LINI, Inc. v. Schachter (In Re Schachter)

214 B.R. 767, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 1785, 1997 WL 705653
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 10, 1997
Docket14-10699
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 214 B.R. 767 (LINI, Inc. v. Schachter (In Re Schachter)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
LINI, Inc. v. Schachter (In Re Schachter), 214 B.R. 767, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 1785, 1997 WL 705653 (Pa. 1997).

Opinion

*770 OPINION

DAVID A. SCHOLL, Chief Judge.

A. INTRODUCTION

Presently at issue in this individual voluntary Chapter 7 case of a married man, SYLVAN SCHACHTER (“the Debtor”), are the objections of LINI, INC. (“the Plaintiff’) to both his discharge and many of his claimed exemptions. We find the evidence of the Debtor’s significant fraudulent post-petition transfers and his inability to explain his expenditures of $250,000 realized in a 1990 mortgage refinancing transaction and of his unreported income are sufficient to deny his discharge under 11 U.S.C. §§ 727(a)(2)(B) and (a)(5). We therefore need not decide whether the Debtor’s pervasive omissions and misstatements on his Schedules and Statement of Financial Affairs (“the Statement”) would justify a denial of discharge under § 727(a)(4)(A) when the § 727(a)(4) claim pleaded sounds only under § 727(a)(4)(D).

We find the Plaintiffs objections to the Debtor’s exemptions timely, since they were filed within 30 days of an amendment changing his election of federal exemptions to state exemptions. We conclude that the exemptions claimed for two residences owned by the Debtor and his nondebtor wife by entire-ties and a few other items claimed are allowable as to the Plaintiff, since it is not a joint creditor. However, the cars and boat titled to the Debtor only at the time that the case was filed and numerous items of property omitted from the Schedules entirely, including significant bank accounts, cannot be claimed as exempt.

B. PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The bankruptcy case in issue was filed on February 20, 1997. Barry A. Solodky, Esquire (“the Trustee”), conducted the meeting of creditors on April 21,1997. His postmeeting letters to the Debtor’s counsel, Richard H. Elliott, Esquire, indicate that the Trustee withheld filing a no-asset report pending receipt of amendments to the Debtor’s Schedules. The original Schedules claim the following property as exempt under 11 U.S.C. § 522(b)(1), which invokes the federal allowances at § 522(d): residences in New Hope, Pennsylvania, and Florida, both held as tenancies by the entireties with his nondebtor wife and valued at $600,000 and $250,000, respectively; a checking account balance of $1,236; a pension of $147; and a 1990 Volvo automobile, a 1988 Chevrolet truck, and a skiff valued at $4,000, $1,500, and $2,000, respectively. On June 7, 1997, the Debtor filed amended Schedules listing the same property at the same values, except for the minor additions, e.g., a 1978 Oldsmobile valued at $100, but referencing § 522(b)(2), which invokes Pennsylvania state law exemptions.

On June 6, 1997, the Plaintiff, a creditor whose federal litigation against the Debtor was halted by the bankruptcy filing on the eve of trial, filed objections to the Debtor’s amended exemption claims (“the Objections”). And on June 20, 1997, the Plaintiff filed the instant adversary proceeding (“the Proceeding”) challenging the Debtor’s discharge under §§ 727(a)(2), (a)(3), (a)(4), (a)(5), and (a)(6), and the dischargeability of its own particular debt under § 523(a)(2).

On June 30, 1997, the Trustee wrote to Elliott, stating, in relevant part, as follows:

You should ... consider this letter as an objection to claim of exemption until the requested documentation is provided. The Trustee has not yet filed his Reports with the court and will not do so until I receive all information requested at the 341 Meeting. Any Reports filed with the court will indicate that the First Meeting was not concluded but was continued until a later date when all information is supplied____

The record also contains later letters from the Trustee to Elliott in which the Trustee indicates that he believes that $37,174.58 located in a bank account of the Debtor is not held in trust, is therefore property of his estate, and is not exempt. However, no further efforts by the Trustee to “complete” the meeting of creditors are referenced in the record.

The Objections were initially scheduled for a hearing on July 16,1997. This hearing was continued to the initial trial date of the Proceeding on August 6, 1997. Both matters were continued on a must-be-tried basis until *771 September 30,1997, at which time they were heard together in a six-hour trial. Representing the Debtor at trial with Elliott was John F. Murphy, Esquire, an experienced bankruptcy attorney who served as a law clerk for several years to two different chief bankruptcy judges. The parties were directed to file briefs by October 14, 1997 (the Plaintiff), and October 28, 1997 (the Debtor). On September 4, 1997, in response to the Trustee’s advice that he considered this an asset ease, he was accorded until March 2, 1998, to file Final Audit papers in this case.

C. FACTUAL HISTORY

The only witnesses adding to the Debtor’s lengthy testimony, mostly adduced as of cross-examination by the Plaintiff, were two experts called by the Plaintiff, Stephen Scherf, an accountant and “certified fraud examiner,” who commented on the Debtor’s tax returns; and Celia Woronowiez, a computer engineer, whose proffered expert testimony was not admitted by this court.

The principal business of the Debtor, who is in his late 60’s, for the last twelve (12) years has been serving as sole proprietor of General Services Group (“GSG”), a business which markets extended motor vehicle warranties through automobile dealerships. The Plaintiff’s claims arose from a side venture in which Robert Bell, the husband of the Debt- or’s former bookkeeper Stephanie Bell, was the principal. The Debtor claimed that his liability to the Plaintiff arose from embezzlements by the Bells. The factual allegations in the Complaint address, for the most part, the Plaintiffs transactions with Robert Bell. However, the testimony at trial did not focus extensively on this venture and little evidence of any such embezzlement was presented.

What the testimony did focus upon was the substantial assets of the Debtor which were the subject of prepetition and post-petition transfers and the failure of the Debtor to identify certain assets or these transfers in his bankruptcy Schedules. It was established that, on that date of filing, the Debtor had $52,420.87 in a GSG bank account, not including $15,000 which he deposited on that date into an undisclosed joint bank account. On February 25, 1997, five days after the filing, he deposited another $5,000 into another undisclosed joint bank account in Florida. The Debtor also established a new joint account at another local bank into which he deposited $7,500 on March 12, 1997, and a total of about-$65,000 in the month of March. Further, the Debtor deposited $1,000 into his wife’s checking account in March 1997 and $6,689 into that account in April 1997, the source of the funds for which he denied recalling. On September 11,1997, the Debt- or withdrew $100,000 from the GSG account and gave it to his wife to purchase a certificate of deposit.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
214 B.R. 767, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 1785, 1997 WL 705653, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lini-inc-v-schachter-in-re-schachter-paeb-1997.