Wood v. Yackley (In Re Yackley)

37 B.R. 253, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 6081
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Missouri
DecidedJune 6, 1983
Docket18-50472
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 37 B.R. 253 (Wood v. Yackley (In Re Yackley)) 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
Wood v. Yackley (In Re Yackley), 37 B.R. 253, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 6081 (Mo. 1983).

Opinion

FINDINGS OF FACT, CONCLUSIONS OF LAW AND FINAL JUDGMENT DENYING PLAINTIFF’S OBJECTION TO DISCHARGE ON CONDITION THAT DEFENDANTS TURN OVER CERTAIN PROPERTY AND INFORMATION TO THE COURT

DENNIS J. STEWART, Bankruptcy Judge.

Plaintiffs complain for the defendants’ denial of discharge in bankruptcy on the grounds of failure to schedule (1) 800 shares of the stock of C.P. Associates, Inc., 122 Lafayette Avenue, Laurel, Maryland, and (2) some $15,000 in inventory. 1 The court initially entered a default judgment denying the discharge in bankruptcy for failure of the defendants to comply with the pretrial orders of the court and for failure to respond to the court’s order to show cause why default judgment should not be entered. Thereafter, the defendants moved to set aside the default judgment on the grounds of the excusable neglect of counsel. It is their contention that counsel believed that, because the court granted the plaintiffs leave to file an amended complaint on January 11, 1983, the pretrial order would be amended and extended by the court. Admittedly, he did not notice that, in entering its order granting plaintiffs leave to file the amended complaint on January 11, 1983, the court explicitly provided that “(t)he pretrial order remains in effect.” But, in the interest of justice and that of determining an action on its merits, which interests must be regarded as particularly applicable in determining the debtors’ right to a discharge in bankruptcy, the court will set aside the default judgment and consider the merits of the action. 2

The trial of the merits was conducted on April 1, 1983, in Joplin, Missouri. The evidence then adduced materially demonstrated that the defendants owned some 800 shares of stock of C.P. Associates, Inc., as of the date of bankruptcy; that its par value was $10 per share; that they had owned it since September 1971; that the defendant David Joseph Yackley had been president of C.P. Associates, Inc., from 1971 through 1978; that he then resigned as president and has had no contact with the corporation since that time, except to contact the current vice president in May or June 1982 to inquire about the value of the stock; that he did not have any other information to the contrary respecting the value of the stock; that he was then informed by the vice president in May or June 1982 that the stock was worthless; that, accordingly, when filing his petition in bankruptcy on April 6, 1982, he did not schedule the stock because he believed it had no value; that, prior to bankruptcy, he had, in prior proceedings, reported his inventory as having a value of $62,347; that he closed his business and did not continue it past July 24, 1982, and filed his bankruptcy petition on August 6, 1982; that the difference between the $62,347 earlier reported in inventory and the $45,000 in the schedules is accounted for, in the defendants’ view, by “the differ *255 ence between fair market value and book value”; that some $21,500 in Zenith floor-planned products were separately scheduled by defendants in schedule A-2; that the defendants own residential real estate in Vernon County which they occupy as their home which they scheduled as having a value of $40,000; that they arrived at this value by “talking with people as to its value”; that, in the course of the meeting of creditors in this case, David Joseph Yackley testified that the value of the same property was $60,000; that, according to the testimony of Edward L. Wade, a professional real estate appraiser produced by the plaintiffs as their expert on value, the value of the property may be as high as $62,500, although he admits that, in appraising the property, he was instructed by plaintiffs not to go onto the property and therefore found it “extremely difficult” to estimate its value under those conditions; that, according to the testimony of another professional appraiser, Homer W. Haggans, whom the defendants produced as their expert on value, the value of this real estate is approximately $40,000; that the Yackleys purchased the real estate for $43,000 on June 21, 1979; that, according to the testimony of George W. Dillard, the territorial sales manager of the Western Auto Supply Company, the inventory of the defendants’ store “was somewhere around $50-60,000”; and that all the inventory was subject to security interests and was physically taken by the lienholders.

Conclusions of Law

On the basis of the foregoing facts, it is asserted by plaintiffs that the denial of defendants’ discharge in bankruptcy should be entered on two grounds, i.e., that “(d)efendants falsely and fraudulently concealed and mis-stated assets, in that they failed to set forth full, true and factual declarations of the value of certain assets” (see sections 727(a)(4)(A) and 727(a)(2) of the Bankruptcy Code) and that “(d)efendants failed to respond to court orders in a timely manner (see section 727(a)(6)(A) of the Bankruptcy Code). As to the first ground, however, the facts found above do not warrant a finding that there was any fraudulent concealment or fraudulent intention of the defendant in scheduling the assets in connection with these bankruptcy proceedings. As this court has pointed out on prior occasion, both of these species of grounds for denial of discharge require findings of a fraudulent intention by the debtors. 3 In this action, however, there is no extrinsic evidence of any fraudulent intention and the evidence does not otherwise show any clear false statement or concealment or even failure of the defendants to explain any diminution of assets. The loss and dwindling of inventory from $62,500 shortly before bankruptcy to $15,000 on the date of bankruptcy is ade *256 quately and without controversion explained by the defendants’ assertion that lienholders recovered possession of the inventory otherwise not scheduled. No fraudulent intention appears in this regard and the plaintiffs do not point to any in their posttrial brief. 4 As to the failure to schedule the issue of stock, the only evidence of record which reflects on the defendants’ intention is the uncontradicted testimony of the defendant David Joseph Yackley that he believed on the basis of conversations with others the stock to be of negligible value. It is not regarded as a duty of a debtor in bankruptcy to schedule worthless assets or those which are of little or negligible value. 5 The plaintiff, however, contends that the evidence of negligible value should be stricken as inadmissible hearsay, inasmuch as it is solely based on Mr. Yackley’s testimony of having heard the estimates of negligible value from others who neither testified nor appeared in the trial of this action. But, if this evidence is inadmissible as hearsay on the issue of value of the property, it is neither hearsay nor inadmissible on the equally decisive issue of the debtors’ state of mind. 6 And there is nothing, furthermore, to contradict its effect, which is to show that, in omitting the stock from the schedules, the debtors honestly believed that there were of little or no worth. 7

The same principles apply to the issue of the value of the house.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 B.R. 253, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 6081, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-yackley-in-re-yackley-mowb-1983.