Nye, a lawyer, referred a personal injury-case to Woldman, another lawyer, to try it, and the two agreed to share equally any attorney fees generated by the case. Wold-man settled the case, collecting a contingent fee of $45,000. But he gave Nye only $500, spent the rest on personal expenses, and declared bankruptcy. Nye assigned his claim for the balance of what he was owed, $22,000, to Johnson, who brought an adversary action in the bankruptcy court for a
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declaration that Woldman’s debt to her through Nye is nondischargeable because it is the result of the debtor’s “fraud or defalcation while acting in a fiduciary capacity.” 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(4). The bankruptcy court granted summary judgment for Woldman; the district court affirmed; Johnson appeals to us. She points out that: Woldman and Nye were partners or joint venturers (relationships treated the same under Illinois law,
Herst v. Chark,
There is a division of authority over whether fiduciary obligations between equals, for example general partners in a partnership, or, as here, joint venturers, are part of the subset.
In re Bennett,
So far we have assumed (with the parties) that this really is a case of fraud, but actually it is better described as defalcation, for there is no indication that Woldman intended from the beginning to keep Nye’s half of any fees that the lawsuit might generate. No matter. The statute treats fraud and defalcation the same. The only thing that matters is that Woldman was not Nye’s fiduciary within the special meaning that section 523(a)(4) assigns to the term.
Affirmed.
