Ozark Production Credit Ass'n v. Moore (In Re Moore)

37 B.R. 720, 1984 Bankr. LEXIS 6433
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Missouri
DecidedJanuary 17, 1984
Docket18-50456
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 37 B.R. 720 (Ozark Production Credit Ass'n v. Moore (In Re Moore)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ozark Production Credit Ass'n v. Moore (In Re Moore), 37 B.R. 720, 1984 Bankr. LEXIS 6433 (Mo. 1984).

Opinion

FINDINGS OF FACT, CONCLUSIONS OF LAW AND FINAL DECREE AND JUDGMENT GRANTING THE WITHIN COMPLAINT AS TO THE DEFENDANT CARL GENE MOORE AND ACCORDINGLY ENTERING NONDISCHARGEABLE JUDGMENT AGAINST HIM AND FOR PLAINTIFF IN THE SUM OF $17,906.90

DENNIS J. STEWART, Bankruptcy Judge.

The plaintiff requests in this action that the defendants’ indebtedness to it not be discharged in bankruptcy because of the allegedly willful and malicious conversion of a quantity of livestock in which the *721 plaintiff had a valid and perfected security interest. The issues joined by the pleadings were tried by the bankruptcy court in a plenary evidentiary hearing held on October 28, 1983, in Joplin, Missouri. The evidence then adduced warrants the following findings of fact. The cattle which were the subject of the plaintiff’s valid and perfected security interest were last known to be in existence in early 1982. But, after the date of the defendants’ bankruptcy, none could be found. In the meantime, the plaintiff’s officers’ successive inquiries of the defendant Carl Gene Moore as to the existence and location of the cattle had met with increasingly noncommital and evasive answers. 1 When it was discovered after the date of bankruptcy that some of the cattle was no longer in existence, the defendants claimed, as they did in their testimony in the trial of this action, that the greater number of them, some 38 head, were struck and killed by a single bolt of lightning; that their carcasses were then buried in a common grave which Mr. Moore testified that he hired one Arthur L. McIntyre to excavate; that Mr. Moore does not know precisely where the grave is because he was not able to observe it within any reasonable time period after it was opened and re-closed 2 ; and that he paid the price of the services involved in excavating the common grave.

Of such substance was the testimony of the defendant Carl Gene Moore in the initial stage of the trial. 3 The plaintiff then presented the testimony of the person whom Mr. Moore had named as the person doing the excavating, Arthur L. McIntyre, who testified that he had never been retained to do any such work and denied knowing anything about it or receiving any payment with respect to it. But then, the defendant Carl Gene Moore, upon being recalled to the witness stand, adjusted his testimony so as to make the claim that it was not really Mr. McIntyre who was retained to dig the grave for the cattle, but rather another person named Rick Hensen, who often did work for Mr. McIntyre, who was retained to do the work and who actually did the work. The testimony of Rick Hensen was not adduced in evidence, but his supposed employer, Mr. McIntyre, clearly testified that he was not aware of any work that this person did for the Moore’s in any capacity as his employee.

This testimony and the set of facts evidenced by it clearly and convincingly demonstrates a fraudulent intention of the part of the defendants in their failing and refusing to turn over the cattle to the plaintiff upon demand. 4 The facts of this action *722 thus clearly answer to the description of wilful and malicious conversion such as is made the basis of a nondischargeable liability by section 523(a)(6) of the Bankruptcy Code. 5 The testimony permits the court only to infer that the cattle in question and their actual disposition were actively concealed by the defendants, not only in the time period leading up to bankruptcy, but, after bankruptcy, in the trial of this action itself, in which the incredible testimony narrated above was rendered, including the self-contradiction as to the identity of the person who was supposed to have dug the mass grave for the deceased cattle. The defendant Carl Gene Moore, as noted above, first unequivocally testified that it was Arthur L. McIntyre who excavated the grave and then, when Mr. McIntyre denied this, altered his testimony to state that it was actually Rick Hensen who performed the excavation. And otherwise the court, considering the defendants’ appearance and demeanor as witnesses, does not find their testimony to be credible. It seems particularly unlikely that the situs of the grave, if it exists, can be presently unknown to the defendants who, if such a grave really existed, must know of its location, if by no other means, from the reports of the person who dug the grave. But they have not been able to show officers of the plaintiff where the grave is located. Further, they did not produce, in the hearing of the action at bar, the testimony of Rick Hensen, and it seems likely that they would have produced his testimony had it been likely to be favorable to them. 6

These principles admit only of the inference of a fraudulent intention in the sense of the intentional violation of the plaintiff’s known right to possession of the cattle. 7 The particular facts of this action merit the application of that standard, rather than of a “looser” standard which may not compel the entry of the decree of nondischargeability in this action. 8 For, if the facts of this action do not compel the rendering of a nondischargeable judgment, it is difficult to imagine a case which would come within the provisions of section 523(a)(6) of the Bankruptcy Code. 9

Accordingly, as to the defendant Carl Gene Moore, the court must issue a decree of nondischargeability for a sum equal to the value of the cattle, or otherwise the balance due to the plaintiff, which *723 ever is smaller. 10 The evidence that the defendants were indebted to plaintiff in the sum of $17,906.90 as of the date of bankruptcy is uncontradicted, as is the evidence that the cattle which served as collateral were worth about $1,000 per head. 11 Accordingly, judgment must be issued for the smaller amount, $17,906.90. 12

It is therefore

ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that the liability of the defendant Carl Gene Moore 13 to the plaintiff in the sum of $17,906.90 be, and it is hereby, declared to be nondischargeable in bankruptcy. It is further

ADJUDGED that the plaintiff have and recover the same sum from the defendant Carl Gene Moore.

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

Related

In Re Beasley
62 B.R. 653 (W.D. Missouri, 1986)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 B.R. 720, 1984 Bankr. LEXIS 6433, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ozark-production-credit-assn-v-moore-in-re-moore-mowb-1984.