R. KIMBALL MOSIER, U.S. Bankruptcy Judge.
Defendant Michael Lynn Robertson borrowed money from certain predecessors in interest to Banner Bank (Plaintiff or Bank). When he defaulted, the Bank foreclosed on real property securing the loans and obtained a deficiency judgment against the Defendant in state court. After he filed bankruptcy, the Bank filed a complaint to except that deficiency judgment from discharge pursuant to 11
The Court's jurisdiction over this adversary proceeding is properly invoked pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1334 and § 157(b)(1). This matter is a core proceeding within the definition of 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(I), and the Court may enter a final order. Venue is appropriate under 28 U.S.C. § 1409.
The Court finds that there is no genuine dispute as to the following facts.
That same month, the Defendant applied for a $230,000 commercial loan from the Bank. In connection with that application, he provided a personal financial statement on an SBA form and what he claimed to be his 2005 tax return to the Bank. The financial statement listed the Defendant's annual salary as $120,000.
Based in part on the purported tax return, the Bank approved the application, and the Defendant signed a promissory note for $230,000 on August 21, 2006. The note was secured by a deed of trust encumbering real property in Springville, Utah. Shortly thereafter, in October 2006, the Defendant applied to augment the loan by an additional $270,000. The Bank also granted that application.
In August 2007, the Defendant applied for an additional loan of $250,000 from the Bank. In connection with the loan application, the Defendant provided a new personal financial statement and what he held out as his 2006 tax return to the Bank. The financial statement represented that the Defendant's net income was $120,000.
Pursuant to the Defendant's ongoing credit relationship with the Bank, he provided what he claimed to be his 2007 tax return to the Bank. Like the prior years' tax returns, the purported 2007 return represented that the Defendant had signed it under penalty of perjury. It also represented that the Defendant's income for the 2007 taxable year was $134,008, his adjusted gross income was $126,168, and that he had made an estimated tax payment of $20,000. That return was not the one that the Defendant filed with the IRS. An IRS transcript for the Defendant's 2007 taxable year shows taxable income of $17,112, adjusted gross income of $17,112, and taxes paid of $0. The Defendant also provided additional personal financial statements to the Bank on December 4, 2007, September 4, 2008, and January 14, 2009, which represented that his salary was $150,000, $140,000, and $120,000, respectively. He signed the statements, certifying that they were true and accurate.
The two promissory notes matured and on April 23, 2009 they were consolidated into a single note in the principal amount of $669,726.32, which was secured by the two deeds of trust encumbering the Springville property. Subsequently, the Bank came into possession of a letter written by the Defendant to representatives of Utah Community Credit Union
In order to avoid the frustration and consumption of time caused by an audit, the Defendant decided to employ a vaguely-defined method of return preparation that, while still "in full compliance," would not lead to an audit each year.
On September 22, 2010, the Bank sent the Defendant a letter informing him that the ACH agreement between it and Instapolypay would be terminated effective October 13, 2010. Thereafter, the Defendant defaulted on the consolidated note. The Bank foreclosed the trust deeds and sold the Springville property in June 2011 and commenced a deficiency action in Utah state court against the Defendant. The Defendant answered and asserted counterclaims for, among other things, breach of contract arising from the termination of the ACH agreement.
The following day the Defendant moved for a new trial, which the court denied. The Defendant then appealed the court's judgment to the Utah Court of Appeals, where the appeal is currently pending. The Defendant filed a voluntary petition under chapter 7 on February 3, 2014.
Before reaching the merits of the parties' cross-motions, the Court must briefly address four motions to strike. The Plaintiff filed three of the motions; they request that the Court strike or disregard (1) the Defendant's first declaration and certain related exhibits, (2) paragraphs 3-5 of the declaration of Jay Lynn Knight; and (3) portions of the Defendant's second declaration and certain related exhibits. The Defendant's motion seeks to strike the declaration of Wayne Wagstaff. All four motions have been thoroughly briefed.
The Court does not need to undertake a detailed analysis of the Plaintiff's motions to strike because even if the Court denied them and considered the declarations and exhibits in question, the Court's decision would remain unchanged. The declarations and exhibits that are the subjects of the Plaintiff's motions to strike do not raise genuine disputes as to any material fact so as to preclude entry of summary judgment in the Plaintiff's favor.
The Defendant's motion to strike argues that the declaration of Wayne Wagstaff should be stricken because the Plaintiff never disclosed Mr. Wagstaff as a witness under Rule 26, the declaration is not admissible under the Federal Rules of Evidence, and Mr. Wagstaff lacks personal knowledge of the Bank's lending procedures.
The Court notes that the Defendant's motion to strike Mr. Wagstaff's declaration was filed on October 20, 2016, five days before the hearing at which the parties announced the stipulation regarding the initial disclosure of Mr. Wagstaff. The Court considers the part of the Defendant's motion that seeks to strike the declaration based on the Plaintiff's failure to disclose Mr. Wagstaff mooted by the stipulation. As for the Defendant's evidentiary objections to the declaration, the Court has examined all of the paragraphs as to which
Under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56(a), made applicable in adversary proceedings by Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure 7056, the Court is required to "grant summary judgment if the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law."
The moving party bears the burden to show that it is entitled to summary judgment,
When considering a motion for summary judgment, the Court views the record and draws all reasonable inferences therefrom in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party,
Section 523(a)(2)(B) excepts from discharge any debt "for money, property, services, or an extension, renewal, or refinancing of credit, to the extent obtained by—
. . . .
To prevail on a claim under § 523(a)(2)(B), the creditor must prove each element by a preponderance of the evidence.
In order for a statement to be "in writing," it must "have been written by the debtor, signed by the debtor, or written by someone else but adopted and used by the debtor."
As for the next element, the Tenth Circuit has adopted the "strict interpretation" of the phrase "respecting the debtor's . . . financial condition"; written statements concerning the debtor's financial condition "are those that purport to present a picture of the debtor's overall financial health."
Reliance under § 523(a)(2)(B)(iii) must be actual reliance.
As for the final element, a debtor's intent to deceive will rarely exist in the form of direct evidence. Instead, "[i]ntent to deceive may be inferred from the totality of the circumstances, including a reckless disregard for the truth."
The Defendant's motion does not attempt to show affirmative evidence negating an essential element of the Bank's claims or the absence of sufficient evidence to establish those claims, a common approach for defendants at summary judgment.
The unclean hands doctrine—also called the clean-hands doctrine—stands for the general "principle that a party cannot seek equitable relief or assert an equitable defense if that party has violated an equitable principle, such as good faith."
The Court does not need to decide whether the unclean hands doctrine applies in exception to discharge proceedings because the Bank does not have unclean hands. The scope of the unclean hands doctrine is limited; it "only applies when the claimant's misconduct is directly related to the merits of the controversy between the parties, that is, when the tawdry acts in some measure affect the equitable relations between the parties in respect of something brought before the court."
The problem for the Defendant is that the state court has already ruled on the propriety of the termination of the ACH agreement and the foreclosure sale. And that ruling was unequivocal: the Bank "fully complied with the termination terms of the ACH Agreement" and the "foreclosures of the Trust Deeds were lawfully conducted in compliance with the terms of the Trust Deeds and Utah law."
Because the state court determined that the Bank properly terminated the ACH agreement and lawfully foreclosed the trust deeds, the doctrine of issue preclusion prevents the Defendant from arguing otherwise in this Court.
At the outset, it is undisputed that the Bank loaned money to the Defendant. But the Defendant asserts that there is a genuine dispute over whether the Bank has a claim against him that can be excepted from discharge because the judgment entered against him in state court is on appeal. He argues that the judgment is invalid because the Bank improperly terminated the ACH agreement. For the reasons stated in section III.D, supra, the Court cannot revisit that judgment. As it currently stands, the judgment is valid and is entitled to full faith and credit. Therefore, the Court concludes that the Defendant owes a debt to the Bank based on that judgment.
In addition, the first and third elements of § 523(a)(2)(B) are established easily. Because the Defendant prepared and signed the documents purporting to be tax returns that he submitted to the Bank, those returns qualify as statements "in writing." And as established by case law, tax returns are statements respecting a debtor's financial condition.
The remaining elements require more elaboration. Whether the purported tax returns the Defendant submitted to the Bank were materially false is the subject of significant contention. The Defendant admits that he provided the Bank with tax returns that were not the same as those he filed with the IRS, and he does not dispute that the income totals on the returns and personal financial statements given to the Bank are significantly larger than those on the returns filed with the IRS. Even so, he argues that the tax returns at issue in this case are not materially false because they reflected his true financial condition.
In support of this argument, the Defendant asserts that the income figures on the returns he submitted to the Bank are supported by Annual Charitable Cash Contributions Official Tax Summary Statements from The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Church), which show the Defendant's contributions to the Church from 2005-08.
The 2005, 2006, 2007, and 2008 statements show charitable contributions of $16,801, $16,420, $15,482, and $17,505, respectively. The Defendant asserts that they show his annual tithing and thus represent 10% of his income. But the statements do not, by themselves, have any
The Court concludes that the tax returns the Defendant submitted to the Bank were materially false for two reasons: They were not the ones he filed with the IRS and the income listed on the returns was significantly larger than that on the returns filed with the IRS. As for the first reason, the Defendant admitted to creating returns with higher listed incomes because banks refused to loan him money when he showed them the returns with lower listed incomes, i.e., the ones filed with the IRS. Even when he explained the methodology behind the returns to the banks and assured them he was making money, they still would not approve the loan applications. In this case, the Bank requested the Defendant's tax returns as part of the loan application process. But the Defendant did not provide his tax returns; he only supplied documents that purported to be his tax returns. Because they were not the returns that he had filed with the IRS, they were not his tax returns by definition. Although the Defendant asserts that these purported returns reflected his true financial condition, the Court disagrees. A properly-completed tax return filed with the IRS should sufficiently reflect a debtor's true financial condition. Were it otherwise, lending institutions would not request IRS-filed tax returns in connection with loan applications, but rather the secondary returns like those the Defendant gave to the Bank. But this is not reality. The world imagined in the Defendant's argument—one in which entities keep two sets of returns, one for tax purposes, the other for lending purposes—borders on the absurd. The purported tax returns the Defendant provided to the Bank are materially false simply because they are not the ones he filed with the IRS and are therefore not his tax returns.
As for the second reason, loan application documents that represent that a debtor's income is substantially different from the debtor's income as stated in tax returns filed with taxing authorities constitute materially false statements.
Accordingly, because banks in general would not loan money to the Defendant until he created the higher-income returns, and the Bank in particular would not have loaned money to him if he had provided it with the returns he filed with the IRS, the purported returns at issue in this case are materially false statements that objectively would, and subjectively did, affect the Bank's decision to make the loans to the Defendant.
On the issue of reliance, the Defendant argues that the Bank's reliance on the tax returns was not reasonable because it failed to perform a sufficient investigation. He notes that if the Bank had immediately requested that he sign a request to obtain transcripts of his tax returns, as it did later, the Bank could have discovered the discrepancy in income before making the loans. In response, the Bank argues that it was entitled to assume that the tax returns were those that the Defendant had filed with the IRS and that requesting transcripts from the IRS would be above and beyond its duty to investigate the Defendant's representations.
The Court agrees with the Bank. "Reasonable reliance was made an element in 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(2)(B) to prevent unscrupulous creditors from inducing debtors to submit false statements so that they can be later used to object to the debtor's discharge."
Here, the Court has determined that the purported tax returns the Defendant submitted to the Bank were materially false. Therefore, the Bank was not required to undertake a searching investigation in order for its reliance to be reasonable. Under the facts and circumstances of the case, the Court concludes that the Bank's reliance was reasonable. There were no red flags to alert the Bank that the income figures on the purported tax returns were erroneous. Instead, the income figures on a given year's return approximated the income and salary figures the Defendant provided on the personal financial statement for that same year. And each subsequent year of submitted tax returns and financial statements corroborated the one before it; the Defendant's asserted income remained relatively constant during the period in question. Reasonable lenders in these circumstances are not required to skeptically presume, without evidence, that borrowers' tax returns are not the same as those they filed with the IRS. To impose a requirement on lenders that they obtain
The Court also concludes that the Bank's reliance was actual. The Bank has established that it relied, at least in part, on the information provided in the Defendant's purported tax returns in deciding whether to loan him money.
The Defendant's intent to deceive is inferred from his history of tax return preparation. After banks repeatedly refused to offer him loans when given the lower-income tax returns, the Defendant created tax returns that purported to show higher income in order to induce banks to make loans that they otherwise would not have made. These higher-income tax returns were successful in getting banks to loan him money, and they were the ones that the Defendant provided to the Bank in order to obtain the loans at issue. The Defendant's intent is clear: The higher-income returns were simply a means to an end. The Defendant knew that banks would not loan him money without the higher-income returns. So he showed the Bank the higher-income returns and withheld the lower-income returns, knowing, based on past experience, that the Bank would find the latter relevant and would likely turn him down if it saw those returns.
Accordingly, based on the undisputed facts the Court finds that the Plaintiff has proved each of the elements of its claim under § 523(a)(2)(B) by a preponderance of the evidence and that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law on that claim. Therefore, the Court does not need to address the Plaintiff's alternative claim for relief under § 523(a)(2)(A). As for the amount of the debt excepted from discharge—the Plaintiff had requested punitive damages in its complaint, but indicated at oral argument that it would be willing to withdraw that request if it were granted summary judgment excepting the state court judgment from the Defendant's discharge. Because the Plaintiff has prevailed on summary judgment, the Court considers the punitive damages request withdrawn. The Court will except the debt owing under the state court judgment, with interest according to the judgment's terms, from the Defendant's discharge. As required by the judgment, such amount shall be augmented by the Plaintiff's reasonable attorneys' fees and costs in enforcing the judgment, which the Plaintiff must prove by affidavit and to which the Defendant will have an opportunity to object.
The Defendant's claim that the Bank has unclean hands is precluded by the