from USS Polaris, “Debtor recognized that gross income was total income and net income was the actual amount he got paid.” In addition, the Debtor acknowledged that his hog operation had existed since 2002 and that it had nearly $2 million in sales. The Debtor explained that the $21,014 he received in 2007 from First Choice Livestock LLC represented a refund of his prepayment for medicine and additives for pigs. Prior to 2007, he had been a member of First Choice Livestock LLC. On appeal, the Debtor admitted that he simply forgot to disclose the $4,050 of income in 2007 from Unique Swine System Inc., a pig broker business for which the Debtor had worked in sales. The Debtor had also worked in sales for another company.

In response to Question 18 on the Statement of Financial Affairs, requesting information about a debtor’s businesses within six years before the bankruptcy filing, the Debtor indicated “None.” When asked about his hog business and farming, he explained that farming was not a business in his case and that “this was like hobby farming,” and noted that he had no land and rented all his buildings. The Debtor acknowledged, however, that in his 2007 U.S. Form 1040, he listed his occupation as “livestock manager.”

The Statement of Financial Affairs also asks a debtor to disclose for the two years prior to the filing of the case “all other property, other than property transferred in the ordinary course of the business or financial affairs of the debtor, transferred either absolutely or as security.” The Debtor’s Schedules and Statements do not include certain pre-petition transfers of property by the Debtor of equipment that he admittedly used at least some of the time in his hog business. The Debtor testified that within two years before he filed his bankruptcy petition, he sold a Bobcat S175

-4- and a Kubota tractor loader and put the proceeds in his retirement account. He traded a Polaris 700 ATV and a Polaris Ranger ATV with his employer for a corn stove. In finding that these items constituted a part of the Bank’s collateral, the bankruptcy court relied upon the Commercial Security Agreement dated July 19, 2007, which gave the Bank a security interest in “Equipment,” which was defined as: “Equipment: All equipment including, but not limited to, machinery, vehicles, furniture, fixtures, manufacturing equipment, farm machinery and equipment, shop equipment, office and record keeping equipment, parts and tools.” The Debtor testified, however, that he did not think the Bank took any collateral for its loan.3 He also claimed that the sales and transfer of the equipment were all made in the ordinary course of his financial affairs and did not need to be reported.

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