DECISION
This matter is before the court following trial of the issues raised by Plaintiffs complaint to determine the dischargeability of the debtors’ obligation to it. Plaintiff contends that the debt is excepted from discharge pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(2), (a)(4), and (a)(6). Although both debtors were originally named as defendants, at trial Plaintiff voluntarily dismissed its claim against Karen Russell. Accordingly, only the claim against Richard Russell remains.
Mr. Russell operated a medium sized feeder pig operation and farmed several plots of land, growing both soybeans and corn. On April 23, 1998, the debtor executed a promissory note in favor of ABF evidencing a loan of two hundred fifty-five thousand dollars. (Pl’s.Ex. 1.) To secure
ABF’s complaint arises out of the debt- or’s disposition of the crops securing its loan. The complaint is best characterized as one based upon the debtor’s “conversion” of collateral, specifically the debtor’s 1998 soybean and corn crops. Where the soybean crop is concerned, the debtor sold it to Cargill, an undisclosed buyer, and thus avoided having the buyer issue a joint check payable to both the debtor and ABF. See, I.C. 26-l-9-307(l)(d). He then used the proceeds of this sale for purposes other than repaying the Plaintiff, such as paying other creditors and funding his ordinary living and business expenses. Where the corn crop is concerned, the debtor fed it to his pigs during the later part of 1998. 1 Plaintiff claims, among other things, that these actions constitute a willful and malicious injury, rendering its claim against the debtor non-disehargeable pursuant to § 523(a)(6).
The parties have agreed that the total value of the crops in question is $129,500. Furthermore, the debtor is entitled to various credits against the amount due so that the current balance due Plaintiff is less than the value of the crops. Consequently, the only real question before the court involves whether the debtor’s obligation should be excepted from discharge.
ABF bears the burden of proving, by a preponderance of the evidence, that its debt should be excepted from the debtor’s discharge.
See, Grogan v. Garner,
The Supreme Court recently examined § 523(a)(6) in
Kawaauhau v. Geiger,
Geiger
seems to have created almost as much consternation as it set out to resolve. In part, this is because the Court never said what “willful” is; only what it is not— it is not negligence, recklessness or a breach of contract.
Geiger,
Compounding the fact that
Geiger
did not clarify the meaning of § 523(a)(6) as precisely as one might wish, is the fact that, in some respects, it also appears to establish a largely subjective standard— requiring an actual intent to cause injury. A debtor, however, will almost always be able to come forward with innocent explanations for its actions, testifying that “I did not intend to .... ” This is particularly true in cases involving the conversion of collateral because a debtor’s actions with respect to a creditor’s collateral are rarely motivated by a desire to injure either the creditor or its collateral.
See, In re Kidd,
Trying to resolve
Geiger’s
ambiguities has lead to largely unnecessary inquiries into such things as whether the debtor’s actions “necessarily caused” or were “substantially certain to cause” injury and the extent to which the debtor “knew” or “believed” that this was so.
See e.g., Miller,
In addressing the meaning of “willful” for the purposes of § 523(a)(6), the Supreme Court did not require a subjective inquiry to determine whether a debtor intentionally injured a creditor. Although a subjective intent to harm will certainly fulfill the requirements of the statute,
Geiger
does not need to be and should not be read as requiring proof of a subjective motivation. It held only that § 523(a)(6) required an intentional injury rather than an intentional act.
Geiger,
The key to applying Geiger without unnecessarily injecting subjectivity into the analysis is to accurately identify the creditor’s true injury. It is easy to confuse the unique damage caused by the debtor’s action with the creditor’s true injury and it is that confusion that leads to the construction of causal chains linking action with injury. Nonetheless, the true injury is not the unique or case specific damages that are somehow monetized and then memorialized in a money judgement. Those damages are only the manifestation of the true injury. They indicate the magnitude of the creditor’s injury, not whether an injury has occurred. Admittedly, the magnitude of the injury will influence whether a creditor is interested in pursuing the matter and what, if anything, it may recover should it do so. Nonetheless, the lack of damage does not necessarily mean that no injury has occurred, it means only that no real harm has come of it. Indeed, it is the recognition that there can be injury without harm that lies behind the opportunity to recover nominal damages.
The creditor’s true injury occurs on an abstract level. It is the debtor’s invasion of the creditor’s legally protected right. The court should focus on this injury, as opposed to the resulting damage, when it asks whether the injury was intentional. When it does so, the answer will usually be relatively obvious because the debtor’s action
is
the injury. For example, in a case involving assault and battery, the true injury is not the creditor’s broken jaw, but rather, the unconsented to touching that produced the broken jaw. Consequently, the question to ask is not whether the debtor intended to break the creditor’s jaw, but instead, whether the debtor intended to hit the creditor. In defamation eases, the true injury is not the damage to the creditor’s reputation; it is the publication of falsehoods about the creditor that
Just because the debtor may have intentionally injured the creditor is not enough to make the resulting debt nondischargeable. Section 523(a)(6) has two components. The injury must not only be willful (intentional); it must also be malicious. This requirement is separate and distinct from the issue of willfulness.
See, Kimzey,
“Malicious” means “ ‘in
conscious
disregard of one’s duties or without just cause or excuse; it does not require ill will or a specific intent to do harm.” ’
In re Thirtyacre,
Measuring the debtor’s conduct against these standards leads to the conclusion that his disposition of ABF’s collateral constituted a willful and malicious injury.
See, e.g., In re Wehri,
The debtor attempts to justify his actions with the explanation that he did not
The result with regard to the debtor’s corn crop is the same. Rather than sell this crop and dispose of its proceeds, the debtor chose to feed it to his pigs. Doing so was in violation of the security agreement, and again, debtor knew this was the case. His explanation for the misconduct is two-fold. To a large extent, however, it echos the explanation which was given for the disposition of the soybeans.
By the fall of 1998, the debtor had run out of feed for his small pigs. Furthermore, at this time the hog market was so very bad you could not even give feeder pigs away. Consequently, the debtor found himself in a situation where he had 1,500 pigs he was not able to dispose of and nothing to feed them. He believed he had but two choices; let the animals starve or feed them the corn which secured his obligation to ABF. He chose the latter option. In doing so, he hoped that by the time the animals reached a marketable weight the market would improve, allowing them to be sold profitably, and he would be in a position to pay all creditors, including ABF. Unfortunately, the debtor reached this decision without adequately consulting the lender in question — ABF. Although the debtor received instructions from National City Bank, the lender with a first lien upon the pigs, that he should keep feeding them, it does not appear that he made it clear to this lender that he did not have the resources with which to do so. More importantly, ABF was never informed that the debtor had made the decision to use its collateral to feed the pigs which had been liened to National City Bank.
The court recognizes that duress or compulsion may constitute a justification or excuse which will help prevent an intentional injury from being a malicious one.
See, e.g., In re Longley,
Undoubtedly, the debtor found himself in a most difficult situation where his small pigs and ABF’s collateral were concerned. While this might excuse a temporary or limited misuse of ABF’s collateral, it does not excuse the debtor’s conduct over the many weeks it took to dispose of the thousands of bushels of corn harvested that year. This is especially so when one remembers that the debtor never advised ABF of the situation or of what he was doing.
The debtor also tries to explain his conduct by suggesting that he did nothing in 1998 which he had not done in 1997, the first year he dealt with ABF. If ABF had
The debtor’s improper disposition of the 1998 crops securing his obligation to the Plaintiff constitutes a willful and malicious injury. Pursuant to § 528(a)(6) his obligation to the Plaintiff is a nondischargeable debt. This conclusion renders it unnecessary to consider whether the debtor’s obligation might also be excepted from discharge pursuant to § 523(a)(2) or (a)(4).
Judgment will be entered accordingly.
Notes
. These pigs were subject to a prior lien in favor of another lender.
