TAMARA O. MITCHELL, Bankruptcy Judge.
This adversary proceeding came before the Court for trial on January 22, 2014, and February 3, 2014. Appearing before the Court were Lee R. Benton and Jamie Alisa Wilson, counsel for the Defendant/Debtor; Gail Lindley Andrews, pro se Plaintiff; Cheryl Ann Chamblee, the Defendant/Debtor; Jodi Ketchersid, witness for the Plaintiff; and George Andrews, witness for the Plaintiff. This Court has jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1334(b), 151, and 157(a) and the District Court's General Order Of Reference Dated July 16, 1984, As Amended July 17,-1984.
This adversary proceeding concerns a mortgage debt owed by Ms. Chamblee to Ms. Andrews. Ms. Andrews asserts that but for misrepresentations made by Ms. Chamblee she would not have loaned Ms. Chamblee money, and therefore the debt should be held nondischargeable. The trial of this adversary proceeding spanned one and one-half days and the parties introduced hundreds of pages of exhibits. The parties' accounts of the factual background differ in material respects.
According to the testimony of both parties, Ms. Chamblee and Ms. Andrews first became acquainted with each other in June 2007. Ms. Chamblee testified that she was looking at houses for sale in Ms. Andrews's neighborhood when she was approached by George Andrews, Ms. Andrews's husband, who asked if she would like to view the Andrews's home. She testified that she later contacted Ms. Andrews to set up an appointment, and at the time she viewed the house she and Ms. Andrews discussed Ms. Chamblee's desire to move from Destin, Florida, where she worked as a realtor, to Birmingham so that her son could attend Altamont School. According to Ms. Chamblee she informed Ms. Andrews that she would work in Birmingham as a realtor and also continue to work in Destin as a realtor.
Ms. Chamblee testified that she does not recall speaking with Ms. Andrews about the selling price of the house at that time, but that Ms. Andrews had that discussion with Ms. Chamblee's ex-husband when he came to see the house. At some point the parties agreed that Ms. Andrews would sell the house to Ms. Chamblee for $950,000.00. See Joint Exh. 6, Real Estate Sales Contract. Ms. Andrews testified that when Ms. Chamblee's ex-husband asked if she would hold the mortgage she declined; however, she did agree to Mr. Chamblee's request that she hold a smaller second mortgage. According to Ms. Andrews he represented that he was developing a condominium project, and further, that when the development was ready in a couple of years Ms. Chamblee would sell the units and the second mortgage loan owed to Ms. Andrews could be repaid. Ms. Andrews stated that Mr. Chamblee asked that a no-prepayment-penalty clause be added to the contract so that Ms. Chamblee would not be penalized if the loan could be paid off more quickly. Ms. Andrews, a licensed attorney who serves as a law clerk to a state court judge presiding over civil cases, and who has a private law practice doing some family and/or domestic relations work on her own, drafted the Real Estate Sales Contract ("Sales Contract") at the request of Mr. Chamblee. The Sales Contract, which incorporated her agreement to hold a second mortgage, provided that $700,000
Ms. Chamblee testified that after signing the Sales Contract she went to the beach for the Fourth of July holiday, and upon returning, she informed Ms. Andrews that she was unable to obtain a letter of credit or affirmation of loan. Each of the parties has a different version of what happened next. According to Ms. Chamblee she offered to Ms. Andrews the good faith estimate prepared by her first mortgage lender, Countrywide Bank ("Countrywide"), reflecting the interest rate, loan charges, and other information that would indicate to Ms. Andrews she was working to obtain a loan. In contrast, Ms. Andrews testified that Ms. Chamblee offered and she agreed to accept Ms. Chamblee's loan application prepared for Countrywide ("Loan Application" or "Application") in lieu of a letter of credit and affirmation of loan. Although the Sales Contract specified that Ms. Chamblee was to provide both a letter of credit and an affirmation of loan, Ms. Andrews apparently proceeded as if Ms. Chamblee was required to produce only one or the other because, according to Ms. Andrews's testimony, she closed the sale and loan despite having received only the Loan Application. Ms. Andrews claimed that she received a copy of the Loan Application via email although she could not remember if Ms. Chamblee or a Countrywide representative emailed it to her.
Ms. Andrews testified that because she financed a portion of the purchase price for Ms. Chamblee, she likewise financed a portion of the purchase price of her new home with the sellers. Ms. Andrews contends that when Ms. Chamblee did not pay off the second mortgage loan from Ms. Andrews when due, Ms. Andrews had to
Ms. Chamblee testified that she made all of the payments due on her first mortgage loan from Countrywide for the first two years of owning the home and during that time spent approximately $100,000 on home improvements. She further testified that she could not continue to pay the first mortgage payments after the first two years; accordingly, she listed the house for sale in September 2009 and it remained on the market until November 2011. It was her testimony that during this time she continued to maintain and repair the home, showed the house to prospective purchasers every Sunday, and attempted to keep Ms. Andrews informed of her efforts to sell the house. Ms. Chamblee also stated that she was able to stave off a foreclosure sale by Countrywide while she worked to obtain a short sale, and that she was finally able to sell the home via short sale within a day of the foreclosure sale set pursuant to Countrywide's second foreclosure notice. To close the short sale, Ms. Andrews agreed to accept $44,000 from the purchaser of the home toward the second mortgage debt owed to Ms. Andrews. Ms. Chamblee noted that the short sale allowed Ms. Andrews to be paid the $44,000, and that had the short sale not occurred and Countrywide's foreclosure sale taken place instead, that Ms. Andrews would have likely received nothing.
Ms. Andrews contends that she would not have made the loan to Ms. Chamblee in the first place had Ms. Chamblee not made false representations about her financial condition. According to Ms. Andrews, she had been told by both Ms. Chamblee and her ex-husband that Ms. Chamblee would be selling condominiums in a project in Florida that Mr. Chamblee was developing. She claims that Mr. Chamblee represented to her that the condominiums would be sold by Ms. Chamblee within a couple of years and that the loan she extended would be paid at that time. Ms. Andrews called Jodi Ketchersid, owner of Real Joy Properties in Destin, as a witness. Ms. Ketchersid testified that Ms. Chamblee had worked as a realtor at Real Joy Properties. Ms. Ketchersid further testified that she too was told that Ms. Chamblee would sell condominiums being developed by Mr. Chamblee but she later discovered that the condominium project in Florida did not actually exist. The bulk of allegedly false statements that Ms. Andrews testified she relied on were contained in the Loan Application. Ms. Chamblee testified that the Loan Application did in fact contain errors, namely (1) that she had $300,000 in a bank account at the time the Loan Application was completed; (2) that she had employment income in the amount of $15,000 per month; (3) that she received $8,437 in child support and alimony per month; and (4) that there was an outstanding judgment against her. Ms. Chamblee also noted that the Loan Application incorrectly reflected that she had no dependents and that the house she was purchasing was built in 2002. Ms. Chamblee testified that in actuality her bank account at the time contained over $3,000, not $300,000.
According to Ms. Chamblee, she had provided the information for the Loan Application to Countrywide loan officer, Jennifer Fiske, over the telephone, then received the completed Loan Application in a package of other loan documents that were mailed to her. She stated that she corrected by hand the part of the Application regarding the judgment then called Jennifer Fiske to inform her of all of the errors. Ms. Chamblee further stated that Ms. Fiske made her feel as if she had done something wrong by marking on the Loan Application; thus she made no other corrections by hand but simply initialed the one change she had made, signed the Application, and sent it back to Countrywide as instructed. She asserts Ms. Fiske informed her she would have a corrected Loan Application to sign at closing. Ms. Andrews testified that she was not aware a corrected Loan Application existed until she obtained it in discovery during this litigation. Ms. Chamblee admitted that she did not provide the corrected Loan Application to Ms. Andrews, but also pointed out that neither Ms. Andrews nor the Contract requested or required a loan application. Ms. Andrews, who testified that she had bought and sold other houses before her transaction with Ms. Chamblee, also testified that she did not seek any financial documents from Ms. Chamblee other than the "letter of credit" and "affirmation of loan" required in the Sales Contract. She admitted she did not perform a credit check and did not ask Ms. Chamblee about her monthly bills and other obligations.
Upon questioning by Ms. Andrews, Ms. Chamblee testified that she was aware Ms. Andrews could have voided the Contract since Ms. Chamblee did not provide the "letter of credit" and "affirmation of loan" as required. Ms. Chamblee also testified that she did not believe that a "letter of credit" would have given Ms. Andrews information as to what Ms. Chamblee was worth.
George Andrews, Ms. Andrews's husband and a retired attorney, testified on her behalf. According to Mr. Andrews, he and Ms. Andrews agreed that before they uprooted their own lives they wanted assurance that Ms. Chamblee and her exhusband, Mr. Chamblee, were solvent, credit-worthy people who would be able to obtain a first mortgage loan and to also repay the money being loaned by Ms. Andrews. Mr. Andrews admitted that he relied in some respects on Countrywide to investigate Ms. Chamblee's financial condition, as he believed that a bank would investigate prior to making a $700,000 loan. Mr. Andrews acknowledged that Ms. Andrews could have included a provision in the sales contract requiring Ms. Chamblee to produce a financial statement, but he thought Ms. Andrews believed that she was asking for a financial statement in the Contract. He testified that it was his understanding that a "letter of credit" was an affirmation from a bank that the potential borrowers were solvent and he could do business with them, and was basically the same as an "affirmation of loan" required by the Sales Contract.
Ms. Andrews testified she brought suit against Ms. Chamblee in the Circuit Court of Jefferson County, Alabama, and obtained a judgment against her in September 2011, for the balance owed on the Note secured by the second mortgage. Ms. Chamblee filed her chapter 7 bankruptcy petition on November 19, 2012, and Ms. Andrews filed this adversary proceeding on February 14, 2013.
Ms. Andrews seeks to have the debt owed to her declared nondischargeable under 11 U.S.C. sections 523(a)(2)(A), 523(a)(2)(B), and/or 523(a)(6). A plaintiff has the burden to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that a debt should not be discharged under each of these sections. Grogan v. Garner, 498 U.S. 279, 286, 111 S.Ct. 654, 659, 112 L.Ed.2d 755 (1991) ("[T]he preponderance-of-the-evidence standard results in a roughly equal allocation of the risk of error between litigants.").
According to the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals, "the fraud exceptions to discharge exist to punish the debtor for committing fraud." St. Laurent v. Ambrose (In re St. Laurent), 991 F.2d 672, 680 (11th Cir.1993) (citation omitted). Section 523(a)(2)(A), one of the fraud exceptions to discharge, provides:
11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(2)(A). To obtain a determination that section 523(a)(2)(A) bars a specific debt from discharge, the creditor must prove that "`(1) the debtor made a false representation to deceive the creditor, (2) the creditor relied on the misrepresentation, (3) the reliance was justified, and (4) the creditor sustained a loss as a result of the misrepresentation.'" Sears v. United States, 533 Fed.Appx. 941, 945 (11th Cir.2013) (quotingIn re Bilzerian, 153 F.3d 1278, 1281 (11th Cir.1998)).
It has been explained that:
FCC National Bank v. Gilmore (In re Gilmore), 221 B.R. 864, 872 (Bankr. N.D.Ala.1998) (Cohen, J.) (some citations omitted).
In the case Schweig v. Hunter, the creditor sought a determination of nondischargeability of a debt owed to him because the debtor, an account executive for a securities broker, never disclosed his affinity for gambling or his past embezzlement of funds from his customers. Schweig v. Hunter, 780 F.2d 1577, 1578-79 (11th Cir.1986) (abrogated on other grounds by Grogan v. Garner, 498 U.S. 279, 111 S.Ct. 654, 112 L.Ed.2d 755 (1991))
Id. Thus, the failure of the debtor to disclose unfavorable facts before obtaining a loan did not equal false pretenses, false representation, or actual fraud.
Ms. Andrews testified that during one of their conversations Ms. Chamblee told her that her ex-husband was a condominium developer and that she would be selling condominiums in Florida for him. She also testified that Mr. Chamblee, the exhusband, asked her to hold a mortgage on a portion of the purchase price for a couple of years at which time the Florida condominiums
Ms. Andrews's argument that the debt should be excepted from discharge under section 523(a)(2)(A) is based less on express misrepresentations allegedly made by Ms. Chamblee than on what Ms. Chamblee did not say.
Through their testimony at trial it became apparent that Ms. Andrews and Mr. Andrews were looking for assurance that Ms. Chamblee was "creditworthy" in the sense that she would have the financial means to obtain a first mortgage loan and be able to repay the second mortgage loan. The fact that Ms. Andrews asked if Ms. Chamblee believed a "letter of credit" would have given her financial information further reinforces this conclusion. Ms. Andrews testified that at the time she asked for a "letter of credit" in the Sales Contract she was looking for evidence that Ms. Chamblee could pay, and did not understand at the time that "letter of credit" had a different meaning.
The testimony of both Ms. Andrews and her husband indicated that at least to some extent they were relying on Countrywide to undertake the analysis of Ms. Chamblee's financial condition. Ms. Andrews testified that she did not ask Ms. Chamblee for tax returns or bank statements, that she never performed a credit check, and that she did not ask Ms. Chamblee about her bills and other obligations. Like the creditor in Hunter, Ms. Andrews did not conduct any investigation of her own into Ms. Chamblee's financial circumstances and never asked for any financial information from Ms. Chamblee, and thus could not expect that Ms. Chamblee would voluntarily divulge information she was not asked to provide. While this Court is sympathetic that Ms. Andrews has lost money, this Court is often faced with sympathetic creditors. When individuals agree to become lenders, they often unknowingly assume a risk without fully appreciating that risk. However, Ms. Andrews clearly understood that she was agreeing to loan money and that her security was a second mortgage on the real estate. Presumably, she assumed real estate values would remain level at worst. Any time loans are made a risk is included, and it is the lender's responsibility to take steps to ensure it is a risk worth taking. There is no clear evidence as to how Ms. Andrews came into possession of the Loan Application, but it is clear the Loan Application was not a requirement of the Sales Contract. Further, it is clear that Ms. Chamblee provided a good faith estimate regarding the loan from Countrywide which reflected she was obtaining the first mortgage for $700,000. It appears to this Court that Ms. Andrews relied on the extension of credit by Countrywide in agreeing to close the sale and the second mortgage loan, and considered Countrywide's approval of Ms. Chamblee's first mortgage loan to be evidence of Ms. Chamblee's ability to repay the additional loan of $250,000 with interest. Ms. Andrews has not established by a preponderance of the evidence that Ms. Chamblee engaged in false pretenses, false representations, or actual fraud in obtaining the second mortgage for purposes of section 523(a)(2)(A).
Even if Ms. Andrews established the first element under section 523(a)(2)(A), her reliance would not have been justifiable. "Justifiable reliance is gauged by an individual standard of the plaintiff's own capacity and the knowledge which he has, or which may fairly be charged against him from the facts within his observation in the light of his individual case." Sears, 533 Fed.Appx. at 945 (citation omitted). "To determine whether the misrepresentations were made with an intent to deceive is a subjective issue and a review of the totality of the circumstances is relevant in determining a debtor's intent." Santa Ana Unified School District v. Montgomery (In re Montgomery), 489 B.R. 609, 625 (Bankr.N.D.Ga.2013). From the testimony, it is clear that Ms. Andrews
Ms. Andrews admitted that she drafted the Sales Contract without obtaining any assistance. However, Ms. Andrews, as an attorney, had the capacity to determine what she should ask for in the Sales Contract, or at least, to obtain the assistance of someone versed in loan transactions to draft the Sales Contract. This was not Ms. Andrews's first real estate transaction or experience with mortgage loans, so she would have had some idea of the complexity involved. Ms. Andrews, and her attorney husband, knew, could have known, or should have known the meaning of the terms used in the Sales Contract drafted by Ms. Andrews, and the importance of investigating the financial information and facts about Ms. Chamblee before undertaking a significant loan transaction. To the extent that Ms. Andrews was seeking financial information, it is clear from her questioning of Ms. Chamblee that Ms. Andrews knew that the Contract could have been voided because the documentation she wanted was not provided by Ms. Chamblee, yet Ms. Andrews nonetheless chose to close the loan anyway. It is unfortunate that Ms. Andrews was not more clear in the Sales Contract about the information she wanted, but she is the person who drafted the Contract and could have ensured that it asked for exactly what she wanted, and perhaps refused to close the sale and loan when she did not get what she wanted. Therefore, any reliance Ms. Andrews had on Ms. Chamblee's silence was not justifiable.
Ms. Andrews also seeks to have the debt excepted from discharge under section 523(a)(2)(B) which addresses fraud involving a writing. Section 523(a)(2)(B) of the Bankruptcy Code provides:
Ms. Andrews contends that Ms. Chamblee made false statements on the Loan Application, on which she relied in deciding to make a loan to Ms. Chamblee. In this case, the first two elements are easily established. "A statement is materially false for purposes of section 523(a)(2)(B) if it paints a substantially untruthful picture of financial conditions by misrepresenting information of the type that would normally affect the decision to grant credit." Delta Community Credit Union v. Greene (In re Greene), BK No.
Ms. Chamblee's original Loan Application contained information regarding her income and assets as well as her liabilities. Undisputably some of the information that would be of particular interest to a potential creditor, such as her income and bank balance, was inaccurate. Whether the information on the Loan Application rose to the level of false representations made with the intent to deceive Ms. Andrews,
The fact that the Loan Application contained inaccurate information does not by itself equate to an intent to deceive. Ms. Chamblee testified that she did not complete the Loan Application herself, but provided the information to Countrywide loan officer Jennifer Fiske over the telephone. Ms. Chamblee explained that her bank account contained $3,000 instead of $300,000, and that she did not have employment income of $15,000 per month but did have deposits into her account totaling between $10,000 and $15,000 per month. It is plausible that Ms. Chamblee provided incorrect information but it is also plausible that the inaccuracies were the result of mistake. Ms. Chamblee's testimony that after she received the Loan Application in the mail she contacted Ms. Fiske to inform her of the problems, and on Ms. Fiske's instruction signed and returned the Application, strongly suggests to this Court that Ms. Chamblee did not create the inaccuracies with the intent to deceive but that somehow in the transmittal of information via telephone and the information having been input onto a form by someone else, mistakes were made and inaccurate data was reported. Further, the Sales Contract with Ms. Andrews did not require that Ms. Chamblee provide a loan application, so even if the Loan Application for Countrywide made its way to Ms. Andrews she was not the intended recipient. Thus, since Ms. Andrews was an unintended recipient there could not have been an intent to deceive her with the information on the Loan Application. Ms. Andrews has not met her burden as to this element.
Even if this Court had concluded that Ms. Chamblee had made materially false statements with the intent to deceive, any reliance that Ms. Andrews had on the false statements must have been reasonable. According to Ms. Andrews she relied on the information contained in the Loan Application because Ms. Chamblee did not provide her with a "letter of credit" or
Assuming, for purposes of this Opinion, that Ms. Andrews permissibly relied on the Loan Application, she must establish that her reliance was reasonable. Reasonable reliance required under this section is a higher standard than the justifiable reliance required under section 523(a)(2)(A). Field v. Mans, 516 U.S. 59, 72-75, 116 S.Ct. 437, 445-46, 133 L.Ed.2d 351 (1995). Whether the creditor's reliance on a writing is reasonable will depend on the particular circumstances of a case, with relevant considerations being, among other things, "whether there had been previous business dealings with the debtor that gave rise to a relationship of trust;... whether there were any `red flags' that would have alerted an ordinarily prudent lender to the possibility that the representations relied upon were not accurate; and... whether even minimal investigation would have revealed the inaccuracy of the debtor's representations." Davenport v. Frontier Bank (In re Davenport), 508 Fed.Appx. 937, 938 (11th Cir.2013) (aff'g 2012 WL 2590828 (M.D.Ala. July 5, 2012)).
Ms. Andrews and Ms. Chamblee met each other as a result of Ms. Chamblee searching for a new home; thus there were no prior business dealings between the two that would have given Ms. Andrews reasons to either trust or distrust any representation made by Ms. Chamblee. However, there were "red flags" that should have signaled to Ms. Andrews the need to further investigate the accuracy of the information on the Loan Application. For instance, Ms. Andrews knew the home was not constructed in 2002 as reported on the Application. Furthermore, Ms. Andrews testified that she knew from speaking with Ms. Chamblee that she had a son, and therefore should have recognized another error on the Loan Application. According to the Loan Application Ms. Chamblee had $300,000 in a bank account yet she sought to borrow $250,000 from Ms. Andrews at a cost of $50,000 in interest. The Andrews did not question why Ms. Chamblee would incur a debt to Ms. Andrews despite having the means to pay the remainder of the purchase price and avoid paying interest. The idea that Ms. Chamblee would keep in one bank account a sum exceeding the FDIC insurance limits should have also been a red flag. Furthermore, the Loan Application reflects substantial credit card debt of roughly $40,000. Ms. Andrews should have questioned why someone would keep $300,000 in a bank account while carrying credit card balances with high interest rates. Even though the Loan Application clearly stated that it could be amended, Ms. Andrews never asked Ms. Chamblee if any information had changed or asked if the Application had been amended before closing on the sale and loan. Despite the red flags noted, the Andrews did not attempt to further investigate Ms. Chamblee's finances. If Ms. Andrews had performed only minimal investigation, she would have discovered Ms. Chamblee's financial condition was not as it appeared on the Loan Application. Therefore, based on the red flags noted, any reliance Ms.
Ms. Andrews has not established by a preponderance of the evidence that Ms. Chamblee made false statements on the loan application with the intent to deceive, nor has she established that her reliance on the loan application was reasonable. The debt Ms. Chamblee owes to Ms. Andrews is not excepted from discharge under section 523(a)(2)(B).
Ms. Andrews finally contends that she suffered a willful and malicious injury by Ms. Chamblee and therefore the debt owed by Ms. Chamblee is nondischargeable pursuant to section 523(a)(6). That section provides:
According to the Eleventh Circuit:
Hope v. Walker (In re Walker), 48 F.3d 1161, 1163-64 (11th Cir.1995) (footnote omitted). To have a debt declared nondischargeable pursuant to section 526(a)(6) a creditor must prove the injury was both willful and malicious. Anglin v. Wallis (In re Wallis), AP No. 10-00010, 2011 WL 2357365, at *9-*10 (Bankr.N.D.Ala. Mar. 31, 2011) (citing Vickers v. Home Indemnity Co. (In re Vickers), 546 F.2d 1149, 1150 (5th Cir.1977)). Like many other circuits, the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals has adopted the approach that "willful" for purposes of section 523(a)(6) means the actor must have intended the actual injury, not just have intended the act that causes the injury. Walker, 48 F.3d at 1164.
There is no question that Ms. Andrews suffered an injury as a result of her loan transaction with Ms. Chamblee.
Ms. Chamblee testified that she made payments on the first mortgage loan for the first two years of owning the home and further that she spent approximately $100,000 in making home improvements. She attempted to sell the home when she could no longer make payments and staved off Countrywide's foreclosure of the first mortgage for a substantial period of time. She testified that she tried to keep Ms. Andrews informed of her efforts to sell the house. It seems unlikely that Ms. Chamblee would have made payments on the first mortgage and built up the equity in the home if she never intended to pay Ms. Andrews and thus risk losing the home in foreclosure. It is also unlikely that, if she had not intended to pay, that she would have worked to sell the house when she instead could have stopped making payments and used successive chapter 13 bankruptcy cases to hold off her mortgage creditors. She could have just prolonged and postponed foreclosure for as long as possible then let Countrywide foreclose, at which point Ms. Andrews would have received nothing. Ms. Andrews has not proven that Ms. Chamblee never intended to pay the debt owed to her, and therefore has not established that Ms. Chamblee willfully injured Ms. Andrews. The debt should not be excepted from discharge under section 523(a)(6).
Ms. Andrews contends that Ms. Chamblee made false representations, particularly on the Loan Application prepared for Countrywide, and if not for those false representations Ms. Andrews would not have made the loan to Ms. Chamblee. Furthermore, Ms. Andrews contends that she suffered a willful and malicious injury as a result of Ms. Chamblee's false representations. Ms. Andrews asserts as a result that the debt owed to her by Ms. Chamblee should be excepted from discharge under sections 523(a)(2)(A), 523(a)(2)(B), and/or 523(a)(6). However, Ms. Andrews has not established by a preponderance of the evidence that the debt should be excepted from discharge under any of these subsections. There is insufficient evidence that Ms. Chamblee had an obligation to provide unsolicited financial information to Ms. Andrews, that Ms. Chamblee made materially false representations on the Loan Application with the intent to deceive, that any reliance by Ms. Andrews on the Loan Application was reasonable, or that Ms. Chanblee willfully injured Ms. Andrews. There is no evidence of any ill intent by Ms. Chamblee. This Court cannot conclude that Ms. Chamblee intended to defraud Ms. Andrews by falling upon hard times.
This Court finds that the Ms. Andrews has failed to prove that any debt owed to her should be declared nondischargeable under sections 523(a)(2)(A), 523(a)(2)(B), or 523(a)(6). Accordingly, it is hereby