OPINION RE: OBJECTION TO DISCHARGE
This case concerns an objection to discharge due to the debtors’ prebankruptcy sale of an asset and use of the proceeds to increase an exemption. The objecting creditor seeks summary judgment on his objection to discharge. Because the Court finds the undisputed facts do not establish any improper intent to hinder, delay or defraud creditors, other than an intent to utilize available exemptions when the need to do so became evident, the motion for summary judgment is denied.
Facts
The following facts are undisputed.
On July 12, 2001, Marvin and Fay Crater (“Debtors”) were served with a suit filed by creditor James Murphey (“Murphey”) for royalties due under a patent license. Murphey obtained a default judgment in that suit for more than $600,000 in October, 2001, although that judgment was subsequently vacated because it had been entered in violation of the automatic stay.
Debtors retained a bankruptcy attorney on July 26, 2001, who sent a letter informing Murphey that he had been retained to file Chapter 7 for thé Debtors. On or about that same day the Debtors sold some stock they owned in Krispy Kream for about $40,000. On September 10, 2001, the Debtors used -the proceeds of that sale to pay Chase Manhattan Mortgage (“Chase”) approximately $40,000, which largely satisfied a second mortgage Chase held against their home. Debtors filed
Murphey filed a timely complaint objecting to the Debtors’ discharge. Among other grounds, the complaint objected pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 727(a)(2)(A), 1 on the ground that the sale of the Krispy Kream stock was made with “intent to hinder, delay, or defraud a creditor,” by essentially converting Debtors’ nonexempt asset into an increased homestead exemption. Arizona has opted out of the federal exemptions 2 and permits a homestead exemption up to $100,000 in equity. 3 Debtors’ Schedule D claims their home is worth $100,000 and is subject to a $32,700 first hen and a $2,577 second hen held by Chase. Consequently their current homestead exemption is approximately $64,712 in equity, whereas but for the application of the stock sale proceeds it would have been only $24,232, and the Chapter 7 Trustee would have had an additional $40,000 of unencumbered assets to distribute to creditors.
Murphey moved for summary judgment. His principal argument is that actual intent to hinder, delay or defraud creditors can be shown by circumstantial evidence, and that it is shown by the “badges of fraud” because the Debtors sold essentially all their nonexempt assets shortly after being sued, and used the proceeds to increase their homestead exemption shortly before filing bankruptcy. 4
General Principles
The question of whether a discharge should be denied because a debtor converted nonexempt assets into exempt assets shortly before filing has been addressed in some significant cases in other circuits.
See, e.g., Smiley v. First Nat’l Bank of Belleville (In re Smiley),
There is, however, substantial Ninth Circuit case law addressing the elements, evidentiary standards, and burden of proof for denial of discharge under § 727(a)(2)(A).
“Denial of discharge is a harsh result.”
Bernard v. Sheaffer (In re Bernard),
Section 727(a)(2)(A) provides that a debtor may be denied a discharge if “the debtor, with intent to hinder, delay, or defraud a creditor, ... has transferred ... property of the debtor, within one year before the date of the filing of the petition;
To a deny a discharge under § 727(a)(2)(A), the intent must be actual intent, as “[constructive fraudulent intent cannot be the basis for denial of a discharge.”
First Beverly Bank v. Adeeb (In re Adeeb),
Although the “badges of fraud” that were recognized at common law and are now codified in the Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act 5 for finding an actual fraudulent conveyance are not codified in the Bankruptcy Code either for that purpose or for denial of discharge under § 727(a)(2)(A), Woodfield seems to suggest that they are at least appropriate circumstances that may be considered as a basis to infer that intent. Id. Indeed, that opinion could be read to say that the presence of some of the badges of fraud may be sufficient to infer the requisite intent “unless some other convincing explanation appears.” Id. But that was dictum because the opinion also noted that “[m]ore than a dry checklist of badges of fraud demonstrates the Debtor’s intent, however,” because those debtors admitted they “were trying to delay or prevent seizure of the assets,” and they omitted them from their statement of affairs. Id. at 519.
Evidentiary Standards
The plaintiff, of course, always has the ultimate burden of proof. Bankruptcy Rule 4005. But depending on the procedural context, there are at least three possibly applicable evidentiary standards. The lowest of them is when the bankruptcy court has conducted a full trial and found that the discharge should be denied. Because the standard of review on appeal for the factual finding of the requisite intent is the clearly erroneous standard,
Devers,
Because this is summary judgment, plaintiff must satisfy that highest standard. Mere presentation of facts that could sustain a factual finding of fraudulent intent, or even establishment of a prima facie case, will not necessarily be sufficient to win summary judgment, if on such undisputed facts a fact finder could infer that the debtor’s intent was innocent.
Exemption Planning Is Permissible, Absent Extrinsic Fraud
So far as this Court has seen, the authorities are unanimous that even though an actual intent to convert nonexempt assets into exempt assets shortly before filing bankruptcy
is
necessarily an intent to hinder or delay creditors, such intent and conversion by themselves do not сompel denial of discharge under § 727(a)(2)(A). The Ninth Circuit Bankruptcy Appellate Panel has so held.
Coughlin v. Cataldo (In re Cataldo),
As under current law, the debtor will be permitted to convert nonexempt property into exempt property before filing of the bankruptcy petition. This practice is not fraudulent as to creditors, and permits the debtor to make full use of the exemptions to which he is entitled under the law. (Emphasis in original).
H.R. REP. 95-595, at 361 (1977),
reprinted in,
1978 U.S.C.C.A.N. 5963, 6317; S. REP. No. 95-989 at 76 (1978),
reprinted in
1978 U.S.C.C.A.N. 5787, 5862,
quoted in, Tveten,
In this case, the exemption planning occurred by payment of a valid debt. This creates a second reason why such exemption planning is not fraudulеnt. When a debtor is insolvent, the payment of any one creditor may inherently delay others, and that may even be the debtor’s actual intent in paying the one creditor, either to increase the equity in an exempt asset such as here, or simply to prefer that creditor over others. And yet it has always been the law that such an intent to prefer one creditor, while delaying others, does not make a preference into a fraudulent con
The circuit courts that have addressed the issue also agree, however, that such a conversion of nonexempt into exempt assets can result in the denial of the discharge if there was extrinsic evidence of actual intent to defraud.
Reed,
These principles also reflect the law of the Ninth Circuit under the Act, which the legislative history quoted above was intended to incorporate into the Code.
8
Un
The Ninth Circuit authority most expansive on this issue is
Goggin v. Dudley,
which adopted the opinion of the District Court. In that case the debtor had purchased $1000 of exempt stock in a building and loan association just one week prior to filing a voluntary petition, when he was “heavily in debt and clearly insolvent.”
[The California exemption statute] does not say when building and loan stock must be acquired in order to be exempt. Nor does it say that the person shall be solvent at the time of acquisition. To sustain the Referee in this case, we would have to impose a time limit and make solvency a condition precedent to exemption. This would mean reading into the state statute restrictions which are not there. And this we cannot and should not do. And, as there is no showing of actual fraud, the stock is immune against the creditors and never passed to the trustee.
The issue these authorities leave open, and the determinative issue here, is whether proof of one or more of the badges of fraud may be used to infer the extrinsic actual fraud that is required to deny a discharge to a debtor who converted nonexempt into exempt assets.
Certain Badges of Fraud Alone Do Not Imply Actual Fraud
As noted above, the “badges of fraud” are not codified as appropriate grounds for denial of discharge pursuant to § 727(a)(2)(A). But they have been long recognized at common law as grounds for finding the identical statutory element that is found in § 727(a)(2)(A) — “actual intent to hinder, delay or defraud” — when it is an element of a fraudulent transfer. And Woodfield suggests, but does not hold, that the badges of fraud аre relevant considerations for purposes of § 727(a)(2)(A).
The question is whether some of them, or which of them, may be sufficient to find the “actual fraud” that must accompany a conversion of nonexempt into exempt assets if it is to result in a denial of discharge.
The badges of fraud may be categorized into three types. Some of the badges are themselves indicative of concealment, deception or fraudulent intent: 2. The debtor retained possession or control of the property transferred after the transfer; 10 3. The transfer or obligation was ... concealed; 6. The debtor absconded; and 7. The debtor removed or concealed assets.
A second category of badges consists of three of them that do not implicitly suggest fraud but do suggest there must have been a motivation other than the transaction itself because it was not an economically rational decision for a debtor to make but for its effect to hinder or delay creditors: 1. The transfer or obligation was to an insider; 11 8. The value of the consideration received by the debtor was [not] reasonably equivalent to the value of the asset transferred or the amount of the obligation incurred; 11. The debtor transferred the essential assets of the business to a lienor who transferred the assets to an insider of the debtor.
The third category, however, consists of badges that may be innocent in themselves, or are merely timing factors that become suspicious only when combined with other factors: 4. Before the transfer was made or obligation was incurred, the debtor had been sued or threatened with suit; 5. The transfer was of substantially
Here, the plaintiff creditor has established only that (1) the Debtors sold the asset shortly аfter being served with suit, (2) the asset was the Debtors’ only significant, unencumbered nonexempt asset, and (3) the sale of the asset and the use of the proceeds to pay down a second home mortgage and thereby increase the equity protected by the homestead occurred shortly before the filing of bankruptcy and, implicitly, while insolvent. Thus the creditor has established badges 4 and 5 and 9, all of them in the third category.
Notably, none of the badges that the creditor has established here is implicitly indicative of fraudulent intent. They do not even fall into the second category of transactions that are suspicious because they lack an economically rational purpose. For example, the creditor has not shown that the Krispy Kream stock was appreciating, or generating dividends, in excess of the interest the debtor was paying on the second mortgage. Rather, they are merely timing factors.
If conversion of nonexempt into exempt assets should not itself result in denial of discharge, should it do so when it occurs shortly after the debtor has been sued or incurred a large debt, or is insolvent, or is about to file bankruptcy? If that were the rule, it would mean that prospective debtors could engage in exemption planning only up until the point where it appeared they might need to do so. As the court noted in Goggin v. Dudley, this would be to add a restriction to the exemption that the legislature (and Congress) did not impose, ie., certain assets are exempt only if purchased while solvent, while not owing substantial debts, or some significant period of time prior to levy of execution or bankruptcy. It would be particularly inappropriate to impose such a judge-made time condition on an exemption, such as the homestead, when the legislature did not do so but did so with respect to other exemptions. For example, while Arizona imposes no time limit on obtaining or declaring a homestead, it does require thаt life insurance policies must have been continuously maintained for two years in order to be exempt, and excludes from the exemption cash surrender values that were increased by premium payments within the prior two years in excess of the average annual premium paid during the previous three years. A.R.S. §§ 33-1126(A)(6) & (B). The Arizona legislature knows how to curb abusive exemption planning when it sees the need to do so.
Moreover, if intentional conversion of nonexempt into exempt assets is not
per se
fraudulent as to creditors, what is the additionally fraudulent
12
nature of the intent that is evidenced by such a conversion occurring shortly after being sued, while insolvent, and shortly before filing bankruptcy? It would seem to be merely evidence that the debtor intended to maximize his assets that would be shielded from creditors, and probably had one specific creditor in mind, and probably knew that his assets were insufficient to satisfy all his creditors. But such intent is nothing more than the intent to convert nonеxempt into exempt assets, which all authorities agree is not fraudulent. So how could the timing of the conversion, or the pressure of a
Indeed, what if the transaction did not make economic sense, standing alone? The scenario is not uncommon in the exemption planning discharge cases, and it yields conflicting results even within the same circuit, as one debtor may get a discharge despite buying an exempt $10,000 shotgun that he does not need, 13 but another is denied the opportunity to buy a homestead that he does not need. 14 For example, what if the Krispy Kream stock were generating income far in excess of the interest rate being paid on the second mortgage, and promised to do so for the foreseeable future? What would that say about the debtor’s intent? It could certainly be argued that it disproves an “innocent” explanation of the transaction, ie., it belies an argument that the debtor thought it was a better use of his money to pay down his homestead mortgage. But what does that prove? It proves that the intent really was to maximize the exemption, even at a sacrifice of income. But that still is nothing more than an intent to convert nonexempt into exempt assets. All that the uneconomic nature of the transaction does is highlight the strength and focus of the intent, but if the intent is not objectionable, then neither should be the same intent when strongly felt and focused on a particular creditor.
Consequently this Court tentatively concludes that those badges of fraud that are not intrinsically indicative of fraudulent intent are not sufficient evidence of actual fraud to compel a denial of discharge. To be more precise, those badges of fraud that fall into the second and third categories identified above are neither sufficient to sustain summary judgment for the creditor, nor to shift the burden of going forward to the debtor. In short, they do not establish a prima facie case for denial of discharge, even when conjoined with prebankruptcy exemption planning. They really do nothing more than demonstrate that the debtor engaged in otherwise permissible exemption planning only when it became apparent that it would be intelligent to do so, and was willing to sacrifice some asset values to achieve the exemption.
This tentative conclusion must be tested against the existing case law, both in the Ninth Circuit and elsewhere.
Ninth Circuit Cases Do Not Find Timing Factors and Uneconomic Transactions Sufficient to Establish Fraud.
The tentative conclusion is certainly consistent with, if not compelled by, Ninth Circuit precedent.
Goggin v. Dudley
essentially rejected timing factors as a basis to deny an exemption, and given § 727’s legislative history indicating an intent to preserve the existing ability to convert nonexempt into exempt assets, there is no reason to conclude the result should be different under the Code. It is also consistent with
Miguel v. Walsh,
where there was actual extrinsic fraud, in that the debt- or fraudulently induced the bank to part with its collateral on a promise to use its sale proceeds to pay down the bank’s debt. And it is not inconsistent with
Woodfield,
where although the court relied on many of the third category timing badges, there also existed the suggestive fraudulent ele
Wudrick
could be read as establishing an even broader rule upholding exemptions and discharges. In
Wudrick,
the debtors in the two cases consolidated for decision both borrowed money against their cars to obtain the funds to put into the exempt credit union accounts.
It should be remembered that these Ninth Circuit Act cases have significance beyond the Ninth Circuit, because they were apparently the Act authorities the House and Senate Reports were referring to when they said “As under current law, the debtor will be permitted to convert nonexempt property into exempt propеrty before filing of the bankruptcy petition.” 15
Most Other Circuit Decisions Are Consistent
The tentative conclusion is consistent with
Smiley v. First Nat’l Bank of Belleville (In re Smiley),
The conclusion is consistent with
Marine Midland Bus. Loans, Inc. v. Carey,
The liquidation of the other assets used to pay down the home mortgage occurred over a two year period and was in thе open; the activity and payment appears to be consistent with what has been approved by Congress to take advantage of exemptions. [Debtor] fully disclosed all payments and transfers in her bankruptcy schedules and at the meeting of creditors. [Debtor] retained no beneficial interest in any converted property. She did not obtain credit to purchase exempt property. Under these circumstances we cannot say that the district and bankruptcy courts erred in finding she did not intend to “hinder, delay, or defraud” her creditors or acted improperly in relation to her homestead.
Id. at 1078.
More difficult to harmonize under the analysis proposed here is
Ford v. Poston (In re Ford),
The tentative conclusion is consistent with
First Texas Sav. Assoc., Inc. v. Reed (In re Reed),
The panel decision in
NCNB Texas Nat'l Bank v. Bowyer (In re Bowyer),
Eighth Circuit Cases Are To the Contrary
But while the Fifth Circuit decisions can be seen as consistent with the proposed analysis, the Eight Circuit decisions cannot.
Norwest Bank Nebraska, N.A. v. Tveten (In re Tveten),
Tveten was an affirmance of the bankruptcy court’s denial of discharge after trial, so it was the lowest standard summarized above. Nevertheless, the bankruptcy court had relied almost exclusively on the timing factors — the debtor’s knowledge of a judgment against him, his rapidly deteriorating investments, and the rapidity with which he converted nonexempt into еxempt assets in 17 separate transfers shortly before bankruptcy. About the only fact mentioned that falls outside the third, timing category is that a number of the transfers were to his parents and brother, Id. at 872, which raises two flags — the sale to a family member may be fraudulent in that it permits the debtor to retain possession or control of the asset, or may be uneconomic because of the likelihood that someone other than a family member might have paid more if the asset were adequately exposed to the market.
But one cannot read the
Tveten
opinion without concluding the majority was driven almost solely by the timing of the exemption planning and its size, almost $700,000. And that was not only how the
Tveten
dissent read the majority’s analysis, but also how the Eighth Circuit subsequently read it. In
Panuska v. Johnson (In re Johnson),
But then the Eighth Circuit retreated from
Johnson.
In
Jensen,
the debtor was ninety years old, afflicted with serious medical problems and living in an аssisted care facility.
It is one thing to convert non-exempt assets into exempt property for the express purpose of holding it as a homestead and thereby putting the property beyond the reach of creditors, (citation omitted). However, it is quite another thing to acquire title to a house for no other reason than to defraud creditors.
Id. at 1011.
The facts in Jensen well fit the second category of the badges of fraud, because the debtor’s investment in the homestead was either uneconomical or an unwise investment for that particular debtor. But the Eighth Circuit’s opinion fails to demonstrate how that made the intent any more fraudulent than a clear intent to convert nonexempt into exempt assets. The closest it came to such an explanation was to label the transaction “rank injustice.” Id. Indeed, the inability of the Jensen opinion to explain why converting assets into exempt property for the purpose of putting it beyond the reach of creditors is one thing, but purchasing a house for no other reason than to claim a homestead exemption is another, is a good demonstration that there is no such distinction to be drawn. As the dissent noted, the facts simply showed that the debtor “sought to protect as much of his assets as the law allowed,” and none of the evidence was “extrinsic to [the debtor’s] act of conversion,” and “therefore [is] not evidence of fraud.” Id. at 1011-12 (Arnold, J., dissenting).
Conclusion
The Ninth Circuit cases discussed above may be sufficient to resolve the issue before the Court today. Neither timing factors nor uneconomic decision-making by debtors is sufficient to deny a discharge on account of knowledgeable exemption planning. They were not sufficient to deny exemptions under the Act, and even aside from the legislative history quoted above there is no basis to conclude that Congress intended a different result under the Code, 22 and certainly not to impose an even harsher remedy, complete denial of the discharge rather than denial of a claimed exemption.
It might also be sufficient to deny summary judgment on the basis that the requisite fraudulent intent is so individualistic and fact based that it cannot be determined without live testimony and the opportunity to judge the credibility of the debtor.
See In re Chavin,
There are many areas of bankruptcy law where Congress apparently intended bankruptcy judges to weigh the evidence and utilize their experience and judgment to decide individual cases on a case by case basis. It does so by using terms that are inherently incapable of fine definition, such as “good faith,” “substantial abuse,” “undue hardship,” and the like. Case law in such areas tends to identify “factors” that in reality are merely a checklist of relevant facts or issues to consider, none of which is dispositive. Perhaps such areas of bankruptcy law are best dealt with as in the civil system, with each judge reading and applying the statute and its underlying policies and principles to each factual situation that comes up, without regard to what the last judge did on different facts. Reported decisions in such areas serve little useful purpose, and in fact may be counterproductive. 23
But this is not one of those areas. Congress did not invite bankruptcy judges to grant or deny the discharge based on an amorphous, individualistic finding such as “reasonable” or “good faith.” Instead, it made the requisite determination hinge on intent, something that common law precedent has successfully refined over the centuries, particularly in tort law and in criminal law. Consequently here is it appropriate for courts to seek to refine and define the requisite intent, so that the evolution of precedent may in the long rung yield predictable, practical rules.
And this is. an area of law where that effort is particularly needed and important. As noted by the
Tveten
dissent, “[djebtors deserve more definite answers” than “each bankruptcy judge’s sense of proportion.”
Both the second and third categories of the badges of fraud merely underscore that the debtor intended to take advantage of available exemptions. The timing factors make that more evident than if the exempt property were purchased before bankruptcy was imminent, and engaging in an otherwise uneconomic transaction eliminates another possible motive, but neither of these makes the intent any more than an intent to utilize available exemptions. And since all authorities (except perhaps the Eighth Circuit) agree that that intent is not penalized or forbidden by
Based on the foregoing, the Court concludes that the showing of only the timing badges of fraud is insufficient to support summary judgment for Murphey. Because Murphey has made no showing of a badge of fraud falling in the first category, Murphey’s motion for summary judgment is denied.
Notes
. Unless otherwise noted, all statutory and rule references are to the United States Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. §§ 101-1330, and the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure.
. Arizona Revised Statutes (''A.R.S.”) § 33-1133(B).
. A.R.S. § 33-1101(A).
.There is some indication in Murphey’s motion that the transfer did not in fact occur until after the petition was filed. Debtor denies that, however, so to the extent Murphey relies on that argument there is a material issue of fact that precludes summary judgment.
.See, e.g., A.R.S. § 44-1004(B), codifying UFTA § 4(b):
"In determining actual intent under subsection A, paragraph 1, consideration may be given, among other factors, to whether:
1. The transfer or obligation was to an insider.
2. The debtor retained possession or control of the property transferred after the transfer.
3. The transfer or obligation was disclosed or concealed.
4. Before the transfer was made or obligation was incurred, the debtor had been sued or threatened with suit.
5. The transfer was of substantially all of the debtor's assets.
6. The debtor absconded.
7. The debtor removed or concealed assets.
8. The value of the consideration received by the debtor was reasonably equivalent to the value of the asset transferred or the amount of the obligation incurred.
9. The debtor was insolvent or became insolvеnt shortly after the transfer was made or the obligation was incurred.
10. The transfer occurred shortly before or shortly after a substantial debt was incurred.
11. The debtor transferred the essential assets of the business to a lienor who transferred the assets to an insider of the debtor.”
. There is now an exception to this broad statement in stales that have adopted the Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act § 5 as originally drafted, which makes insider preferences fraudulent. Section 5(b) of the UFTA provides: "A transfer made by a debtor is fraudulent as to a creditor whose claim arose before the transfer was made if the transfer was made to an insider for an antecedent debt, the debtor was insolvent at that time, and the insider has reasonable cause to believe that the debtor was insolvent.” Arizona, however, did not adopt that provision. See A.R.S. § 44-1005 (codifying UFTA § 5(a) and eliminating § 5(b)).
. While the circuits are in apparent agreement on this principle, none of them seems to have noticed the difference between the Seventh Circuit’s rule as stated in Smiley, which requires an extrinsic act, and the Fifth and Eighth Circuit formulations, which only require extrinsic evidence of the prohibited intent. Here, there is no act extrinsic to the conversion of exempt into nonexempt assets, yet the creditor argues that the timing of that act is such evidence of the prohibited intent. But if an extrinsic fraudulent or delaying act is required, why is not that act alone sufficient to deny the discharge wholly apart from the exemption planning?
.In fact, one authority suggests that it was precisely these Ninth Circuit cases that were referred to in the legislative history quoted above, based on a letter from a California bankruptcy judge, who described this stale of
. These Ninth Circuit authorities under the Act technically dealt only with objections to the claimed exemption. For opt-out states under the Code, the availability of the exemption should be controlled by state law, whereas the denial of discharge under § 727(a)(2) is governed by federal law. This distinction is implicit in
Cataldo,
and is well illustrated by the two decisions in
Reed,
one of which upheld the exemption, and the other of which denied the discharge.
Driskill v. Reed (In re Reed),
. Transfer without change of possession was considered fraudulent at the inception of fraudulent conveyance law over 400 years ago. See Twyne’s Case, 3 Coke Rep. 80b (1601). See also A.R.S. § 44-1061(A): "A sale made by a vendor of goods and chattels ..., unless the sale or assignment is accompanied by an immediate delivery and followed by an actual and continued change of possession of the things sold or assigned, is prima facie evidence of fraud against creditors of the vendor ....”
. A insider transfer suggests the debtor did not seek to maximize his economic benefit by exposing the asset to the market to obtain the highest possible price. But it could also fall in the first category, because insider sales may also facilitate a secret retention of possession, control or benefit. Of course it could also evidence an intent to benefit the insider, a potential classic fraudulent conveyance if made while insolvent without receipt of fair equivalent value. And under UFTA § 5(b), even payment of a valid insider debt while insolvent may be fraudulent. See note 6 supra.
. The term "fraudulent” is used here generically to include also the prohibited intent to hinder or delay creditors.
. In
In
re
McCabe,
. In
Jensen v. Dietz (In re Sholdan),
. See H.R. REP. 95-595, at 361 (1977), re
printed in,
1978 U.S.C.C.A.N. 5963, 6317; S. REP. No. 95-989 at 76 (1978),
reprinted in
1978 U.S.C.C.A.N. 5787, 5862,
quoted in, Tveten,
. The dissent in
Tveten
criticized the majority's reasoning by comparing it to that in
Albuquerque Nat’l Bank v. Zouhar (In re Zouhar),
.In fact, this appears to be the issue that makes this area so difficult. Virtually all of the difficult cases deal with state exemption statutes that are unlimited in amount. The cases simply do not arise with any frequency, or at least do not reach the circuit courts, when the state legislature has imposed caps
. Perhaps
Ford
counsels that it would be unwise to grant
debtors
summary judgment in such cases where the only badge of fraud a creditor asserts relates to timing — because the debtor should be required to explain the transaction, and the discharge should be denied if the explanation is not credible. If so, that would mean that any badge of fraud could make a prima facie case sufficient to shift the burden of going forward to the debt- or. But the rule suggested here would still mean that if the debtor testified honestly, like Mr. Tveten, then the creditor’s case is insufficient to deny the discharge. But that issue is
. Another case that may have hinged primarily on debtor’s apparent lack of candor is
Pomerantz v. Pomerantz (In re Pomerantz),
. When Reed could not adequately account for $19,000 that he carried in cash he argued that it was but a small percentage of the amount of money he went through in that year.
Reed,
. The objection was to the exemption, rather than to the discharge; the discharge was irrelevant because the debtor was deceased. The bankruptcy court relied on a fraudulent conveyance analysis and utilized the badges of fraud to find the fraudulent intent, which the Eighth Circuit approved, including the reliance on the debtor’s age and the value of the house. Id. at 1009-10 & n. 5.
. See
Dewsnup v. Timm,
. See Lawrence Ponoroff, The Dubious Role of Precedent in the Quest for First Principles in the Reform of the Banknptcy Code: Some Lessons from the Civil Law and Realist Traditions, 74 Am. Bankr.L.J. 173 (Spring 2000).
. A.R.S. §§ 33-1126(A)(6) & (B).
