Wolf v. McGuire (In Re McGuire)

284 B.R. 481, 2002 WL 31374782
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Colorado
DecidedSeptember 30, 2002
Docket17-11104
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 284 B.R. 481 (Wolf v. McGuire (In Re McGuire)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wolf v. McGuire (In Re McGuire), 284 B.R. 481, 2002 WL 31374782 (Colo. 2002).

Opinion

ORDER DENYING OBJECTION TO DISCHARGEABILITY

ELIZABETH E. BROWN, Bankruptcy Judge.

THIS MATTER came before the Court on Plaintiffs Complaint, asserting that the debt owed to him in the amount of $35,000 should be declared nondischargeable under 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(2). It is undisputed that the Defendant made representations which induced the Plaintiffs purchase of an investment and that these representations later proved to be false. The central dispute is whether Defendant had the requisite fraudulent intent. As to the majority of the representations, it is undisputed that Defendant did not know of their falsity at the time he made them. Following a trial, in which only the Plaintiff and Defendant appeared as witnesses, the Court took this matter under advisement to consider whether the degree of Defendant’s carelessness in making these statements rose to the level of reckless disregard and, thus, could constitute a basis for finding the necessary element of scienter. As explained more fully below, the Court finds that the Defendant was merely negligent and, thus, is entitled to discharge Plaintiffs claim in his bankruptcy.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

Defendant was an insurance salesman, who conducted his business through his wholly-owned company, American Assets Management Corp., Inc. (“AAM”), an independent retail insurance brokerage. He sold life insurance policies, annuities, interests in “viatical financial settlements,” and other products offered by third-party insurance companies and similar industries. After meeting with the Defendant and reviewing promotional materials supplied by AAM, Plaintiff purchased two insurance-related products through AAM, an annuity contract with National Western Life Insurance Company for $15,000 and a viatical financial settlement from American Benefits Services, Inc. (“ABS”) for $35,000.

A viatical financial settlement (“viatical”) is the sale by assignment of the benefits *485 from a life insurance policy, insuring the life of a terminally ill person. As ghoulish as this investment vehicle sounds, it actually allows a terminally ill person in the later stages of a disease, to obtain additional funds with which to secure either the basic means of support or additional comforts during the insured’s final days. Undoubtedly, it is especially attractive to those insureds who have no heirs. Companies who issue a viatical are supposed to employ a physician to certify that the insured is in the later stages of a terminal disease. The purchase price for the assignment is never the full value of the policy, but some discounted amount.

In this case, Plaintiff realized the benefits of the annuity contract he purchased through AAM, but completely lost the funds he invested in the viatical. ABS (not AAM) was operating an elaborate “Ponzi scheme,” soliciting investors and paying the earlier investors solely from funds received from the later investors, rather than from the proceeds of any insurance policies. 1 ABS issued certificated assignments to Plaintiff, certifying that it had purchased two life insurance policies with his $35,000 and specifying the details of the alleged policies. In reality, it never bought the policies.

ABS was able to perpetrate its fraud, in part, by selling the viaticáis through reputable insurance agencies throughout the country, including Defendant’s brokerage, AAM. It is undisputed that neither AAM nor Defendant knew anything about the Ponzi scheme, until it was too late. There was nothing about the compensation structure between ABS and AAM that should have raised red flags for the Defendant. AAM’s commission from ABS was always within a range of 6-7%%, which is the same commission range it earned on the viaticáis it sold for other businesses. Defendant’s company earned only slightly more than $2,000 from Plaintiffs $35,000 purchase. Over the course of time, AAM sold a total of $1.6 million in viaticáis to its various clients, but stopped selling ABS’ products when Defendant became aware that one of AAM’s other customers was experiencing customer service difficulties with ABS. Defendant caused AAM to stop doing business with ABS as soon as the first problem surfaced, without waiting until the Ponzi scheme came to light.

Defendant educated himself regarding viaticáis through his attendance of a seminar on viaticáis, his inquiry with the state as to any licensing requirements, a meeting with the attorneys of another company that sold viaticáis, Mutual Benefits Company, and by reviewing literature prepared by one of the largest administrators of IRAs, Pensco Financial Services, Inc. Based on this training, there was nothing in ABS’ promotional materials regarding its viaticáis that sounded too good to be true. Unfortunately, Defendant did not investigate ABS, did not demand proof that ABS had actually purchased the subject insurance policies, and did not obtain a copy of the requisite physician’s report. Defendant assumed that ABS was doing everything it was supposed to do.

Defendant became involved with ABS, when he was approached by the principal of another company, SunCoast Financial Services, Inc., who was promoting ABS’ viatical product. SunCoast provided sales literature and product brochures to Defendant. Defendant studied the sales literature, spoke with SunCoast’s representatives, obtained a copy of SunCoast’s insurance license, and contacted the Florida State Department of Insurance regarding SunCoast to ensure that it was *486 “in good standing.” Defendant requested a history and financial statements on both SunCoast and ABS. He did not receive this information as to either company. Nevertheless, Defendant signed a written agency agreement with SunCoast. Defendant testified that he considered himself an agent of ABS, because he agreed to sell products of ABS, as a sub-agent of SunCoast. He did not have a written agency agreement directly with ABS.

AAM utilized the ABS promotional materials, specifically a brochure and a sample newspaper advertisement. He created a customized brochure for AAM by retyping the ABS sales literature verbatim, merely substituting AAM’s name for ABS, so that customers would know to contact him to purchase this product. The customized brochure did not reference ABS as the principal offering the viatical investment. The advertisement stated:

ARE YOU TIRED OF LOW CD RATES?
9.86% per year GUARANTEED
* High Yield
^Completely Insured up to $300,000
* Fixed Return
* No Market Risk
* 3-Year Growth 42%
* Short Term
* Monthly Incozne Plan Available
* No Hidden Costs
* Principal Liquid
* Great for IRA Rollovers.

Call Today! American Assets Manageznent Corp., Inc., 9025 Kezzyon Ave., Suite 305, Dezzver, CO 80237, (303) 889-5959, Toll Free, (800) 644-1454

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Bluebook (online)
284 B.R. 481, 2002 WL 31374782, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wolf-v-mcguire-in-re-mcguire-cob-2002.