Ben Barry, United States Bankruptcy Judge.
On December 10, 2015, the United States Trustee [the UST] filed adversary proceeding 4:15-ap-1112, seeking the denial of the debtor's chapter 7 discharge under 11 U.S.C. § 727(a)(2)(A) and (a)(4)(A).
The Court has jurisdiction over these matters under 28 U.S.C. § 1334 and 28 U.S.C. § 157, and they are core proceedings under 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(E), (H), and (J). This order contains findings of fact and conclusions of law pursuant to Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure 7052.
The debtor and Buch have been a couple since December 2011. According to Buch, his relationship with the debtor has improved over the years but he does not wish to be married now or at any point in the future because he wants to live an autonomous life. Buch worked for large corporations early in his professional life but for the past twenty-plus years has made his living by buying farms and other properties, renovating them, selling them for a profit, and immediately reinvesting the proceeds into additional properties. When Buch met the debtor in 2011, he was running a 400-acre farm in Eureka Springs, Arkansas [the farm] that he had purchased in or around 2001 with cash.
Approximately six months after Buch loaned the debtor the money to pay off her student loans, he hired real estate agent Kevin Lunceford [Lunceford] to look for commercial properties in Greenbrier and Conway-Greenbrier because the debtor wanted to open a medical practice there and Conway because Buch wanted to move closer to his elderly parents. At the beginning of April 2013, Lunceford told Buch about a piece of commercial property located at 2645 Prince Street in Conway, Arkansas [the Prince property] that would soon be listed for sale by Pam Macdowell Properties, where Lunceford worked. This particular property contained both office spaces and apartment units. Buch testified
The debtor, who was still working in Batesville at the time and had regular income, agreed to co-sign a loan to facilitate Buch's purchase of the Prince Street property. On April 15, 2013, the debtor and Buch applied for a loan with First Community Bank — the same bank that the debtor had used to finance her home in Cushman. The loan application signed by both Buch and the debtor stated that the purchase price of the property was $240,000.00 and that title to the property was to be held by Paul Buch. UST Ex. 12. The loan application also contained a note identifying an account at First Community Bank that would be the source of a 20% down payment of $48,000.00. Both the account identified in the loan application and the funds in the account were Buch's; the debtor did not contribute any of her own money toward the down payment. The day of the closing, May 13, 2013, Buch wired $50,109.97 (the down payment of $48,000.00 plus closing costs) from his account at First Community Bank to Faulkner Title Company, the title company handling the closing. The "special instructions" section of the wire transfer form contained a note that identified the wired funds as "closing money for Paul Buch 2645 Prince Street, Conway, AR." Def. Ex. 16. Despite the loan application stating that Buch was to hold title to the Prince Street property, the seller deeded the property to both Buch and the debtor when the transaction closed on May 13, 2013.
In June 2013, the debtor opened a rural "concierge" practice in Greenbrier, Arkansas.
Trial Tr. vol II, 87.
On May 7, 2014, the debtor sold his Eureka Springs farm for $440,000.00 and used some of the proceeds to pay off the loan on the Prince Street property. After Buch paid the loan in full, First Community Bank released its lien on the Prince Street property despite a cross-collateralization provision in the mortgage stating that the mortgage secured all other debts owed to the bank by Buch or the debtor. UST Ex. 13. After Buch satisfied the debt to First Community Bank, the debtor's PLLC continued to make monthly rent payments to Buch for four more months. The debtor wrote the PLLC's last rent check to Buch in October 2014. UST Ex. 39. The same month, the debtor closed her Conway location to open a practice in Maumelle, Arkansas.
Buch testified that in early 2015, a couple that owned a restaurant across the street from the Prince Street property approached him and expressed interest in buying the Prince Street property. While the couple never made a written offer to buy the property because they were unable to get financing, Buch testified that it was their interest in the property that precipitated his realization that the debtor's name was on the deed to the Prince Street property. Trial Tr. vol II, 15-16. Buch and the debtor both testified that their intent was always for the Prince Street property to be Buch's alone. After Buch discovered that the Prince Street property was not titled solely in his name, he asked the debtor to execute a quitclaim deed that transferred her interest to him in order to clear up title to the property. Trial Tr. vol I, 167-68. The debtor executed the quitclaim deed on April 6, 2015, and the deed was filed of record two days later without transfer tax stamps.
Although the debtor had not resided in her home in Cushman since November 2013, she continued to make mortgage
On August 31, 2015, the debtor filed a skeletal chapter 7 petition. On September 14, 2015, she filed her schedules and her statement of financial affairs [SOFA]. Relevant to the matters before the Court are the debtor's initial responses to three questions — one in her SOFA and two in Schedule B. Question 10 of the SOFA required the debtor to
In response, the debtor marked the box labeled "None." The trustees argue that the debtor should have disclosed in response to Question 10 that she transferred her interest in the Prince Street property to Buch on April 6, 2015.
UST Ex. 6.
The instructions on Schedule B directed the debtor to "list personal property of the debtor of whatever kind. If the debtor has no property in one or more of the categories, place an `x' in the appropriate position in the column labeled "None."' Question 2 on Schedule B asked the debtor to describe and value
UST Ex. 4. In response, the debtor listed a checking account at Bank of America with a balance of $5888.00 and a business checking account for her PLLC at Bank of America with a balance of $34.00. However, the actual balance in the PLLC's checking account on the date the debtor
UST Ex. 6. On both her original and amended schedules, the debtor valued her business interest at $20,000.00. At trial, the debtor's attorney questioned Wetzel about the interplay between the value of the debtor's interest in the PLLC and the balance in the PLLC's checking account on the date that the debtor filed her individual chapter 7 petition:
Trial Tr. vol I, 89-90.
Trial Tr. vol I, 91-92. On August 31, 2015, the PLLC had total outstanding credit card debt of $20,664.28, leaving an available balance of $5942.72 in the PLLC's account with which to pay employees and other business expenses. In response to
Trial Tr. vol II, 85.
Question 7 asked the debtor to list and value "Furs and jewelry." In response, the debtor put an "x" in the column labeled "None." However, on the date the debtor filed her petition, she owned a Tag Heuer watch gifted to her in 2007 by her former husband and some "small pieces of costume-like jewelry." Trial Tr. vol I, 86-87,141. When asked to explain why she did not disclose the watch on Schedule B, the debtor said that she did not consider watches to be jewelry — though she admitted that they do qualify as such — and she had not given any thought to the value of the watch or believed it to be valuable. Trial Tr. vol II, 86-87. In her amended schedules, the debtor added "Rings, Watch, Earrings" valued at $1200.00 to Schedule B and claimed an exemption of the same amount in her amended Schedule C. The debtor admitted at trial that she testified at her § 341(a) meeting of creditors on October 15, 2015, that she had listed her assets and debts and that her original schedules and statements were true and correct.
The trustees contend that the debtor's discharge should be denied under § 727(a)(2) and § 727(a)(4) because of her failure to disclose her transfer of the Prince Street property to Buch, her failure to schedule her jewelry — specifically, the Tag Heuer watch — and her failure to schedule the correct balance for the PLLC's bank account. In addition, Wetzel argues that the debtor fraudulently transferred her interest in the Prince Street property to Buch and that, as a result, Wetzel is entitled to recover the property for the benefit of the estate under § 548(a)(1)(A)(B).
To resolve these two adversary proceedings, the Court must decide the following: (1) whether the debtor fraudulently transferred the Prince Street property to Buch, entitling Wetzel to avoid the transfer and recover the value of the property for the benefit of the debtor's bankruptcy estate; and (2) whether the trustees' objections to the debtor's discharge should be sustained. The Court will address Wetzel's fraudulent transfer allegations before moving to the trustees' shared contention that the debtor's discharge should be denied.
The bankruptcy code defines a "transfer" as "each mode, direct or indirect, absolute or conditional, voluntary or involuntary, of disposing of or parting with — (i) property; or (ii) an interest in
11 U.S.C. § 548(a)(1)(A)(B). Although the debtor characterized her execution of the quitclaim deed on April 6, 2015, as nothing more than a mechanism to clear up title to the Prince Street property for Buch, the Court finds that it was still a transfer of the debtor's interest in the property. In addition, because the debtor signed the deed less than five months prior to filing her bankruptcy on August 31, 2015, the transfer falls within the two-year look-back period required under § 548. The next question, then, is whether the interest that the debtor transferred to Buch would have been property of the estate had the debtor not transferred it. See Golden v. The Guardian (In re Lenox Healthcare, Inc.), 343 B.R. 96, 100 (Bankr. D. Del. 2006) ("As a threshold matter, for a trustee to exercise avoidance powers under [§ 548], there must have been a transfer of property of the estate.") (citing Begier v. Internal Revenue Serv., 496 U.S. 53, 58, 110 S.Ct. 2258, 110 L.Ed.2d 46 (1990) ("if the debtor transfers property that would not have been available for distribution to his creditors in a bankruptcy proceeding, the policy behind the avoidance power is not implicated.")).
Property of the estate includes "all legal or equitable interests of the debtor in property as of the commencement of the case." 11 U.S.C. § 541(a)(1). Although property of the estate is an expansive concept, it is not limitless:
11 U.S.C. § 541(d). In other words, "where the debtor holds bare legal title without any equitable interest, the estate acquires bare legal title without any equitable interest." N.S. Garrott & Sons v. Union Planters Nat'l Bank (In re N.S. Garrott & Sons), 772 F.2d 462, 466 (8th Cir. 1985). Despite "the broad scope of section 541(a), the Supreme Court noted that `[t]he legislative history indicates that Congress intended to exclude from the estate property of others in which the debtor had some
Therefore, before the Court proceeds further in its analysis under § 548, the Court must determine under Arkansas law whether the debtor held only bare legal title to the Prince Street property when she transferred her interest to Buch or whether she held a more significant interest. See In re N.S. Garrott & Sons, 772 F.2d at 466 ("Property rights under section 541 are defined by state law.") (citing Butner v. United States, 440 U.S. 48, 55, 99 S.Ct. 914, 59 L.Ed.2d 136 (1979)). Under Arkansas law, a debtor may hold bare legal title as a result of a resulting trust, which arises as a matter of law when "property is purchased in the name of one person with money furnished by another." Cowden v. Ramsay (In re Cowden), 154 B.R. 531, 534 n.3 (Bankr. E.D. Ark. 1993) (citing Andres v. Andres, 1 Ark.App. 75, 613 S.W.2d 404, 406 (1981)). In a resulting trust, "a party becomes invested with legal title, but holds that title for the benefit of another." In re Cowden, 154 B.R. at 534 (citation omitted). A resulting trust is "founded upon the actual payment of money and upon no other ground." Andres, 613 S.W.2d at 406 (citing numerous cases). However, "when the parties involved are spouses or children of the one who pays the purchase price, the law presumes that the purchase and registration of legal title in the family members' names were intended as gifts by him to them since they are the natural objects of his affection and largess." Walker v. Hooker, 282 Ark. 61, 667 S.W.2d 637, 642 (1984) (citation omitted). The presumption of a gift may be rebutted by evidence that the party who paid for the property did not intend the party with legal title to have a beneficial interest in the property. Id. Although the debtor and Buch are not married, the nature of their long-term romantic relationship may give rise to a similar presumption in this case. As a result, the Court will consider evidence of Buch's intent, including whether he had a reason to title the property in the debtor's name (other than to give her a gift); whether he managed the property; collected the rents; paid taxes and insurance; paid for repairs and improvements; or otherwise asserted ownership of the property. See id.
The Court found Buch credible when he testified that he asked the debtor to co-sign the loan with First Community Bank because he believed that the Prince Street property would be off the market before he could generate the funds from the sale of his farm to allow for a cash purchase. The Court also believes that Buch never intended for the debtor to share in his ownership of the property. In fact, the loan application — signed by both Buch and the debtor — clearly indicated that title to the property was to be held by only Buch. Further, the debtor contributed none of her own funds toward the purchase or improvement of the Prince Street property — she paid none of the closing costs, none of the sizeable down payment, and none of the renovation costs. Buch paid for all of those things plus incurred the cost associated with rezoning the property. Buch also paid the insurance premiums on the Prince Street building, as well as the property taxes each year.
Based on the evidence discussed above, the Court finds that Buch paid for the Prince Street property without financial contribution from the debtor and did not intend to give the debtor a share of the property as a gift. Therefore, a resulting trust was established in favor of Buch and the debtor had only bare legal title to the property. As a result, the debtor had a duty to convey the property to the rightful owner, which she did on April 6, 2015. See In re Cowden, 154 B.R. at 534. For these reasons, the Court finds that Wetzel cannot avoid the debtor's transfer to Buch as fraudulent under § 548.
Next, both trustees seek the denial of the debtor's discharge under § 727(a)(2) and (a)(4)(A). "The denial of a debtor's discharge is akin to financial capital punishment. It is reserved for the most egregious misconduct by a debtor." Manning v. Watkins (In re Watkins), 474 B.R. 625, 630 (Bankr. N.D. Ind. 2012). Because the denial of a discharge is a "harsh and drastic penalty," the statute's provisions are "strictly construed in favor of the debtor." Korte v. U.S. Internal Revenue Serv.
Under § 727(a)(2) the Court shall grant a debtor a discharge, unless —
11 U.S.C. § 727(a)(2). Section 727(a)(2) is fundamental to the concept that a debtor's chapter 7 discharge is granted upon the condition that the debtor has disclosed all of her assets and made them available for distribution. Helena Chem. Co. v. Richmond (In re Richmond), 429 B.R. 263, 302 (Bankr. E.D. Ark. 2010). A creditor objecting to a debtor's discharge under § 727(a)(2) has the burden of proving four elements by a preponderance of the evidence —
See 11 U.S.C. § 727(a)(2); see also In re Korte, 262 B.R. at 472.
The Court finds that the first three factors are present in this case — the debtor transferred property within the year prior to filing her petition and failed to disclose the transfer on her SOFA in response to Question 10.
Id. (citing Ark. Code Ann. § 4-59-204(b)(1)-(11); Brown v. Third Nat'l Bank (In re Sherman); 67 F.3d 1348, 1354 (8th Cir. 1995); Graven v. Fink (In re Graven), 936 F.2d 378, 383-84 n.8 (8th Cir. 1991); United States v. Johnston, 245 F.Supp. 433, 441 (W.D. Ark. 1965)). A confluence of several badges of fraud "`can constitute conclusive evidence of an actual intent to defraud.'" In re Mathis, 258 B.R. at 734 (quoting In re Sherman, 67 F.3d at 1354). Section 101(31)(A) of the bankruptcy code provides that
11 U.S.C. § 101(31)(A).
The Court finds that the first badge of fraud is present in this case. The debtor transferred property to Buch, whom she had been dating for approximately four years at the time of the transfer. Although the Court recognizes that Buch and the debtor were not — and are not — married or otherwise related, the code's definition of an insider is not exclusive and the Court finds that the debtor's long-term committed relationship to Buch qualifies him as an insider in this case.
The Court's determination of the third badge of fraud — whether the transfer was disclosed or concealed — is mixed. The debtor failed to disclose her transfer of the Prince Street property when she filed bankruptcy, meaning that the transfer was initially concealed from the UST, Wetzel, and the debtor's creditors. However, First Community Bank — the creditor holding the debt that led to the debtor's bankruptcy filing — knew that the Prince Street property would be titled in only Buch's name because the loan application that the bank approved specifically stated that very thing.
The Court finds that the fourth badge is not present here. Although the debtor made her last mortgage payment on the Cushman property in March 2015, she had not yet defaulted on her obligation to First Community Bank when she transferred her interest in the Prince Street property to Buch and had not been sued or threatened with suit at the time.
The Court also finds that the fifth badge is not present in this case. The debtor transferred bare legal title to Buch and, as the Court stated above in its discussion of § 548, bare legal title has no economic value. As a result, the debtor's transfer of an asset with no value was not a transfer of substantially all of her assets.
The Court finds that the sixth badge of fraud is not present in this case because the debtor did not abscond.
The Court finds that the seventh badge is present. Although there is no evidence that the debtor removed assets, she concealed her Tag Heuer watch and other jewelry when she failed to list them in her original schedules. However, the Court does not assign the presence of this particular badge much weight due to the plausibility of the debtor's explanation for her initial omission of the items — the watch was a gift she received in 2007 from her ex-husband that she did not, at the time she filled out her schedules, consider "jewelry" and the rest of her jewelry was costume.
The Court finds that the eighth badge is not present in this case. The debtor transferred her valueless interest in the Prince Street property to Buch and received nothing in exchange. Therefore, the Court finds that the value of the consideration received by the debtor was reasonably equivalent to the value of the asset transferred. See Kapila v. Moodie (In re Moodie), 362 B.R. 554, 562 (Bankr. S.D. Fla. 2007) (transferring bare legal title for free is reasonably equivalent value).
The Court finds that the ninth badge of fraud is not present. There is no evidence to suggest that the debtor was insolvent on the date she transferred her interest in the Prince Street property to Buch and the
The Court finds that the tenth badge is present. The debtor transferred her interest to Buch shortly before she stopped making mortgage payments to First Community Bank on the Cushman property, leading the bank to foreclose and resulting in the debtor owing a $53,941.15 deficiency judgment. The Court finds that the eleventh badge, which relates to a transfer of business assets, is not applicable in this case.
After examining the circumstances surrounding the debtor's transfer of her interest in the Prince Street property to Buch, including the badges of fraud discussed above, the Court finds that the evidence fails to establish that the debtor made the transfer with the actual intent to defraud a creditor or her bankruptcy estate. Therefore, the Court finds that the trustees failed to carry their respective burdens of proof under § 727(a)(2) and denies the relief requested pursuant to that subsection in both complaints.
Section 727(a)(4)(A) provides for the denial of a debtor's discharge if "the debtor knowingly and fraudulently, in or in connection with the case, made a false oath or account." 11 U.S.C. § 727(a)(4)(A). A party objecting to a debtor's discharge under (a)(4)(A) has the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that —
In re Richmond, 429 B.R. at 307.
The first and second elements under § 727(a)(4)(A) require that the debtor made a false statement under oath. "For purposes of § 727(a)(4), a debtor's petition and schedules, statement of financial affairs, statements made at a § 341 meeting and testimony at a Rule 2004 examination all constitute statements that are made under oath." In re Stamat, 395 B.R. at 73. Like all debtors, the debtor in this case verified her schedules and statements under the penalty of perjury. See Daniel v. Boyd (In re Boyd), 347 B.R. 349, 355 (Bankr. W.D. Ark. 2006). In addition, she testified under oath at her § 341(a) meeting that she had read and signed her schedules and statements and they were true and correct. She also confirmed under oath at her § 341(a) meeting that she had listed all of her assets and debts. The debtor's declarations regarding her schedules and statements have the "force and effect of an oath." Id. at 355 (citing Cepelak v. Sears (In re Sears), 246 B.R. 341, 347 (8th Cir. BAP 2000)). Based on the fact that the debtor initially failed to list her jewelry, the correct balance in the PLLC's bank account, and the transfer of the Prince Street property on her schedules and SOFA but made oaths to the contrary, the Court finds that the first two elements under § 727(a)(4)(A) are satisfied.
Before discussing the third and fourth elements, the Court will address
Here, the debtor failed to disclose in her initial schedules that she owned a Tag Heuer watch and other jewelry; she failed to disclose that she had transferred her interest in the Prince Street property to Buch on April 6, 2015; and she misstated the balance of the PLLC's bank account on the date she filed her individual bankruptcy case. The Court finds that the debtor's failure to disclose that she owned a watch and other jewelry in her initial schedules was a material misstatement regarding the debtor's assets — irrespective of whether those assets could be — and later were — claimed as exempt.
Likewise, the Court finds that the debtor's failure to disclose her transfer of the Prince Street property to Buch was a material misstatement. Even if the debtor believed that her transfer to Buch was meaningless to her estate because he was the true owner of the property and the quitclaim deed was only a means of clearing the title, she had a responsibility to answer Question 10 of her SOFA accurately, end of story. Although the Court has now determined that the debtor held and transferred only bare legal title to the Prince Street property, the Court's ruling on that issue does not retroactively absolve the debtor from the duty she had on the date she filed her SOFA to disclose every transfer that she had made within two years of the date she filed her petition — regardless of whether she subjectively believed the information to be material or not. Although the transfer disposed of an interest in property that the debtor's creditors could not have reached, it was nonetheless material and should have been disclosed. See In re Freese, 460 B.R. at 739.
The trustees also argue that the debtor made a material misstatement when she understated the balance of the PLLC's bank account as of the date she filed her individual bankruptcy petition. However, the Court finds that this particular misstatement was not material to the debtor's bankruptcy case, Although the PLLC is owned by the debtor — as she disclosed elsewhere on Schedule B — the PLLC itself is not in bankruptcy and the debtor was not required to separately list the PLLC's bank account, even if she occasionally used the account to pay personal expenses. See In re Watkins, 474 B.R. at 644 (finding that an individual debtor was not required to disclose the existence of a corporate account); see also Brown v. Smith (In re Smith), 489 B.R. 875, 895 (a statement about an asset that is not the debtor's "does not relate materially to the bankruptcy case.").
For the above stated reasons, the Court denies the relief requested in the UST's and Wetzel's respective complaints and will schedule the UST's motion to dismiss for hearing by subsequent notice.
IT IS SO ORDERED.