Glenn and Ann McCrory appeal from the judgment of the Bankruptcy Appellate Panel (BAP) reversing the bankruptcy court and holding that the debt owed them by Robert Spigel as a result of a Rhode Island Superior Court judgment was not exempt from discharge pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(2)(A). The McCrorys claim that the collateral estoppel effect of the Superior Court judgment creating the debt establishes that Spigel committed fraud in a transaction related to that debt, and hence that debt should be exempt from discharge. The BAP disagreed, concluding that the Superior Court did not find that Spigel engaged in fraud, thereby precluding reliance on collateral estoppel. We disagree with the BAP’s analysis because the Superior Court judgment reflected findings that Spigel engaged in fraudulent conduct. However, that judgment did not establish a sufficient link between Spigel’s fraudulent conduct and the debt Spigel owes the McCrorys to allow an exception to discharge under § 523(a)(2)(A) on the basis of collateral estoppel. Consequently, we affirm for a different reason.
I.
The facts in this case are drawn from the judgment and record of the Rhode Island Superior Court. The McCrorys are owners of an unincorporated business, Frenchtown Auto Sales, that services and sells automobiles in North Kingstown, Rhode Island. At some point prior to the events at issue here, the McCrorys entered into a verbal agreement with Spigel concerning Frenchtown’s business. First, the McCrorys wanted an independent contractor to perform all of their service-work. Spigel formed a corporation called A Smiling Mr. Bob Enterprises, Inc. (Smiling Mr. Bob), and the McCrorys agreed to have that corporation service automobiles at the Frenchtown lot. Second, the McCrorys hired Spigel individually as a sales agent. Under Rhode Island law, an individual can only sell six cars per year. To sell more, a special license is required. Spigel did not have the requisite license, so *30 the McCrorys extended to Mm the authority to use their license to sell and buy cars, provided that Spigel did so either at auctions or on the Frenchtown lot.
The transaction that underlies the debt at issue here began when Spigel received a phone call from a nephew who sold cars in New York. This nephew had three cars with New Jersey titles that he wished Spigel to sell for him. Spigel took delivery of the cars and sold all three, one to Tarbox Motors and two to Apollo Auto Sales. Both buyers were Rhode Island dealers. Spigel used the McCrorys’ license number to authorize all three sales, even though none of the sales were conducted in accordance with the limited grant of authority given to him by the McCrorys. The sales did not occur at auction or on the Frenchtown lot.
Although Spigel claimed that he had called an unidentified police officer to run the cars’ vehicle identification numbers (VIN’s) to ensure their legitimacy, the cars were, in fact, stolen. 1 Apollo discovered this problem soon after the sale, when it performed its own check of the VIN’s. Informed of the problem, Spigel refunded the purchase price of both cars and then called Tarbox to stop any sale of the car he had sold them. Spigel did not, however, refund the purchase price to Tarbox or take any other action to reimburse Tarbox, apparently lacking the funds to do so. Tarbox submitted a claim to its insurer for the loss associated with the stolen car. The insurer paid the claim and then, rather than suing Spigel for the loss, proceeded before the Rhode Island Motor Vehicles Dealers Commission to get reimbursement from the McCrorys through Spigel’s use of the McCrorys’ license to sell a stolen car. Before the commission contacted them concerning this complaint, the McCrorys had not known of Spigel’s sales to Tarbox and Apollo. The McCrorys claimed, in their defense, that Spigel had acted on his own. The commission rejected this defense and ordered the McCrorys to reimburse Tarbox’s insurer the $18,000 purchase price that Tarbox had paid Spigel for the car. 2
After working out an arrangement to pay Tarbox’s insurer, the McCrorys instituted an action against Spigel in the Rhode Island Superior Court. In due course, the McCrorys filed a motion for summary judgment seeking to ground the liability of Spigel on a theory of equitable indemnification. Although the Superior Court found that both Spigel and the McCrorys were liable to Tarbox, it also concluded that Spigel had, through a transaction that failed to “bear any indicia of legitimacy,” been entirely at fault in causing Tarbox’s loss. The court noted the cars’ illicit background and Spigel’s unauthorized use of the McCrorys’ Rhode Island auto sales license. The cars’ New Jersey titles had obvious misspellings and two of the titles, though “with two different previous owners,” had the same control number. 3 Spi-gel also listed Frenchtown on the back of the titles as the buyers of the vehicles, even though Frenchtown had no involvement at all with the cars. Moreover, Spi-gel created a new Bill of Sale designed to further the false impression that he was acting as agent for Frenchtown. This Bill of Sale bore the heading “Specializing in *31 high quality one owner reconditioned vehicles. You just made a great deal. A Smiling Mr. Bob Enterprises, Incorporated d/b/a Frenchtown Auto Sales.” 4 In contrast to the opprobrium it directed at Spi-gel, the court found that the McCrorys were blameless. Consequently, the court ordered Spigel to indemnify the McCrorys for the money they paid to Tarbox’s insurer.
Spigel appealed to the Rhode Island Supreme Court. During the pendency of that appeal, Spigel filed for bankruptcy. The McCrorys responded with the present adversary proceeding, seeking to have the debt created by the Superior Court judgment deemed nondischargeable pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(2)(A). The bankruptcy court stayed the proceeding pending the Rhode Island Supreme Court’s decision. Shortly after the Supreme Court affirmed, Spigel and the McCrorys filed cross-motions for summary judgment in the bankruptcy court, agreeing that the court should take judicial notice of the decision and record in the Rhode Island courts. In a terse order, the bankruptcy court granted the McCrorys’ motion and denied Spigel’s, thereby ruling that Spi-gel’s debt to the McCrorys was nondis-chargeable. Spigel appealed to the BAP, which reversed and ordered judgment in favor of Spigel. The McCrorys now appeal.
II.
A motion for summary judgment in an adversary proceeding under § 523(a)(2)(A) to have a debt declared nondischargeable is governed by the same standards applicable to motions under Fed.R.Civ.P. 56. Fed. R. Bankr.P. 7056. In reviewing the application of those standards by the bankruptcy court, we apply “the same regimen that the intermediate appellate tribunal must use, [while] exhibit[ing] no particular deference to the conclusions of that tribunal (be it the district court or the BAP).”
In re Healthco Int'l, Inc.,
III.
The Bankruptcy Code offers debtors, through discharge, “a new opportunity in life and a clear field for future effort, unhampered by the pressure and discouragement of preexisting debt.”
Local Loan Co. v. Hunt,
A. The scope of the exception to discharge.
As the party seeking to prevent Spigel from discharging his debt to them, the McCrorys bear this burden to show that Spigel’s debt comes squarely within an exemption from discharge. They focus their argument solely on 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(2)(A), which exempts from discharge a debt “for money, property, services, or an extension, renewal, or refinancing of credit, to the extent obtained by — false pretenses, a false representation, or actual fraud, other than a statement respecting the debtor’s or an insider’s financial condition.” 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(2)(A). Applying this language, we have said that the statutory language does not “remotely suggest that nondis-chargeability attaches to any claim other than one which arises as a direct result of the debtor’s misrepresentations or malice.”
Century 21 Balfour Real Estate,
Reading the statute to require such a direct link is supported by the legislative
*33
history. Prior to 1984, some courts had interpreted § 523(a)(2)(A) as preventing the discharge of an entire debt even though the fraudulent conduct of the debt- or was directly related only to a part of that debt.
See, e.g., Birmingham Trust Nat’l Bank v. Case, 755 F.2d
1474, 1477 (11th Cir.1985) (holding that debtor’s misrepresentations regarding ownership of collateral caused entire debt, rather than just the value of the collateral, to be non-dischargeable). Congress responded by adding “to the extent obtained by” to § 523(a)(2), Pub.L. 98-353 § 454(a)(1)(B), a change that other courts have interpreted as “expressly limit[ing] the exception to discharge to the extent that [the debt] was actually obtained by the fraudulent conduct.”
Muleshoe State Bank v. Black,
B. The relationship between the debt and the fraudulent conduct.
In seeking to demonstrate that Spigel’s debt is nondischargeable, the McCrorys rely exclusively upon the collateral estoppel effect of the judgment in the Rhode Island Superior Court that created the debt. The ordinary rules of collateral estoppel and res judicata apply in most actions in the bankruptcy court, including adversary proceedings under § 523(a) to except debts from discharge.
FDIC v. Shearson-American Express, Inc.,
Both the BAP and the McCrorys focus their attention on the question of whether the Superior Court judgment established any fraud. In reversing the bankruptcy court, the BAP concluded that
the essential elements of an exception to discharge under Section 523(a)(2)(A), false representations, false pretenses, or actual fraud, were not plead, litigated in, or determined by the state court. The McCrorys’ state court complaint does not mention fraud, false representations, false pretenses, misrepresentation or deceit as a basis for indemnification. Moreover, neither party, in the summary judgment pleadings and in oral argument before the state court, argued fraud.... The judgment of the state court established the debtor’s liability under equitable indemnification principles, not fraud.
Consequently, the BAP found that “neither res judicata or collateral estoppel was appropriate in this case.”
We have reservations about this analysis and its close attention to the labels describing the legal theories underlying the Superior Court judgment. Indeed, the McCrorys point to the Superior Court’s declaration that the transaction between Spigel and Tarbox bore “no indicia of legitimacy” as a demonstration that they proved in the state court that Spigel engaged in fraud. We agree. The Superior Court found that Spigel held himself out during the sale to Tarbox as an agent of Frenchtown and provided a New Jersey title for the car he sold to Tarbox indicating that Frenchtown had been a buyer of the car. Both of these statements were patently false. Spigel himself acknowledged that his authority to act as an agent for Frenchtown extended only to selling cars at auction or off the Frenchtown lot. The Tarbox sale, however, took place on the Tarbox lot. Moreover, it is undisputed that Frenchtown had never owned the cars.
However, this showing in the Superior Court action of fraudulent conduct by Spigel is not identical to the fraud showing required by § 523(a)(2)(A). The finding of the Rhode Island Superior Court that Spigel engaged in fraudulent conduct is, at most, identical only to the first two elements of the
Palmacci
test, i.e., that Spigel made a false statement with an intent to deceive. That finding does not demonstrate that the McCrorys’ claim “arises as a direct result of the debt- or’s misrepresentations or malice,”
Century 21 Balfour Real Estate,
In attempting to recover from Spigel the sum of their liability to Tarbox, the McCrorys proceeded on a theory of equitable indemnification, a theory that allows one “exposed to liability solely as the result of a wrongful act of another ... to recover from that party.”
Muldowney v. Weatherking Prods., Inc.,
Because the Superior Court was not asked to find, and did not find, any wrongdoing by Spigel directed at the McCrorys in the creation of his indebtedness to them, its judgment simply does not establish that the claim of the McCrorys is “one which arises as a direct result of the debtor’s misrepresentations or malice.”
Century 21 Balfour Real Estate,
All six of the
Palmacci
elements, however, and thus the direct link between the fraud and the debt, are arguably present between Spigel and Tarbox. Thus, if the Superior Court judgment for equitable indemnification permitted the McCrorys to succeed to Tarbox’s position with respect to the transaction, they might be able to cure the defect we have identified here. The McCrorys have not shown, as they must, that they stand in Tarbox’s shoes. It is far from clear that Rhode Island law permits the McCrorys as equitable indem-nitees to succeed to Tarbox s position; most likely, it does not.
Silva v. Home Indemnity Co.,
IV.
We understand that exceptions to discharge serve both to punish the debt- or and “concomitantly to protect the
inculpable
creditor.”
Century 21 Balfour Real Estate,
Affirmed.
Notes
.At some point following the events described here, Spigel’s nephew was incarcerated. It is not clear from this record whether that incarceration was related to the sale of the stolen vehicles.
. The record does not reveal the precise basis of the commission's ruling.
. Spigel claimed that he had not noticed the similar control numbers because he had not had the titles at the same lime.
. The McCrorys did not see this Bill of Sale until it was shown to them by the State Police as part of its investigation into the Tarbox sale.
. In Century 21 Balfour Real Estate, the debt was created through a crossclaim for equitable indemnification between the creditor and the debtor, both of whom were named as defendants in an action alleging fraud against the debtor and negligence against the creditor. Id. at 8. Both defendants were held liable, after which the crossclaim was allowed "because [the creditor’s] mere negligence made it less culpable than [the debtor], whose conduct had been found fraudulent.” Id.
.
As originally formulated in this circuit, a creditor's reliance had to be reasonable.
Commerce Bank & Trust Co. v. Burgess,
.We note that the Seventh Circuit has recently called into question whether the
Palmacci
test should properly be considered the exclusive test to determine nondischargeability un
*33
der § 523(a)(2)(A). In
McClellan v. Cantrell,
