Lеonard Chavin was petitioned into Chapter 7 bankruptcy by his creditors. On the basis of false statements and misleading omissions by Chavin in his bankruptcy schedules and other filings in the bankruptcy proceeding, the trustee in bankruptcy asked the bankruptcy judge to deny Chavin a discharge of his debts. That judge, seconded by the district judge, granted summary judgment for the trustee, finding 17 instances in which Chavin had either concealed assets “with intent to ... defraud” the creditors and the trustee, 11 U.S.C. § 727(a)(2), or “knowingly and fraudulently” made “a false oath or account” about a fact material to the bankruptcy. § 727(a)(4)(A).
Chavin doеs not deny the untruthfulness of the statements and of the omissions, the latter amounting to false denials. But he claims that because fraudulent intent, which both sections of the Bankruptcy Code that we have quoted require, is subjective, and thus requires proof of actual rather than merely constructive fraud, e.g., In re Agnew,
Intent to defraud involves a material representation that you know to be false, or, what аmounts to the same thing, an omission that you know will create an erroneous impression. E.g., Athey Products Corp. v. Harris Bank Roselle,
But that position would bе too extreme. A denial of knowledge may be so utterly implausible in light of conceded or irrefutable evidence that no rational рerson could believe it; and if so, there is no occasion to submit the issue of knowledge to determination at a trial. Seshadri v. Kasraian,
We are mindful of a line of cases that, interpreting Matsushita Electric Industrial Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp.,
This case fits the exceptionаl category as we have defined it. Chavin is a mature and experienced businessman who on the eve of bankruptcy had properties worth millions of dollars. The questions that he claims not to have understood were not esoteric, and his explanations for his failure to answer them correctly are ridiculous. Here are some examples. Though president and sole shareholder of a real estate management company suggestively named Chavin Enterprises, Inc., Chavin did not list his position as president or his stock ownership in response to questiоns about both office and stock ownership. He claimed that the stock was worthless, but of course that was for the creditors to decidе; he offered no explanation for his failure to list his office. He failed to disclose a partnership interest in commercial real estate and tried to justify the failure by saying that the partnership had been dissolved a few weeks before the bankruptcy proceeding began; but in the face of his partner’s sworn denial that it had dissolved that early, Chavin was unable to substantiate his claim. He failed to disclose a vаluable stock option on the preposterous ground — one he could not, as an experienced businessman, have believed — that because the option was not assignable, it had no value. He failed to disclose some $1.6 million in income, explaining that he “was wondering when the paralegal would ask me about my other earnings.” And so it goes. In none of these instances, or any of the others on the list of 17 (morе than 40 false statements were alleged, but the bankruptcy judge generously determined that with respect to 23 there was a genuine issue of matеrial fact concerning Chavin’s state of mind), could a reasonable person believe Chavin’s stated reason for his false represеntation or omission. The judge was therefore right to grant summary judgment for the trustee and deny Chavin a discharge of his debts.
Because the fraud appears to have been deliberate, we are referring this case to the Department of Justice for possible prosecution of Chavin for bankruptcy fraud. See 18 U.S.C. § 152.
Affirmed.
