Matter of Whitehurst

198 B.R. 981, 1996 Bankr. LEXIS 967, 1996 WL 444935
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Alabama
DecidedApril 23, 1996
Docket16-04074
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 198 B.R. 981 (Matter of Whitehurst) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Whitehurst, 198 B.R. 981, 1996 Bankr. LEXIS 967, 1996 WL 444935 (Ala. 1996).

Opinion

ORDER DISMISSING CASE

BENJAMIN COHEN, Bankruptcy Judge.

The matter subject to this order is a Motion to Dismiss, Convert, or in the Alternative, Appoint a Trustee filed on January 5, 1996 by the United States Bankruptcy Administrator (“BA”). A trial was held on March 19, 1996. 1 Donald G. Wright and *982 Stephen Porterfield, attorneys for the debt- or; J. Thomas Corbett, attorney for the BA; and Richard O’Neal, attorney for the IRS, appeared. 2 No testimony was offered. The facts were uncontested. Two exhibits, one consisting of several documents, were admitted into evidence without objection. The parties stipulated to the other facts. The matter was submitted on those facts, the exhibits, the record and pleadings from the case and arguments of counsel.

I. Introduction

The debtor contends that a confirmed chapter 11 plan affords his creditors the best prospect of payment; consequently, he asks the Court to deny the BA’s motion and allow his case to continue to confirmation. The BA and the IRS contend that the ease should be converted or dismissed, and of the two options both prefer conversion. 3 The BA and the IRS base then- common position on the debtor’s performance as a debtor in possession and both draw the conclusion that the debtor will not make a good faith commitment to achieve confirmation. For the reasons explained below, the Court finds that this case should be dismissed. 4

In summary the Court finds:

(A) in contravention of this Court’s Chapter 11 Operating Order the debtor failed to file chapter 11 operating reports; 5
(B) of the reports the debtor did file many were incorrect and misleading; 6
(C) the debtor failed to pay post-petition taxes for almost two years which demonstrates a lack of good faith, especially considering that the debtor’s admitted purpose for filing this case was to negotiate a repayment plan for unpaid pre-petition taxes and that during the pendency of this case the debtor’s personal income exceeded $400,000.00 per year; 7 and,
(D) the debtor failed to act as a fiduciary for his creditors when he failed to follow this Court’s operating order and failed to pay his post-petition taxes; such failures reveal that if this ease continues, the debt- or will not act as a fiduciary for his creditors or make a good faith attempt to effectuate a plan of reorganization. 8

*983 II. Bases for Dismissal or Conversion

A. Failing to File Chapter 11 Operating Reports

Pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 1107(a) this Court enters a standard Chapter 11 Operating Order in every chapter 11 case filed in the Southern Division of the Northern District of Alabama. 9 The Chapter 11 order entered in this case on January 28, 1994 required the debtor to complete specific forms and to file those forms with the Court at specific times. 10 There is no dispute that the debtor either did not file the reports or did not file them timely. 11

B. Filing Inaccurate Chapter 11 Operating Reports

Individual BA-01, a form consisting of four affirmations and an accounting of bank balances, is one of the forms required to be filed with the Court every month an individual remains as a debtor in possession. That form reads in part:

AS THE DEBTOR IN POSSESSION, I AFFIRM THAT THE RESPONSES TO THE QUESTIONS BELOW ARE TRUE TO THE BEST OF MY KNOWLEDGE AND BELIEF.
1. YES_NO_ Ail post petition personal taxes are being withheld and/or all estimated taxes are being paid as they come due.

The form ends with this certification:

I CERTIFY THAT THE ABOVE INFORMATION IS TRUE TO THE BEST OF MY KNOWLEDGE AND BELIEF.

A signature line and a date line are provided.

At the hearing on these matters the attorneys of the debtor, the Internal Revenue Service and the United States Bankruptcy Administrator agreed that the debtor had not made 1995 estimated income tax deposits for any quarter of the calendar year 1995 12 . At the hearing on this matter the Court asked about the status of the debtor’s tax liability. This exchange with counsel reads in part:

The Court: What about ’95?
IRS Counsel: The IRS is here today for the purpose of verifying that no deposits, no tax deposits, no estimated tax payments were made by Dr. Whitehurst during the tax year 1995, during the *984 period, calendar year 1995 to be applied to the 1995 tax liability.

Debtor’s Counsel: Judge we don’t dispute the failure to pay in ’95....

Unofficial Transcript of Official Court Recording. 13

The Individual BA-01 forms that comprise part of composite BA Exhibit 2 were signed by the debtor for the months of January 1995 through December 1995. These forms are in absolute disagreement with the debtor’s tax payment history. In every instance where the debtor filed a BA-01 report he marked “YES,” that all post-petition personal taxes were being withheld or all estimates were being paid when due. Given this conflict, the Court must assume that the debtor either intentionally filed false information with the Court or that he has so little regard for this Court’s proceedings that he was indifferent to the affirmations he made. 14

C. Demonstrating Lack of Good Faith

The uncontested facts demonstrate that during his chapter 11 case the debtor had the ability to pay his taxes. And although he had that ability, rather than paying his taxes, the debtor chose to make other expenditures. While the debtor maintained an annual personal income of over $400,000.00 he did not, for most of 1994 or for any of 1995, pay post-petition taxes. These actions reveal a lack good faith. 15

The debtor’s admitted purpose for filing this case was to negotiate a plan of repayment of past due, pre-petition taxes.

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Bluebook (online)
198 B.R. 981, 1996 Bankr. LEXIS 967, 1996 WL 444935, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-whitehurst-alnb-1996.