OPINION
Hartford Accident & Indemnity Company and Hartford Fire Insurance Company (hereinafter “Hartford”) seek to except their judgment for an agency balance of $22,425.11 against the Debtor, Harold Britt McCraney, from his discharge under Section 523(a)(4) of the Bankruptcy Code. That section provides:
A discharge ... does not discharge an individual debtor from any debt—
[[Image here]]
(4) for fraud or defalcation while acting in a fiduciary capacity, embezzlement, or larceny[.]
Hartford acknowledges that its contract with McCraney did not create a fiduciary relationship. 1 Hartford contends that McCraney was acting in a fiduciary capacity solely by reason of Section 27-7-36, Code of Ala. 1975, which reads:
(a) All premiums, return premiums or other funds belonging to others received by an agent, broker or solicitor in transactions under his license shall be trust funds so received by the licensee in a fiduciary capacity, and the licensee in the applicable regular course of business shall account for and pay the same to the insurer, insured, agent, broker or other person entitled thereto.
(b) Any agent, broker or solicitor who, not being lawfully entitled thereto, diverts or appropriates such funds, or any portion thereof, to his own use shall, upon conviction, be guilty of embezzlement and shall be punished as provided by law as if he had stolen such funds. (Acts 1971, No. 407, p. 707, 148.)
Was McCraney acting in a fiduciary capacity for Hartford? If so, there could be
All questions of dischargeability of debts in bankruptcy proceedings are federal law questions.
Brown v. Felsen,
The Supreme Court appeared to answer this question in
Davis v. Aetna Acceptance Co.,
Under
Davis v. Aetna
and its progeny, a fiduciary relationship exists for purposes of the Bankruptcy Code if there is a technical trust, not one which the law implies from a contract,
Chapman v. Forsyth,
Under
Cross
and the majority procedure, where state statutes impose fiduciary trusts, additional factors are considered. Does the statute require the individual to maintain a segregated account?
See, Matter of Angelle,
Given these requirements, Hartford correctly argues that in some cases the relationship between an insurance agent and its principal is a fiduciary one. 5 In these cases, however, even if the courts apply Davis, they do not follow the majority and consider the additional factors which this Court believes should be considered. The task then becomes one with two parts.
First,
Davis
requires a trust which existed prior to the acts complained of and without reference to that act. While the Alabama statute may create a trust prior to an alleged violation of that trust, it does not create that trust without reference to
The Supreme Court of Alabama specifically addressed Section 27-7-36,
Code of Ala.,
1975 in
Washburn v. Rabun,
Bankruptcy Courts analyzing similar facts and similar state statutes have reached similar conclusions.
In re Lipke,
In this District, it has been held that fiduciaries under the Employees Retirement Income Security Act were not fiduciaries for purposes of determining dis-chargeability under Section 523(a)(4).
In re Nielson,
Hartford disclaimed reliance on embezzlement. However, embezzlement, whether or not occurring in a fiduciary capacity, is cause for excepting a debt from discharge under Section 523(a)(4); and a literal reading of Section 27-7-36(b),
Code of Ala.
1975, imports that McCraney’s failure to pay his account balance constitutes embezzlement under that section.
7
In the highly similar case of
Matter of Storms,
The evidence in this case sustains only that McCraney owed Hartford a debt reduced to judgment. As to dischargeability, it differs in no essential particular from the myriad accounts that exist daily between debtor and creditor. There was no fiduciary relationship, and McCraney was not guilty of embezzlement within the meaning of Section 523(a)(4). Hartford’s judgment is a dischargeable obligation. Judgment will be entered accordingly.
As required by 28 U.S.C. Section 157(b)(3), this is a core proceeding. 28 U.S.C. Section 157(b)(2)(I). The foregoing Opinion constitutes findings of fact and conclusions of law pursuant to Bankruptcy Rule 7052 and Rule 52, F.R.Civ.P.
Notes
. The contract was not placed in evidence by either party. From the representations of counsel, the contract provided for periodic accounting in which McCraney was debited with premiums received from insureds on Hartford policies he issued, and credited with commissions and unearned premiums on cancelled policies.
. Hartford does not contend, and the evidence does not support, that its judgment should be excepted from discharge because of “fraud” under Section 523(a)(4) or "actual fraud” by McCraney under Section 523(a)(2)(A) of the Bankruptcy Code. There was certainly no “larceny". Hartford’s attorney disclaimed in oral argument any insistence on "embezzlement” or reliance on any moral dereliction by McCraney. He viewed McCraney’s failure to pay the account balance as a "defalcation” without the opprobrium that attaches to fraud, embezzlement or willful misappropriation.
. SECOND CIRCUIT: Applying
Davis
and additional federal standards to a non-state statute case, a corporate officer who neither diverted specific corporate funds expressly required to be segregated nor personally benefited from the use of general corporate funds, did not commit fraud in a fiduciary capacity within the meaning of old Bankruptcy Act Section 17(a)(4), predecessor of Bankruptcy Code Section 523(a)(4).
Matter of Banister,
FIFTH CIRCUIT: A Louisiana statute made misappropriation of funds by a contractor a crime. Applying
Davis
and additional federal standards, it was held that a contractor could not be a trustee where the funds misapplied did not exist until the misappropriation occurred.
Matter of Angelle,
SIXTH CIRCUIT: Applying Michigan law, debts of an independent insurance agent who failed to remit collected premiums to its insur-anee principal were held nondischargeable on the basis of defalcation committed in a fiduciary capacity.
In re Interstate Agency, Inc.,
SEVENTH CIRCUIT: Applying federal standards to a Wisconsin statute without applying
Davis,
it was held that a subcontractor could not use funds paid by a general contractor except in the target project.
Matter of Thomas,
EIGHTH CIRCUIT: Applying
Davis
and additional federal standards to a Nevada statute, it was held that old Bankruptcy Act Section 17(a)(4) does not operate in the absence of an express trust, and that where the statute does not create an express trust, there is no fiduciary relationship.
Matter of Dloogoff,
NINTH CIRCUIT: Applying
Davis
and additional federal standards to a California statute, it was held that where the state court construes a statute to make partners fiduciaries within Section 523(a)(4), a trust results.
Ragsdale v. Haller,
TENTH CIRCUIT: Applying a New Mexico statute which imposes a fiduciary duty upon contractors who have been advanced money pursuant to construction contracts, it was held that there was a fiduciary duty sufficient for the Bankruptcy Code.
In re Romero,
ELEVENTH CIRCUIT [FIFTH CIRCUIT, UNIT B]: Applying
Davis
and additional federal standards to a Georgia statute which does not require a segregated account for trust funds, the Eleventh Circuit held there was not a fiduciary relationship.
Matter of Cross,
. As it concerns a fiduciary, Section 17(a)(4) of the Bankruptcy Act of 1898 was not significantly different from current Bankruptcy Code Section 523(a)(4).
Matter of Angelle,
.
See, In re Interstate Agency, Inc.,
. The Alabama Court did not discuss the criminal aspects of Section 27-7-36 in
Washburn v. Rabun.
This is of no consequence. Under
Davis,
a trust must exist prior to the act alleged as wrong. Where criminal acts are involved, it is difficult to see how a trust could have existed before the acts creating the debt.
See, Matter of Angelle,
.
Section 27-7-36, Code of Ala.
1975, a part of the Alabama Insurance Code, was enacted in 1971. Alabama revised its criminal statutes and adopted a new Criminal Code in 1977. Crimes formerly known as embezzlement were redefined under the descriptive heading of "Misappropriation of property”.
Code of Ala.
1975, Section 13A-9-51. Research has revealed no Alabama Criminal Code provision proscribing "embezzlement" as such, or any Alabama Insurance Code provision reconciling embezzlement in terms employed by the new Alabama Criminal Code. In
Hurst v. State,
