Sur Gro Plant Food Co. v. Curl (In Re Curl)

64 B.R. 14, 1986 Bankr. LEXIS 6684
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Missouri
DecidedFebruary 14, 1986
Docket19-30079
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 64 B.R. 14 (Sur Gro Plant Food Co. v. Curl (In Re Curl)) 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
Sur Gro Plant Food Co. v. Curl (In Re Curl), 64 B.R. 14, 1986 Bankr. LEXIS 6684 (Mo. 1986).

Opinion

FINDINGS OF FACT, CONCLUSIONS OF LAW AND

FINAL DECREE AND JUDGMENT DENYING COMPLAINT

FOR A DECREE OF NONDISCHARGEABILITY

DENNIS J. STEWART, Chief Judge.

This is an action for a decree of nondis-chargeability of an indebtedness allegedly *15 brought into being by a false financial statement within the meaning of section 528(a)(2) of the Bankruptcy Code. After joinder of the issues by the pleadings, the action came on for trial of its merits before the bankruptcy court on June 28,1985, and September 13,1985, in St. Joseph, Missouri, whereupon the plaintiff appeared by counsel, James H. Thompson, Jr., Esquire, and the defendants appeared personally and also by counsel, Mark G. Stingley, Esquire, and John Manring, Esquire. The evidence which was then adduced warrants the following findings of fact.

Findings of Fact

On November 14, 1981, the defendant James A. Curl rendered a financial statement to the plaintiff for the purpose of inducing it to extend him some form of credit. 1 In this financial statement, the amount owed by the debtors to the Farmers Home Administration was understated by some $80,000. 2 On February 21,1983, a second financial statement was rendered by the defendant James A. Curl. In this financial statement, the debtors’ indebtedness to the Farmers Home Administration was drastically misstated as $56,000, whereas, in truth and fact, the amount of the indebtedness was $381,473.23. Further, the entire indebtedness then owed to the Commodity Credit Corporation, $37,-488.89, was wholly omitted from the financial statement of February 21, 1983. And half of the livestock described in the financial statement, having a total value of $110,500.00, were in fact not the property of the debtors but were in fact owned by the father of James A. Curl. The fact of that division of ownership was not disclosed in the financial statement. The evidence which was adduced by the plaintiff showed that the false financial statements were subscribed by the defendant James A. Curl only; that they were not signed by the defendant Cathy J. Curl; and that there is really no evidence that James A. Curl acted as the agent of Cathy J. Curl in subscribing the financial statements. 3 The evidence further shows that the plaintiff, in making the extensions of credit to the defendants, took a security interest in a significant portion of the chattels owned by the defendants. 4 The testimony of the plaintiffs managing officer, given in a deposition of April 16, 1985, serves to demonstrate the “new” or “fresh” money actually extended in reliance upon the false financial statements which are complained of. In the course of that testimony, the plaintiffs managing officer testified that the balance of loans for “crop inputs” which existed as of the date of the deposition was $30,494.45 (tr. 12); that, of that amount, “(t)here is an amount ... of $1,803.36 that was applied in September and October of ’81”; that “there was (also) an amount of $6,000 loaned to Jim Curl on July 31, ’81”; and that the resulting difference is $22,291.09, a figure which is further reduced to $21,-121.04 when the applicable interest on the principal loaned prior to November 14, 1981, is taken into account. 5

The plaintiff’s managing officer, as to these loans for “crop inputs,” further testified that a security interest was taken by *16 the plaintiff in livestock and crops (tr. 14). In his initial testimony on the subject he seemed to state that sole reliance was placed upon the security interests. See tr. 15 to the following effect:

Q. (by Mr. Stingley, defendants’ counsel) “So is it a fair statement that you were relying upon the livestock and the crops from the financial statement to go ahead and make the loan and to rewrite the previous loans?
A. “That’s right.”

In his later testimony, however, the managing officer disavowed that sole and exclusive reliance was placed upon the security interests. See tr. 23 to the following effect:

Q. (by Mr. Stingley) “Wouldn’t you, in a normal situation on your inputs, don’t you rely upon the crop normally and take you out of your input loans?
A. “For new inputs, yes.”
Q. “And that’s what you relied upon in this case?
A. “It was a combination.”
Q. Why don’t you explain to me what you mean by a combination?
A. It was a combination of the livestock and the crops. Our experience for the prior year was not good in regard to the crops because many of the crops disappeared into the livestock, and so that we felt we needed to have the livestock mortgaged in order to collect for the crops that were going into them.”

In the complaint which was initially filed by the plaintiff, the sum of $39,714.50 is said to have been due and owing as of the date of bankruptcy. 6

Conclusions of Law

The authorities which govern the making of a determination of dischargeability vel non are agreed that the nondischargeability statute, section 523 of the Bankruptcy Code, must be given a strict, literal construction so that the burden of proving each and every element of the cause of action is upon the plaintiff. In re Taylor, 514 F.2d 1370, 1373 (9th Cir.1975). Proof of each element must, moreover, be by clear and convincing evidence. Matter of Curl, 49 B.R. 302, 304, n. 6 (Bakrtcy.W.D. Mo.1985). With respect to the species of nondisehargeability which may lie for misrepresentation under section 523(a)(2) of the Bankruptcy Code, the following elements of the cause of action must be proven by the plaintiff:

“(1) the debtor made the representations; (2) that at the time he knew they were false; (3) that he made them with the intention and purpose of deceiving the creditor; (4) that the creditor relied on such representations, and (5) that the creditor sustained the alleged loss and damage as the proximate result of the representations having been made.”

Sweet v. Ritter Finance Co., 263 F.Supp. 540, 543 (W.D.Va.1967). According to the above findings of fact, the court has little difficulty in finding and concluding that the defendant James A. Curl made knowing and material misrepresentations in the two financial statements which have been made the basis for this action. Although he adverts in his testimony to the fact that a bank officer took the information for the statements and that he was sometimes unsure what was being requested, there is no question that he signed the statements and that he knew their contents and that he knew that they were grossly and materially inaccurate. 6a

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Bluebook (online)
64 B.R. 14, 1986 Bankr. LEXIS 6684, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sur-gro-plant-food-co-v-curl-in-re-curl-mowb-1986.