Marrama v. Citizens Bank of Massachusetts

445 F.3d 518, 55 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1826, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 9883, 2006 WL 1028771
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedApril 20, 2006
Docket05-1858
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 445 F.3d 518 (Marrama v. Citizens Bank of Massachusetts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marrama v. Citizens Bank of Massachusetts, 445 F.3d 518, 55 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1826, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 9883, 2006 WL 1028771 (1st Cir. 2006).

Opinion

*520 LIPEZ, Circuit Judge.

After Robert Marrama filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy protection, Citizens Bank contended that Marrama should be denied a discharge because he recently had transferred assets to defraud his creditors. See 11 U.S.C. § 727(a)(2)(A). The bankruptcy court entered summary judgement for the bank. Marrama appealed to the district court, which sustained the bankruptcy court’s judgment. On Marrama’s further appeal, we too conclude that summary judgment was appropriate and affirm.

I.

We review the facts in the light most favorable to Marrama, the non-mov-ant in the summary judgment proceedings. Medeiros v. Vincent, 431 F.3d 25, 29 (1st Cir.2005). 1 Before his bankruptcy filing, Marrama owned RLM Flooring, a small Massachusetts company that sold and installed flooring products. RLM Flooring maintained a line of credit with Citizens Bank, which Marrama had guaranteed personally. When Marrama’s flooring business ran into problems, Citizens demanded repayment of the line of credit— roughly $255,000 — in June 2002. Two weeks later, Citizens commenced a Massachusetts state court collection action. In August, the state court granted Citizens the authority to seize RLM Flooring and sell its assets. At the same time, that court also ordered Marrama not to dispose of any personal assets except to pay for his normal living expenses. Citizens liquidated Marrama’s flooring business, but sale of the company’s assets failed to satisfy the bank’s claim.

Meanwhile, Marrama made some unusual personal financial transactions. In July 2002, Marrama refinanced a vacation home he owned in York, Maine. In connection with the refinancing, Marrama received $118,000 in cash. He deposited these proceeds into a Maine bank account he held jointly with his girlfriend, Josephine Bol-leterio. From the joint account, he withdrew approximately $8,000, which he told the trustee that he used, at least in part, to pay certain personal and business creditors. Then he transferred roughly $109,000 into an account standing in Bol-leterio’s name alone, leaving only a small sum in the joint account. In late August 2002 — after the Massachusetts court ordered him not to transfer any assets— Marrama used the York property to fund “the Bo-Mar Realty Trust,” a spendthrift trust of which Bolleterio is the trustee. The York home is the trust’s only asset, and Marrama is its only beneficiary. Mar-rama later testified that he placed the home into the trust to “try to protect it.”

In March 2003, Marrama petitioned for Chapter 7 bankruptcy protection. On forms and schedules he filed with his bankruptcy petition, Marrama disclosed his beneficial interest in the Bo-Mar trust but stated, under penalty of perjury, that he had not transferred any assets during the previous year. Marrama later termed his failure to disclose the transfer of the York home a scrivener’s error. Marrama does not point to anything in the record suggesting an excuse for his failure to disclose his deposit of the refinancing proceeds into Bolleterio’s solo account.

Citizens soon filed a bankruptcy court adversary action to deny Marrama a discharge. The bank contended that Marra-ma had forfeited his right to a discharge *521 by transferring the York home to the trust; by transferring the refinancing proceeds to Bolleterio; and by transferring $40,000 to the lawyer who represented him in state court, 2 also less than a year before his petition for bankruptcy protection. Any of these allegedly fraudulent transfers could constitute an independent ground for denying Marrama a discharge, pursuant to § 727(a)(2)(A). 3

Contentious proceedings followed. Citizens demanded discovery testimony from Marrama. Marrama answered certain inquiries from the bankruptcy trustee. But, in reaction to Citizens’s insistent complaints about his “bankruptcy crimes,” Marrama cited the Fifth Amendment and refused to respond to Citizens’s questions about the transfers to the trust, Bolleterio, and his lawyer.

The bankruptcy court granted the bank’s motion for summary judgment. Ruling from the bench, the court concluded:

[T]he bank has certainly made a prima facie case that ... disclosures were not made that should have been made, that transfers were made that should have been reported. All these things are set out in the motion for summary judgment, and if standing alone with no opposition would certainly justify the granting of summary judgment and the denial of Marrama’s discharge.
One of the problems here is that the defendant debtor is in the unenviable position of wishing to claim the Fifth Amendment and defending against a motion for summary judgment. Now he claims that the bank is unable to give proof of evidence that he intended to defraud, but at the same time he claims that the bank is not prejudiced. But there’s no way to find out his intent if he’s claiming the Fifth because he won’t tell us what his intent was. Indeed, I can and will draw a negative inference from the fact that he is standing mute when it comes to these matters which are civil and not criminal.
When I come to the response to the motion for summary [judgment], which I permitted to be filed in open court today, and I look over it, I don’t find anything that contradicts the assertions made in the bank’s moving papers to the extent that they are necessary for me to grant summary judgment.

Marrama’s appeal to the district court focused on the bankruptcy court’s determination that it could draw a negative inference, in summary judgment proceedings, from Marrama’s invocation of the Fifth Amendment in adversarial discovery proceedings. Marrama argued that such an inference was inconsistent with the maxim that, on summary judgment, inferences are drawn in favor of the non-movant. The district court was unconvinced by Marra-ma’s argument but concluded that, even without any negative inference, the record warranted summary judgment for the bank.

II.

On further appeal, Marrama again claims that the bankruptcy court drew an *522 impermissible inference from his invocation of his Fifth Amendment rights. Mar-rama admits that he transferred property-less than one year before his bankruptcy petition. He contends only that, without an inference drawn against him, the summary judgment record does not permit a conclusion that Marrama intended to defraud his creditors when he made the transfers.

We have recognized that four elements are required to deny a discharge pursuant to § 727(a)(2)(A): (1) transfer or concealment of property (2) that belonged to the debtor (3) less than a year before the bankruptcy petition (4) with actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud a creditor. See In re Schifano, 378 F.3d 60

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Bluebook (online)
445 F.3d 518, 55 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1826, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 9883, 2006 WL 1028771, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marrama-v-citizens-bank-of-massachusetts-ca1-2006.