Michael D. Schwartz v. Barclays Capital, Incorporated

799 F.3d 760, 74 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 263, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 14846, 2015 WL 4998443
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedAugust 24, 2015
Docket15-1416
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 799 F.3d 760 (Michael D. Schwartz v. Barclays Capital, Incorporated) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Michael D. Schwartz v. Barclays Capital, Incorporated, 799 F.3d 760, 74 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 263, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 14846, 2015 WL 4998443 (7th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

POSNER, Circuit Judge.

When Michael Schwartz was hired as an executive of Barclays Capital, Inc., the company lent him $400,000 and promised to forgive the loan in equal installments on the first through seventh anniversaries of his start date. But before the second anniversary came round, the company fired him, which under their agreement made the unforgiven principal (about $340,000) immediately due and owing. Schwartz refused to pay, and pursuant to a term in the agreement the dispute between the parties was submitted to an arbitrator. The arbitrator sided with Barclays and ordered Schwartz to pay the company $568,568, which included attorneys’ fees incurred by Barclays in trying to collect the debt as well as the debt itself, plus interest.

It was, as Schwartz admits, in response to the arbitrator’s award that he and his wife petitioned for bankruptcy under Chapter 7. Their goal was to obtain a discharge of their debts, not only the debt to Barclays but also debts to other creditors. A discharge would give them a “fresh start,” which is to say a future without debt until they borrowed again, or otherwise accrued new debt. See Harris v. Viegelahn, — U.S. -, 135 S.Ct. 1829, 1835, 191 L.Ed.2d 783 (2015).

But between the announcement of the arbitration award and the filing of the bankruptcy petition the Schwartzes spent thousands of dollars on inessential consumer goods and services, including tickets to Disney World (they have two children). Learning of these expenditures, Barclays, which was both the Schwartzes’ principal *762 creditor and the only active opponent of granting a discharge, moved the bankruptcy court to dismiss the petition. It based its motion primarily on two provisions of 11 U.S.C. § 7.07 (we say “primarily” because Barclays’ challenge under section 707(b) was not limited to subsection (1) but extended to other subsections of 707(b) as well):

(a) The court may dismiss a case under this chapter only after notice and a hearing and only for cause, including — (1) unreasonable delay by the debtor that is prejudicial to creditors; (2) nonpayment of any fees or charges required under chapter 123 of title 28; and (3) failure of the debtor in a voluntary ease to file, within fifteen days or such additional time as the court may allow after the filing of the petition commencing such case, the information required by paragraph (1) of section 521(a), but only on a motion by the United States trustee.
(b)(1) After notice and a hearing, the court, on its own motion or qn a motion by the United States trustee, trustee (or bankruptcy administrator, if any), or any party in interest, may dismiss a case filed by an individual debtor under this chapter whose debts are primarily consumer debts, or, with the debtor’s consent, convert such a case to a case under chapter 11 or 13 of this title, if it finds that the granting of relief would be an abuse of the provisions of this chapter....

Initially Barclays stressed subsection (b), pointing out that Schwartz’s debt was consumer debt, as it was debt created by a personal loan. The social goal of discharging a debt in bankruptcy is to enable the bankrupt to continue to engage in productive activity (Schwartz is a businessman), which would often be impossible were the bankrupt so deeply buried in debt that he would have to devote an inordinate fraction of his resources to debt repayment rather than to business investment. But since losing his job with Barclays Schwartz has been spending his money on consumption by himself and his family, and much of that consumption is optional rather than essential. His monthly income (his wife' does not work and has no income separate from her husband’s) exceeds $9500, the family has assets of about $350,000, and the family’s monthly expenses, of some $11,100, exceed that monthly income by more than $1500. Among the family’s many optional consumer expenditures are private-school tuition for their children and a monthly payment of $850 for a Range Rover. In addition, the Schwartzes were represented by counsel during the arbitration proceedings and for the first eight months of the bankruptcy proceeding; and although the lawyer withdrew before the dismissal of their bankruptcy petition and they are now litigating pro se, they had spent a good deal of money on attorneys’ fees during those earlier phases of their struggle with Barclays and those were consumer expenditures because their purpose was to avoid repayment of a personal loan.

It may seem odd that the Schwartzes have only $350,000 in assets despite the $400,000 loan that Barclays had given Mr. Schwartz, but living expenses, monthly car payments on their Range Rover, the legal bills for the arbitration and for the early stages of the litigation in the bankruptcy court, and a period of unemployment following his termination by Barclays, may have depleted the loan. Yet they remain well off. Though their after-tax annual household income of $114,000 ($9500 x 12) doesn’t put them in the top 1 percent of American households, extreme wealth is not the criterion for whether to dismiss a petition for bankruptcy under 11 U.S.C. § 707(b). There are several criteria: whether the *763 debts are mainly consumer debts, which the Schwartzes’ debts are; if so whether the debtors’ income is high enough to enable them to repay a significant amount of debt without sacrificing a reasonable standard of living, which it is; and whether their income is at least as high as the median family income in their region, which it also is.

But we needn’t dwell on section 707(b), because the bankruptcy judge decided that rather than become entangled in that section she would decide the case under section 707(a), which is at least superficially simpler, as it permits dismissal of the bankruptcy petition (thus precluding discharge) “for cause.” It may not really be simpler, because the analysis required by section 707(b) is mainly arithmetical, while the undefined term “cause” in 707(a) invites a more open-ended inquiry.

The Schwartzes argue that the three subsections of section 707(a) are procedural and so the only grounds for dismissal under the section are procedural, or alternatively that the specified grounds are the only possible grounds for dismissal under that section. To take the second argument first, the fact that the three grounds are introduced by “including” tugs against the argument that they are exclusive, or that they exhaust the statute. If you tell your maid to iron your clothes, including your Bond Street tuxedo and its cummerbund, there is no implication that she is not to iron your other clothes. And as for whether the three grounds specified in section 707(a) are procedural, two are not: the first, which punishes unreasonable delay, by a debtor who has filed a bankruptcy petition, in taking steps necessary to the administration of the bankrupt estate; and the second, which involves nonpayment of fees, mainly filing fees. See 6 Collier on Bankruptcy ¶ 707.03 (16th ed.2015).

It would make no sense to limit “for cause” to procedural defects in the bankruptcy petition. Suppose the debtor can pay all or some of his debts without hardship yet refuses without any plausible excuse.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In re: Darryl Lee Adler
S.D. New York, 2025
Austin v. Layng
N.D. Illinois, 2025
Brahim M Gaddour
E.D. Wisconsin, 2025
Tanner Scott Campbell
District of Columbia, 2021
Michael Chance Tate
M.D. Louisiana, 2020
Osvaldo Amaro
N.D. Illinois, 2020
LLC 1 07CH12487
N.D. Illinois, 2019
Goldstein v. Zilberbrand (In re Zilberbrand)
602 B.R. 53 (N.D. Illinois, 2019)
In re Plichta
589 B.R. 794 (N.D. Illinois, 2018)
Ralph Janvey v. Peter Romero
883 F.3d 406 (Fourth Circuit, 2018)
Singh v. Shah
690 F. App'x 419 (Seventh Circuit, 2017)
In re Dini
566 B.R. 220 (N.D. Illinois, 2017)
Marjorie Lynch v. Gabriel Jackson
845 F.3d 147 (Fourth Circuit, 2017)
Sammarco v. Dini (In re Dini)
560 B.R. 741 (N.D. Illinois, 2016)
In re Chovev
559 B.R. 339 (E.D. New York, 2016)
In re Romero
557 B.R. 875 (D. Maryland, 2016)
In re Watts
557 B.R. 640 (N.D. Illinois, 2016)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
799 F.3d 760, 74 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 263, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 14846, 2015 WL 4998443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michael-d-schwartz-v-barclays-capital-incorporated-ca7-2015.