In re: Roger Thomas Haag ( 2012 )


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  •                                                             FILED
    SEP 27 2012
    SUSAN M SPRAUL, CLERK
    U.S. BKCY. APP. PANEL
    OF THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    1
    2
    3                   UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY APPELLATE PANEL
    4                             OF THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    5   In re:                           )     BAP Nos.   AZ-11-1661-DJuBr
    )                AZ-11-1662-DJuBr
    6   ROGER THOMAS HAAG,               )                AZ-11-1663-DJuBr
    )
    7                       Debtor.      )     Bk. No.    10-07917-EWH
    ________________________________ )
    8                                    )     Adv. Nos. 10-01207-EWH
    ROGER THOMAS HAAG,               )               10-01268-EWH
    9                                    )
    Appellant,   )
    10                                    )
    v.                               )
    11                                    )
    NORTHWESTERN BANK; M&I BANK,     )     M E M O R A N D U M1
    12                                    )
    Appellees.   )
    13   ________________________________ )
    14                  Argued and Submitted on September 19, 2012
    at Phoenix, Arizona
    15
    Filed - September 27, 2012
    16
    Appeal from the United States Bankruptcy Court
    17                        for the District of Arizona
    18        Honorable Eileen W. Hollowell, Bankruptcy Judge, Presiding
    19
    Appearances:    David Hindman of Mesch, Clark & Rothschild, P.C.,
    20                   argued for Appellant Roger Thomas Haag; Howard C.
    Meyers of Burch & Cracchiolo, P.A. argued for
    21                   Appellee Northwestern Bank.
    22
    23
    24        1
    This disposition is not appropriate for publication.
    25   Although it may be cited for whatever persuasive value it may have
    (see Fed. R. App. P. 32.1), it has no precedential value. See 9th
    26   Cir. BAP Rule 8013-1.
    1
    1   Before:   DUNN, JURY, and BRAND,2 Bankruptcy Judges.
    2
    3        Two creditors filed separate adversary proceedings to challenge
    4   debtor’s right to a discharge.     The bankruptcy court consolidated
    5   the adversary proceedings and conducted a four-day trial on the
    6   issues raised in the adversary complaints.    Ultimately, the
    7   bankruptcy court determined that the debtor was not entitled to a
    8   discharge solely on the basis that he intended to hinder or delay
    9   his largest creditor when, within a year prior to filing bankruptcy,
    10   he placed approximately $120,000 in cash in a safety deposit box
    11   with the admitted purpose of keeping it from the creditor, whom he
    12   believed was engaging in improper collection activities.    The debtor
    13   appealed.3   We AFFIRM.
    14                                 I.    FACTS4
    15
    16        2
    Hon. Julia W. Brand, United States Bankruptcy Judge for
    17   the Central District of California, sitting by designation.
    3
    18             The bankruptcy court’s judgment denying Appellant’s
    discharge was docketed in both adversary proceedings and in the main
    19   case. Appellant filed an appeal from each of the judgments. The
    appeals were consolidated by the order of our motions panel on
    20   January 11, 2012. Though a named Appellee, M&I Bank is not
    21   participating in this consolidated appeal.
    4
    22             Claims for relief were asserted in the adversary
    proceedings pursuant to §§ 523(a)(2)(B), 523(a)(4), 727(a)(2),
    23   727(a)(3), 727(a)(4), and 727(a)(5). After the close of Appellee’s
    case, the bankruptcy court dismissed the §§ 523(a)(4) and 727(a)(5)
    24
    claims for relief. After trial, the bankruptcy court ruled in favor
    25   of Appellant on all but the § 727(a)(2) claim for relief, which is
    the subject of this appeal.
    26                                                         (continued...)
    2
    1            On July 27, 2009, Northwestern Bank (“NWB”) obtained a
    2   judgment (“Judgment”) against Roger Thomas Haag in the Circuit Court
    3   for the County of Leelanau, Michigan in the approximate amount of
    4   $1.7 million.    The Judgment was based on Mr. Haag’s personal
    5   guaranty of the debts of his failed business, HTI, Inc. (“HTI”).
    6   NWB domesticated the Judgment in Arizona on February 1, 2010.
    7        The domestication of the Judgment in Arizona prompted Mr. Haag
    8   to file a voluntary chapter 75 petition in the Bankruptcy Court for
    9   the District of Arizona on March 23, 2010 (“Petition Date”), an
    10   action he had been contemplating since at least November 29, 2008.
    11        NWB filed an adversary complaint seeking alternatively to have
    12   its debt excepted from the application of Mr. Haag’s discharge, or
    13
    14        4
    (...continued)
    15             As his record on appeal, Appellant submitted five volumes
    of excerpts, the majority of which are the complete trial
    16   transcripts and the transcripts of closing arguments and the hearing
    on Appellant’s motion for reconsideration, most of which are not
    17
    relevant to the limited issue before the Panel. The factual record
    18   important in this appeal relates to evidence of the receipt of five
    tax refunds and various banking transactions through which the
    19   disposition of the proceeds of those refunds was traced. Yet
    Appellant did not provide the actual trial exhibits, which would
    20   have made that evidentiary record easily accessible. Instead, to
    21   put together the facts, it was necessary to read the entire
    transcript, and then go back to locate the factual information that
    22   actually relates to this appeal. The parties provided some
    assistance in their briefs, but the actual evidence would have made
    23   the exercise much easier.
    24        5
    Unless otherwise specified, all chapter and section
    25   references are to the Bankruptcy Code, 
    11 U.S.C. §§ 101-1532
    , and
    all “Rule” references are to the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy
    26   Procedure, Rules 1001-9037.
    3
    1   to deny Mr. Haag his discharge altogether.    After four days of
    2   trial, the bankruptcy court denied Mr. Haag a discharge, based
    3   solely on its finding that Mr. Haag intended to hinder or delay NWB
    4   in its efforts to collect on the Judgment.
    5           Mr. Haag is an engineer with expertise in biosolids
    6   applications and in the construction of biosolids storage tanks.
    7   Mr. Haag was the sole owner of HTI, which built and installed
    8   precast concrete tanks for use in wastewater treatment plants.
    9           Beginning in 2003, Mr. Haag and HTI began their banking
    10   relationship with NWB.    By June 2007, HTI’s line of credit with NWB
    11   had increased to $1.3 million.    Mr. Haag and HTI had two options
    12   available to repay the NWB debt:    generating funds through
    13   performance on HTI’s contracts or the sale of HTI as a going
    14   concern.    Following the 2007 collapse of the housing market, HTI was
    15   unable to obtain sufficient new business to support its debt
    16   payments to NWB.    Mr. Haag thereafter obtained a buyer for HTI;
    17   however, the attempted sale ultimately failed in November 2008.
    18           By email dated November 29, 2008, Mr. Haag advised NWB that he
    19   had retained counsel with the intent to file a personal chapter 7
    20   case and to live on social security benefits and the IRAs held by
    21   Mr. Haag and his wife, Carol.    Mr. Haag left HTI’s office and
    22   everything in it, including HTI’s books and records, in December
    23   2008.    Also in December 2008, Mr. Haag surrendered his residence to
    24   NWB and moved to Arizona.
    25           In January 2009, NWB took possession of all HTI assets.
    26   Mr. Haag testified he fully cooperated with NWB in turning over
    4
    1   HTI’s equipment.   By letter dated January 17, 2009 (“January 2009
    2   Letter”), Ms. Haag advised NWB that “[Mr. Haag’s] only income is
    3   unemployment, social security, and IRAs.”   At the end of the January
    4   2009 Letter is a statement by Mr. Haag that he had read and approved
    5   the January 2009 Letter.
    6        Beginning in February of 2009,6 Mr. Haag received a total of
    7   $231,838 from refunds of taxes for the years 2007 and 2008:   $12,549
    8   from the State of Michigan as a refund of personal income taxes;
    9   $61,206 as a refund of federal personal income taxes; $68,194 from a
    10   federal income tax refund attributable to a loss carry forward;
    11   $13,114 from the State of Michigan attributable to a loss carry
    12   forward; and $76,775 from a federal income tax refund attributable
    13   to a loss carry forward.    Some or all of the refund checks were
    14   deposited into Mr. Haag’s personal checking account at the Bank of
    15   Tucson.
    16        On July 11, 2009, less than three weeks before NWB obtained the
    17   Judgment, Mr. Haag withdrew $120,000 in cash from the Bank of Tucson
    18   account and placed it in a safety deposit box he and Ms. Haag rented
    19   jointly at Wachovia Bank.   When asked at trial why he had converted
    20   $120,000 from his Bank of Tucson account to cash, Mr. Haag
    21   responded:   “I guess the reason was that I felt at some point in
    22   time [NWB] had taken – gotten into stuff that I didn’t think they
    23   should get into, so I took it out in cash.”   In subsequent
    24
    25        6
    Ms. Haag testified that she believed that Mr. Haag started
    26   receiving the tax refunds in February of 2009.
    5
    1   testimony, he stated:   “I didn’t feel comfortable with leaving it in
    2   a bank.   If I had the cash in my hand and if something -- somebody
    3   decided that they wanted to take it from me if it was in a bank, I’d
    4   have to get a lawyer to try to get it back.   And it was much easier
    5   for me to take it as cash because I knew I needed it to live on.”
    6   Ms. Haag also testified at trial that the process of taking $120,000
    7   of the tax refunds proceeds from Mr. Haag’s Bank of Tucson account
    8   in cash, putting it in the safety deposit box at Wachovia Bank, and
    9   then depositing some of the cash into her bank accounts was done
    10   “[b]ecause we were nervous because we felt our opinion that [NWB]
    11   had been quite aggressive with us, and I just felt that this was an
    12   appropriate way to manage the tax returns.”   Mr. Haag asserts that
    13   in moving the cash to the safety deposit box he merely was acting to
    14   protect himself from improper conduct by NWB.   Specifically, he was
    15   protecting his right to privacy and his financial information from
    16   improper inquiries by NWB.
    17        By the Petition Date, some eight months after Mr. Haag put the
    18   $120,000 cash into the safety deposit box, the cash was, in
    19   Mr. Haag’s words, “long gone.”7   Mr. Haag did not keep records of
    20   how or when the money was taken from the safety deposit box and
    21   spent.    Nevertheless, the record establishes that he and/or Ms. Haag
    22   removed cash from the safety deposit box, and that Ms. Haag spent
    23   the cash on what Mr. Haag characterized as reasonable expenses.      The
    24
    7
    25             Ms. Haag testified that when she filed for a legal
    separation from Mr. Haag in September 2009 [see n.8], there was no
    26   money left in the safety deposit box.
    6
    1   record is undisputed that Ms. Haag used cash from the safety deposit
    2   box, in part, for the following:   $37,000 to remodel a condo in
    3   Mexico owned by Mr. Haag, at least $18,000 to purchase new
    4   furnishings for the remodeled condo in Mexico, and $2,000 to an
    5   attorney Ms. Haag hired to draft a separation agreement through
    6   which she became legally separated from Mr. Haag and was “awarded”
    7   the condo in Mexico.8
    8        The bankruptcy court ultimately found that within one year
    9   prior to the Petition Date, Mr. Haag withdrew $120,00 in cash from
    10   his account at the Bank of Tucson and placed it in a safety deposit
    11   box he jointly owned with Ms. Haag; that he converted the funds in
    12   his bank account to cash because he was concerned about collection
    13   action by NWB; that between July and November of 2009, at least
    14
    15
    8
    Ms. Haag is a successful business woman. Ms. Haag acted
    16   as CFO of HTI and managed HTI’s banking relationship with NWB. NWB
    believes Ms. Haag prepared, and Mr. Haag provided, fraudulent
    17   financial statements to NWB.
    18             The Haags maintained separate bank accounts and separate
    assets.
    19             In August 2009, the Haags participated in a Mexican
    marriage ceremony, likely as a renewal of their vows as their 40th
    20   anniversary approached. In September 2009, they signed the
    21   separation agreement. A short time thereafter they took an overseas
    trip together which they referred to as their “anniversary”
    22   vacation. Mr. Haag’s explanation as to why they took the trip was
    that it already had been paid for. They still travel together for
    23   family visits.
    At the time of trial in 2011, the Haags still had not told
    24
    all of their children they were legally separated. Ms. Haag
    25   frequently stays at the Arizona condo Mr. Haag claims as his
    residence. Mr. Haag explained that the separation agreement
    26   “awarded” her the use of a room there.
    7
    1   $36,000 of the cash from the safety deposit box was deposited by
    2   Ms. Haag into her personal checking account; and that Ms. Haag used
    3   the cash received from Mr. Haag to pay family and business expenses.
    4   The bankruptcy court concluded that the transfer of money from the
    5   Bank of Tucson account to a safety deposit box jointly owned with
    6   Ms. Haag was a transfer of property by Mr. Haag, that the removal of
    7   cash from the safety deposit box into Ms. Haag’s individual account
    8   was a transfer, and that Mr. Haag transferred the money with a
    9   subjective intent to hinder or delay.   Finally, while the bankruptcy
    10   court determined that Mr. Haag’s admission that he intended to
    11   hinder or delay NWB in its collection activities was sufficient to
    12   deny Mr. Haag his discharge, the bankruptcy court noted that, even
    13   without his admission, there were sufficient badges of fraud to
    14   support a finding of intent:    the close relationship between
    15   Mr. Haag and Ms. Haag, Mr. Haag’s poor financial condition at the
    16   time of the transfers, and the lack of any consideration for the
    17   transfers.
    18        After his motion for reconsideration was denied, Mr. Haag filed
    19   a timely notice of appeal asking that we determine that the
    20   bankruptcy court erred in finding that his actions constituted an
    21   intent to hinder sufficient to deny his discharge pursuant to
    22   § 727(a)(2).
    23                             II.   JURISDICTION
    24        The bankruptcy court had jurisdiction under 
    28 U.S.C. §§ 1334
    25   and 157(b)(2)(J).   We have jurisdiction under 
    28 U.S.C. § 158
    .
    26
    8
    1                                 III.   ISSUES
    2        Whether the bankruptcy court erred when it found that Mr. Haag
    3   intended to hinder or delay NWB in its efforts to collect on the
    4   Judgment when he withdrew $120,000 from his Bank of Tucson account
    5   and placed it in a safety deposit box to which he and Ms. Haag had
    6   access.
    7        Whether the bankruptcy court erred when it denied Mr. Haag a
    8   discharge.
    9                         IV.    STANDARDS OF REVIEW
    10       [T]he Ninth Circuit standard of review of a judgment on an
    objection to discharge is that: (1) the court’s
    11       determinations of the historical facts are reviewed for
    clear error; (2) the selection of the applicable legal
    12       rules under § 727 is reviewed de novo; and (3) the
    application of the facts to those rules requiring the
    13       exercise of judgments about values animating the rules is
    reviewed de novo.
    14
    15   Searles v. Riley (In re Searles), 
    317 B.R. 368
    , 373 (9th Cir. BAP
    16   2004), aff’d, 
    212 Fed. Appx. 589
     (9th Cir. 2006).
    17        A factual finding is clearly erroneous if the appellate court,
    18   after reviewing the record, has a firm and definite conviction that
    19   a mistake has been made.    Wall Street Plaza, LLC v. JSJF Corp.
    20   (In re JSJF Corp.), 
    344 B.R. 94
    , 99 (9th Cir. BAP 2006).    If two
    21   views of the evidence are possible, the trial judge's
    22   choice between them cannot be clearly erroneous.    Anderson v. City
    23   of Bessemer City, N.C., 
    470 U.S. 564
    , 574 (1985); Hansen v. Moore
    24   (In re Hansen), 
    368 B.R. 868
    , 874-75 (9th Cir. BAP 2007).
    25        “De novo means review is independent, with no deference given
    26   to the trial court's conclusion.     See First Ave. W. Bldg., LLC v.
    9
    1   James (In re Onecast Media, Inc.), 
    439 F.3d 558
    , 561 (9th Cir.
    2   2006).”   Mwangi v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. (In re Mwangi), 
    432 B.R. 3
       812, 818 (9th Cir. BAP 2010).
    4        We may affirm the bankruptcy court’s ruling on any basis
    5   supported by the record.   See, e.g., Heilman v. Heilman (In re
    6   Heilman), 
    430 B.R. 213
    , 216 (9th Cir. BAP 2010); FDIC v. Kipperman
    7   (In re Commercial Money Center, Inc.), 
    392 B.R. 814
    , 826-27 (9th
    8   Cir. BAP 2008); see also McSherry v. City of Long Beach, 
    584 F.3d 9
       1129, 1135 (9th Cir. 2009).
    10                                 V.   DISCUSSION
    11   A.   General Considerations.
    12        Many debtors seek a fresh start, available to them by virtue of
    13   the discharge provisions of the Bankruptcy Code, when they have
    14   become unable to meet their financial obligations.    The bankruptcy
    15   court denied Mr. Haag a discharge, and in this appeal, we are asked
    16   to determine whether the bankruptcy court erred when it did so.
    17        In our review of the bankruptcy court’s findings of fact and
    18   conclusions of law, we are guided by certain general principles
    19   governing denial of discharge claims.     Most important is the
    20   admonition that “[a] denial of a discharge is an act of mammoth
    21   proportions, and must not be taken lightly.     In light of this
    22   gravity . . . Section 727 must be construed liberally in favor of
    23   the debtor and against the objector.”     In re Goldstein, 
    66 B.R. 909
    ,
    24   917 (Bankr. W.D. Pa. 1986).    See First Beverly Bank v. Adeeb (In re
    25   Adeeb), 
    787 F.2d 1339
    , 1342 (9th Cir. 1986); Devers v. Bank of
    26   Sheridan (In re Devers), 
    759 F.2d 751
    , 754 (9th Cir. 1985).        The
    10
    1   opposing tension to this admonition is that the bankruptcy discharge
    2   and its opportunity for a fresh start are available only to the
    3   “honest but unfortunate debtor.”   See Cohen v. De La Cruz, 
    523 U.S. 4
       213, 217 (1998), citing Grogan v. Garner, 
    498 U.S. 279
    , 286-87
    5   (1990).
    6        Finally, a party objecting to the debtor’s discharge has the
    7   burden of proving, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the
    8   debtor’s actions or conduct fall within one of the exceptions to
    9   discharge set forth in § 727.   Grogan v. Garner, 498 U.S. at 289.
    10        With these guidelines in mind, we turn to our review of the
    11   specific issues in this appeal.
    12   B.   The Record Supports Denial of Mr. Haag’s Discharge Under
    § 727(a)(2).
    13
    14        As relevant to this appeal, § 727(a)(2) provides:
    15        (a) The court shall grant the debtor a discharge, unless–
    . . .
    16            (2) the debtor, with intent to hinder, delay, or
    defraud a creditor or an officer of the estate charged
    17        with custody of property under this title, has
    transferred, removed, destroyed, mutilated, or concealed,
    18        or has permitted to be transferred, removed, destroyed,
    mutilated, or concealed –
    19               (A) property of the debtor, within one year before
    the date of the filing of the petition9 . . . .
    20
    21   (Emphasis added.)
    22        To prevail on its claim for relief under § 727(a)(2)(A), NWB
    23
    9
    There is no dispute that all relevant events occurred
    24
    within one year before the Petition Date. The property with which
    25   we are concerned in this appeal are the proceeds of the tax refunds
    Mr. Haag took from his bank account and placed into the safety
    26   deposit box at Wachovia Bank in July 2009.
    11
    1   was required to prove two things: “(1) a disposition of property,
    2   such as transfer or concealment, and (2) a subjective intent on the
    3   debtor's part to hinder, delay or defraud a creditor through the act
    4   [of] disposing of the property.”   Hughes v. Lawson (In re Lawson),
    5   
    122 F.3d 1237
    , 1240 (9th Cir. 1997).    Ninth Circuit case law makes
    6   clear that Mr. Haag’s intent need not have been fraudulent.
    7   “Because the language of the statute is in the disjunctive it is
    8   sufficient if the debtor's intent is to hinder or delay a creditor.”
    9   Retz v. Samson (In re Retz), 
    606 F.3d 1189
    , 1198 (9th Cir. 2010),
    10   citing Bernard v. Sheaffer (In re Bernard), 
    96 F.3d 1279
    , 1281 (9th
    11   Cir. 1996).
    12         The term “transfer” is defined by the Bankruptcy Code to mean:
    13         (A) the creation of a lien;
    (B) the retention of title as a security interest;
    14         (C) the foreclosure of a debtor’s equity of redemption; or
    (D) each mode, direct or indirect, absolute or
    15         conditional, voluntary or involuntary, of disposing of or
    parting with –
    16              (I) property; or
    (ii) an interest in property.
    17
    18   Section 101(54).
    19         A withdrawal from a bank account is a transfer.   See In re
    20   Bernard, 
    96 F.3d at 1283
    .   As explained by the Bernard court:
    21         Instead of owning money sitting in their accounts, the
    Bernards owned claims against their bank. When they
    22         withdrew from their accounts, they exchanged debt for
    money (which, more than incidentally, was more difficult
    23         for the Sheaffers to acquire). Thus, when the Bernards
    made their withdrawals they parted with property,
    24         satisfying the Code’s definition of transfer.
    25   
    Id.
       The Ninth Circuit determined that the mere act of removing the
    26   money from their bank account in order to hinder their creditors
    12
    1   warranted denial of the Bernards’ discharge.
    2        Here, in addition to transferring $120,000 in cash from his
    3   Bank of Tucson account, Mr. Haag took the further step of placing
    4   the $120,000 cash into a safety deposit box at Wachovia Bank to
    5   which only he and Ms. Haag had access, thereby concealing it from
    6   his creditors, including NWB.10   Further, each time cash was removed
    7   from the safety deposit box and placed in Ms. Haag’s control, there
    8   was a separate transfer.
    9        Mr. Haag asserts on appeal that the bankruptcy court erred in
    10   finding he held an actual intent to hinder or delay NWB.    Mr. Haag
    11   faults the bankruptcy court for relying only on his “admission” that
    12   he placed cash into the safety deposit box out of concern about
    13   NWB’s collection efforts.   He asserts that the bankruptcy court
    14   failed to consider all of the circumstantial evidence and inferences
    15   from his conduct.
    16        We note that “[w]hen a debtor admits that he acted with the
    17   intent penalized by section 727(a)(2)(A), there is no need for the
    18   court to rely on circumstantial evidence or inferences in
    19   determining whether the debtor had the requisite intent.”   First
    20   Beverly Bank v. Adeeb (In re Adeeb), 
    787 F.2d 1339
    , 1343 (9th Cir.
    21   1986).    We further note that, notwithstanding the sufficiency of
    22   Mr. Haag’s admission of intent to hinder or delay, the bankruptcy
    23   court buttressed its conclusion with additional findings that
    24
    10
    25             The term “conceal” means “[t]o keep from being seen,
    found, observed, or discovered; hide.” The American Heritage
    26   Dictionary of the English Language, 4th ed. p. 381 (2000).
    13
    1   sufficient badges of fraud were present to support an inference of
    2   fraud under § 727(a)(2), utilizing the proper standard articulated
    3   in Emmett Valley Assocs. v. Woodfield (In re Woodfield), 
    978 F.2d 4
       516 (9th Cir. 1992).   Mr. Haag simply does not like the additional
    5   findings.
    6         In Mr. Haag’s view, the “admission” itself needed to be
    7   considered within the circumstances as they existed.    In particular,
    8   Mr. Haag points out that both he and his wife testified that he
    9   withdrew cash and placed it in a safety deposit box because
    10   “(1) they needed cash for their expenses in Mexico and (2) to
    11   protect against improper conduct of NWB including privacy
    12   violations.”   Appellant’s Opening Brief at 13:3-4.   He further
    13   asserts (1) that it is “uncontested” that all funds in the safety
    14   deposit box were used for the payment of his reasonable business,
    15   medical, legal, and living expenses, (2) that his course of conduct
    16   demonstrated “an ongoing intent to cooperate with all lawful
    17   collection actions against him,” and (3) that there was no evidence
    18   that he “misled or deflected creditors.”
    19         We find these assertions troubling based on the record before
    20   us.   The bankruptcy court made no finding as to the reasonableness
    21   of the expenses for which the $120,000 cash was used.   We would not
    22   characterize a complete remodeling and redecorating of a second
    23   residence in a foreign country as an “ordinary” expense for anyone,
    24   most especially for an insolvent debtor, so we find it difficult to
    25   determine how the expense could be found to be reasonable.    Neither
    26   do we see in the record the “ongoing intent to cooperate” with NWB.
    14
    1   The record in fact suggests a longer-term plan to conceal the
    2   existence of the tax refunds from NWB.   Specifically, Mr. Haag twice
    3   communicated with NWB to volunteer to them the information that his
    4   only sources of funds on which he would be living were IRAs, social
    5   security benefits, and unemployment benefits.   These representations
    6   were made in December of 2008 and in January of 2009.   Within a
    7   month of the last representation, he began receiving large tax
    8   refunds.   It is inconceivable that it was only after January 17,
    9   2009 that Mr. Haag realized he was entitled to these substantial
    10   refunds, gathered his records for the preparation of the returns,
    11   prepared the returns, and had the good fortune to have the returns
    12   expeditiously processed by the taxing authorities and the refunds
    13   disbursed.
    14        Finally, Mr. Haag asserts that seeking haven from untoward
    15   creditor behavior and intending to hinder or delay are “not mutually
    16   exclusive.”   Beauchamp v. Hoose (In re Beauchamp), 
    236 B.R. 727
    , 731
    17   (9th Cir. BAP 1999).   In other words, he asserts that both
    18   intentions can exist, and, under his reading of Beauchamp, because
    19   the bankruptcy court did not make an explicit finding that Mr. Haag
    20   was not acting to protect his privacy when he placed cash in the
    21   safety deposit box, the existence of the safe haven intention
    22   precludes a finding that Mr. Haag had the intent to hinder or delay
    23   the creditor.   We do not read Beauchamp to require the bankruptcy
    24   court to explicitly reject alternate, co-existing motivations.     In
    25   concluding that Mr. Haag possessed the requisite intent to hinder or
    26   delay NWB, the bankruptcy court may even have recognized, but
    15
    1   discounted Mr. Haag’s intent to seek a safe haven.11   We observe
    2   that a debtor’s belief that his conduct was morally justifiable does
    3   not provide a defense to § 727(a)(2) allegations.   See 6 COLLIER   ON
    4   BANKRUPTCY ¶ 727.02[3][a](Alan N. Resnick & Henry J. Sommer, eds.,
    5   16th ed. 2012).
    6        The bankruptcy court did not err when it denied Mr. Haag his
    7   discharge.
    8                              VI.   CONCLUSION
    9        The bankruptcy court’s findings that Mr. Haag placed $120,000
    10   in cash into a safety deposit box, which funds subsequently were
    11   spent by Mr. Haag and his wife, with the intent to hinder or delay
    12   NWB in its efforts to collect its Judgment are more than adequately
    13   supported by the record.   We AFFIRM.
    14
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    21
    11
    22             Mr. Haag’s concern about violation of his privacy rights
    seems to have arisen when NWB made inquiries about the Haags’ IRAs
    23   as potential sources of recovery. At trial, his attorney attempted
    to make that point. Mr. Haag’s response is illuminating as to the
    24
    true nature of his concern about his “privacy” rights:
    25        Q:   So you were concerned about your privacy related to your
    IRA?
    26        A:   Yes, I was. That’s all we had to live on.
    16