Van Daele Bros. v. Thoms (In Re Thoms)

461 B.R. 50, 2011 WL 2413221
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Iowa
DecidedJune 8, 2011
Docket19-00388
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 461 B.R. 50 (Van Daele Bros. v. Thoms (In Re Thoms)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Van Daele Bros. v. Thoms (In Re Thoms), 461 B.R. 50, 2011 WL 2413221 (Iowa 2011).

Opinion

ORDER RE: COMPLAINT

PAUL J. KILBURG, Bankruptcy Judge.

This matter came before the undersigned on April 20, 2011 for trial. Plaintiff Van Daele Bros., Inc. (“Plaintiff’) was represented by attorneys David H. Skilton and Christine B. Skilton. Debtor/Defendant Jeffrey Thoms was represented by attorney Brian W. Peters. After the presentation of evidence and argument, the Court took the matter under advisement. The time for filing briefs has now passed and this matter is ready for resolution. This is a core proceeding pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(I).

STATEMENT OF THE CASE

Plaintiff seeks to except debt from discharge under § 523(a)(6) for willful and malicious injury. Its claim arises out of a sale and lease-back by Debtor of 24 cows and 5 yearling heifers in March 1, 2008. Debtor asserts he entered into the transaction in good faith and did not intend to injure Plaintiff.

FINDINGS OF FACT

In February 2008, Debtor approached Jerry Van Daele, a principal of Van Daele Bros., Inc., to secure financing. In exchange for $75,000, Debtor would sell his herd of 24 cows and 5 yearling heifers to Plaintiff and lease them back with five annual lease payments to Plaintiff of $18,784.23. The cattle would remain in Debtor’s possession, on a lot owned by his neighbor next to Debtor’s acreage, and he would care for them. Debtor prepared the documents for the sale (Ex. 1) and lease (Ex. 2), and neither party was represented by an attorney. To finance the purchase, Mr. Van Daele obtained a loan from Kerndt Bros. Savings Bank which he continues to make payments on. The transaction was finalized on March 1, 2008. Debt- or used the $75,000 payment from Plaintiff to pay off a loan with Community Bank, previously secured by the same cattle, in the amount of $68,000 and for other personal expenses.

At the time of the transaction, Debtor was employed as a loan officer at Kerndt Bros. Savings Bank and had been Mr. Van Daele’s lending officer at the Bank for approximately ten or eleven years. Mr. Van Daele testified that he thought Debtor was a friend and that he could trust him. He stated that Debtor knew him as a friend and was aware that he had helped out other family and friends in need. Mr. Van Daele said he was willing to help and trust Debtor because of Debtor’s position at the bank and his rapport with Debtor. He understood that he would pay $75,000 to purchase the cattle and Debtor would lease them back and keep them at his property. He stated that Debtor made oral assurances and agreed to notify Mr. Van Daele of any changes in the amount of cattle.

In August 2008, Debtor lost his job at Kerndt Bros. Savings Bank. At the time, he believed, and assured Mr. Van Daele, that he could make the first annual payment under the lease the following March. He planned to find a job at another bank and continue working with Mr. Van Daele. There appears to be very little communication between the parties after that point in time. Debtor was only able to find part-time jobs and his income dropped to approximately $40,000 per year, before taxes.

Debtor defaulted on the first annual payment due March 1, 2009. Mr. Van *53 Daele testified that, approximately 30 days later, on April 3, 2009, he picked up 20 cows and 7 calves from Debtor’s cattle lot. Debtor testified Mr. Van Daele took 31 head of cattle plus some newborn calves. Debtor was not aware of the repossession until later and no one else was there when the cattle were picked up. Debtor’s father, Fred Thoms, claims five of the cows were his, not Debtor’s or Plaintiffs. Fred Thoms has filed two replevin actions against Plaintiff based on the removal of his five cows. He dismissed the first action close to the time of trial and the other remains pending in the Iowa District Court in Fayette County.

A few days after the repossession, Debt- or attempted to pay the annual payment with a check written by his daughter, Emily. Debtor testified that Emily received a loan from a friend of his, Gary Zimmerman, in order to help Debtor make the payment. Mr. Van Daele refused to accept the check, telling Debtor if he wanted the cattle back, he would have to pay off the whole debt, as set out in the documents Debtor had prepared. Debtor testified that he didn’t begrudge Mr. Van Da-ele for making that decision.

Apparently, the next time the parties discussed the matter was in August or September 2009. Mr. Van Daele saw Debtor at the fairgrounds and told him he was going to have to sell the cattle because it was too costly to keep feeding and caring for them. Debtor testified that he responded: ‘You’ve got to do what you’ve got to do.” By that time, Debtor had come to accept this was a possibility. Mr. Van Daele sold a majority of the cattle in September 2009 and by the end of 2009 or early 2010, he had sold all the cattle, receiving approximately $20,000 to $23,000 in total proceeds. He estimates that he spent approximately $10,000 for feed from the time of repossession until the end of 2009, and had to pay someone to take care of them.

Plaintiffs brief describes the transaction as a plan, specifically targeted at Mr. Van Daele, which allowed Debtor to continue to work his herd of cattle with Plaintiff being responsible for loan payments to the bank, after which Debtor would discharge the debt he owed to Plaintiff in bankruptcy. Plaintiff cites several specific circumstances which it argues supports this version of the facts.

First, Plaintiff argues that Debtor improperly used the same cattle he sold to Plaintiff in March 2008 as security for a loan from Community Bank in June 2008. Page 390 of Exhibit 8 is a copy of the loan. It states: “The purpose of this loan is [to] purchase cows.” Debtor testified at trial that this loan was to purchase fall calvers but the deal fell through because the cows he considered buying didn’t look good. He stated the security for the June 2008 loan was not the cattle sold to Plaintiff, which he knew he no longer owned and couldn’t use as collateral.

Second, Plaintiff argues that Debtor failed to account for the reduction in the number of cattle in the herd. It asserts there should have been 58 head — the original 29 plus 29 offspring — but Plaintiff was only able to recover 20 cows and 7 calves on April 3, 2009. Debtor did not keep records of the number or disposition of cattle or their offspring.

The Lease and Bill of Sale do not mention who would own future offspring of the original 29 cattle. Debtor testified that he considered the original 29 cows and heifers to be Plaintiffs property, but he believed the calves were his to sell in order to be able to make a profit and pay the annual payment. He explained that the five heifers would not calve until the following year and one of them died during the year. Two of the original 24 cows died. Thus, 26 *54 remained of the original 29 cattle which were sold to Plaintiff.

Debtor testified that eight of the offspring died of pneumonia and one died later. One pair of twins was born dead. Debtor sold 12 of the offspring and he believed that two of the cows were not pregnant to begin with. These numbers account for the possibility of 24 offspring from the original 24 cows sold to Plaintiff, excluding the 5 heifers which wouldn’t calve until the following year.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
461 B.R. 50, 2011 WL 2413221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-daele-bros-v-thoms-in-re-thoms-ianb-2011.