Meyer et al v. Bissett Nursery Corp. et al
Filing
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MEMORANDUM AND ORDER: The Court vacates the order and remands for further proceedings. In sum, the bankruptcy court correctly acknowledged that there was no evidence that Mary had anything to do with the shredding, but incorrectly assigned to her the burden of disproving her involvement. Therefore, the Court must vacate the order denying her a discharge. However, since the trial proceeded under an incorrect assumption, the Court will remand with instructions to reopen the proceedings to allow Bissett, if it so chooses, to elicit Marys testimony or any other evidence relevant to the issue. Ordered by Judge Frederic Block on 9/4/2019. (Innelli, Michael)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
EASTERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK
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MARY V. MEYER,
Appellant,
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
Case No. 2:18-CV-2955 (FB)
-againstBISSETT NURSERY CORP.,
Appellee.
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Appearances:
For the Appellant:
RICHARD F. ARTURA
Phillips, Artura & Cox
Post Office Box 405
Lindenhurst, New York 11757
For the Appellee:
JEFFREY HERZBERG
Zinker & Herzberg, LLP
300 Rabro Drive, Suite 114
Hauppauge, New York 11788
BLOCK, Senior District Judge:
Mary V. Meyer appeals an order of the bankruptcy court denying her a
discharge of her debts after finding that she refused to obey an order requiring her
to turn over documents. For the following reasons, the Court vacates the order and
remands for further proceedings.
I
Mary and her husband, Douglas, declared bankruptcy in July 2016.
According to their joint petition, each had a 50% ownership interest in three defunct
landscaping businesses.
One of the businesses had run up a total of $425,000 in
credit from Bissett Nursery Corp. (“Bissett”), with Douglas personally guaranteeing
the debt.
During the bankruptcy proceedings, the bankruptcy court entered a “2004
Order”1 requiring the Meyers to produce an extensive list of documents:
(a) personal and business income tax returns since January 1, 2010;
(b) financial statements “pertaining to any and all borrowings and leasings”;
(c) contracts between the landscaping companies and 32 other entities;
(d) sources and uses statements for those contracts;
(e) personal and business bank statements since January 1, 2010;
(f) records of all personal and business disbursements since January 1, 2010;
(g) mortgages, leases and/or security agreements;
(h) balance sheets for the businesses since January 1, 2010;
(i) income statements for the businesses since January 1, 2010;
(j) all correspondence and communications with Bissett;
(k) invoices and statements from Bissett “with proof of payment thereof”;
(l) titles to vehicles and landscaping equipment; and
(m) proof of insurance for those vehicles and equipment.
Record (“R.”) at 13-15.
In response, the Meyers produced their personal tax
returns and, later, a “box load” of documents in partial compliance with the 2004
1
So called because Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure 2004 authorizes
bankruptcy courts to order “the examination of any entity,” which examination
may include compelling testimony and the production of documents.
2
Order.
R. at 21.
Bissett then brought an adversary proceeding.
Its complaint asked the
bankruptcy court not to discharge the Meyers’ debts because they had “failed to
obey” the 2004 Order.
R. at 9. The Meyers denied that allegation, representing
that they had complied with the order “to the extent that the documents were
available or in existence,” and explaining that many records had been shredded
“after the company ceased operation.”
R. at 21.
The bankruptcy court then tried the complaint.
The Meyers’ counsel
stipulated that his clients had received the order and that some of the documents
were produced late, while others were not produced at all.2
Bissett then called Douglas as a witness.
Douglas testified that he “caused
corporate documents to be shredded” in late March or April of 2016 (about three
R. at 85. 3
months before declaring bankruptcy).
He further testified that
“[b]asically everything that was in the office” was shredded at his direction.
89.
R. at
However, he did not “look at any documents before they were shredded”
because he was recuperating from a three-month hospital stay. R. at 111; see also
id. (“I was not there.”).
2
In her appellate brief, Mary concedes that no documents were produced in
five of the thirteen categories listed in the 2004 Order.
3
At a pre-trial deposition, Douglas testified that the documents were
shredded in Janunary 2016.
3
When the 2004 Order was issued, the Meyers’ bankruptcy lawyer told
Douglas to get “all the documents together that [I] could possibly get together and
as fast as I can.”
R. at 114. “[O]ne of the girls in the office managed to find”
copies of some documents, R. at 91; he was able to get copies of others from banks
and the Meyers’ accountant.
In addition, he asked his office manager to “download
everything from [his computer] and to hand it over.”
R. at 124.
Bissett’s second and final witness was its former general counsel, who
testified that the company had sold its assets and was winding down, but still held
the debt and Douglas’s personal guarantee.
Bissett then rested.
The Meyers
rested without putting on a case.
Neither side called Mary to testify.
At the conclusion of the trial, the
bankruptcy court observed:
I don’t have any evidence that Mrs. Meyer was involved in any way
with the destruction of documents. Nobody has alleged that. Mr.
Meyer said he did it or directed it.
R. at 143.
The bankruptcy court later issued a written decision, in which it described the
issue as “whether the Debtors acted willfully and intentionally in refusing to comply
with the 2004 Order based on their failure to produce documents regarding their
business interests.”
R. at 147.
The bankruptcy court began its analysis by noting,
“It is undisputed that both Debtors received the 2004 Order and failed to turn over
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many of the requested documents.”
R. at 158.
It then stated that “the burden
shifts to the Debtors to justify their noncompliance.”
R. at 158.
Turning first to Douglas, the bankruptcy court rejected the justification that
“there were no available copies to produce.”
R. at 158.
It described that
justification as a “defense of ‘impossibility’” and found that “the impossibility of
obtaining the records in this case was a result of Mr. Meyer’s own wrongdoing.”
R. at 158.
With respect to Mary, the bankruptcy court stated that “Mrs. Meyer did not
testify at trial nor did she offer a separate explanation for her failure to comply with
the 2004 Order.”
R. at 159.
However, in contrast to its post-trial statement
acknowledging that there was no evidence that Mary was involved in the shredding,
the bankruptcy court held the lack of evidence against her, finding that she “failed
to meet her burden of offering a justifiable excuse for her noncompliance.”
R. at
159.
Based on its findings, the bankruptcy court denied the Meyers a discharge.
Mary appealed; Douglas did not.
II
The discharge of debts is “the foundation upon which all other portions of the
Bankruptcy Code are built.” In re Anderson, 884 F.3d 382, 389 (2d Cir. 2018).
“[T]he ‘fresh start’ procured by discharge [is] the ‘central purpose of the bankruptcy
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code’ as shaped by Congress, permitting debtors to obtain a ‘fresh start in life and a
clear field unburdened by the existence of old debts.’”
Id. (quoting In re
Bogdanovich, 292 F.3d 104, 107 (2d Cir. 2002)).
The “fresh start” offered by a discharge is available, however, “only to an
honest but unfortunate debtor.”
Cohen v. de la Cruz, 523 U.S. 213, 217 (1998)
(internal quotation marks omitted).
To that end, 11 U.S.C. § 727 authorizes a
bankruptcy court to deny a discharge in certain circumstances.
The denial of a
discharge lies within the bankruptcy court’s sound discretion, see In re Beeber, 239
B.R. 13, 31 (Bankr. E.D.N.Y. 1999) (citing In re Kokoszka, 479 F.2d 990, 997 (2d
Cir. 1973), with the caveat that denial of a discharge is “an extreme penalty for
wrongdoing.”
In re Chalasani, 92 F.3d 1300, 1310 (2d Cir. 1996).
Therefore,
the statute “must be construed strictly against those who object to the debtor's
discharge and liberally in favor of the bankrupt.” Id.
Pertinent here is subsection (6)(a), which allows the bankruptcy court to deny
a discharge if “the debtor has refused . . . to obey any lawful order of the court, other
than an order to respond to a material question or to testify.”
“Under this
subsection, a plaintiff must prove that the court issued an order and that the debtor
refused to obey that order.”
In re Sofer, 519 B.R. 28, 34-35 (Bankr. E.D.N.Y.
2014).
A “refusal” is not simply a failure to comply.
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See In re Demar, 373 B.R.
232, 240 (Bankr. E.D.N.Y. 2007) (“[T]he mere failure of a debtor to obey a court’s
order, without more, is insufficient to deny or revoke a debtor’s bankruptcy
discharge.” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
Rather, the word implies that the
debtor acted “willfully and intentionally”; noncompliance “resulting from
inadvertence, mistake, or inability to comply” will not suffice. In re Gardner, 384
B.R. 654, 670 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 2008).
Courts adjudicating claimed violations of § 727(6)(a) use a burden-shifting
approach: “[O]nce a plaintiff has shown that the debtor violated a court order, the
burden shifts to the debtor to either justify the violation or prove that the violation
did not in fact occur.”
In re Sofer, 519 B.R. at 35.
This refers only to the burden
of production, however; the burden of persuasion remains with the party objecting
to the discharge.
See In re Gardner, 384 B.R. at 663 (“Shifting burdens of
production . . . will not shift the ultimate burden of persuasion.”).
In particular, the
party opposing discharge “must demonstrate some degree of volition or willfulness
on the part of the debtor.” Id. at 670.
Only then must the debtor “put forward
evidence that he or she has not committed the objectionable act.”
Id. (internal
quotation marks omitted).
III
On appeal, “[a] bankruptcy court's “factual findings will be upheld unless
clearly erroneous, and its legal conclusions are reviewed de novo.” In re Flanagan,
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503 F.3d 171, 179 (2d Cir. 2007).
Since it was undisputed that Mary did not
comply with the 2004 Order, the burden shifted to her to explain her noncompliance.
The bankruptcy court held that she failed to meet that burden because she “did not
testify at trial nor did she offer a separate explanation for her failure to comply with
the 2004 Order.”
R. at 31.
This was an error of law.
The answer, filed on behalf of both Douglas and
Mary, claimed that many documents called for by the 2004 Order were shredded.
Douglas testified that he was responsible for the shredding.
Although Mary did not
testify or offer a separate explanation, she was perfectly entitled to rely on her
husband’s testimony in support of a joint explanation.
With respect to Douglas, of course, the bankruptcy court rejected that
explanation because “[t]he impossibility of obtaining the records in this case was a
result of Mr. Meyer’s own wrongdoing.”
R. at 30.
By contrast, it noted that there
was no evidence that “Mrs. Meyer was involved in any way with the destruction of
documents.”
R. at 143.
The bankruptcy court apparently reasoned that it was up to Mary to prove that
she played no role in the shredding and, therefore, that the lack of evidence weighed
against her.
This misunderstands Mary’s burden.
Once Bissett had shown that
the order was violated, Mary had to offer a justification.
Douglas’s testimony was sufficient to satisfy that burden.
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As explained above,
But the bankruptcy court
imposed the additional burden of offering evidence (and, perhaps, proving) that
Mary was not at fault.4
To the contrary, it was Bissett’s burden to “demonstrate some degree of
volition or willfulness on the part of the debtor.” In re Gardner, 384 B.R. 670. In
re Gardner illustrates proper allocation of that burden. In that case, a court order
required the debtor to file a schedule of unpaid debts.
The debtor conceded that he
had not done so but testified at trial that “it was an oversight.” Id.
The bankruptcy
court interpreted that testimony as “claiming inadvertence,” and noted that “[t]he
Trustee has not produced any additional evidence to refute this claim of inadvertence
and provide evidence that the lack of action was an intentional refusal to comply
with the court’s order.” Id.
Therefore, the bankruptcy court found, “the Trustee
has not met his ultimate burden of persuasion under [§ 727(6)(a)].” Id.
Bissett objects that the debtor in Gardner testified, while Mary did not.
But
both Mary and Douglas clearly intended to rely on the shredding of documents as
the justification for their failure to comply with the 2004 Order; the source of the
4
The bankruptcy court’s error may have stemmed from its description of the
proffered justification as a “defense of ‘impossibility[.]’” R. at 30. Since the
burden of persuasion always remains with the party opposing discharge, the burden
of offering a justification for noncompliance with a court order is not a “defense”
in the usual sense. See Saks v. Franklin Covey Co., 316 F.3d 337, 350 (2d Cir.
2003) (quoting Black’s Law Dictionary definition of “[a] defendant's assertion
raising new facts and arguments that, if true, will defeat the plaintiff’s . . . claim,
even if all allegations in the complaint are true.” (emphasis added)).
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evidence offered in support of that justification is of no consequence.
Bissett
disagrees, arguing that “[i]f Mary had testified at the trial, Bissett would have
examined her in great detail concerning her role, if any, in the ‘shredding of
documents.’”
Appellee’s Br. at 7.
If Bissett wished to explore that issue, it was
free to call Mary as a witness, just as it had called Douglas to question his bona fides.
IV
In sum, the bankruptcy court correctly acknowledged that there was no
evidence that Mary had anything to do with the shredding, but incorrectly assigned
to her the burden of disproving her involvement.
the order denying her a discharge.
Therefore, the Court must vacate
However, since the trial proceeded under an
incorrect assumption, the Court will remand with instructions to reopen the
proceedings to allow Bissett, if it so chooses, to elicit Mary’s testimony or any other
evidence relevant to the issue.5
SO ORDERED.
/S/ Frederic Block____________
FREDERIC BLOCK
Senior United States District Judge
Brooklyn, New York
September 4, 2019
5
The Court urges Bissett to first assess the practicalities of its position. The
bankruptcy court’s order denying Douglas a discharge means that Bissett can
attempt to collect his debt in state court. As far as the Court can glean, by
contrast, Mary does not owe Bissett anything.
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