Mega Enterprises, Inc. v. Lahiri (In Re Lahiri)

225 B.R. 582, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 1287, 1998 WL 725235
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 14, 1998
Docket15-15977
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 225 B.R. 582 (Mega Enterprises, Inc. v. Lahiri (In Re Lahiri)) 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
Mega Enterprises, Inc. v. Lahiri (In Re Lahiri), 225 B.R. 582, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 1287, 1998 WL 725235 (Pa. 1998).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION 1

JUDITH K. FITZGERALD, Bankruptcy Judge.

Before the court is the complaint of Mega Enterprises and Seymour Weiss to determine whether a debt is nondischargeable under 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(2)(A), § 523(a)(2)(B), or § 523(a)(6). The complaint originally included a count under § 523(a)(4), but that *585 count was withdrawn at the conclusion of trial.

The facts as established at trial are not complex. Mr. Weiss was a friend of Mr. Lahiri’s (Debtor). Through Mega Enterprises, Weiss owned and operated a steel brokerage business. He purchased steel on his own account and resold it to another broker or to an end user like Debtor. Debtor operated a corporation known as LEI Products Corporation (hereafter “LEI”), a company that produced steel slats and overhead doors. The business relationship of the parties ran from February, 1991, until June, 1992. Weiss would receive an order from Debtor on behalf of LEI, either for galvanized steel coils or for ungalvanized steel sheets. Weiss would ñnd a supplier and purchase the required product on his own account. Debtor would specify whether the shipment was to be made to a location where it would undergo additional preparation before it was utilized for manufacturing or whether Debtor would pick it up. In the first instance, Weiss would direct his supplier to deliver it. If Debtor was to pick up the steel, Weiss would notify Debtor when the steel was available. Weiss had credit terms from his suppliers and typically had to pay invoices within 30 or 45 days. In turn, he extended credit and required payment in full within 30 days. Weiss also offered a discount for payments made within ten days. During the course of their dealings, LEI ordered about a million tons of steel from Weiss, for a total price of $193,-655.24. 2 Unfortunately, LEI issued payments, via checks on its bank account generally signed by Debtor, for only $135,000 of that amount, and of the $135,000 sent to Weiss, 15 checks were returned on account of insufficient funds. Weiss received payments of $108,188.40 and, as of the date the bankruptcy was filed, was owed $85,466.84 against his invoices. Weiss’s out of pocket cost for the $193,000 of invoiced product was approximately $150,000.

After several months of transactions, payments were in arrears and 60 days or more delinquent. However, Weiss charged interest on the late payments, which was paid, and so Weiss continued to do business. Nonetheless, the situation got worse, at which point Weiss decided that the arrears were too great and Weiss could not tolerate the risk of nonpayment. As a result, Weiss stopped ordering steel for LEI. By August of 1991, LEI, which had continued to make payments even though it could not order new product from Weiss, had paid the debt down to about $7,000. In October, 1991, Debtor approached Weiss with a request to purchase more steel, and Weiss again transacted business with Debtor, on behalf of LEI. The pattern of making partial payments continued. Debtor would issue a check on LEI’s account that would clear, then another that would not. The 15 “NSF” checks were interspersed with many checks for which funds were available. At first, Debtor replaced the “NSF” checks but later failed to do so or, on one occasion, issued a replacement check that also was returned for insufficient funds.

Because checks that cleared were mixed with those that did not, Weiss adopted a practice of holding the steel until he received a check. Upon receipt of payment, Weiss would notify Debtor that steel was available and release it. Even this was not enough to insure that checks did not bounce, however. Debtor always promised to clear the deficiency but he did not do so. By June of 1992, Weiss stopped all business dealings with Debtor and LEI.

LEI’s nonpayment created a financial drain on Weiss, who had to borrow money from his bank and from his children in order to pay his own steel suppliers. The bank required his wife to sign the line of credit and took a mortgage on the marital home as security for repayment. Weiss used $80,000 of his available line to repay his suppliers. His reputation in the business was in jeopardy because he was unable to pay for the steel he ordered for LEI. His suppliers refused to sell to him until he paid them.

Debtor conceded that the “NSF” checks totaled $24,751.46. He contends that he repaid $4,470 of that amount pursuant to an order of restitution entered against him in a state court criminal proceeding and Plaintiffs agree that Debtor completed payments due *586 under an order entered in that proceeding. 3 Thus, Weiss is still owed $80,996.84. However, Mega Enterprises and Weiss seek a declaration that damages of $175,174.86 are nondischargeable, on the theory that Mega Enterprises has a non-preferential judgment against Debtor for that amount, issued on or about November 23, 1994, in the Court of Common Pleas for Montgomery County, Pennsylvania.

On the record in this challenge to dis-chargeability, Mega Enterprises failed to prove that it was owed $175,174.86. However, it clearly established that it is owed in excess of $80,000 for unpaid steel products and Weiss established that, to repay his suppliers, he and his wife borrowed funds from relatives and from a lender who took a mortgage on their home as security. Weiss must repay the secured lender. The evidence supports the conclusion that Mega Enterprises and Weiss were damaged by $80,996.84.

Debtor offered several lines of defense, none of which the court finds credible. His first was that of the one million pounds of steel he purchased from Weiss, 243,000 pounds were nonconforming and, therefore, were rejected. Debtor had no documents to support this testimony. Weiss, on the other hand, had business records available to support his testimony that only 10,300 pounds had been questioned. As to that quantity, Debtor kept the steel in exchange for a $1700 credit against LEI’s account with Weiss. Debtor also testified that LEI had paid between $18,000 and $19,000 in cash toward this obligation, for which no credit had been given. Once again, Debtor had no documents, receipts or records of any kind to verify his statement, while Weiss had records that reflected no such cash payments had been made. 4 Next, Debtor asserted that one certified check made payable to Avenue Check Cashing in the amount of $4,200 was actually cashed by Weiss. Curiously, despite having produced at trial numerous original cheeks, Debtor has only a photocopy of the front of this one. The photocopy showed no indorsement of any kind but did contain a notation that it was “payable only as originally drawn and when properly indorsed....” Weiss denied ever having received this $4,200. The court finds the facts to be as represented by Mr. Weiss. If Plaintiffs establish the elements of § 523(a)(2)(A), (a)(2)(B), or (a)(6), the obligation will be non-dischargeable if it is an obligation of this Debtor.

Section 523(a)(6)

The court finds that the Plaintiffs have not met their burden of proof under 11 U.S.C. §

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314 B.R. 747 (C.D. Illinois, 2004)
Gonzalez v. Moffitt (In Re Moffitt)
254 B.R. 389 (N.D. Ohio, 2000)
Woodstock Housing Corp. v. Johnson (In Re Johnson)
242 B.R. 283 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 1999)

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Bluebook (online)
225 B.R. 582, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 1287, 1998 WL 725235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mega-enterprises-inc-v-lahiri-in-re-lahiri-paeb-1998.