Bankr. L. Rep. P 75,348
In re Ira N. SAMPSON, individually and as a general partner
of Tuchas Associates, a Colorado general
partnership, Debtor.
Katherine Lavonne SAMPSON, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
Ira N. SAMPSON, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 92-1238.
United States Court of Appeals,
Tenth Circuit.
June 21, 1993.
Harry Michael Sterling (Dana A. Temple with him on the brief), Gelt, Fleishman & Sterling, Denver, CO, for defendant-appellant.
Dennis A. Lacerte, Case & Lacerte, Denver, CO, for plaintiff-appellee.
Before BALDOCK, WOOD* and EBEL Circuit Judges.
BALDOCK, Circuit Judge.
Debtor and Defendant in the instant proceeding Ira N. Sampson appeals from a district court order
After nine years of marriage, Plaintiff and Defendant divorced in 1984. An agreement between the parties, entitled "Property Settlement and Permanent Orders Agreement" ("the Agreement"), was incоrporated into the divorce judgment filed in the state court proceeding. In Article I of the Agreement, entitled "Maintenance (Spousal Support)," Defendant agreed to pay Plaintiff "as and for maintenance, a specific monthly amount" over an eight year period, commencing in June 1984.1 The Agreement stated that "said maintenance payments are for the support of [Plaintiff] and are not in lieu of or partially in lieu of property division and that the parties have herein agreed to a fair and equitable division of marital property as hereinafter provided." The division of marital property was specifically addressed in Article III of the Agreement and included a cash payment to Plaintiff over a two year period which is not at issue in this case.
In November 1990, Defendant filed a voluntary petition under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code. Plaintiff filed a complaint with the bankruptcy court to determine the dischargeability of Defendant's "maintenance" obligations under the Agreement. At an evidentiary hearing before the bankruptcy court, Defendant, Defendant's attorney in the divorce proceeding, and Defendant's accountant testifiеd that the payments were intended to be a property settlement, but were designated as maintenance so that Defendant could deduct the payments from his gross income for tax purposes. Plaintiff testified that she did not remember these particular distinctions, and Plaintiff's divorce attorney was deceased by the time of the hearing. It is undisputed that at the time of the divorce, Plaintiff was a full-time homemaker with no independent income, an arthritic condition which hindered her employment, no job skills or training although she had worked as Defendant's secretary prior to their marriage, and mоnthly living expenses of $4,165. It is also undisputed that, at the time of the divorce, Defendant was a mortgage banker with a monthly income of approximately $14,850 and monthly living expenses of $3,795.2
The bankruptcy court found that the Agreement unambiguously provided that Defendant's debt to Plaintiff was for maintenance. The bankruptcy court reasoned that our decision in In re Yeates,
Defendant appealed the bankruptcy court's order to the district court. The district court held that the bankruptcy court erred in not looking beyond the unambiguous Agreеment to determine whether the obligation was actually in the nature of alimony, maintenance or support. The district court also disagreed with the bankruptcy court's alternative finding that the parties intended the obligation as property settlement. The district court considered the agreement itself, the fact that payments extended over an eight year period, the gross imbalance of income between the parties at the time of the divorce, and Plaintiff's lack of marketable skills in "conclud[ing] that the parties intended the obligation as alimony, maintenance or support." Therefore, the district court affirmed the bankruptcy court's order on an alternative ground.
On appeal to this court, Defendant contends that the district court erred in redetermining the bankruptcy court's factual findings. In reviewing a bankruptcy court order, the district court sits as an appellate court and must accept the bankruptcy court's factual findings unless they are clearly erroneous. In re Robinson,
Defendant's argument ignores the district court's authority as a reviewing court, as well as our authority, to affirm the bankruptcy court's decision on an alternative ground which is supported by the record. See In re Slack Horner Foundries Co.,
Under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code, a debtor may discharge "all debts that arose before the date of the order for relief." 11 U.S.C. § 727(b). Excepted from discharge are debts to a "former spouse ... for alimony to, maintenance for, or support of such spouse ... [provided that] such liability is actually in the nature of alimony, maintenance or support." Id. § 523(a)(5)(B). See also id. § 727(b) (discharge subject to exception provided in § 523). This provision in the Bankruptcy Code "departs from the general policy of absolution, or 'fresh stаrt' " in order to "enforce an overriding public policy favoring the enforcement of familial obligations." Shaver v. Shaver,
Our cases addressing § 523(a)(5), specifically our opinions in Yeates and Goin, have not articulated a consistent standard for bankruptcy courts to apply in order to determine whether a debt to a former spouse is "actually in the nature of alimony, maintenance, or support." In Yeates, we statеd that "intention of the parties" was "the initial inquiry,"
Goin, which came out approximately a month after Yeates, articulates a seemingly different standard and does not even cite Yeates. In Goin, after recognizing that neither state law nor the parties' characterization determined whether a debt was nondischargeable under § 523(a)(5), we stated that "a bankruptcy court must look beyond the language of the decree to the intent of the parties and to the substance of the obligation."
(1) if the agreement fails to provide explicitly for spousal support, the court may presume that the property settlement is intended for support if it appears under the circumstances that the spouse needs support; (2) when there are minor children and an imbalance of income, the payments are likely to be in the nature of support; (3) support or maintenance is indicated when the payments are made directly to the recipient and are paid in installments over a substantial period of time; and (4) an obligation that terminates on remarriage or death is indicative of an agreement for support.
Id. at 1392-93 (citation omitted).
Goin 's statement that a bankruptcy court should consider both the parties' intent and the substance of the agreement arguably conflicts with Yeates' suggestion that the parties' intent is dispositive on the issue of whether a debt to a former spouse is nondischargeable under § 523(a)(5) and Yeates suggestion that an unambiguous agreement will normally control. As a three-judge panel, we are not at liberty to overrule either Yeates or Goin, but rather we must attempt to reconcile them. Nonetheless, we are confident in pursuing this task because, while the language in the two opinions appears inconsistent, their holdings are entirely consistent. With reconciliation in mind, we turn to this case.
Congress, by directing federal courts to determine whether an obligation is "actually in the nature of alimony, maintenance, or support," sought to ensure that § 523(a)(5)'s underlying policy is not undermined either by the treatment of the obligation under state law or by the label which the parties attach to the obligation. Thus, a debtor's lack of duty under state law to support his or her former spouse does not control whether an obligation to the former spouse is dischargeable in bankruptcy. Yeates,
Because the label attached to an obligation does not control, an unambiguous agreement cannot end the inquiry. As we stated in Goin, "a bankruptcy court must look beyond the language of the decree to the intent of the parties and the substance of the obligation" to determine whether the obligation is actually in the nature of alimony, maintenance or support.
The parties' intent is the "initial inquiry" to determine whether a debtor's obligation to his or her former spouse is actually in the nature of alimony, maintenance or support. Yeates,
"A written agreement betweеn the parties is persuasive evidence of intent." Yeates,
In Tilley, which we cited with approval in Yeates, the Fourth Circuit held that a bankruptcy court's finding that a debtor's obligation to his former spouse was intended as support despite an agreement's identification of the obligation as property settlement was clearly erroneous. Id. at 1078. Like the Agreement at issue in the present case, the agreement in Tilley "did more than simply label payments as alimony or property settlement; [i]t exhibited a structured drafting that purported to deal with separate issues in totally distinct segments of the document." Id. at 1077-78. While the Tilley court recognized, as we have here, that "the agreement could not ... be determinative on the issue," the court concluded that it "erected a substantial obstacle" for the party challenging its express terms to overcome. Id. at 1078.
The present case is the mirror image of Tilley. In Tilley, the debtor's former spouse was challenging the terms of the agreement, and she testified that she intended at the time of the divоrce that the obligation would provide her a certain level of support for her legitimate needs. Id. As the court recognized, however, "virtually nothing" in the former spouse's testimony "illustrate[d] the shared intent of both parties." Id. Here, in the case before us, the testimony of Defendant, his divorce attorney, and his accountant is no different than the testimony of the former spouse in Tilley. While it may provide some evidence of Defendant's subjective intent, it provides no evidence of the parties' shared intent. Such post hoc testimony, standing alone, is insufficient to overcome the "substаntial obstacle" posed by the Agreement's clear expression of the parties' shared intent.
Notwithstanding the Agreement's clear expression of the parties' intent, Defendant points us to several provisions of the Agreement which, he argues, are characteristic of property settlement. The Agreement's provision that the obligation would survive Plaintiff's remarriage is indicative of a property settlement, see Sylvester,
Defendant also notes that the obligation could be modified due to a change in the tax laws and that his obligation was conditioned on his continuing ability to deduct the payments under federal and state tax laws. It is undisputed that Defendant was motivated, at least in part, by the tax benefits that would accrue to him by designating the obligation as maintenance. However, in order for Defendant to have deducted the payments under federal and state tax laws, which he did, the payments must be alimony or separate maintenance payments. See 26 U.S.C. §§ 62(a)(10), 71, 215 (West 1988). See also Colo.Rev.Stat. § 39-22-104 (1992) (state income tax based on percentage of federal taxable income). The fact that the obligation was modifiable due to a change in tax laws and was conditioned on Defendant's continuing ability to receive the tax benefit is not evidеnce that the obligation was intended as property settlement; on the contrary, Defendant's reaping of the tax benefit and Plaintiff's simultaneous incursion of the tax liability strengthens Plaintiff's position that the parties intended the obligation as maintenance.6 Cf. Tilley,
In addition to the persuasive evidence of intent provided by the Agreement, the surrounding circumstances at the time of the parties' divorce strongly indicate that the obligation was intended as maintenance. See Yeates,
In light of the clear expression of the parties' intent exhibited by the language and structure of the agreement, the parties' placement of the tax burden, and Plaintiff's obvious need for support, we are "left with the definite and firm conviction" that the bankruptcy court erred in alternatively finding that the parties intended the obligation as property settlement. See Anderson v. City of Bessemer,
This does not end the inquiry because Plaintiff, as the party seeking nondischargeability of the obligation, also has the burden of proving that the obligation was in substance support. Because the burden was on Plaintiff to establish both that the parties intended the obligation as support and that the obligation was in substance support, and, in the bankruptcy court's view, Plaintiff could not establish intent, the bankruptcy court never reached the second part of the inquiry. See Tilley,
The critical question in determining whether the obligation is, in substance, support is "the function served by the obligation at the time of the divorce." In re Gianakas,
As earlier stated in our discussion of the parties' intent, Plaintiff had an obvious need for support at the time of the divorce. She had no income and her employment opportunities were limited by her health condition and lack of education. Defendant was clearly in a position to provide support. Givеn these facts, it is clear that Defendant's obligation to Plaintiff served as a source of her support at the time of the parties' divorce, and, therefore, was in substance a support obligation.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
The Honorable Harlington Wood, Jr., Senior Circuit Judge, United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, sitting by designation
Defendant agreed to pay Plaintiff $3,333.33 per month during the first five years; $2,500 per month during the sixth year; $2,083.33 per month during the seventh year; and $1,666.66 per month during the eighth year. The agreement further provided as follows: Defendant would procure life insurance to secure his obligation; Defendant's оbligation would terminate upon Plaintiff's death but would continue regardless of whether Plaintiff remarried; Defendant's obligation was contractual in nature and could not be modified except in the event of a change in the applicable tax laws nor could it be revived at its expiration; and Defendant's obligation was conditioned upon the deductibility of the payments from his gross income and the taxability of the payments to Plaintiff
The bankruptcy court made several findings of fact concerning the changed circumstances of the parties since their divorce. These findings are irrelevant to whether Defendant's debt was actually in the nature of alimony, maintenance or support. See Sylvester v. Sylvester,
The bankruptcy court stated that In re Goin,
We recognized, however, that "if the agreement is ambiguous, then the court must determine the parties' intentions by looking to extrinsic evidence." Yeates,
Defendant points to several other provisions in the Agreement which he argues are characteristic of a property settlement. The fact that Defendant was required to make monthly payments, if anything, is indicative of a support obligation. See, e.g., Sylvester,
In Matter of Davidson,
To allow a spouse to set up an intricate and unambiguous divorce settlement, carefully distinguishing certain periodic payments, called alimony, from the division of marital property, and consistently taking advantage of this characterization for tax purposes, only then tо declare that the payments truly represented a division of property, would be a legal affront to both the bankruptcy and tax codes. To uphold the discharge of those payments in bankruptcy would reward an admitted manipulation tantamount, at best, to deception.
Id. This reasoning would seem to apply with equal force to the facts of the present case, and we, like the Fifth Circuit have a strong aversion to sanctioning a sham transaction which we would effectively be doing if we accepted Defendant's argument. Nonetheless, § 523(a)(5) requires federal courts tо look beyond the labels. Given that a legal consequence of labeling an obligation to a former spouse support or property settlement is the placement of the tax burden, § 523(a)(5) might, in the proper case, require a federal court to sanction such a transaction.
In addition to being extremely relevant in the determination of the substance of the obligation, a spouse's need for support at the time of the divorce is sufficient to presume that the parties' intended the obligation as support. Goin,
