McDonough v. Erdman (In Re Erdman)

96 B.R. 978, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 2330, 1988 WL 148341
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. North Dakota
DecidedOctober 11, 1988
Docket19-30075
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 96 B.R. 978 (McDonough v. Erdman (In Re Erdman)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. North Dakota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McDonough v. Erdman (In Re Erdman), 96 B.R. 978, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 2330, 1988 WL 148341 (N.D. 1988).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

WILLIAM A. HILL, Bankruptcy Judge.

This adversary proceeding was commenced by complaint of the Plaintiffs, Shirley McDonough, Kristine Solberg, and Karyn Ervin (Plaintiffs), filed January 22, 1988, asking that the Defendant/Debtor Emil Earl Erdman, Jr. (Erdman), be denied a discharge generally pursuant to section 727(a)(2), (a)(3), (a)(4)(A) and (B), (a)(5) and (a)(7). The plaintiffs allege that Erdman, preparatory to filing his Chapter 7 petition on June 26, 1987, concealed, converted and transferred assets and is unable to explain various asset deficiencies; failed to maintain records; made a false oath in connection with the case and otherwise engaged *980 in impermissible “exemption planning”. Erdman generally denies the allegations. Trial was held on August 24, 1988.

Findings of Fact

1.

After apprenticeship training, Erdman obtained employment as a mortician and funeral director with the Aarthun Funeral Home in July 1978. The Aarthun Funeral Home, situated in Beulah, North Dakota, was operated for many years as a sole proprietorship by Bernhard Aarthun and enjoyed an excellent reputation. Bernhard Aarthun became ill with cancer and passed away in 1979. Shortly thereafter the entire business comprising the Aarthun Funeral Home was sold to Erdman. The personal property and good will were sold by separate agreement in January 1980, for $109,000.00 and the real property consisting of a Beulah funeral home and a viewing chapel in Golden Valley, North Dakota were sold on contract for deed for $116,-000.00. Another viewing chapel in Hazen, North Dakota was rented from the Aar-thun estate for several years by Erdman who, in September 1982, purchased it on a contract for deed. The sale of the business included good will which, due to the highly personal nature of the funeral business, is difficult to value separate from the reputation and ability of the mortician/funeral director. Shirley McDonough, widow of Bernhard Aarthun, and Glen Goetz, an established North Dakota funeral director, both testified that the funeral business is one of often intangible service such as compassion and that the value of a particular funeral home’s good will depends upon who had the business. The only tangible basis for value is the number of pre-need contracts and the historical business volume.

Erdman incorporated the business as Erdman Funeral Home, Inc., in 1981 and operated the property formerly known as the Aarthun Funeral Home into 1986 when he began to miss payments on the contract for deed on the Beulah and Golden Valley property. About this time he and his wife began to experience marital problems. He and his wife were divorced by Decree entered December 4, 1986, and the plaintiffs shortly thereafter on December 17, 1986, commenced an action to cancel the contract for deed on the Beulah and Golden Valley properties and recover damages for breach of the funeral business purchase agreement. On February 17,1987, the plaintiffs obtained a judgment cancelling the contract for deed on the Beulah and Golden Valley properties as well as an award of $106,-528.97 for breach of the funeral home purchase agreement. The Beulah and Golden Valley properties formerly known as the Aarthun funeral home was sold in April of 1987 to another mortician for $72,000.00. Erdman continued his business under the name of Erdman Funeral Homes, Inc. at another Beulah location and also retained the funeral chapel in Hazen, renting it out to others for $750.00 per month. Approximately seven months following the December 1986 divorce, Erdman filed for relief under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code, relief being entered on June 26, 1987.

2.

Corporate tax returns prepared for the years 1982 through 1986 reveal that gross sales of Erdman’s funeral home business went from $207,000.00 in 1982 to a high of $358,000.00 in 1984 before plummeting to an estimated $82,600.00 in 1987. Net corporate income was only $6,137.00 in 1985, declining to minus $73,493.00 in 1986 and an estimated minus $80,574.00 for 1987. Corporate profit and loss statements prepared and maintained by an outside accounting firm substantiate this business decline as do the embalmer’ reports from the Clerk of Court for Mercer County. The report of cases handled by Erdman show 74 cases in calendar 84, 88 in calendar 85, 43 in calendar 86 and 35 in calendar 87. Erdman estimates that for 1988 he has thus far handled 60 cases. The average charge for a full service funeral is $3,500.00 which is consistent with the area, however, Erdman testified that not all of the cases in past years were full service funerals.

In connection with operating Erdman Funeral Home, Inc. from which he was paid a salary, Erdman also operated an unincorpo *981 rated monument business. Net profits from this business were $27,865.00 in 1982, $9,345.00 in 1983, minus $6,900.00 in 1984, $4,297.00 in 1985, and minus $6,057.00 in 1986. Until just before the bankruptcy filing there remained $2,332.00 in the monument business bank account.

In addition to providing him with a base monthly salary, the corporation paid his medical expenses and all transportation expenses. Beyond these expenses revealed in the corporate tax returns, Erdman also had the corporation issue him checks from time-to-time for personal expenses. Within the six months preceding his bankruptcy twenty-seven checks totaling $8,896.00 were drawn on the corporate account in favor of Erdman personally. These cash payments were in addition to regular salary checks.

The value of Erdman’s funeral business was the subject of considerable expert testimony during the state court divorce proceedings in December 1986. The divorce court in reaching a valuation averaged the profitability ratios of sales, rate of return on assets, and rate of return on equity, these figures themselves being developed by Federated Funeral Directors of America based on Erdman’s actual experience. Erd-man’s divorce trial expert put a value of $127,897.00 on the funeral home and monument businesses while his wife’s expert pegged it at $381,000.00. The divorce court placed an investment value of $175,-173.00 on the funeral home business and $25,000.00 on a monument business.

The bankruptcy schedules only reflection of any value attributable either to the funeral home business or monument business is 25,000 shares of Erdman Funeral Home worth $500.00. This stock was declared exempt under applicable North Dakota law and the monument business is not reflected anywhere in the schedules. Erdman testified that the monument business has no value except what he puts into it.

From testimony presented at trial it is apparent to the court that Erdman did not enjoy the same high reputation that Bern-hard Aarthun had. Several funeral directors familiar with Erdman testified that he had a reputation problem.

3.

At the time of the divorce in December 1986 Erdman owned directly or through the corporation fourteen vehicles worth a total of $100,000.00 all, save for a Porsche, were debt:free. Of these he was awarded nine valued at $68,000.00 in December 1986. The principal balance outstanding on Erdman’s home mortgage was $28,000.00. In December 1986 Erdman owned and was awarded an IRA valued by the divorce court at $14,341.00. He also owned a paid up $150,000.00 universal life insurance policy for which he paid $10,000.00.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
96 B.R. 978, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 2330, 1988 WL 148341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdonough-v-erdman-in-re-erdman-ndb-1988.