Monday, July 20, 2020

Bankruptcy: Dischargeability of Debts - Reliance on Financial Statement

     In the case of Paterno Imports Ltd. v. McBee, Judge Tice of the United States Bankruptcy Court, Eastern District of Virginia, sitting in Richmond, held that a plaintiff/creditor, a wine import company who had obtained a judgment against the debtor and his business, failed to prove that it required or relied on the alleged material misrepresentations in a financial statement provided to the debtor company. Accordingly, the judgment the import company ultimately obtained against the debtor and his business was not exempt from discharge. 
     The Court ruled that the case hinged upon the events surrounding a meeting between the debtor, the debtor's counsel, the plaintiff and the bank official. Each party presented evidence in diametric opposition to the other party's claims. The oral testimony presented by the parties at trial was, in its most important aspect, conflicting and irreconcilable. 
     The Court pointed out that in a dischargeability case, the burden of proof is on the plaintiff. The Court found that the plaintiff failed in its burden. Despite the fact that the plaintiff's counsel prepared extensive documentation which the debtor was required to sign both personally and for his company, the debtor's guaranty did not mention a financial statement, and no other writing presented at trial suggested that the guaranty was conditioned upon the plaintiff's approval or acceptance of the debtor's financial statement. 
     In summary, the Court found that the plaintiff failed to establish (1) that the plaintiff and the debtor entered into an agreement under which the plaintiff would forbear from pursuing further collection efforts against the debtor's business and give it time to resolve its financial difficulties, in exchange for the debtor's personal guaranty of the company's debt to the plaintiff; (2) that any transaction between the plaintiff and the debtor was conditioned upon the plaintiff's acceptance or approval of the debtor's personal financial statement; or (3) that at the meeting of the parties the debtor produced a personal financial statement or that there was any discussion of such a statement. The Court stated that these findings required the Court to conclude that the plaintiff did not rely upon the debtor's personal financial statement or any other statement. Therefore, the debt was discharged.





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