Elizаbeth E. Nail borrowed from Arvest Mortgage Company (“Arvest”) to purchase a newly-constructed home, executing a promissory note and mortgage. In April 2009, Ms. Nail filed a voluntary petition for Chapter 13 bankruptcy relief. Arvest then purchased the mortgaged property at a foreclosure sаle for substantially less than what Ms. Nail owed on the promissory note and filed this adversary proceeding, seeking a judgment declaring the mortgage debt nondischargeable under 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(2) and (4). At trial, the bankruptcy court directed a verdict for Ms. Nail on the § 523(a)(2) claim but concluded that $65,000 of the remaining debt was nondischargeable under § 523(a)(4) because Ms. Nail held that amount of settlement proceeds in a fiduciary capacity created by § 4-58-105(b)(2) of the Arkansas Code. The Bankruptcy Appellate Panel (BAP) reversed. Arvest appeals, arguing that, as to the settlement proceeds, Ms. Nail committed “fraud or defalcation while acting in a fiduciary capacity” and “embezzlement” within the meaning of § 523(a)(4). We review findings of fact for clear error and the BAP’s conclusions of law
de novo. See Hunter v. Philpott,
I. Background
Section 523(a) of the Bankruptcy Code defines various classes of debts that are excepted from an individual Chapter 13 debtor’s discharge in bankruptcy. Section 523(a)(4) excepts debts “for fraud or defalcation while acting in a fiduciary capacity, embеzzlement, or larceny.” At issue here are the distinct exceptions for defalcation while acting in a fiduciary capacity and embezzlement. We construe these exceptions narrowly, imposing the burden of proof on Arvest, the party opposing Ms. Nail’s discharge.
In re Belfry,
Soon after Ms. Nail mоved into the new home, she discovered significant structural *1039 defects and sued the builders for constructive fraud, breach of warranty, and breach of contract. Arvest granted her a twelvemonth loan forbearance while she litigated the dispute. When the forbearance period ended аnd Ms. Nail did not resume the required loan payments, Arvest commenced foreclosure proceedings in state court. At Ms. Nail’s deposition in the foreclosure suit, Arvest learned that the builders had paid $65,000 to settle her state court lawsuit. After the Chapter 13 filing, Arvest obtained relief from the automatic stay to complete the foreclosure.
The mortgage assigned to Arvest all “Miscellaneous Proceeds,” a term defined to include “any ... settlement ... paid by any third party ... for ... damage to, or destruction of, the property.” Rather than remitting the settlement proceeds to Ar-vest pursuant to this аssignment provision, Ms. Nail invested part of the proceeds in a new home and spent the remainder, primarily to pay legal fees and reduce her credit card debts. After a trial, the bankruptcy court concluded that the $65,000 settlement proceeds were Miscellaneous Proceeds; the written assignment created an express trust under Ark.Code § 4-58-105(b)(2); 1 and therefore Ms. Nail’s failure to apply those proceeds to the mortgage debt was a defalcation while acting in a fiduciary relationship. The court declared the $65,000 nondischargeable subject to an allowancе or set-off for Ms. Nail’s litigation expenses. It entered a judgment in favor of Arvest in the amount of $46,016.25. Ms. Nail appealed.
The BAP reversed the bankruptcy court’s decision on three distinct grounds: (1) because Arvest failed to prove the settlement proceeds were “Miscellaneous Proceeds” under the mortgage assignment provision; (2) because those proceeds arose, at least in part, from Ms. Nail’s tort causes of action against the builders, and Arkansas law prohibits the assignment of tort claims or the proceeds of tort claims; (3) because, even if the settlement proсeeds were validly assigned Miscellaneous Proceeds, neither the mortgage agreement nor Ark.Code § 4 — 58—105(b)(2) created the fiduciary relationship that is necessary to render a debt nondischargeable under § 523(a)(4). Arvest appeals, arguing that two § 523(a)(4) exceptions apply — defalcation while acting in a fiduciary capacity and embezzlement.
II. Defalcation While Acting in a Fiduciary Capacity
Section 523(a)(4) bars discharge of an obligation a debtor incurs through fraud or defalcation “while acting in a fiduciary capacity.” “The meaning of these words has been fixed by judicial construction” since before the Civil War; “the statute ‘speaks of technical trusts, and not those which the law implies from the contract.’ ”
Davis v. Aetna Acceptance Co.,
The fiduciary relationship reflected in an express or technical trust is
*1040
typically created by contract. Numerous cases have addressed whether a bankrupt debtor’s alleged defalcations of contractual obligations to a secured lender such as Arvest were committed while acting in a fiduciary capacity. “It is the substance of a transaction, rather than the labels assigned by the parties, which determines whether there is a fiduciаry relationship for bankruptcy purposes.”
In re Long,
Applying these authorities, the bankruptcy court and the BAP properly rejected Arvest’s contention that the mortgage document itself creаted an express trust. That document did nothing more than provide for a contractual assignment of certain proceeds. Indeed, Arvest has more or less abandoned that contention on appeal, 2 instead urging, as the bankruptcy court concluded, that ArkCode § 4-58-105(b)(2) created the requisite fiduciary relationship by declaring that Ms. Nail “became the trustee of the funds upon receipt of the Settlement Proceeds,” and then committed a defalcation by spending the proceeds instead of remitting them to Ar-vest.
It is now well settled that a state statute may create the fiduciary rеlationship required by § 523(a)(4).
See In re Long,
In
Matter of Dloogoff,
In
Matter of Marchiando,
The key to knitting the cases into a harmonious whole is the distinction stressed in Davis ... between a trust ... that has an existence independent of the debtor’s wrong and a trust ... that has no existence before the wrong is committed. A lawyer’s fiduciary duty to his client ... pre-exists any breach of that duty, while in the case of a constructive ... trust there is no fiduciary duty until a wrong is committed. [In this case, the trust] has a purely nominal existence until the wrong is committed. Technically, Marchiando beсame a trustee as soon as she received her license to sell lottery tickets. Realistically, the trust did not begin until she failed to remit ticket receipts.
Id.
at 1115-16;
accord In re Tran,
Viewed in light of these cases, we agree with the BAP that Ark. Code § 4-58 — 105(b)(2) does not create a fiduciary relationship “in the strict and narrow sense” required by § 523(a)(4).
Hunter,
*1042 III. Embezzlement
Alternatively, Arvest argues that the $65,000 debt is nondischargeable under the embezzlement subpart of § 523(a)(4). “Embezzlement, for purposes of .section 523(a)(4), is the fraudulent appropriation of property of another by a person to whom such property has been entrusted or into whose hands it has lawfully come.”
In re Phillips,
“One cannot embezzle one’s own property.”
In re Belfry,
Although the term “assignment” was used in parts of the documentation, the parties treated the transaction as the routine granting of a security interest.... [We] conclude that [the borrower] owned the funds from the check subject to the security interest of the Bank.... Because the funds belonged to [the borrower] subject to [the bank’s] security interest, the debtors could not have embezzled the funds and the debt is not nondischargeable under section 523(a)(4).882 F.2d at 304-05 .
Like the secured lender in
Phillips,
Arvest loaned Nail money secured by an interest in her home, including recoveries defined as Miscellaneous Proceeds. The parties trеated the transaction as a mortgage or security interest. The assignment provision merely served as a collection device for Miscellaneous Proceeds, funds owned by Ms. Nail that she was contractually obligated to remit to Arvest. Thus, even if the settlement proceeds were Miscеllaneous Proceeds, as we are assuming without deciding, Ms. Nail’s alleged failure to comply with the assignment provision “was a dischargeable breach of contract, not a nondischargeable embezzlement.”
Werner v. Hofmann, 5
F.3d 1170, 1172 (8th Cir.1993);
accord In re Mitchell,
No. 07-02379,
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the BAP in this adversary proceeding is affirmed.
Notes
. § 4-58-105(b)(2) provides: "In any case where, acting without knowledge of the assignment ... the debtor in good faith pays all or part of such account to the assignor ... the assignor ... shall be a trustee of any sums so paid and shall be accountable and liable to the prior assignee thereof.”
. Arvest’s brief casually likens its assignment provisions to the insurance agency contract that we held created an express trust in
Morgan v. Amer. Fid. Fire Ins. Co.,
. The BAP also held that the settlement proceeds wеre not "Miscellaneous Proceeds” under the mortgage assignment provision, and that the proceeds in any event could not be lawfully assigned under Arkansas law. We do not address these issues because our conclu *1042 sion that Ms. Nail did not act in a fiduciary capacity resolves Arvest’s claim under this subpart of § 523(a)(4).
