Two bankruptcy appeals present a common question: whether a liar may obtain a discharge in bankruptcy by showing that the victim did not do enough to nose out the truth. Debts attributable to fraud may not be discharged, 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(2)(A), and intentional deceit concerning a material proposition is fraud whether or not a more-alert target would have smelled a rat. Victims of intentional torts need not take special precautions.
The first transaction occurred in December 1987. John and Deborah Mayer jointly borrowed more than $135,000 to purchase the Bess Hotel, a residence for transients in Rockford, Illinois. The Mayers presented financial statements showing assets exceeding $800,000 and tax returns showing annual income exceeding $150,000. John Mayer promised to subsidize the hotel’s operations until it turned a profit. Yet the Mayers had no intention of operating the hotel, underwriting its losses, or paying off the loan. They were serving as fronts for their friends Donald and Rosemarie Monti. Donald Monti and John Mayer had engaged in other real estate transactions; Rosemarie Monti and Deborah Mayer are first cousins, “inseparable” friends who rode horses together daily. The Montis could not have obtained the loan in their own names, because Donald was in bankruptcy and Rosemarie had no income. So the Mayers lent their name and financial statement; John Mayer signed a power of attorney authorizing the Montis to transfer the hotel to their own name by quit-claim *673 deed and adding: “I have agreed to help Rosemarie K. Monti obtain a loan From the 1st Natl. Bank of Rockford. I, Dr. John E. Mayer, have no legal interest in the Bess Hotel.” Any correspondence the Mayers received from the bank was passed, unopened, to the Montis.
The Montis could not make a go of the hotel and did not pay off the loan. The Mayers refused to pay a cent. A state court determined that the Mayers had taken out a loan, had signed all the papers, and are liable. The court ordered the hotel sold at foreclosure; a deficiency judgment of $187,-665.35 (including attorneys’ fees and accrued interest) was entered against the Mayers on January 3, 1992. The Mayers sought to discharge that debt in their federal bankruptcy proceeding. The bankruptcy judge denied discharge under § 523(a)(2)(A) after concluding that the Mayers had defrauded the bank. The state court’s judgment conclusively determines that the Mayers borrowed and owe the money.
Grogan v. Garner,
The other transaction occurred in September 1990. By then John Mayer was in financial distress and unable to borrow from banks. He located Spanel International, which was willing to lend at substantially higher rates. A clinical psychologist specializing in adolescents with drug problems, Mayer told Dennis King, Spanel’s owner, that he was working on a manual that would help schools deal with substance abuse among pupils. To add verisimilitude to this claim (and to fortify his representation that he would be able to pay back the 90-day loan of $100,000), Mayer showed King a purchase order issued by the Chicago Board of Education for 5,000 copies of the manual, at a total price of $725,000. Spanel made the loan; Mayer did not repay the debt; the purchase order turned out to be a fake, with a forged signature. Mayer denied knowing that the purchase order was bogus and blamed his literary agent. The bankruptcy judge found that Mayer knew that the order was spurious and rejected his contention that King should have investigated its validity more thoroughly. (King had called the Board about the subject, but Mayer told him to stop snooping.) On reconsideration the bankruptcy judge withdrew his finding that Mayer knew of the forgery but concluded that Mayer was reckless in presenting the order to King. The bankruptcy court concluded that the debt may not be discharged, and the district court affirmed.
Section 523(a)(2)(A) forbids the discharge of any debt incurred by
false pretenses, a false representation, or actual fraud, other than a statement respecting the debtor’s or an insider’s financial condition!)]
Each of the district judges turned to
In re Kimzey,
To succeed on a claim that a debt is non-dischargeable under section 523(a)(2)(A), a creditor must prove three elements. First, the creditor must prove that the debtor obtained the money through representations which the debtor either knew to be false or made with such reckless disregard for the truth as to constitute willful misrepresentation. Carini v. Matera,592 F.2d 378 , 380 (7th Cir.1979). The creditor also must prove that the debtor possessed scienter, i.e., an intent to deceive. Gabellini v. Rega,724 F.2d 579 , 581 (7th Cir.1984). Finally, the creditor must show that it actually relied on the false representation, and that its reliance was reasonable. Car ini,592 F.2d at 381 . The party objecting to discharge must prove the facts establishing each element by clear and convincing evidence.
*674
We confess to some doubt that
Kimzey
is an accurate guide to § 523(a)(2)(A).
Kim-zey’s
fourth requirement — that the creditor prove the statutory elements by clear and convincing evidence — has been disapproved by the Supreme Court, which thought
Kim-zey
unduly influenced by the goal of providing debtors with fresh starts.
Grogan v. Garner,
Kimzey
finds three ingredients in § 523(a)(2)(A): falsity, fraudulent intent, and reasonable reliance. The statute itself specifies only the first of these, speaking of “false pretenses, a false representation, or actual fraud”. The word “fraud” implies a requirement of intent to deceive, see
Ernst & Ernst v. Hochfelder,
Kimzey took the intent requirement from Carini v. Matera, which interprets the Bankruptcy Act of 1898. Section 17(a)(2) of that Act, 11 U.S.C. § 35(a)(2), the portion closest in spirit and effect to § 523(a)(2)(A), forbade discharge of “[[liabilities for obtaining money or property by false pretenses or false representations,” language that to modern ears differs from “fraud” in lacking an intent component. It turns out that cases interpreting the 1898 Act got the intent ingredient from the Bankruptcy Act of 1867, which disallowed the discharge of debts “created by fraud.” This was the language understood in Neal to require proof of intent to defraud. All reference to “fraud” disappeared from the Act in 1903, but courts of appeals paid no heed and the Supreme Court did not return to the subject. See generally 1A Collier on Bankruptcy §§ 17.01, 17.16[3] (14th ed. 1978) (tracing this history). Then the 1978 Code included both fraud and the more capacious “false pretenses [or] false representation” language, and again courts have acted as if nothing has changed.
Are we to treat the evolution of statutory language as meaningless?
Patterson v. Shumate,
“Reasonable reliance” is a different kettle of fish. Language establishing a reliance requirement not only is missing from § 523(a)(2)(A) but also appears in § 523(a)(2)(B), where it is used to determine eligibility for a discharge when the debtor tells a fib in a financial statement — the category carved out of § 523(a)(2)(A). Congress deliberately distinguished the criteria for discharge according to the kind of document in which the falsehood appears;
Kimzey
did not explain why a standard applicable under § 523(a)(2)(B) should be applied to cases under § 523(a)(2)(A), unless the reason is that
Kimzey
was not thinking about the 1978 Code at all, and (as the panel’s citations imply) was simply repeating criteria that had been developed under the 1898 Act. The “reasonable reliance” requirement has given us some headaches. E.g.,
In re Scarlata,
Support for
Kimzey’s
pronouncement is hard to come by — at least if reliance, to be “reasonable” or “justifiable,” includes an element of investigation. The common law of fraud has a mental-state requirement; it does not have any reasonable-investigation • requirement. Indeed, it is precisely
because
fraud has a mental-state requirement that it lacks a reasonable-investigation requirement. Fraud is an intentional tort, and victims need not take precautions against such torts in order to preserve their rights. Tolerating fraud by excusing deceit when the victim is too easily gulled increases both the volume of fraud and expenditures on self-defense. Society is better off with less fraud and fewer precautions against it, and the common law has tailored the doctrine accordingly. In the standard formulation, contributory negligence is not a defense to an intentional tort.
Prosser & Keeton on Torts
462 (5th ed. 1984);
Restatement (2d) of Torts
§§ 481, 482 (1965). We observed in
AMPAT/Midwest, Inc. v. Illinois Tool Works Inc.,
Angelos,
this court’s most extensive examination of a person’s obhgation (if any) to protect himself from being snookered, concluded that an intentional falsehood is not always enough. The he must concern a material fact. Even a material he may be disregarded when the victim is not actually taken in. For example, the victim may know the truth, having been given documents containing full information. Compare
Zobrist v. Coal-X, Inc.,
Kimzey
was handed down almost simultaneously with
Angelos
and was written by a member of the
Angelos
panel. We think that the best understanding of the passing references in
Kimzey
to rehance is that this term means the same in the definition of fraud under bankruptcy law as in the definition of fraud under securities law: it denotes the combination of materiality and causation. See also
In re Garman,
So understood, the rehance element of § 523(a)(2)(A) offers the Mayers no comfort. The bank’s loan officer testified that she had not seen the power of attorney by which John Mayer disclaimed any interest in the Bess Hotel; the bankruptcy judge believed that testimony, and his finding is not clearly erroneous. The bank therefore had neither actual knowledge of the fraud nor any strong reason to suspect one. Whether the bank should have done more to protect itself is a subject of sound banking practice. A lender wants a borrower willing and able to pay, rather than a claim in bankruptcy, but the fact that the lender ended up with a chose in action rather than cash in hand does not disqualify its claim. It relied on the Mayers’ material misrepresentations. As the Mayers concede that they never intended to pay, § 523(a)(2)(A) forbids discharge.
John Mayer’s attempt to shake off his debt to Spanel fares no better. King testified that he relied on the purported purchase order, which was unquestionably material to the transaction. The documentation for the loan so recited. King inquired of the Board of Education; when the person to whom King spoke could not verify that the Board had agreed to purchase Mayer’s manual, Mayer wrote King that he had spoken *677 with the wrong person and warned him off from making further inquiries:
Because of your call and fax to the Chicago public school system we are on the verge of losing our contact there. If you needed verification of our work I wish you could have had me put you in contact with the correct persons. You know how businesses work. Your call was a very costly one. If anyone contacts you from CPS on this, please just let them know you are satisfied with the origin of any documents. Any questions, call me directly.
Thus although King had doubts about the purchase order, Mayer specifically assured him that the doubts were unwarranted. Mayer does not contend that the size of the order (5,000 drug manuals for a district with 77 high schools and 476 elementary schools) or the price ($145 per manual) should have alerted Spanel that something was fishy. In the end Spanel actually relied on the purported purchase order, and it did not need to do more research to protect its ability to collect.
Mayer’s letter also shows that he was at least reckless in telling Spanel that he had a purchase order for the drug manual. In the bankruptcy court, Mayer denied any knowledge of the purchase order’s provenance; it was all his agent’s doing, Mayer insisted, and how was he to know that his agent had given him an ersatz order? Yet Mayer told Spanel that he had actual knowledge of the purchase order, and just who to call to verify it. A man teetering on the brink of insolvency (as Mayer was) is unlikely to be indifferent to a contract promising five times his annual income. He cared enough about the subject to offer the purchase order as collateral; it is hard to swallow his later tale that he accepted this document from his agent without inquiry. Mayer had more cause than King to ask follow-up questions. Indeed, Mayer’s letter to King suggests that Mayer well knew that the purchase order was phony. One stratagem of a defrauder is to enlist the aid of a confederate in “verifying” the truth of the representation. Success depends on sending the victim to the confederate; a call at random is likely to reach someone who is not in on the scheme. The letter implies that Mayer was worried that King’s call, to someone who had not been enlisted, might set an inquiry in motion.
One final issue and we are done. John Mayer promised Spanel, and both Mayers promised the bank, to reimburse any attorneys’ fees that the lender incurred in the process of collection. Bankruptcy judge Wedoff, relying on
Klingman v. Levinson,
AFFIRMED
