Thurmond v. Parker (In re Parker)

488 B.R. 794, 2013 WL 1352300, 2013 Bankr. LEXIS 1339
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Georgia
DecidedMarch 29, 2013
DocketBankruptcy No. 09-65148-pwb; Adversary No. 11-05354-pwb
StatusPublished

This text of 488 B.R. 794 (Thurmond v. Parker (In re Parker)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thurmond v. Parker (In re Parker), 488 B.R. 794, 2013 WL 1352300, 2013 Bankr. LEXIS 1339 (Ga. 2013).

Opinion

ORDER ON PLAINTIFF’S MOTIONS TO COMPEL

PAUL W. BONAPFEL, Bankruptcy Judge.

The Chapter 7 Trustee in this adversary proceeding asserts that the Debtor, Frances Foster Parker, owned real estate that [796]*796the Defendants, the Debtor’s son and daughter-in-law, leased from her for 60 months under a written lease dated February 9, 2007, for use in their business known as Executive Auto. The lease provided for payment of monthly rent of $5,800 plus taxes and insurance. (Complaint, Exhibit “A”).

The Trustee contends that the parties executed a modification to the lease dated October 7, 2008. (Complaint ¶ 16). The modification provided for the tenant to pay, in lieu of rent as set forth in the original lease, loan payments on the debt secured by the property directly to the lender, insurance, taxes, and maintenance on the building. (Complaint, Exhibit “F”).

The Trustee asserts that the modification effected a prepetition transfer of property of the Debtor to the Defendants. Counts I and II of the complaint seek avoidance of the modification as an actually or constructively fraudulent transfer under Georgia law, O.C.G.A. §§ 18-2-74 and 18-2-75, under the provisions of 11 U.S.C. § 544 (Count I) or under 11 U.S.C. § 548 (Count II). Alternatively, Count III alleges that the Defendants created the modification document after he made demand for payment of rent under the original lease in a conspiracy to defraud the Trustee and the Debtor’s creditors by avoiding the payment of rent due. (Complaint ¶¶ 33).1 The Trustee also seeks recovery of punitive damages (Count IV) and attorney’s fees (Count V).

The Trustee requested that the Defendants produce their federal tax returns for the years 2007 through 2011. These returns are relevant to the issues here, the Trustee asserts, because they would presumably show any deductions that the Defendants took on account of payment of rent under the lease and, therefore, provide proof of payments the Defendants actually made.

In response to the Trustee’s motion to compel the production of their federal tax returns, the Defendants state that they have not filed the returns for the years in question. (Docket No. 47 at 2). The Defendants’ position contradicts the deposition testimony of Mr. Parker that he and his wife had filed joint tax returns for the years in question and had not taken any deductions with regard to payments on the mortgage loan, insurance, or taxes. (Docket No. 50 at 7-8).

The Defendants obviously cannot produce tax returns if they do not have them; if they did not file them, they obviously do not have them. In these circumstances, the Trustee seeks an order compelling the Defendants to execute and deliver to the Internal Revenue Service a Form 4506, which would grant permission to the Internal Revenue Service to release to them copies of the tax returns. (Docket Nos. 39, 40). The Defendants oppose this requirement because submission of Form 4506 would alert the IRS to their failure to file returns and could subject them to potential civil and criminal consequences. (Docket No. 47 at 5-6).

The Court must address two questions. First, it must determine whether the tax returns, assuming they exist, are discoverable. If so, the Court must then determine whether it may compel the Defendants to execute Form 4506 to obtain copies of them, if they exist.

I. Discovery of Tax Returns

Courts are understandably reluctant to permit the discovery of federal tax [797]*797returns as a routine matter. Because tax returns contain highly sensitive information, compelled disclosure intrudes on the taxpayer’s privacy concerns and may threaten “the effective administration of our federal tax laws given the self-reporting, self-assessing character of the income tax system.”2 Nevertheless, a federal tax return is discoverable if it contains information relevant to the issues and the information in the returns is not otherwise readily obtainable.3

The relevance of the tax returns, if filed, is that they would show the amounts, if any, of the deductions that the Defendants took for rent as a business expense. As such, the returns are relevant to the issues here because they could provide evidence of what the defendants actually paid.

Under the theories of the Trustee’s complaint, however, the amount of rent actually paid is relevant only for the years 2007 and 2008. In this regard, the Trustee alleges that the Defendants did not pay rent due under the terms of the lease after the date of the modification. (Complaint ¶¶ 16). The Trustee also alleges that the Defendants created the modification after he made demand for the rent due under the original lease to defraud the Trustee and the Debtor’s creditors by avoiding the payment of the rent. (Complaint ¶¶ 33-35).

Both theories thus assert that, after the date of the modification, the Defendants did not pay rent as the original lease required. This is the same position the Defendants take. Consequently, whether the Defendants actually paid rent as the original lease requires during the years 2009 through 2011 is not an issue in this proceeding. It follows that the tax returns for those years can lead to no relevant evidence on this issue and are not subject to discovery unless they are relevant to some other issue.

Although the Trustee has not identified any other basis on which information in the returns is relevant to a disputed issue, the Trustee contends that the nonexistence of the tax returns is relevant to the question of whether actual fraud occurred. The Trustee’s theory is that proof of the nonexistence of the returns bears on the credibility of Mr. Parker in view of his deposition testimony that he and his wife had filed joint returns.

As an initial matter, whether the Defendants did or did not file tax returns is not material to any substantive issue in this proceeding. The questions are what payments the Defendants made and when they executed the modification, not whether or how they reported any payments they did make to the Internal Revenue Service. Because it does not matter how the Defendants reported any payments they made, the nonexistence of the returns does not prove or disprove any material fact at issue in this proceeding.

The credibility of a witness, of course, is always a relevant question in an adversary proceeding. But confirming the nonexistence of the tax returns does not [798]*798add anything to the credibility issue here in view of the fact that Mr. Parker has already taken contradictory positions as to their filing. A party may impeach a witness with a prior inconsistent statement, but not by attempting to prove that a witness’ statement with regard to a non-material matter is not true through other evidence. Thus, the tax returns are not relevant under the theory that their nonexistence would lead to the discovery of admissible evidence in this proceeding.

The second requirement for the discovery of federal tax returns is a showing that the information in the returns is not otherwise readily obtainable.

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Bluebook (online)
488 B.R. 794, 2013 WL 1352300, 2013 Bankr. LEXIS 1339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thurmond-v-parker-in-re-parker-ganb-2013.