MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
This matter is before the court on the Complaint of Security Bank of Hebron (Bank) seeking a determination that the unpaid balance of a 1995 consolidated term loan is nondischargeable under 11 U.S.C. §§ 523(a)(2)(A) and (a)(2)(B). The Bank also alleges that the Debtors converted property pledged as collateral for the loan and seeks a determination of nondischargeability premised upon 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(6). The Debtors generally deny the allegations. Trial was held before the undersigned on August 14, *965 1997. From the evidence presented the court makes the following findings of fact and conclusions of law:
Findings of Fact
1.
Donald and Norma Wehri, the Debtors herein, own and reside upon 820 acres of farmland in Morton County, North Dakota. Their relationship with the Bank began in 1993 when they made three loans: a real estate loan, a chattel term loan, and an operating line of credit. Due to financial problems, the 1993 operating loan, as well as a 1994 loan, were consolidated and rolled into a term loan. By the spring of 1995, financial conditions had deteriorated to a point where the Bank was considering liquidating the term loan. The Wehris, however, were interested in continuing with farming and to that end were pursuing an FSA refinancing of the term loan. Believing their position would be taken by FSA the Bank, on March 3, 1995, renewed the term loan in the principal amount of $122,374.50. On this date the Wehris signed two separate security agreements securing all debts. One was a blanket security agreement covering farm products, inventory, equipment, accounts, instruments and general intangibles. The other covered all crops and proceeds of crops grown upon their land. In connection with the 1995 loan, the Wehris gave the Bank a financial statement which the Bank believes omits outstanding debts to Donald Wehri’s father-in-law and his uncle, from whom he purchased several items of farm equipment. The evidence surrounding the alleged omitted debts is somewhat confused, but is important, as it bears not only upon the accuracy of the financial statement but also upon the § 523(a)(6) cause of action.
Donald Wehri’s father-in-law owned an OMC 15 ft. swather which the Wehris were interested in purchasing. According to Norma Wehri her father agreed to finance their purchase of the swather for $4,500, because they could not line up purchase money in 1994. He was given a security interest in the swather and it was depreciated on their 1995 tax return. Both Donald and Norma agree no payments were ever made to her father. Donald, however, testified it belonged to his father-in-law, while Norma, on the other hand, testified that they owned it. On a farm and home plan balance sheet prepared by the Wehris, and given to FSA in January 1995, there appears an outstanding balance of $4,500 due and owing on the swather and $3,200 due and owing on a tractor. The swather is also listed, as an asset on the March financial statement.
The other debt alleged to have been omitted from the financial statement stems from a tractor Donald purchased from his uncle in 1994. On direct examination Donald stated he bought the tractor, but later stated that he only leased it. His uncle was nonetheless given a security interest in the tractor, and on the January farm and home plan there appears an outstanding debt of $3,200 owing on a tractor. Both the swather as well as the tractor were later sold at a 1996 machinery auction. The advertising bill for the auction listed the equipment to be sold, inclusive of the tractor and the swather, and clearly stated Donald and Norma Wehri to be the owners. From the weight of the evidence the court must conclude that both the swather and the tractor belong to the Wehris and that as of the date of the financial statement there was $4,500 due and owing in consequence of the swather purchase and $3,200 outstanding on account of the tractor purchase-debts omitted from the financial statement.
Despite the inaccuracy of the financial statement, according to several Bank officers, the primary and overriding factor in making, the 1995 loan was the pendency of the FSA buy out. The Bank’s executive vice-president testified that the loan would not have been made had the Debtors not been seeking FSA refinancing. He went on to state that listing the swather deal would have made no difference “because the Bank was going to be taken out by FSA and this was the overriding reason for making the loan.”
2.
Although the Wehris were actively engaged in loan refinancing negotiations with FSA in March 1995, by early 1996 they had decided not to refinance because it would have required a larger farming operation and *966 they were concerned about the ability to cash flow. As a consequence, they agreed to liquidate their farm assets and apply the proceeds therefrom to the outstanding bank loan.
Cattle were liquidated, with proceeds going to the Bank. A machinery auction was held in June 1996, with most of the proceeds also going to the Bank. The proceeds of certain property in which the Bank claims a security interest were not turned over to the Bank, however, and it is this property, pledged as collateral, which the Bank claims was converted.
With FSA refinancing no longer under consideration, the bulk of the Wehris’ property was eventually liquidated. The machinery, along with the OMC swather, was ultimately sold at an auction conducted in June 1996. The swather sold for $5,900 and, according to Donald, this sum was deducted from the auction proceeds and paid to his father-in-law rather than to the Bank. Donald and Norma both agreed that although this amount was paid to their father-in-law in recognition of his security interest, he was owed only $4,500. Why the $1,400 excess was also paid to him was not explained. There was never any agreement between the Wehris and the Bank that they could retain the $1,400 excess.
In late October 1995 the Bank conducted an on-site inspection of the property pledged as collateral for the March 1995 loan. Donald Wehri was present at the time and assisted the Bank’s inspecting officer by giving him the count for hay, grain, cattle and pigs. Although the Bank’s officer personally observed the existence of this property, he relied upon Donald to provide the actual physical count. On this report, which Donald signed, are indicated precise quantities of livestock, grain and machinery. Three thousand bushels of wheat at $4.50 per bushel are indicated as existing, as are one thousand tons of hay at $30 per ton. In November 1995, 1,021.98 bushels of wheat were sold with proceeds of $4,615.19 paid over to the Bank. According to their bankruptcy schedules there remains on hand 534 bushels. Missing are 1,444 bushels. 1 According to both Debtors, they never had 3,000 bushels; instead, they claim the count provided the Bank in the October 1995 inspection report was erroneous. According to Donald, only 1,500 bushels actually existed at that time. Norma agreed with this and said she told Donald it was inaccurate. Neither, however, made any effort to correct the report or tell the Bank of the mistake. They could not explain their action.
The Wehris put up 1995 hay and carried it over to 1996. In August 1996, this hay was sold to the Debtors’ neighbor, Edwin Richter, for $10,000. None of the proceeds went to the Bank. At the time, Donald was aware the Bank claimed a security interest in the hay but never obtained a release, stating at trial he was relying upon advice of counsel. Precisely what this advice was, was not revealed except that Donald believed that because his 1995 operating loan had been paid off from the sale proceeds of his cattle liquidation the hay no longer served as collateral. He did not tell anyone at the Bank of this sale and no one at the Bank told him he could sell the hay in disregard of the Bank’s lien. To the contrary, a Bank officer specifically told the Debtors’ attorney they were claiming a security interest in the hay. One of the Bank’s officers testified that Donald quite possibly believed it was acceptable to sell the hay.
Despite the 1995 inspection report revealing the existence of hogs and a conversation in March 1996 where the Debtors told the Bank they had $1,000 worth of hogs on hand, no proceeds from the sale of hogs ever passed to the Bank. Norma testified that as the hogs were sold the proceeds were retained because the Bank did not want proceeds from any sale of under $500. No Bank officer verified this assertion.
3.
The Wehris filed for relief under Chapter 12 on December 26, 1996. Their schedules and statement of affairs contain inaccuracies *967 which cast a shadow on the credibility of their trial testimony. At the time of filing, the Wehris had in their possession cattle belonging to a neighbor, yet this fact is not disclosed in answer to statement of affairs question 14. Nor do they reveal any sums paid to their attorney in answer to statement of affairs question 9, except for a $160 filing fee, despite the fact, as testimony demonstrated at trial, that $5,000 from the sale of hay went to their attorney for fees associated with the bankruptcy filing.
At the time of filing, Donald was co-signer on his son’s outstanding student loan, yet this fact was not disclosed on the schedules. Also omitted was the item of 80 acres of farmland upon which Donald is the record title holder subject to a life estate in his parents. He also omitted ownership of an automobile. Despite being given a warranty deed for the land, Donald testified he thought it belonged to his parents. Donald holds title in an automobile, but said it was his son’s car and that he only co-signed for the loan with his son making the payments, claiming this as the reason it was omitted from the schedules.
Conclusions of Law
1.
Sections 528(a)(2)(A); (a)(2)(B)
The Bank argues that the Wehris obtained their 1995 operating loan and refinancing by means of false representations. More specifically, the Bank charges that they caused the Bank to rely upon a false financial statement.
Sections 523(a)(2)(A) and (a)(2)(B) are the operative provisions of section 523, rendering nondischargeable debts traceable to fraud or to materially false financial statements. As to either, the elements essential to their proof must be established by a preponderance of the evidence.
Grogan v. Garner,
(a) A discharge under section 727, 1141, 1228(a), 1228(b), or 1328(a) of this title does not discharge an individual debtor from any debt—
(2)for money, property, services, or an extension, renewal, or refinancing of credit to the extent obtained by—
(A) false pretenses, a false representation, or actual fraud, other than a statement respecting the debtor’s or an insider’s financial condition;
[or]
(B) use of a statement in writing—
(i) that is materially false;
(ii) respecting the debtor’s or an insider’s financial condition;
(iii) on which the creditor to whom the debtor is liable for such money, property, services, or credit reasonably relied; and
(iv) that the debtor caused to be made or published with intent to deceive;
Nondischargeability is established under section 523(a)(2)(A) upon proof of the following five elements:
(1) that the debtor made representations;
(2) that at the time he knew they were false;
(3) that he made them with the intention and purpose of deceiving the creditor;
(4) that the creditor justifiably relied upon such representations;
(5) that the creditor sustained the alleged loss and damage as the proximate result of the representation.
11 U.S.C. §§ 523(a)(2)(A) and (B);
see Field v. Mans,
Section 523(a)(2)(B) pertains to actual writings respecting a debtor’s financial condition. As to this section the following five elements must be established:
(1) the debtor makes;
(2) a statement in writing;
(3) respecting the debtor’s or an insider’s financial condition;
(4) which statement is materially false;
*968 (5) which is made with the intent to deceive, and
(6) which is reasonably relied upon by the creditor.
11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(2)(B);
see In re Frey,
The Bank’s argument is twofold based upon the Debtors’ assurances in March 1995 that an FSA loan would be obtained coupled with the financial statement which was inaccurate as to the indebtedness remaining on the several items of machinery. As for the intended , refinancing by FSA, there is nothing in evidence suggesting that in March 1995 the process was not being undertaken in good faith or that the Wehris had no intention of consummating the deal. That apparently did not happen until a year later. The evidence falls short of establishing that the Wehris falsely represented their intent to refinance with FSA. The financial statement is false but it too falls short of the proof needed under section 523(a)(2)(B). While false, it is not “materially false.” Materiality is any statement that paints a substantially untruthful picture of a financial condition by misrepresentation of the type which would normally affect the decision to grant credit.
Norris v. First Nat’l Bank (In re Norris),
2.
Section 523 (a)(6).
Section 523(a)(6) precludes discharge of a debt:—
“for willful and malicious injury by the debtor to another entity or to the property of another entity.”
11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(6).
Under the foregoing section, a conversion of property belonging to another may, if committed with the requisite willfulness and maliciousness, result in a nondisehargeable debt. 10 Collier On Bankruptcy ¶ 523.12, pp. 523-91-92 (15th ed. rev. 1997);
accord In re Lacina,
In the ease at bar, as in all eases of this nature, the Debtors have denied any intent to injure the interests of the Bank and have offered a variety of explanations ranging from, “I thought I could do it,” to “My lawyer said it was okay.” Whether intent to harm is a measure of willfulness or of malice or of both, it remains an element that must, in conversion cases, be established by proof that a debtor acted with knowledge and intent that the creditor’s interest would be harmed as a consequence of the act.
United States v. Foust (In re Foust),
Except for the hay sale, the excuses offered by each of the Debtors are not supported by anything other than the self-serving statements of each other. The 1995 hay crop was sold with the proceeds in part used to pay their attorney upon whose advice they purportedly relied. Reliance upon advice of counsel may constitute a defense where counsel, fully apprised of the facts, advises as a matter of law, and where the debtor acts on the advice believing it to be correct.
In re Erdman,
The court does not reach the same conclusion regarding the missing $1,400 of swather proceeds, the $1,000 in hog proceeds or the missing 1,444 bushels of wheat. A debtor’s testimony bearing on the issue of intent may be impeached by inconsistencies in that testimony as well as the contradictory testimony of other witnesses and contradictory documents.
Waugh,
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the Complaint of the Security Bank of Hebron based upon sections 523(a)(2)(A) and (B) is dismissed. The Security Bank of Hebron is granted judgment on its complaint of nondischargeability based upon section 523(a)(6) with the sum of $8,984.64 declared nondisehargeable by reason of conversion.
JUDGMENT MAY BE ENTERED ACCORDINGLY.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The Debtors sold 1,021.98 bushels for $4,615.19 which breaks down to $4.56 per bushel.
