Long v. Turner

134 F.3d 312, 1998 WL 20802
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 6, 1998
Docket96-11468
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 134 F.3d 312 (Long v. Turner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Long v. Turner, 134 F.3d 312, 1998 WL 20802 (5th Cir. 1998).

Opinion

GARWOOD, Circuit Judge:

Plaintiffs-appellees Long, et al., (appellees) brought this Texas law diversity action against defendant Kenneth Turner (Turner), individually, and defendant-appellant Fir-strust Corporation (Firstrust) seeking a declaratory judgment, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2201, that appellees had been released from liability on a judgment by the Resolution Trust Corporation (RTC), Firstrust’s predecessor in interest as owner of the judgment. Firstrust now appeals the district court’s determination that the debt had been released through the issuance of Internal Revenue Service (IRS) forms 1099A and that Firstrust is not entitled to attorneys’ fees. Appellees cross-appeal the denial of their attorneys’ fees. Concluding that the district court misapplied Texas law concerning the release of a debt, we reverse the declaratory judgment, but affirm the court’s decision denying attorneys’ fees to both parties.

Facts and Proceedings Below

The current dispute concerns the legal significance of IRS forms 1099A that were issued by the RTC to appellees, who owed an outstanding judgment, then owned by the RTC, on an unpaid loan that they had guaranteed.

The fifteen male appellees guaranteed a loan from MeraBank, Texas, FSB to I.G.P., Inc. in 1984. When the loan went unpaid, MeraBank pursued the debt against the eighteen guarantors and the borrower, I.G.P., and eventually obtained a judgment on August 23,1990, for the principal of $113,-000, plus attorneys’ fees and interest, against appellees jointly and severally.

Shortly thereafter, in 1991, MeraBank experienced financial difficulties of its own, the immediate result of which was that the Office of Thrift Supervision ordered a pass-through receivership into a new entity (New Mera-Bank Texas, FSB) that was placed into con-servatorship with the RTC. As conservator, the RTC assumed control over New Mera-Bank’s assets, including the I.G.P. loan and the outstanding judgment against appellees. 1

*315 In January 1992, while New MeraBank was in conservatorship, an IRS form 1099A, entitled “Acquisition or Abandonment of Secured Property,” was issued by New Mera-Bank in its name to each appellee (in respect to calendar year 1991) reflecting his pro rata share of the outstanding judgment principal, excluding attorneys’ fees and interest. 2 The district court found that the 1099s were issued “so that the borrower/judgment debtor could report on his or her [federal income] tax return the event of the forgiveness of the indebtedness and the benefit conferred.” 3 Two months later, in March 1992, the “Asset Manager” of the RTC, in its capacity as conservator of New MeraBank, made a request to write off the I.G.P. promissory note. 4 The write-off request was approved by the RTC Managing Agent on March 17, 1992, and the loan file was transferred to the RTC’s Asset Recovery Division. On April 3, 1992, the New MeraBank went into receivership, with the RTC acting as receiver.

On November 15, 1992, in its capacity as New MeraBank’s receiver, the RTC sold the outstanding August 23,1990, judgment. The RTC executed a “Quitclaim Assignment of Judgment,” which transferred the RTC’s rights under the judgment against appellees to Firstrust Corporation without recourse, representation, or warranty.

Thereafter, much to the dismay of appel-lees, Firstrust attempted to collect on the judgment and initiated a state court garnishment action. Believing that the judgment debt had been released by the RTC, as conservator of New MeraBank, appellees brought the instant action, seeking a declaration from the district court that the debt had been discharged by the issuance to them of the 1099A forms. Additionally, they also asserted claims of wrongful garnishment, conversion, unreasonable collection efforts, and negligence.

The case was tried to the court without a jury in July 1996. The district court, in its Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, ruled that the RTC, in its capacity as conservator of New MeraBank, had entirely released appellees of the judgment debt through its issuance to them of the 1099A forms, and, thus, that the judgment which Firstrust had subsequently purchased from the RTC was no longer enforceable against appellees. The court denied appellees’ other claims, found no liability as to Turner individ *316 ually, and did not award attorneys’ fees to either party.

We reverse the district court’s ruling as to the release of the judgment debt through issuance of the 1099A forms, but affirm the court’s denial of attorneys’ fees to both parties. 5

Discussion

I. Enforceability of the Judgment

In this appeal, the primary issue we are asked to decide is whether, under Texas law, a creditor releases a debt by issuing to the debtor an IRS form 1099A in respect thereto and then writing the debt off.

The district court found that “the issuance of the 1099A forms by the RTC evidenced their intent to forgive the debt ... and their intent to write off the judgment debt.” The court also found that “the write-off of the judgment debt and the issuance of the 1099 forms was inconsistent with the further enforcement of the judgment” and that “[t]he judgment debt was forgiven.” In its conclusions of law, the court determined that “the RTC released the judgments when they issued the 1099 forms,” “[t]he judgment involved in this case is not subject to continued enforcement,” and “[t]he judgment being satisfied by the issuance of a 1099, that event occurring before assignment of the judgment creditor (RTC), the satisfaction thus bars the assignee (the defendant FirstTrust Corporation) from enforcing the judgment.” The court did not cite any principle of Texas law that would lend credence to these conclusions concerning release, satisfaction, or discharge of the judgment debt. In its judgment, the district court declared “that the Resolution Trust Corporation released judgments [sic] against the Plaintiffs ... so that Defendants cannot now collect from Plaintiffs on those judgments [sic].”

Even if the court was correct that the issuance of a 1099A form is evidence of an intent in some sense to “forgive” the debt, we find, as a matter of Texas law, that such an intent alone is insufficient to release or discharge a debt. 6 Furthermore, we hold that a write-off of a debt on the creditor’s books is an accounting practice that does not of itself amount to a discharge or release of the debt.

A. Release or Discharge of Debt

It is well established in Texas that the mere communicated intent to forgive, without some further action by the creditor or debtor, cannot be the basis of a debt release or discharge.

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Long v. Turner
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
134 F.3d 312, 1998 WL 20802, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/long-v-turner-ca5-1998.