MEMORANDUM DECISION
Kevin Koch, while a sole proprietor, contracted for roofing jobs and purchased materials from various suppliers. Between *656 August, 1990, and November, 1990, Koch maintained an account with Chase Lumber & Fuel Company, Inc. He used materials purchased from Chase Lumber to complete numerous roofing repairs. According to Koch, he paid “whatever I had at the time from time to time.” Chase Lumber credited the payments against the oldest charges. Koch folded his business in December, 1990. When he stopped paying on his Chase Lumber account, there remained thirty unpaid invoices totaling $4,766.25 in principle and interest. On November 25, 1991, Chase Lumber filed suit against Koch to collect the account, and sometime between Dеcember, 1991, and June, 1994, judgment against Koch was entered in the amount of $5,886.08.
Beginning in July, 1994, Chase Lumber garnished Koch’s wages at a rate of approximately $79.60 per week. In total, Chase Lumber recovered $2,697.76, including $71.41 garnished from a paycheck issued to Koch four days after he filed for bankruptcy on March 6, 1995. Chase Lumber filed this adversary complaint on June 8,1995, seeking to have Koch’s remaining debt of $5140.25 declared nondischargeable on grounds of defalcation under 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(4). A trial was held on November 29, 1995. The elements required to establish a § 523(a)(4) exception to discharge of a claim are (1) the existence of a trust; (2) the debtor having been a fiduciary of that trust; and (3) fraud or defalcation by the debtor while acting as a fiduciary of the trust.
See, e.g., In re Eisenberg,
Wisconsin’s “theft-by-contractor” statute, Wis.Stat. § 779.02(5), is part of Wisconsin’s construction lien law, Wis.Stat. § 779.01 et. seq. (1993-94), and purports to create a fiduciary relationship, to wit:
[A]ll moneys paid to any prime contractor or subcontractor by any owner for improvements, constitute a trust fund only in the hands of the prime contractor or subcontractor to the amount of all claims due or to become due or owing from the prime contractor or subcontractor for labor and materials used for the improvements, until all the claim shall been p'aid[.] The use of any such moneys by any prime contractor or subcontractor for any other purpose until all claims, except those which are the subject of a bona fide dispute аnd then only to the extent of the amount actually in dispute, have been paid in full or proportionally in cases of a deficiency, is theft by the ... contractor of moneys so appropriated and is punishable under s. 943.20.
The statute makes a contractor a trustee of funds received from an owner until the laborers, material suppliers, or subcontraсtors are paid for work or materials put into the specific improvement for which the payment was made.
In re Thomas,
The limited case law on this subject suggests that as long as payments can be traced from the owner to the subcontractor the monies in the hands of the subcontractor аre held in trust under the statute for the benefit of the second-tier subcontractors. This interpretation of the statute comports with the practices of the industry. Typically the prime contractor serves as a conduit for payments from an owner to a subcontractor. This interpretation also comports with the policy of the statute, which is to assist subcоntractors and their subcontractors and suppliers in getting paid and to protect owners and prime contractors from paying twice.
As the word “conduit” implies, the trust cannot be imposed where no demonstrable chain connects materials to the specific job for which the owner paid the contractor. In this case, Chase Lumber presented evidence that there were thirty unpaid invoices totaling, before interest, $3,941.90. Only five of those invoices contained a reference to a specific job. (Plaintiffs Exh. 1, invoices #’s 1,11,16, 23, 25). The other invoices appear to have been for tools with anticipated life beyond a single job and supplies which could have *657 been used on many jobs. The evidence failed to tie any of the other invoices to a job in a manner sufficient to impose a trust under the statute. The five invoices totaled $1,388.30. All of the invoices were for materials incorporated into “improvements” as defined by the statute. Wis.Stat. § 779.01(2)(a). For four of the five jobs (invoices # 1, 11, 16, and 25), Koch was paid in full. As to invoice # 23, in the amount of $116.50, Koch testified that he was paid all but $500 for a job on which he billed between $1,200 and $1,500. Koch worked alone on most jobs, including the five to which invoices were identified. Therefore, Koch was a fiduciary of Chase Lumber for those five invoices and held funds totaling $1,388.30 in trust for Chase Lumber.
The state and federal decisions involving breaches of duty under Wis.Stat. § 779.02(5) and its analog, Wis.Stat. § 779.16, have generally failed to address thе precise issue of the fiduciary’s standard of care, appearing to rely on something akin to strict liability.
See, e.g., Capen Wholesale, Inc. v. Probst,
The issue is important because it may no longer be enough to assume, as courts have apparently done, that a violation of the “theft-by-contractor” statute is
per se
defalcation as envisioned by the Bankruptcy Code. After surveying state law and concluding that the vast majority of courts historically require negligence, the Seventh Circuit recently concluded that “defalcation” in bankruptcy requires more than negligence, though less than fraud.
Meyer v. Rigdon,
The Meyer survey did not include a Wisconsin decision, and it is unclear whether that is because the court read Aetna Casualty and like cases and concluded that the Wisconsin standard was higher than negligence, or because the court could not detеrmine a consistent standard in the Wisconsin decisions. Either way, Meyer does not provide any direct guidance as to the application of the defalcation standard under 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(4) to Wisconsin’ theft-by-contractor statute.
None of the reported decisions in this circuit in recent decades involved an operator as small as Koch nor a contractоr/supplier relationship as informal as the Koch/Chase Lumber arrangement. A survey of other jurisdictions revealed only one reported decision with facts closely analogous to this case. In that decision, the court held the contractor’s debt to the supplier to be dischargeable.
See In re Crea,
Unlike the statute at issue in
Crea,
the Wisconsin theft-by-contractor statute creates an express fiduciary relationship and delineates clear duties, and Wisconsin contractors are charged with knowledge of the law in this area. The Wisconsin statute has also been interpreted to benefit all parties to property improvement contracts equally, so long as the rеquisite fiduciary relationship is established.
Kraemer Bros.,
Whether or not Crea is persuasive, the Seventh Circuit’s raising of the standard for defalcation, to something more than negligence, brings into question the entire body of pr e-Meyer v. Rigdon case law on the theft-by-contractor statute. Before Meyer, the question was whether Koch’s actions violated the statute. Koch’s actions certainly square with thоse that the theft-by-contractor statute is designed to prevent. After Meyer, however, the question appears to be whether Koch’s actions entailed bad faith or affirmative misconduct rather than mere negligence or mistake. Though Koch’s testimony was not entirely clear on this point, it appears that he had spent some years working in the construction field in Wisconsin prior to forming Koch Building & Repair and opening his account with Chase Lumber. As a sole proprietor, Koch was regularly taking on and finishing jobs worth thousands of dollars, and for the jobs at issue here, he agreed that the materials listed on the invoices were incorporated into the identified improvements and that he was paid relatively promptly, and gеnerally in full, for those improvements.
Nothing in the pr
e-Meyer
case law in this circuit suggests that a sole proprietor such as Koch should be exempt from the statute so long as reliable evidence can tie materials to the improvements for which Koch was paid. Nevertheless, after
Meyer,
Koch’s actual or constructive knowledge of the theft-by-contraetor statute, or аt least of his trust fund duties as a general contractor, would seem to be material. It is the plaintiffs burden to show by a preponderance of the evidence that more than mere negligence led to the debtor’s failure to pay.
Grogan v. Garner,
Koch contends that Chase Lumber violated the stay by accepting $71.41 in garnished wages from Koch’s employer. Both the paycheck in question and the check issued by Dane County Roofing to Chase Lumber are dated March 10, 1995, four days after Koch filed for bankruptcy. Chаse Lumber argues that the stay was not violated because the paycheck and garnished wages were due and owing to Koch and Chase Lumber, respectively, on March 3, 1995, when the pay period ended. The specific question is whether wages earned pre-petition that are subject to a garnishment hen can be captured postpetition by the garnishing creditor without violating the automatic stay.
11 U.S.C. § 362(a) states in relevant part:
Except as provided in subsection (b) of this section, a petition filed under section 301, 302, or 303 of this title, ... operates as a stay, applicable to all entities, of — ■
(1) the commencement or continuation, including the issuance or employment of process, of a judicial, administrative, or other action or proceeding against the debtor that was or could have been commenced before the commencement of the case under this title, or to recover a claim against the debtor that arose before the commencement of the case under this title;
(2) the enforcement, against the debtor or against property of the еstate, of a judgment obtained before the commencement of the case under this title[.]
Property of the estate includes, with some limitations not relevant here, “[a]ll legal or equitable interests of the debtor in property as of the commencement of the case.” 11 U.S.C. § 541(a)(1).
If Chase Lumber’s interest in the garnished funds did not attach prior to the filing of the easе on March 6, 1995, then there is no question that its postpetition retention of the garnished funds is a violation of the stay. Even if Chase Lumber’s interest attached prepetition, however, its retention of the funds violated the stay so long as Koch retained, if not a legal interest, at least an equitable interest in those funds at the time of filing.
“In the absence of controlling federаl law, ‘property’ and ‘interests in property’ are creatures of state law.”
Barnhill v. Johnson,
Nevertheless, the debtor retains an equitable interest in the earmarked funds through the right to contest the garnishment.
See e.g. In re Woodman,
Relying primarily on § 362(a)(1) and (2), courts have consistently plаced an affirmative duty on garnishing creditors to stop garnishment proceedings once notified of the bankruptcy filing and to return any funds garnished in violation of the stay to the estate.
See e.g. In re Roberts,
Notes
. The statute at issue in Crea, Minn.Stat. § 514.02 subd. 1, states:
Whoever, on any improvement to real estate ... fails to use the proceeds of any payment made to him on account of such improvement by the owner of such real estate or person having any improvement made, for the payment for labor, skill, material, and machinery contributed to such improvement, knowing that the cost of any such labor performed, or skill, material, or machinery furnished for such improvement remains unpaid, and who has not furnished to the person making such payment either a valid lien waiver as to any unpaid labor performed, or skill, material, or machinery furnished for such improvement; or a payment bond in the basic amount of the contract price for such improvement, conditioned for the prompt payment to any рerson or persons entitled thereto ..., shall be guilty of theft of the proceeds of such payment and upon conviction shall be fined not more than $1,000 or imprisoned nor more than one year, or both.
The Minnesota statute differs from the Wisconsin statute in two significant ways: It does not create an express fiduciary relationship, though it implies one, and it has a scienter element (the defendant must know that costs remain unpaid).
