MEMORANDUM OPINION DENYING DEBTORS' DISCHARGE
KAREN S. JENNEMANN, Bankruptcy Judge.
Former business partners1 and the United States Trustee2 contend the Debtors should not receive a discharge of their debts under various provisions of the Bankruptcy Code3 because they hid assets before and during this bankruptcy case, failed to keep or withheld business records preventing the parties from determining the Debtors' true financial condition, cannot explain their loss of assets, and lied on their bankruptcy pleadings. Debtors vehemently deny these allegations arguing failed businesses, a fire, a computer crash, multiple foreclosures, and in Mr. Rome's words, "hookers and blow," caused their financial decline and inability to produce any meaningful financial records. After a multi-day trial,4 the Court finds that the Debtors are not entitled to a discharge under §§ 727(a)(3), (4), and (5).
The primary purpose of a Chapter 7 consumer bankruptcy case is to reward an honest debtor with a fresh start from all debts—a discharge.5 Courts construe objections to discharge liberally for the debtor and strictly against the objecting party.6 However, only those debtors who fully disclose their assets may receive a discharge.7 Early and complete disclosure by the honest debtor avoids extraordinary and unjustified work by Chapter 7 Trustees, who should not spend time recreating what "may" have happened to a debtor's assets.8
When a party objects to a debtor's discharge, the initial burden is on that party to prove the objection by a preponderance of the evidence.9 Once met, the burden shifts to the debtor to rebut the allegations.10 Plaintiffs here argue the Debtors are precluded from discharging their debts because they failed to produce or to keep adequate financial records to allow their creditors to ascertain their true financial condition (§ 727(a)(3)), they knowingly or fraudulently made a false oath or account (§ 727(a)(4)(A)), and they failed to satisfactorily explain their loss of assets (§ 727(a)(5)).
Section 727(a)(3) provides a debtor should not receive a discharge if he or she fails to maintain adequate books and records from which the debtor's true financial condition can be ascertained.11 The purpose of § 727(a)(3) is to give creditors, the trustee, and the bankruptcy court, "complete and accurate information regarding the status of a debtor's affairs and to test the completeness of the [debtor's] disclosure."12 Giving truthful and complete financial books and records to the Chapter 7 Trustee is mandatory. Every trustee needs the information to administer the bankruptcy case, and this is a condition precedent to receiving a discharge.13 Courts have wide discretion in determining whether a debtor has maintained sufficient records.14
Courts generally must decide whether the books and records produced by a debtor "are adequate to permit the court and creditors to trace the debtor's financial dealings."15 "While perfect record keeping is not required, the creditors examining the debtor's records `must be reasonably able to follow the debtor's business transactions, make intelligent inquiry, verify the oral statements and explanations of the bankrupt, and ascertain the present and past financial condition of the bankrupt [with] substantial completeness and accuracy.'"16
Section 727(a)(4)(A) provides that a debtor shall not receive a discharge where he "knowingly and fraudulently, in or in connection with the case, makes a false oath."17 The false oath must be both fraudulent and material.18 A false oath is material if it "bears a relationship to the bankrupt's business transactions or estate, or concerns the discovery of assets, business dealings, or the existence or disposition of his property."19 An omission from a debtor's schedules or statement of financial affairs, for example, can constitute a false oath under § 727(a)(4).20 After a plaintiff's initial burden is met, the burden shifts to the debtor to prove he did not knowingly and fraudulently make a material false oath.21
Section 727(a)(5)22 precludes a debtor's discharge where the debtor fails to explain a loss of assets.23 A plaintiff has the preliminary burden of demonstrating that the debtor "formerly owned substantial, identifiable assets that are now unavailable to distribute to creditors."24 Upon such a showing, debtors then must supply a satisfactory reason why they no longer have the asset.25 "A [debtor's] general oral explanation for the disappearance of substantial assets without documentary corroboration" is not enough.26 Vague and indefinite explanations of losses are not sufficient.27
Applying these legal standards to the facts, Plaintiffs assert that Debtors had (and may still have) substantial assets but have failed to disclose or to sufficiently account for the loss of these assets. Although they provided thousands of pages of records, none satisfactorily explain where these assets went. And, the Debtors' other explanations of their financial losses are not credible.
Plaintiffs have proven overwhelmingly that Debtors had (and may still have) substantial assets. Pre-bankruptcy, the Debtors lived lavishly. They owned several homes and other real estate.28 Mr. Rome was the CEO and President of Apex Radiology, Inc. ("Apex"), a multimillion dollar company that hired doctors to provide radiology services to hospitals and other doctors.29 According to the Debtors' Memorandum of Law, Mr. Rome's "income was commensurate with that of a CEO at that level, and the Rome family lived accordingly."30 Debtors also owned and operated a martial arts gym,31 a restaurant,32 car dealerships,33 and a payday loan company.34 Both Debtors actively worked in these joint business ventures.35
Debtors also have an established practice of trading items for barter and cash without maintaining normal financial records. They sold substantial valuable personal property at informal auctions and sales. Mr. Rome traded precious metals including gold and silver, keeping few or no records.36 Mrs. Rome sold bootleg women's purses.37 And, importantly for this case, Debtors for years have failed or refused to keep normal financial records to document their business dealings. The Court concludes that the examples discussed below and identified during the trial of the Debtors' unorthodox business dealings likely are just the "tip of the iceberg" of the numerous business transactions that went undetected by the Chapter 7 Trustee or the Creditors.
On March 23, 2015, the Debtors filed this joint Chapter 7 bankruptcy case.38 Debtors listed no cash, and only $290 in the Debtors' joint bank account.39 They disclosed $43,588.65 in personal property, claiming virtually all property as exempt from creditor claims.40 Except for consulting income of $10,800 earned in 2014, Debtors' Statement of Financial Affairs ("SOFA") indicated no earned income for 2013,41 2014,42 and pre-petition 2015.43 Yet, they listed unsecured debts of almost $4.8 million.
If the Debtors' schedules are to be believed, they quickly went from living a privileged lifestyle to one of poverty. The Court however concludes that the Debtors schedules are mostly fiction and do not reflect the Debtors' true financial situation. The Court relies on a few examples to buttress this conclusion that the Debtors had substantial assets, have failed to explain what happened to these assets, and have lied on their bankruptcy schedules.
Debtors Received $1.4 Million in October 2012
In 2007, Apex sold its assets to Franklin & Seidelmann, LLC ("F&S")44 for an upfront payment of $4.1 million and a promissory note of $3.5 million.45 Mr. Rome received about $1.4 from the initial payment.46 F&S also hired Mr. Rome under the terms of the sale.47 The employment relationship was rocky and ended with Mr. Rome's termination.48
Both Debtors sued F&S individually for damages resulting from Mr. Rome's employment termination.49 Mrs. Rome claimed physical injuries resulted from her husband's termination.50 Mr. Rome claimed a more straight-forward breach of contract claim.51 In October 2012, Debtors won and received an arbitration award of $1.4 million from F&S.52
Debtors do not satisfactorily explain where these substantial monies of $1.4 million went between receipt in October 2012 and the bankruptcy filing in March 2015, a period of only 18 months.53 Debtors also fail to account for the earlier monies received in 2007 (an additional $1.4 million) and in 2009 (over $1 million). Debtors received approximately $3.8 million between 2007 and their bankruptcy filing in March 2015. Yet, they claim few assets and provide no credible explanations for what happened to the money.
Debtors Obfuscated Ownership of Their Vehicles and Hid Personal Property
Debtors drove and had exclusive use of two cars, a Honda Odyssey and a Nissan Titan, when they filed bankruptcy.54 They did not list these cars in their schedules contending they had no ownership interest. The Court finds this testimony false and unbelievable under § 727(a)(4)(A).
In August 2010, Mr. Rome obtained the Honda Odyssey and titled it jointly to Wade Rome and B&H Auto.55 The B&H Auto entity, however, did not exist when the title was issued.56 Similarly, in 2012, Mr. Rome acquired57 the Nissan Titan with a check drawn from Macon Finance,58 and titled it in Rome Enterprise's name, a business he controlled.59
Debtors drove both cars for years under expired dealer's licenses and fake stickers.60 Debtors insured both cars telling their insurance company, GEICO, they were the owners of the two cars.61 Debtors had exclusive control of the Odyssey and the Titan from the day they got the vehicles until they turned the cars over to the Chapter 7 Trustee.62 Debtors were the true legal owners of the cars, regardless of the "name games" played with the car titles.63
Debtors also had numerous motorcycles they never disclosed in their schedules. Terry Brown, the Debtors' neighbor, regularly observed motorcycles at the Debtors' home in Florida in early 2015.64 Mr. Brown testified he saw the Debtors moving these motorcycles with substantial other personal property from their Florida home shortly before this bankruptcy was filed.65 Sandra Trudeau, the Debtors' landlord, testified Mr. Rome told her he owned ten motorcycles and that he often drove to her home on a motorcycle.66 Ms. Keela Ratliff, a former employee of one of the Debtors' many businesses, stated that she observed three to four motorcycles at the Debtors' prior home in Missouri.67
On August 12, 2015, the Trustee inspected the Debtors' residence in Florida.68 She discovered a large Liberty Lincoln safe at least five feet in high and two feet in width not disclosed in the Debtors' schedules.69 Debtors refused to open the safe during the inspection, claiming it belonged to their son.70 Who knows what was in this safe or what happened to the property moved shortly before the bankruptcy was filed. The breadth and number of vehicles and other personal property the Debtors own and hid is unquantifiable.
Debtors Purchased $700,000 of Gold, Silver, and Coins in 2012 and 2013
In late 2012 and 2013, Mr. Rome bought $600,000 in gold and silver coins from the Tulving Company.71 Debtors have not satisfactorily explained what happened to these coins, instead offering two unbelievable stories.72 First, Mr. Rome contends he tried to exchange some coins but Tulving never sent him the substitute coins.73 Second, Mr. Rome contends the Tulving Company fraudulently sold him seven sealed boxes, called "monster boxes," that contained "lead shot" and fake Krugerands instead of the valuable metals he ordered.74
Mr. Rome testified he did not find the false product because he did not want to break the seal on the monster box.75 He never filed a police report regarding the alleged "lead shot."76 And, he never filed a claim in the Chapter 11 case later filed by the Tulving Company.77
The Chapter 7 Trustee investigated whether she had a claim against Tulving and concluded she had no legitimate claim.78 BRG Financial Services, the expert retained in the Tulving bankruptcy, found Mr. Rome was not a potential creditor.79 And no other creditor in Tulving's bankruptcy case filed a claim contending Tulving had sent lead instead of the requested gold or silver—not one claim.80 The Court rejects the Debtors explanation of what happened to the $600,000 of gold and silver purchased in 2012 and 2013. Perhaps the Debtors have used it, perhaps they still have it. But, without doubt, they have not explained what happened to it.
Mr. Rome also bought gold and silver from vendors other than Tulving shortly before filing bankruptcy. Debtors' own witness, Robert Appelman, testified he sold Wade Rome gold for a cash payment of $100,000 in July 2013.81 Where did this gold purchased for $100,000 go?
And, the Debtors attempted to pay rent in gold and silver to their landlord, Sandra Trudeau, after this bankruptcy case was filed, indicating the Debtors still had at least some of the valuable metals. Ms. Trudeau testified that Mr. Rome offered to pay rent in May 2015, about one month after filing bankruptcy, with a coin he valued at $44,000.82 (The Court notes that, when Ms. Trudeau refused to accept this tendered coin, Debtors gave her $10,134 in cash, when four weeks earlier they claimed to have only $290.)83 A few days later, Mr. Rome again tried to pay rent with a large bag of silver "so heavy he could not lift it."84 (As another aside, Mr. Rome also offered to buy the rental home in 2013 and 2014, including a cash offer for $350,000.85) How were the Debtors able to pay rent with gold and silver (and cash) after filing bankruptcy, when they listed no gold, silver or coins on their schedules? Debtors offer no credible explanation.
Debtors Received Undisclosed Business Income
Until 2013, Debtors jointly operated a payday loan business, Macon Finance Company ("MPL"), in Macon, Missouri.86 Debtors did not disclose income arising from MPL, and they failed to produce the company's financial books and records that would allow one to assess the business's value. Debtors argue that MPL's financial records remain with MPL's owner and their former attorney, Phil Prewitt.87 The Court concludes, however, that the Debtors were the true owners and operators of MPL and that they received substantial undisclosed income from the business. This is just another example of the Debtors attempting to evade the consequences of claiming ownership of a business they created and operated.
Mary Kessler, a former employee of MPL,88 testified that both Debtors were in charge of the business89 and that she would occasionally make deposits to Rome Enterprises, another one of the Debtors' businesses, without entering the information into MPL's financial books.90 Ms. Kessler confirmed that Mr. Rome often bought gold and silver coins from customers,91 but MPL kept no accounting of these purchases unless the gold and silver was exchanged for the payment of a loan.92 She explained that references to "shareholders" in the company's daily records meant monies sent to Mr. Rome at the direction of Mrs. Rome.93
Ms. Kessler also testified that, because the Debtors did not report their earnings to the IRS, she had to prepare a special form to justify her own payroll.94 Mr. Rome instructed her to stop keeping her own time records demonstrating his established practice of failing to keep routine business records.95 Obviously, the Debtors' practice of keeping no or incomplete financial records was established long before they filed this bankruptcy case.96
Plaintiffs have established that the Debtors received $1.4 million in October 2012, but reflected only $290 in cash on the day they filed this bankruptcy case. Creditors also established that, on the petition date, Debtors also possessed but failed to disclose two cars, who knows how many motorcycles, precious metals consisting of gold, silver and coins, additional hidden personal property, and income from operating businesses. These are merely examples of substantial, identifiable assets owned by the Debtors at or shortly before filing bankruptcy. I expect no one will locate all property the Debtors owned at the bankruptcy filing, but I conclude their assets were substantially greater than the ones disclosed in their schedules.
Debtors Failed to Adequately Explain Loss of Assets
The burden then shifts to the Debtors to explain satisfactorily what happened to these assets. Debtors have woefully failed this task.
Mr. Rome testified he did not record all of his expenses because he spent a lot of money on "very improper things" including, in his own words, "hookers and blow."97 Mr. Rome claims he was not in a good place from 2009 to 2014, and he was spending over $5,000 a month on drugs and prostitutes.98 Debtors state that Mr. Rome was candid about his drug abuse, and that even if the Plaintiffs do not like his explanation, the explanation was "truthful and satisfactory."99
The Court rejects the Debtors' explanation on both factual and legal grounds. Factually, the Debtors acknowledge they received $1.4 million in October 2012. If Mr. Rome spent double what he states, $10,000 per month for the 18 months preceding this bankruptcy filing, the spending would only account for $180,000. What happened to the remaining $1.22 million?
I also legally reject the Debtors' argument that drug use excuses a failure to account for monies and assets. I adopt the strong majority position taken by most courts that drug addiction and alcohol problems do not explain loss of assets. In In re Dollin, for example, the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals found that even if a debtor's drug addiction prevented him from keeping adequate records, the drug addiction did not excuse a failure to account for lost monies.100 Similarly, in In re Liberatore, the Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania found that a debtor's explanation for failing to keep adequate records due to her use of a prescription drug was unsatisfactory when the debtor simultaneously kept other records and handled the requirements of ordinary daily living on her own.101
Although Mr. Rome likely spent significant monies on "hookers and blow," he still continued to conduct business. In 2010 and 2012, he finagled a way to get two cars for the family through a sophisticated titling scam that kept the cars' legal title out of the Debtors' names. He successfully managed litigation against F&S resulting in the $1.4 million award in October 2012.102 He bought gold, silver, and coins for at least $700,000 in late 2012 and 2013.103 And, he actively managed MPL, the payday loan business in Missouri until its closure in 2013.104 Mr. Rome wants to convince the Court he was incapacitated by his drug problems before this bankruptcy and use this as an excuse why he cannot account for losing his assets. The evidence does not support this conclusion, and the Court summarily rejects this explanation.
Further, Mrs. Rome, who had no known substance abuse problems, was the primary bookkeeper for the family. She failed to keep adequate records of the couple's financial activities, even though there is evidence she had joint control of bank accounts.105 Mrs. Rome also was in charge of day-to-day operations of the MPL payday loan business. And, she assisted in preparing the couple's tax returns.106 She had the financial expertise and access to the Debtors' financial records to keep track of their assets. Debtors, however, deliberately failed to keep traditional financial records.
Debtors argue they lost various financial records due to chaotic events occurring prior to 2012.107 They claim that many of the missing records and bank statements were lost when Premier Bank failed and when a fire damaged a building where Mr. Rome kept records.108 The fire, however, occurred in 2010, and Premier Bank failed in 2011.109 Debtors' loss of income because of Mr. Rome's firing at F&S also occurred in 2008 and 2009.110 Assuming this is true, what happened to more recent financial records since 2011? Specifically, how did the Debtors spend the $1.4 million they obtained in October 2012?
To answer this question, Debtors point to 4,000 pages of documents they produced. But, after sifting through the evidence and carefully reviewing the testimony, the Court concludes the Debtors only partially explained the loss of some assets. Most documents were submitted to add bulk but little or no content to what happened to the money, the motorcycles, the gold, and the personal property. Even the Debtors' Memorandum of Law concedes there is an unexplained loss of $624,912.22 in assets.111
Mrs. Rome desperately tried to explain the whereabouts of the missing money, the precious metals, and the other assets by testifying about a so-called demonstrative aid titled "Evidence Summary" during the last days of trial.112 The summary included hard-to-read charts, illegible receipts, and estimated expenses with no apparent methodology or consistent explanation of where the money went.113 It also included a schedule attached to the Debtors' 2014 tax return that calculated and inferred loss of gold.114 The Court finds neither this Evidence Summary nor any other excuse offered by the Debtors satisfactorily explains the loss of the Debtors' assets.
The anecdotal testimony of Ms. Trudeau perhaps best captures the Debtors' duplicity. In July 2015, four months after the petition date, Ms. Trudeau asked Mr. Rome whether he had hid assets and he replied, sarcastically while nodding his head yes, but stating "No! No!"115
Debtors are Not Credible
Credibility is often the key in determining the sufficiency of a debtor's explanation for lost assets. Here, the Court specifically finds that the both of the Debtors' testimonies were not credible. Mr. Rome particularly could not separate fact from fiction and often gave conflicting testimony. Mrs. Rome, sadly, also was not believable. Plaintiffs provided enough evidence to draw a contrary conclusion to the Debtors' numerous representations.116
Conversely, the Court finds the third party witnesses, including and especially Ms. Trudeau, credible. Despite the Debtors' allegations that Ms. Trudeau was motivated by "spite and revenge,"117 Ms. Trudeau supplied believable details. She offered a consistent time line of what occurred between her and the Debtors. Ms. Trudeau was an angry creditor frustrated by the Debtors' financial irresponsibility. But, she was honest in her anger and, although she may have relished the opportunity to "dish dirt" on the Debtors, I conclude she was telling the truth. More important, her testimony was buttressed by other third party testimony including that of Ms. Kessler and Mr. Brown.
Debtors are Not Entitled to a Discharge
Plaintiffs have shown by a preponderance of the evidence the Debtors are not entitled to a discharge under §§ 727(a) (3), (4)(A), and (5) of the Bankruptcy Code. They failed to explain the loss of their assets, failed to maintain accurate and adequate financial records to allow the parties to evaluate their financial condition, and made false oaths by failing to disclose numerous substantial, identifiable assets. Debtors' explanations for their failures are not credible or accepted.
Related Adversary Proceeding Seeking an Accounting and Turnover
Plaintiffs also filed a related adversary proceeding seeking turnover of hidden estate property under § 542(a), an accounting of hidden assets, and injunctive relief to prohibit the Debtors from liquidating or transferring the hidden assets.118 Trustee testified that the "hidden assets" she was trying to recover were mainly the $600,000 of precious metals purchased from Tulving in October 2012.119 The evidence admittedly failed to establish what happened to this gold. Requiring an additional accounting at this point from these Debtors is fruitless. And, given that the Debtors will not discharge their debts, further recovery efforts are best left to other forums.
Section 1334(c)(1) governs discretionary abstention and allows a federal court to abstain from hearing a proceeding over which it has jurisdiction.120 Factors to consider in deciding if a matter should proceed in state court is whether the state court is better equipped to handle the issue.121 Here, I conclude that the state court is the better forum.
Given the Debtors' deceptive practices, the denial of the Debtors' discharges, and the fact the Plaintiff Creditors litigated this matter in state court for years, this Court will not continue this futile endeavor of attempting to obtain this fungible personal property of gold, silver, and coins. The parties may pursue collection efforts, if they chose, in state court.122
A Final Judgment shall be entered denying the Debtors' discharges and abstaining from taking any further action in the related accounting and turnover adversary proceeding.
The Clerk is directed to serve a copy of this memorandum opinion on all interested parties.