Omnibank Aurora, N.A. v. Konopka (In re Konopka)

61 B.R. 237, 1986 Bankr. LEXIS 5976
CourtDistrict Court, D. Colorado
DecidedMay 29, 1986
DocketBankruptcy No. 85 B 3694 M; Adversary No. 85 G 627
StatusPublished

This text of 61 B.R. 237 (Omnibank Aurora, N.A. v. Konopka (In re Konopka)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Omnibank Aurora, N.A. v. Konopka (In re Konopka), 61 B.R. 237, 1986 Bankr. LEXIS 5976 (D. Colo. 1986).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

CHARLES E. MATHESON, Bankruptcy Judge.

This adversary proceeding was commenced by OmniBank Aurora (hereinafter referred to as “the Bank”) against the [239]*239Debtors on the complaint of the Bank seeking a determination that the Debtors’ obligations to the Bank are nondischargeable.

The evidence at the hearing disclosed that in February 1985, the Debtor, Huxley P. Konopka, applied at the Bank for a guaranteed check card. At that time he and Mrs. Konopka filled out a financial statement and submitted it to the Bank in support of their application.

The financial statement provided to the Bank in February 1985 represented that Mr. Konopka had a gross monthly income of $5,000 in addition to which Mrs. Konop-ka had a monthly income of $1,750. They also received $550 in rental income from a rental property. The schedules which are a part of the financial statement listed the real property in which the Debtors had an interest and disclosed the outstanding mortgages against the real estate. The unsecured debts listed in the financial statements totalled $19,800.00. The financial statement was signed by both of the Debtors, and the form contained the following statement immediately above the signatures.

I hereby represent and warrant that the information set forth above and on the reverse side hereof, is true, correct, complete and accurate in all respects, and it is a full and complete disclosure of my financial condition as of the date hereof. This statement is made for the purpose of inducing the Bank to loan money from time to time, secured and unsecured, to me or to accept my endorsement or guarantee of the obligations of others. The Bank is authorized to make such investigation of the representations herein as the Bank deems desirable. This application is the property of the Bank for all purposes. I further agree to notify the Bank if there is any material change in my financial condition subsequent to the date hereof and during the time when I may be indebted to the Bank.

The 1984 federal tax return of the Debtors reported total gross income of $13,676 for Mrs. Konopka and $27,860 for Mr. Ko-nopka. In 1985 Mr. Konopka, who worked as a real estate salesman, had gross commissions of $30,440. The statement of unsecured debt was deficient in that the actual unsecured indebtedness outstanding was in excess of $34,000. In addition, Mr. Konopka did not disclose that no payments had been made on the first mortgage on his home since September of 1984 and foreclosure was being threatened.

In addition to filling out the financial statement the Debtors entered into a check guarantee agreement. Under the terms of that agreement the Bank, upon issuance of the check guarantee card, was bound to honor any check of $100 or less which was drawn by either Mr. or Mrs. Konopka. The Debtors agreed to maintain a balance in their checking account sufficient to pay all checks or to have credit available in their Bank cash cushion account sufficient to cover the checks. The cash cushion account was under a separate agreement and was essentially the loan agreement pursuant to which the Bank agreed to make advances, up to a total of $100, to the Debtors’ checking account to cover checks drawn under the check guarantee card. That agreement expressly provided that each of the Debtors “shall be jointly and severably liable for the payment of all obligations under such account.” Both Debtors signed the cash cushion agreement. In May, at the request of Mr. Konopka, the Bank extended the credit available under the cushion agreement to $500.00.

Mr. Konopka encountered delays in closings of real estate that he had listed which resulted in delays to him of income. In early June of 1985, for reasons not fully explained, Mr. Konopka cashed a series of twenty-one (21) checks each in the amount of $100. All of the checks were drawn either on Safeway or on King Soopers. In doing so he drew from one to five checks in any given day. At the time that the checks were drawn Mr. Konopka did not have the funds available in his account, nor credit available under his cash cushion agreement, to cover the checks. Mr. Konopka testified that at the time he drew the checks he was aware that he did not have [240]*240the funds to cover them, but expected a series of closings to occur in the near future which would have given him sufficient cash to pay all of the outstanding checks. He also testified that it was his belief that it would be Safeway and King Soopers which would be caught holding the bag on the cheeks and not the Bank, indicating that it was never his intent that the Bank would end up with the short checks. His testimony in that regard is directly contrary to the terms of the Bank agreements he had signed. His plea of ignorance of the terms of the Bank agreements is either not credible, or is evidence of his gross disregard of his financial affairs, particularly in light of the fact that he had previously had an Omnibank check guarantee card which he had used in the past.

When the checks began to appear at the Bank, Mr. Konopka was called by the Bank and requested to surrender his check guarantee card, which he did. He told the Bank that he did not have funds available to pay the shortages but believed that he would have the funds within 30 days by reason of real estate closings which were set. The Bank was then in a position of having an overdrawn checking account in the amount of $2,295.74, which the Bank was anxious to clear. They requested that Mr. Konopka prepare a new financial statement, and told Mr. Konopka the Bank would consider a 30-day loan to clear the overdraft.

Mr. Konopka prepared a new financial statement dated June 14, 1985, which was unsigned by Mrs. Konopka. It bears no disclosure concerning income and reflects unsecured liabilities of only $6,200. Mr. Konopka testified that the Bank told him just to fill something out and that it was not important what he put down. The Debtors then signed a note to the Bank in the amount of $2,736.74 payable one month later. The note was secured by a security agreement on all of the Debtors’ household goods. Against the note the Bank then issued a check to the Debtors which they endorsed for deposit to their checking account, thereby clearing the overdraft.

The Debtors had previously borrowed approximately $9,000 from Mr. and Mrs. Hartnett, which was secured by a second mortgage on some rental real property in which the Debtors had an interest. The Debtors defaulted in the payment of their obligations to the Hartnetts and in May 1985, the Hartnetts commenced suit by filing a summons and complaint and serving the same on the Debtors. The Debtors ignored the summons with the result that a default judgment entered against them. The existence of the lawsuit was never disclosed to the Bank. With the default judgment in hand in late June 1985, the Hartnetts sought to execute on the judgment to satisfy the same. Faced with that prospect, the Debtors filed their Chapter 7 proceeding with this Court.

The testimony reflected that this Chapter 7 case was filed on July 1, 1985. On June 24, 1985, Mr. Konopka in fact did begin to have a series of real estate closings and between June 24, 1985, and July 16, 1985, he earned commissions in excess of $13,-000.00, approximately $10,000.00 of which were earned on sales which were closed on July 1, 1985, and after. Had the sales, closed without the threat of garnishment from the Hartnetts, Mr. Konopka would, in fact, have had sufficient funds available to pay the Hartnetts’ judgment and pay the Bank on the overdraft note.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
61 B.R. 237, 1986 Bankr. LEXIS 5976, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/omnibank-aurora-na-v-konopka-in-re-konopka-cod-1986.