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- 1 2 FILED & ENTERED 3 JUN 28 2024 4 5 CLERK U.S. BANKRUPTCY COURT Central District of California 6 BY s u m l i n DEPUTY CLERK 7 UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT 8 CENTRAL DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 9 LOS ANGELES DIVISION 10 In re: Case No.: 2:22-bk-13069-NB 11 George Gordon Strong, III, Chapter: 13 12 13 MEMORANDUM DECISION DENYING CONFIRMATION OF DEBTOR’S 14 CHAPTER 13 PLAN 15 Debtor. Preliminary Evidentiary Hearing: 16 Date: February 6, 2024 Time: 11:00 a.m. 17 Continued Evidentiary Hearing: 18 Date: February 12, 2024 Time: 9:30 a.m. 19 Continued Confirmation Hearing: 20 Date: March 14, 2024 Time: 9:30 a.m. 21 Place: Courtroom 1545 255 E. Temple Street 22 Los Angeles, CA 90012 23 This Bankruptcy Court conducted evidentiary hearings to determine whether to 24 confirm Debtor’s chapter 13 Plan as set forth in the caption above. For the reasons set 25 forth on the record at the above-captioned Confirmation Hearing,1 and explained in 26 more detail in this Memorandum Decision, separate orders have been issued 27 28 1 Determinations made on the record at the Confirmation Hearing are incorporated herein as permitted by Rule 52(a) (Fed. R. Civ. P.), made applicable by Rules 7052 and 9014(c) (Fed. R. Bankr. P.). 1 (a) denying confirmation of the Plan (dkt. 192) and (b) converting this case to chapter 7 2 (dkt. 193). 3 1. BACKGROUND 4 Debtor filed a voluntary chapter 13 petition on June 1, 2022 (the “Petition Date”). 5 Debtor works as an investment advisor and conducts business through a firm he 6 founded in 2009, Strong Wealth Management.2 The filing of the petition was 7 precipitated by disputes between Debtor and some former clients, in particular Michael 8 Horner (with affiliates, the “Horners”) and David Vosicher (collectively, “Creditors”). 9 Before the Petition Date, the Horners commenced litigation3 against Debtor in the 10 Superior Court of California for the County of Los Angeles (the “State Court”) on May 11 11, 2021, by filing a complaint asserting claims for fraud, breach of fiduciary duty, 12 negligence, breach of contract, and financial elder abuse.4 On June 16, 2022, this 13 Court granted relief from the automatic stay, to enable the Horners to proceed to final 14 judgment in the State Court litigation.5 On August 18, 2023, the State Court entered a 15 Final Statement of Decision against Debtor and in favor of the Horners, in which it 16 awarded the Horners compensatory damages of $2,599,120 and double damages of 17 $5,198,240, based on a finding of financial elder abuse, for a total award of $7,797,3606 18 (the “State Court Judgment”).7 In its Final Statement of Decision, the State Court found 19 that Debtor’s actions in managing the Horners’ investments were “grossly incompetent 20 2 Aug. 15, 2022 Rule 2004 Examination Tr. at p. 9:16–23. 21 3 The action was brought by Mr. Horner and Thomas Horner, in their capacities as co-trustees of the Horner Family Trust. For ease of reference, this Memorandum Decision does not distinguish between 22 Michael Horner, Thomas Horner, and the Horner Family Trust, instead referring to them as “the Horners.” 4 Dkt. 16, Ex. 1. 23 5 Dkt. 32. 6 In a Proof of Claim filed on June 14, 2022 prior to issuance of the State Court Judgment (Claim 5-1), the 24 Horners asserted that Debtor owed them no less than $11,971,617.90. The difference between the amount asserted in the Horners’ Proof of Claim and the amount set forth in the State Court Judgment is 25 primarily attributable to the fact that the State Court awarded only double damages on account of the Horners’ elder abuse claim, as opposed to the treble damages sought by the Horners. See Final 26 Statement of Decision (attached as an exhibit to Horners’ Ex. AJ) at p. 12 (“However, based on the evidence presented, primarily that Mr. Horner was not targeted because of his age and that Defendant 27 [Debtor] did not benefit in any way from financial elder abuse, the Court finds treble damages excessive. The Court awards double damages ….”). 28 7 Horners’ Ex. AJ (Debtor’s motion to vacate State Court Judgment attaching Final Statement of Decision as an exhibit). 1 and fell below what would be reasonably expected of a professional in the field,”8 and 2 involved “manic, voluminous trading patterns” conducted in “blatant disregard” of Mr. 3 Horner’s investment objectives.9 4 Debtor’s appeal of the State Court Judgment is pending. In addition, the Horners 5 have filed an adversary proceeding seeking a determination that the State Court 6 Judgment is nondischargeable.10 Due in large part to the ongoing State Court 7 proceedings, the nondischargeability action has been quiescent. 8 On November 13, 2021, Mr. Vosicher filed a claim against Debtor before the 9 Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (“FINRA,” and Mr. Vosicher’s claim, the “FINRA 10 Claim”).11 On March 16, 2023, this Court granted relief from the automatic stay, to 11 enable Mr. Vosicher to liquidate the FINRA Claim.12 On September 17, 2023, a FINRA 12 arbitration panel awarded Mr. Vosicher $150,000 in compensatory damages.13 13 Debtor’s operative First Amended Chapter 13 Plan (the “Plan”)14 proposed to pay 14 creditors an estimated total of $14,980.00 over 36 months.15 The bulk of the Plan’s 15 payments – $10,990.00 – were earmarked for the priority claim of the Internal Revenue 16 Service.16 Debtor proposed to pay general unsecured creditors – who consist primarily 17 of the Horners and Mr. Vosicher – a dividend of 0.02% (that is, a dividend of two basis 18 points).17 Funding for the Plan was at least nominally derived from Debtor’s projected 19 earnings as a financial advisor, but those earnings were not necessarily reliable so the 20 Plan’s proposed dividend to creditors mostly relied on promised contributions to be 21 gifted from Debtor’s father, George Gordon Strong Sr. After Creditors’ initial objections, 22 23 24 8 Final Statement of Decision at p. 8. 9 Id. at p. 13. 25 10 Adv. No. 2:23-ap-01359-NB. 11 Dkt. 100, Ex. 1. 26 12 Dkt. 111. 13 Exhibit to Proof of Claim 18-2. 27 14 Dkt. 158. 15 Plan at § I.A. 28 16 Id. at § II.B. 17 Id. at § I.B. 1 Debtor’s father deposited $32,047.29 into a bank account that was dedicated solely to 2 making payments necessary to fund the Plan.18 3 2. CONTENTIONS OF THE PARTIES 4 Creditors essentially asserted three objections to Debtor’s Plan. First, they 5 asserted that Debtor is ineligible to be a chapter 13 debtor under § 109(e),19 because 6 Debtor’s income from his investment advisory business is not sufficiently reliable and 7 because (at least before Debtor’s father deposited funds in a dedicated account to fund 8 the Plan) there was no guarantee that Debtor’s father would follow through on his 9 commitment to make up for any shortfalls. Second, they argued that the Plan does not 10 meet the feasibility requirement imposed by § 1325(a)(6) for the same reasons. Finally, 11 they contended that Debtor’ Plan was not “proposed in good faith and not by any means 12 forbidden by law,” as required by § 1325(a)(3), because (A) he failed promptly to furnish 13 required financial information to Creditors and (B) the financial information that he 14 belatedly produced contained material discrepancies that Debtor never satisfactorily 15 explained. Debtor vigorously disputed each of these contentions. 16 3. CONFIRMATION PROCEEDINGS 17 On November 13, 2023, this Court entered an order establishing procedures 18 governing the confirmation hearing (the “Confirmation Procedures Order”).20 That order 19 provided for direct testimony by declaration, subject to live cross-examination and 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 18 Decl. of George Gordon Strong Sr. (dkt. 174) at ¶ 5 and Ex. B. 19 Unless the context suggests otherwise, a “chapter” or “section” (“§”) refers to the United States 27 Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. § 101 et seq. (the “Code”), a “Rule” means the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure or other federal or local rule, and other terms have the meanings provided in the Code, Rules, 28 and the parties’ filed papers. 20 Dkt. 168. 1 redirect.21 Live testimony was taken at the Preliminary Evidentiary Hearing (defined in 2 the caption above) and at the Continued Evidentiary Hearing (same).22 3 4. JURISDICTION, AUTHORITY, AND VENUE 4 This Court has jurisdiction (28 U.S.C. § 1334(b)); the matters at issue are 5 statutorily “core” (28 U.S.C. § 157(a)(2)(L)); and this Court has the authority under the 6 7 21 The Confirmation Procedures Order also mandated that Debtor include in any confirmed Plan a “disputed claims reserve,” and the order includes a detailed explanation of how such a reserve should 8 operate, quoted below with subsequent clarifications to assure completeness of the record: 9 A disputed claims reserve means a reserve sufficient to pay disputed claims of creditors the full dollar amount that they would have been receiving if their claim had 10 been finally allowed in full prior to confirmation of the Plan, or such different dollar amount as this Court determines to be sufficient to protect that creditor’s rights to its aliquot share 11 of distributions. For example, if creditor X asserts a claim of $1 million, and if Debtor’s Plan were 12 to propose a 10% total dividend broken down into equal distributions over 60 months (i.e., 10% ÷ 60 = 1/6 of 1% per month), then each month Debtor would set aside 1/6 of 13 1% of $1 million ($16,666.67) into a disputed claims reserve account held for the benefit of creditor X. If creditor X’s claim were [at the end of the first month post-confirmation] 14 allowed at 1/10th of the asserted amount ($100,000.00), then creditor X would receive [its aliquot share of] funds out of the disputed claims reserve up to 1/10th of its initial claim 15 ($1,666.67 [per elapsed month – i.e., in this example one month]) and the balance (which, if that reserve were fully funded, would be $16,666.67 - $1,666.67 = $15,000.00) 16 would be distributed to other creditors in proportion to their allowed claims. Conversely, if creditor X’s claim were to be ultimately allowed in a greater dollar amount than originally 17 stated (e.g., if it were finally allowed at $2 million), there would be a shortfall and not only would creditor X be entitled to 100% of the balance of funds in the disputed claims 18 reserve but, in addition, creditor X would be entitled to most or all of the remaining distributions under the Plan until creditor X had caught up (i.e., other creditors would 19 receive $-0- each month until creditor X had caught up). [Confirmation Procedures Order at 2:21–3:7 (as clarified by Adopted Tentative Ruling for Preliminary Evidentiary 20 Hearing).] 21 22 Debtor called Sonia Singh, one of the attorneys for the Horners, as a percipient witness at the evidentiary hearings. At the outset of the Preliminary Evidentiary Hearing, Debtor made an oral motion to 22 exclude Ms. Singh from the courtroom while other witnesses were testifying pursuing to Rule 615 (Fed. R. Evid.). This Court denied that motion. 23 “Federal Rule of Evidence 615 generally provides that at the request of a party a district court shall, or on its own motion the district court may, order witnesses excluded from the courtroom so that 24 they cannot hear the testimony of other witnesses. However, this exclusionary rule is subject to four exceptions, the third of which excepts from exclusion ‘a person whose presence is shown by a party to be 25 essential to the presentation of the party's cause.’ Thus, where a particular trial counsel is ‘essential to the presentation’ of the client's cause, we agree with the Eighth Circuit that ‘Fed.R.Evid. 615(3) clearly 26 would allow [trial counsel] to remain present in the courtroom as an exception to the exclusionary rule for witnesses.’” Milicevic v. Fletcher Jones Imports, Ltd., 402 F.3d 912, 915–16 (9th Cir. 2005) (internal 27 citations omitted). Ms. Singh has acted as one of the primary attorneys for the Horners throughout this case. To 28 enable the Horners to present their objections to Debtor’s Plan, it was essential that she remain present in the courtroom throughout the entirety of the evidentiary hearings. 1 U.S. Constitution to issue final orders and judgments regarding whether to confirm 2 Debtor’s Plan. See Stern v. Marshall, 564 U.S. 2 (2011). In addition, venue is proper 3 under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1408(1) and 1409(a). 4 5. DISCUSSION 5 As explained below, Debtor did establish that he is an “individual with regular 6 income” sufficient to fund his proposed Plan, as required by § 109(e), and that his Plan 7 was feasible as required by § 1325(a)(6). In addition, although Debtor’s proposed 8 distribution to creditors was vanishingly small (two basis points), that did not establish a 9 lack of good faith if Debtor had proved that he could not afford anything more. 10 Indeed, it is fairly common in this district for plans to be confirmed with a 0% 11 dividend to nonpriority unsecured creditors when debtors can only afford to pay their 12 secured and priority claims. Debtor alleged that, although his past income was high, his 13 current and projected income is low because he has lost his financial license. In other 14 words his earning capacity allegedly is greatly reduced because he can only work in 15 capacities that do not require a financial license – e.g., (a) by advising individual clients 16 whose wealth and trust in Debtor enable him to continue managing their money through 17 Strong Wealth Management, such as his mother, or (b) by working for an insurance 18 company, or a wealthy family as an in-house financial advisor, or a nonprofit charitable 19 foundation. See Debtor Decl. (dkt. 175) pp. 12:25–13:8. 20 Debtor’s assertions about his limited earning capacity are conceptually possible. 21 But Debtor’s obligation from the inception of this case was to provide information – in 22 his bankruptcy schedules and in response to Creditors’ discovery requests and this 23 Court’s discovery orders – to meet his burden to prove his allegations. In other words, 24 he had to show that he truly was proposing in his Plan to devote all of his projected 25 disposable income to paying his debts. He failed to do that. 26 In fact, not only did Debtor fail to meet his burden to show this; he actively and 27 passively stymied Creditors’ attempts to determine whether he truly is unable to pay 28 them more than a dividend of two basis points. For these reasons, Debtor failed to 1 show that his Plan had “been proposed in good faith” as mandated by § 1325(a)(3). 2 Consequently, this Court was required to deny confirmation. 3 a. Debtor qualified as an “individual with regular income” who could 4 feasibly fund the (paltry) payments under his proposed Plan 5 To qualify for chapter 13 at all, Debtor must be an individual with regular income. 6 § 109(e). Under § 101(30), the term “individual with regular income” means “an 7 individual whose income is sufficiently stable and regular to enable such individual to 8 make payments under a plan under chapter 13 ....” (Emphasis added.) In addition, one 9 of the requirements for confirmation is for Debtor to show that he “will be able to make 10 all payments under the plan and to comply with the plan.” § 1325(a)(6) (emphasis 11 added). 12 In this case, it is true that Debtor’s current income from his profession does not 13 appear to be substantial or stable, and he may well have periods of negative cash flow, 14 absent contributions from his father. The question has been whether his father’s 15 contributions enable Debtor to assert that he has enough “regular income” to qualify for 16 chapter 13, and to make his proposed Plan feasible. 17 Debtor’s evidence of contributions from his father did meet his prima facie burden 18 of proof on these issues. Between those contributions and Debtor’s own (unreliable and 19 small) income, Debtor appeared to be able to pay his ongoing monthly expenses and to 20 fund his proposed Plan. 21 As for ongoing monthly expenses, the contributions from Debtor’s father have 22 taken the form of free rent, vacations, and funding tuition for Debtor’s children, among 23 other regular expenses. In addition, Debtor's father apparently has been funding 24 Debtor's ongoing litigation with Creditors, in both this bankruptcy case and in 25 nonbankruptcy fora. 26 As for funding the Plan, it is true that there is no meaningful evidence of the 27 father's assets and liabilities, or gross revenues, expenses, and net income. But, as 28 noted above, the father had set aside a separate bank account with $32,047.29 to 1 support the Plan, and the father had agreed to certain protections that assure those 2 funds will be dedicated to paying creditors and would be sufficient to fund the (very 3 small) dividend under the proposed Plan.23 4 In these circumstances, Debtor met his prima facie burden under §§ 101(30) and 5 109(e).24 The authority cited by the Horners is better suited to a situation in which the 6 contributor has not pre-funded the entire projected dollar amount needed to pay 7 creditors. 8 Alternatively, even applying the traditional authority applicable when promised 9 future contributions are being relied upon to fund a plan, Debtor qualified under that 10 authority. The factors usually considered are: 11 (1) the nondebtor’s relationship to the debtor and motivation in making the 12 contributions; (2) the nondebtor’s long and undisputed history of making the contributions or 13 otherwise providing support for the debtor; (3) the unqualified commitment of the nondebtor to make the contributions in 14 a specific amount for the duration of the chapter 13 plan; and (4) the financial ability of the nondebtor to make the proposed contributions, 15 including expenses and liabilities of the nondebtor that might take 16 precedence over the contributions. [In re Deutsch, 529 B.R. 308, 313 (Bankr. C.D. Cal. 2015) (summarizing other decisions; emphasis added, 17 citations omitted).] 18 23 At the Preliminary Evidentiary Hearing, this Court determined that for the Plan to be feasible, it was 19 necessary for the bank account to be accompanied by the following protections: 20 (1) The bank account must be a trust account devoted exclusively to Plan payments (i.e., even if Debtor has a shortfall in his monthly net income, he could not draw on this bank 21 account to make up that shortfall); (2) The bank account must not reduced by an administrative expenses (e.g., Debtor's 22 attorney fees or other distributions, except to the extent that any such reductions would still leave enough in the account to fund all future payments to creditors under the Plan); 23 (3) The bank account must not be an account from which the father can withdraw funds (until completion of all Plan payments); and 24 (4) The bank account must not be an account that the father's own creditors could reach (until completion of all Plan payments). 25 Debtor’s father testified at the Preliminary Evidentiary Hearing that he would agree to the foregoing 26 protections. 24 It is true that, if a hypothetical debtor were to turn out to have more projected disposable income than 27 initially disclosed, the chapter 13 plan would have to be amended to provide larger payments. § 1325(b)(1)(B). But in that scenario the hypothetical debtor still would qualify under §§ 101(30) and 28 109(e) because that debtor would, by definition, have enough income to fund the increased plan payments. 1 The second factor – a “long and undisputed history” of contributions – is 2 irrelevant because the father pre-funded a dedicated bank account that would have 3 assured regular payments under the proposed Plan. The third factor (an unqualified 4 commitment from the nondebtor) was mooted – Debtor’s father did not need to make 5 any “commitment” to funding because he had already funded the Plan. The other 6 factors – Debtor’s relationship to his father, and the father’s financial ability to fund the 7 Plan (which he had already done) – cut in Debtor’s favor. 8 More generally, when “considering the effect of a promised family contribution” 9 on the feasibility of a plan, “there are no hard and fast standards.” In re Lee, 655 B.R. 10 340, 353 (9th Cir. BAP 2023). The upshot is that Debtor qualified for chapter 13 under 11 § 109(e) and showed that he could make all payments under his proposed Plan and 12 thus met the one confirmation requirement embodied in § 1325(a)(6). 13 In sum, Debtor showed that he was eligible to be in chapter 13 and that it was 14 feasible for him to fund the very small distributions to creditors in his proposed Plan. 15 Those things are different, however, from whether Debtor met his burden to show that 16 he was devoting all of his projected disposable income to paying creditors 17 (§ 1325(b)(1)(B)) and, if he was not proposing to do so, whether he was proposing his 18 Plan in good faith. § 1325(a)(3). 19 b. The Plan was not proposed in good faith 20 (i) Legal standards 21 (A) The scope of the “good faith” analysis 22 In the Ninth Circuit, the good faith analysis “includes” but is not limited to 23 considering whether the following four circumstances exist: 24 whether (1) the debtor has misrepresented the facts, manipulated the 25 Bankruptcy Code or filed in an inequitable manner; (2) the debtor's history of bankruptcy filings; (3) the debtor intended to frustrate collection of a 26 state-court judgment; and (4) “egregious behavior is present.” [In re Welsh, 711 F.3d 1120, 1123 (9th Cir. 2013) (citing and quoting In re 27 Leavitt, 171 F.3d 1219, 1224 (9th Circuit 1999) (citations omitted)). See also Welsh at 1127-30 (discussing history and breadth of good faith 28 analysis).] 1 Not every one of the four above-quoted circumstances must be established. 2 What matters is the totality of the circumstances. In re Khan, 846 F.3d 1058, 1066 (9th 3 Cir. 2017). 4 In addition, the courts have developed other ways of articulating what it means to 5 propose a plan in “good faith.” One such test is “whether the debtor has 6 misrepresented facts in his plan, unfairly manipulated the Bankruptcy Code, or 7 otherwise proposed his Chapter 13 plan in an inequitable manner.” In re Escarcega, 8 573 B.R. 219, 241 (9th Cir. BAP 2017) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted; 9 emphasis added). See also Villanueva, 274 B.R. 836, 841 (9th Cir. BAP 2002); In re 10 Broadbent, 531 B.R. 840, 843-44 (Bankr. D. Idaho 2015); In re Pasley, 507 B.R. 312, 11 319 (Bankr. E.D. Cal. 2014); In re Norwood, 178 B.R. 683, 687-88 (Bankr. E.D. Pa. 12 1995) (noting that the precise “factors” used to evaluate good faith have “long been a 13 source of dispute among the courts,” but concluding that the inquiry “still has at its 14 heart” whether “there has been an abuse of the provisions, purpose, or spirit of Chapter 15 13 in the proposed plan”) (citations and internal quotation marks omitted; emphasis 16 added).25 17 One of the provisions of the Bankruptcy Code that a debtor must not “unfairly 18 manipulate[],” and as to which he must not “misrepresent[] facts,” is the mandate to 19 propose a plan that will pay creditors “all of the debtor’s projected disposable income 20 21 25 This Court is also mindful that, under the language of § 1129(a)(3) that is identical to the language of 22 § 1325(a)(3), the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit has held that the statute "directs courts to look only to the proposal of a plan, not the terms of the plan." Garvin v. Cook Investments NW, SPNWY, LLC, 23 922 F.3d 1031, 1035 (9th Cir. 2019) (emphasis added, citations omitted). On the one hand, this Court believes that the same interpretation should apply to the identical statutory "good faith" test under 24 § 1325(a)(3). On the other hand, Garvin added, “[c]ases directing courts to look to the 'totality of the 25 circumstances’ to determine whether a plan was proposed in good faith do not change the analysis here,” and courts must still “determine whether the plan achieves a result consistent with the objectives and 26 purposes of the Code." Id. at 1036 n. 3 (citations omitted; emphasis added). Accordingly, this Bankruptcy Court interprets Garvin as refining but not changing the analysis. The decisions interpreting 27 § 1325(a)(3), cited above, continue to be applicable. See, e.g., In re Orange Co. Bail Bonds, Inc., 638 B.R. 137, 147 (9th Cir. BAP 2022) (“Under the good faith prong of § 1129(a)(3), courts must determine 28 whether the plan achieves a result consistent with the objectives and purposes of the Code.”) (internal quotation marks omitted; citing Garvin and other Ninth Circuit authority). 1 …” (if any creditor objects to confirmation). § 1325(b)(1)(B) (emphasis added).26 This 2 requirement is the lynchpin of the chapter 13 bargain: in contrast to Chapter 7, in which 3 a discharge comes at the “steep price” of the “prompt liquidation of the debtor’s assets,” 4 under Chapter 13 a debtor may obtain a discharge and “retain his property if he 5 proposes, and gains court confirmation of, a plan to repay his debts over a three- to 6 five-year period,” and then subsequently makes all payments required under the 7 confirmed plan. Harris v. Viegelahn, 575 U.S. 510, 514 (2015). 8 It was Debtor, not Creditors, who had the initial burden (once Creditors objected) 9 to show that he had proposed a plan that would pay all of his “projected disposable 10 income,” based on a good faith projection of such income. § 1325(b)(1)(B). In meeting 11 that burden, Debtor has an obligation to provide full, candid, and complete disclosures 12 of his finances. “[T]he viability of the system of voluntary bankruptcy depends upon full, 13 candid, and complete disclosure by debtors of their financial affairs.” In re Searles, 317 14 B.R. 368, 378 (9th Cir. BAP 2004), aff'd, 212 F. App'x 589 (9th Cir. 2006). 15 Put another way, at the heart of the tradeoff under which a chapter 13 debtor 16 may simultaneously obtain a discharge and retain property is the debtor’s burden to 17 show that all projected disposable income will be devoted to paying creditors. That 18 burden starts with bankruptcy Schedule “I” and continues through confirmation of a 19 proposed plan. 20 Line 8a of bankruptcy Schedule I: Your Income (Official Form 106I) directs 21 debtors to list “[n]et income from … operating a business.” It also directs debtors to 22 “[a]ttach a statement for each … business showing gross receipts, ordinary and 23 necessary business expenses, and the total monthly net income.” (Emphasis added.) 24 In addition, the bottom of bankruptcy Schedules I and J (Official Forms 106I & 106J) 25 direct debtors to state whether the expect any increase (or decrease) within the year 26 after filing the form. 27 26 A plan may also be confirmed if it provides for a stream of payments that, when discounted to present 28 value, are sufficient to pay an objecting creditor’s claim in full, § 1325(b)(1)(A). That alternative obviously does not apply here, as Debtor’s plan proposes a dividend of only 0.02% to objecting to creditors. 1 In addition to Schedule I’s snapshot of alleged disposable income as of the 2 petition date, and projection as to the next year, prior years’ income is supposed to be 3 disclosed in a debtor’s Statement Of Financial Affairs (“SOFA,” Official Form B 107). 4 When, as in this case, there is a large disparity between high historical income and low 5 alleged current and projected income, creditors often seek discovery including historical 6 financial and tax records. 7 In this case, it is relevant to the good faith analysis that on July 20, 2022, Debtor 8 stipulated with the Horners to appear for an examination under Rule 2004 (Fed. R. 9 Bankr. P.) and to produce (subject to a privilege log) a range of documents relevant to 10 the calculation of gross receipts, ordinary and necessary business expenses, and the 11 determination of net monthly and yearly income on a historical, current, and projected 12 basis. See Stipulation (dkt. 38). This Court issued an order directing Debtor to comply 13 with that stipulation. See Order (the “Rule 2004 Order,” dkt. 40). 14 It is also relevant to the good faith analysis that Creditors made a request to 15 Debtor to produce information required by § 521(a)(4), which provides in relevant part: 16 (f) At the request of the court, the United States trustee, or any party in 17 interest in a case under chapter 7, 11, or 13, a debtor who is an individual shall file with the court— 18 * * * (4) in a case under chapter 13— 19 (A) on the date that is either 90 days after … 1 year after the date of the commencement of the case … [i.e., one year 20 plus 90 days after June 1, 2022, which is August 30, 2023]; 21 * * * a statement, under penalty of perjury, of the income and 22 expenditures of the debtor during the tax year of the debtor most recently concluded before such statement is filed under this 23 paragraph, and of the monthly income of the debtor, that shows how income, expenditures, and monthly income are calculated. 24 [§ 521(f)(4) (emphasis added).] 25 Under each of these alternative disclosure obligations – (I) Schedules I and J, 26 (II) this Court’s Rule 2004 Order, and (III) § 521(f)(4) – it was Debtor who had the 27 obligation to explain his finances to Creditors. In particular, Debtor was required to 28 respond fully and accurately to questions about his finances at his Rule 2004 1 examinations, and he was required to “show[] how” (§ 521(f)(4)) he calculated his gross 2 income, expenditures, and net income. 3 The centrality of a debtor’s duty to provide meaningful disclosures and 4 explanations, not obfuscation, has been articulated in a different context by In re Martin, 5 698 F.2d 883, 888 (7th Cir. 1983) (involving the analogous situation of denial of a 6 discharge for inadequate records and explanations under § 727(a)(3)&(5)): 7 The speculation of the bankruptcy judge or the creditors as to what may 8 actually have been occurring is not an adequate substitute for a believable explanation by the debtor. The evidence in this case which could 9 satisfactorily explain the events in question is far more likely to lie in the hands of a debtor than of the creditor. The debtor presumably knows why 10 what is usually a simple matter … has taken on such a byzantine character. To the extent that the debtor can explain these events he has 11 an obligation to come forward and do so—he cannot abuse the 12 bankruptcy process by obfuscating the true nature of his affairs and then refusing to provide a credible explanation. [In re Martin, 698 F.2d 883, 13 888 (emphasis added).] 14 In sum, “good faith” under § 1325(a)(3) includes Debtor’s obligations, on multiple 15 grounds, to provide both historical and projected profit and loss statements, supporting 16 financial documents, and documents and testimony showing how gross receipts, 17 expenditures, and net income is calculated. Those disclosures should have been clear 18 by themselves, but if they were not (as in this case) then Debtor had obligations to 19 explain them. 20 (B) Limitations on the “good faith” analysis 21 Although the “good faith” analysis is broad, it must not be used as a “back door” 22 means of applying a different measure of “disposable income” from what Congress has 23 mandated. The Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit has confirmed that “consideration 24 of [an allegedly too small dollar amount of] disposable income – now defined in great 25 detail by Congress – has no role in the good faith analysis.” Welsh, 711 F.3d 1120, 26 1132–33 (emphasis added). 27 The necessary implication of this authority is that, as Debtor puts it, “[w]hat is not 28 to be counted in Debtor Strong’s disposable income is (a) his father’s house, (b) his 1 father’s wealth, (c) what vacations Debtor goes on with his family, (d) who pays for his 2 legal fees, or (e) his upbringing.” Debtor Confirmation Brief (dkt. 184) pp. 5:27–6:1 3 (emphasis added). This Court agrees. 4 But Debtor is placing too much weight on Welsh to the extent, if any, that he is 5 relying on it to defeat his creditors’ objections without a broader inquiry into his good 6 faith. The questions presented in Welsh were specific. One was whether payments of 7 secured debts that were permissible under Congress' calculation of “disposable income” 8 nevertheless could be impermissible under the “good faith” test. The Ninth Circuit held 9 that the “good faith” test could not be used in that manner. Welsh, 711 F.3d 1120. 10 Another question was whether social security income, even though not included 11 in the statutory calculation of disposable income, could nevertheless be included for 12 purposes of the “good faith” test. Again, the good faith test could not be used that way. 13 Welsh, 711 F.3d 1120. 14 This case involves different issues, as reflected in the fact that Welsh agreed with 15 the arguments of the trustee in that case that “good faith” still encompasses a broad 16 range of issues different from the “disposable income” test: 17 The Trustee urges us to "determine that the good faith test and the 18 disposable income test serve two different purposes," and, therefore, "they must be read separately." 19 We agree with the Trustee's contentions, but disagree that it leads to the conclusion that the good faith inquiry can encompass 20 considerations of what income, and how much income, a debtor is devoting to the proposed plan. [Welsh, 711 F.3d 1120, 1132 (footnotes 21 omitted; emphasis added).] 22 In this case, unlike Welsh, Creditors are not challenging Debtor's payment of any 23 secured debts or the other elements of how to calculate disposable income (which 24 Congress has mandated) but rather whether Debtor has provided support for his own 25 calculations of historical, current, and projected disposable income. In addition, 26 Creditors argue that Debtor fails each of the four non-exclusive factors described in 27 Leavitt. 28 1 (C) Summary of the law on “good faith” 2 Under Welsh, Leavitt and the other authorities interpreting “good faith,” this 3 Bankruptcy Court has a duty to consider all facts and circumstances except 4 “considerations of what income, and how much income, a debtor is devoting to the 5 proposed plan” in any way different from the formulas mandated by Congress. Welsh, 6 711 F.3d 1120, 1132; Leavitt, 171 F.3d 1219. The legitimate “good faith” issues that 7 this Court must examine include Creditors’ assertions that Debtor has: 8 1) engaged in misrepresentations and inequitable manipulation of the 9 Bankruptcy Code (Horner Brief in Opposition to Confirmation (dkt. 178) 10 at pp. 10:1–14:25); 11 2) filed bankruptcy cases at times chosen to maximize the expense, 12 delay, and hindrance to his creditors (id. at pp. 14:26–16:7); 13 3) frustrated the finalization and collection of judgments and awards from 14 nonbankruptcy fora (id.); and 15 4) engaged in “egregious” conduct (id. at p. 11:8–12 and passim). 16 More broadly, this Court must consider whether Debtor “has misrepresented 17 facts in his plan, unfairly manipulated the Bankruptcy Code, or otherwise proposed his 18 Chapter 13 plan in an inequitable manner.” Escarcega, 573 B.R. 219, 241. This 19 includes whether Debtor has failed to live up to his obligations to provide both historical 20 and projected profit and loss statements, supporting financial documents, and 21 documents and testimony explaining how gross receipts, expenditures, and net income 22 are calculated. 23 (ii) Applying the “good faith” law to the facts of this case 24 Throughout this case, Debtor has consistently and repeatedly failed to furnish 25 sufficient financial information to all of his creditors, particularly the Horners. Of course, 26 sometimes a debtor offers a potentially plausible explanation that future income cannot 27 be expected to match past income due to a change in circumstances – in this case 28 Debtor points to difficulties obtaining work in the wealth management field given the 1 harm to his reputation caused by the Horners’ $7.8 million State Court Judgment and 2 Mr. Vosicher’s $150,000 FINRA arbitration award. But that is not an excuse to fail to 3 provide, or to obscure, past finances. To the contrary, any possible uncertainty about 4 Debtor’s earning capacity was all the more reason why he needed to be candid about 5 his past and present finances, so that Creditors could examine both his past level of 6 earnings and his potential for future earnings, as well as any attempts to hide income or 7 intentionally minimize income. 8 Instead Debtor stonewalled Creditors, who were unnecessarily required to 9 expend substantial funds coercing Debtor’s compliance with his obligations under the 10 Bankruptcy Code. After multiple requests by the Horners, Debtor did belatedly produce 11 some of the information that should have been promptly provided, but even this 12 untimely production was inadequate. 13 The Schedule I that Debtor filed at the onset of the case listed his occupation as 14 the “[m]anaging [m]ember” of Strong Wealth Management27 and indicated that Debtor’s 15 total monthly income was $2,164.00,28 consisting of $1,964.00 from operating Strong 16 Wealth Management29 and $200.00 from “[f]amily [s]upport [w]hen [n]eeded.”30 But 17 Debtor failed to include the required statement “showing gross receipts, ordinary and 18 necessary business expenses, and the total monthly net income” from operating Strong 19 Wealth Management. 20 Ordinarily a debtor has only 14 days after the petition date to file fully complete 21 bankruptcy schedules. That period can be extended (Rule 1007(c)), but Debtor never 22 requested an extension, and in any event the undersigned Bankruptcy Judge cannot 23 recall ever extending the total period longer than approximately one month, particularly 24 25 26 27 27 Schedule I (dkt. 1 at PDF pp. 35–36) at ¶ 1. 28 Id. at ¶ 9. 28 29 Id. at ¶ 8(a). 30 Id. at ¶ 8(h). 1 when, as in this case, there has been a prior bankruptcy case in connection with which 2 the debtor should have been compiling the same financial information.31 3 Not until October 28, 2022, almost five months after the Petition Date of June 1, 4 2022, did Debtor produce to the Horners what purported to be the required statement of 5 gross revenues, expenses, and calculation of net income. But as set forth below that 6 statement was only provided after repeated requests, and it was inadequate. 7 The Horners conducted a Rule 2004 examination of Debtor on August 15, 8 2022.32 The Horners brought to Debtor’s attention the fact that he had failed to produce 9 certain documents to creditors: 10 Question by Horners’ Counsel: Do you recall attending the 11 creditor meeting on July 1st, 2022? Debtor’s Answer: I do. 12 Question by Horners’ Counsel: And do you recall that the Chapter 13 trustee's counsel requested that certain documents be 13 produced, such as tax returns, a schedulized [sic] statement of business net income, [etc.]? 14 Debtor’s Answer: Yes, I do. 15 Question by Horners’ Counsel: And do you also recall that the creditors who attended who were at least participating by phone also 16 asked for copies of those documents? … Debtor’s Answer: Yeah, I recall a number of creditors saying I 17 would like a copy of those documents as well, yes. Question by Horners’ Counsel: Have you produced the 18 documents that the Chapter 13 trustee’s counsel requested? 19 Debtor’s Counsel’s Answer: That’s – we are taking care of that. We haven't turned over everything that they wanted, so since the 20 confirmation’s continued we have some more time…. Question by Horners’ Counsel: Mr. Strong, have you seen 21 Exhibit 3 previously? Debtor’s Answer: I have. 22 Question by Horners’ Counsel: And have you produced – excuse 23 me, to the Chapter 13 trustee or the Chapter 13 trustee's counsel any of the documents described in Exhibit 3? 24 25 26 31 Case No. 2:22-bk-10689-NB (filed on February 8, 2022 and dismissed on February 24, 2022). Debtor states that he voluntarily dismissed the prior case because it was filed prematurely, before Debtor’s 27 marital dissolution proceeding had been concluded. Debtor’s Decl. (dkt. 59 at PDF pp. 16–20) at ¶ 4. The Horners suggest that he dismissed his prior case because it had served its purpose of disrupting 28 their litigation. 32 Dkt. 40. Debtor’s Answer: Again, I will be turning it over to the trustee 1 before the next confirmation dates. So the answer is no. [Aug. 15, 2022 2 Rule 2004 Examination Tr. at 17:20–19:16.] At the conclusion of the August 22, 2022 Rule 2004 examination, Debtor agreed 3 to produce various documents to the Horners by no later than September 9, 2022, 4 including business and personal tax returns for the 2019–2021 tax years.33 Debtor 5 failed to produce the documents by the agreed-upon deadline.34 After the Horners’ 6 counsel sent Debtor’s counsel several follow-up e-mails, Debtor produced some, but not 7 all, of the missing documents on September 14, 2022, September 21, 2022, and 8 October 10, 2022.35 Notably, however, Debtor failed to produce his personal tax returns 9 or tax returns for his investment advisory business, Strong Wealth Management.36 10 On October 6, 2022, the Horners filed a motion to dismiss Debtor’s chapter 13 11 case, in which they argued, among other things, that Debtor had acted in bad faith by 12 failing to produce financial information, including a profit and loss statement for Strong 13 Wealth Management and his personal and business tax returns.37 On October 28, 2022 14 – five days before the hearing on the Horners’ motion to dismiss – Debtor for the first 15 time produced a profit and loss statement for Strong Wealth Management.38 This Court 16 emphasizes that the Horners should not have been required to litigate to compel Debtor 17 to disclose information that should have been included in the Schedule I that Debtor 18 filed at the inception of the case. “Creditors should not have to ‘drag the truth’ from the 19 debtor and the debtor should be required to abide by the ‘cardinal rule: when in doubt, 20 disclose.’” In re Kinsale, 617 B.R. 58, 68 (Bankr. D.S.C. 2020) (internal citation 21 omitted). 22 On November 10, 2022, this Court issued an interim order granting in part the 23 relief sought by the Horners in the motion to dismiss. Specifically, this Court ordered 24 25 33 Aug. 15, 2022 Rule 2004 Examination Tr. at 78:14–83:14. 34 Singh Decl. (dkt. 171) at ¶ 6. 26 35 Id. 36 Ex. C (e-mail from Debtor’s counsel to Horner’s counsel, stating that Debtor objected to producing his 27 personal and business tax returns). 37 Dkt. 54 at pp. 8–9. 28 38 Horner Ex. F (Strong Wealth Management profit and loss statement); Singh Decl. (dkt. 171) at ¶ 7(d) (testimony by Horners’ counsel as to the date of production). 1 Debtor to produce his personal and business tax returns to the Horners no later than 2 November 23, 2022, but declined to dismiss the case.39 As explained on the record at 3 the hearing on the motion to dismiss, this Court determined that it was necessary for 4 Debtor to produce the tax returns as well as a revised profit and loss statement in order 5 to rebut the Horners’ prima facie showing that the petition had been filed in bad faith. 6 This Court took care to note that its decision to allow Debtor to continue to proceed in 7 bankruptcy did not prevent the Horners from raising the issue of bad faith in connection 8 with the confirmation hearing: 9 Third, this Court distinguishes the issues at this stage from other issues 10 that might arise later in this case. As stated in the concurrence in In re Ho, if the case is not dismissed on the present motion, the issue of good 11 or bad faith can be properly revisited at the plan confirmation stage, at which time the burden will be on Debtor to establish, inter alia, that the 12 plan has been proposed in good faith. § 1325(a)(3); In re Ho, 274 B.R. 867, 883. In addition, if Movants' allegations of wrongdoing are correct, 13 they might be able to establish nondischargeability. See §§ 523, 1328. 14 But those confirmation and dischargeability issues are not presently before this Court. [Adopted Tentative Ruling issued on November 3, 2022 15 (formatting and citations cleaned up).] 16 On December 8, 2022, Debtor produced to the Horners purportedly revised profit 17 and loss statements.40 On January 6, 2023, the Horners’ counsel advised Debtor’s 18 counsel that the purportedly revised profit and loss statements were nothing more than 19 a monthly breakdown of the defective profit and loss statement that had been previously 20 produced, and as such did not resolve the core problem – the fact that Debtor’s profit 21 and loss statements could not be reconciled with his bank statements.41 22 On February 17, 2023, the Horners conducted a continued Rule 2004 23 examination of Debtor. At the examination, the Horners again emphasized to Debtor 24 25 26 27 39 Dkt. 73 at ¶ 4. 28 40 Singh Decl. (dkt. 171) at ¶ 7(f). 41 Id. 1 and his counsel that there were material inconsistencies between the bank statements 2 and profit and loss statements: 3 Question by Horners’ Counsel: Our analysis of the banker 4 statements and the profit and loss statement indicates that the income shown on the profit and loss statement is lower than the deposit into the 5 bank accounts by approximately $47,000 for the period between January and June 2022. Do you have an explanation for the difference in figures? 6 Debtor’s Answer: I don’t know. I mean, I rely on Quickbooks for this…. 7 Question by Horners’ Counsel: The deposits that show on the 8 bank statements are approximately $75,000…. But the income as shown on the profit and loss statement, Exhibit 29, is $28,516.61. The question 9 is, what's the difference consist of and where did the extra money go? Debtor’s Answer: Yeah. I don’t know at this time. I’ll look into 10 this. Question by Horners’ Counsel: Similarly, the expenses on the 11 profit and loss statement are higher than what’s withdrawn from the bank 12 accounts by approximately $40,000. And I'll tell you exactly what our analysis shows. The bank statement shows withdrawals of approximately 13 $77,000, but the expenses on the profit and loss statement are $117,555.30. So the question is, how do you explain the difference? 14 Debtor’s Answer: Yeah. I relied on Quickbooks, and I've not seen your analysis that you referenced, so I can’t speak to something that you 15 guys did to calculate that difference. [Feb. 17, 2023 Rule 2004 16 Examination Tr. at 133:20–135:9 (emphasis added).] On February 22, 2023, the Horners’ counsel e-mailed Debtor’s counsel a detailed 17 list of numerous discrepancies between Debtor’s bank statements and his profit and 18 loss statements.42 Although Debtor’s counsel represented to the Horner’s counsel on 19 March 21, 2023 that the discrepancies would be explained, the Horners never received 20 any additional documentation or communication from Debtor providing such an 21 explanation.43 22 Debtor also waited until October 26, 2023 – one week after the Horners had filed 23 an objection to confirmation of Debtor’s Plan – to provide the Horners profit and loss 24 statements covering Strong Wealth Management’s operations subsequent to January 25 2023 (the profit and loss statements previously produced only covered the period 26 27 28 42 Singh Decl. (dkt. 171) at ¶ 7(g) and Horner’s Ex. L. 43 Id. at ¶ 7(h) and Horner’s Ex. M. 1 between January and June 2022).44 The Chapter 13 Trustee’s counsel subsequently 2 advised the Horners’ counsel that the Chapter 13 Trustee had received updated 3 financial statements from Debtor approximately one month prior to the plan objection 4 deadline – showing that Debtor’s failure to produce the updated information to the 5 Horners was a deliberate attempt by Debtor to impede the Horners’ ability to challenge 6 confirmation of Debtor’s Plan.45 7 The updated financial information Debtor belatedly provided to the Horners 8 suffered from numerous deficiencies. First, Debtor produced what he characterized as 9 a profit and loss statement covering the operations of Strong Wealth Management for 10 the period between January 2023 and August 2023.46 The profit and loss statements 11 that Debtor had previously produced to the Horners in October and December 2022 12 were deficient because Debtor failed to adequately explain how those statements could 13 be reconciled with the underlying bank statements. Notwithstanding this material 14 omission, the October/December 2022 profit and loss statements did contain an 15 itemization of the income and expenses of Strong Wealth Management. By contrast, 16 the purported profit and loss statement produced in October 2023 was nothing more 17 than a table showing the deposits and withdrawals from Strong Wealth Management’s 18 checking and savings account, with the difference between the deposit and withdrawal 19 amounts listed as net income. The statement failed to include any of the information 20 that would customarily be included in a profit and loss statement – such as line items for 21 gross revenue, gross profit, cost of revenue, interest expense, and the like. In other 22 words, what Debtor claimed to be a profit and loss statement was in fact nothing of the 23 sort. 24 Second, the figures on the statement do not even match up with the 25 corresponding bank statements upon which it is based. For example, for the month of 26 August 2023, the statement lists checking deposits of $2,734.35 when the actual 27 44 Id. at ¶ 7(k). 28 45 Id. 46 Horner Ex. Q. 1 checking deposits as shown on the bank statement were only $2,000.00, and lists 2 savings deposits of $5,449.30 when the actual savings deposits per the bank statement 3 were only $4,599.81.47 Comparable discrepancies exist for almost all the months 4 covered by the statement.48 5 Debtor’s cavalier approach to the Horners’ requests for financial information is 6 best illustrated by the cursory explanation presented in declaration testimony filed in 7 support of the Plan, which was devoid of specific detail and attempted to shift the 8 burden and costs of reconstructing Debtor’s financials to the Horners: 9 One of the things that came up during my examination with the 10 Horner’s and the Chapter 13 trustee is why the profit and loss statements that I turned over did not fully reconcile with the bank statements. 11 I can easily explain this here and I have explained it, in detail with document support, to the Chapter 13 Trustee and the Horners. 12 Every business owner does their accounting differently depending on the industry: the way a roofing contractor does his accounting will differ 13 from that of a dentist. Similar here, the way my business, Strong Wealth 14 Management, operates differs than other businesses – but what remains true and concrete is that all of the income, expenses and financial 15 information is disclosed and was made readily available when I turned over all of my bank statements, profit and loss, the financing statements 16 from Strong Wealth Management and my private returns (both personal and business). 17 If I was trying to “hide” something, I could not do so because it was 18 all laid out in the open for the Trustee and the Horners to see. With that said, I will now clarify why my profit and loss does not 19 match my bank statements. Interactive Brokers is the custodian of funds and broker platform 20 that I used to execute trades. The fees and transactions on Interactive Brokers would reflect on the following month’s statements. This was a 21 combined accrual and cash basis accounting. For example, if in the 22 month of January I would have transactions, the fees would post to my advisory master account on February 1st or 2nd. Because I would use 23 accrual accounting, I would need to go back and manually journal those fees retroactively on Quickbooks to the month of January so it would 24 reconcile. The documents from Interactive Brokers and transaction history 25 was all provided to the Horners and the Trustee. With respect to the bank 26 statements and profit and loss through my Quickbooks, I turned over all bank statement requested and the accompanying profit and loss. 27 28 47 Singh Decl. (dkt. 171) at ¶ 12(a) and Horner’s Exs. Q and R. 48 Id. Questions came up from the Horners or the Trustee why they do 1 not match. 2 I explained it to my attorney, who them provided the explanation in different emails dated December 8, 2022, again on March 21, 2023 and 3 again on October 26, 2023…. My father would give a loan to my entity, Strong Wealth 4 Management, which was for funds that he used to cover my legal fees and other expenses. The income and deposits plus the expenses and 5 expenditures on the profit and loss would be around $85,000 which 6 matched the approximate $85,052 that my dad lent to my company. My father would give a loan to my company and the funds would be 7 drawn down to pay for expenses. Not all deposits on the bank statements are categorized as 8 “income” for purpose of my profit and loss. For example, just as a hypothetical, if there is an Amazon refund that would be on the bank 9 statement – the “-$25” credit is not categorized as “income” for profit and 10 loss purposes because it is not income. Similar to my situation, not all of the deposits on my bank statements are “income” and not every 11 withdrawal on my bank statement was an “expense.” The individual entries for each transaction [were] disclosed and properly identified. 12 [Debtor Decl. [dkt. 175] at ¶¶ 20–33 (paragraph numbering omitted, emphasis added).] 13 Debtor’s declaration testimony shows that he fundamentally misapprehends his 14 obligations as a fiduciary to creditors. Debtor holds an MBA from the USC Marshall 15 School of Business,49 and he worked at Merrill Lunch, Advantage Partners, and Morgan 16 Stanley before founding his own wealth management firm.50 If anyone is capable of 17 reconciling a profit and loss statement with a bank statement, it is Debtor. It is not 18 incumbent upon creditors to incur the time and expense of attempting to conduct a 19 forensic accounting, untangle Debtor’s “combined accrual and cash basis accounting,” 20 whatever that means (quoted above), and unearth Debtor’s true financial picture from 21 thousands of pages of bank statements. Debtor has failed to provide a reliable and 22 verifiable accounting of the performance of his business. To paraphrase, creditors “are 23 not like pigs, hunting for truffles buried” in disorganized financial data. United States v. 24 Dunkel, 927 F.2d 955, 956 (7th Cir. 1991). 25 It is not necessary for this Court to exhaustively itemize every shortcoming in 26 Debtor’s financial disclosures, as a description of the more serious omissions 27 28 49 Aug. 15, 2022 Rule 2004 Examination Tr. at p. 8:17–18. 50 Id. at p. 9:6–18. 1 sufficiently illustrates the yawning gap between Debtor’s actual disclosures and the 2 required standard. But in addition to the deficiencies discussed above, certain other 3 shortcomings are worth highlighting. First, in response to legitimate concerns raised by 4 the Horners over their inability to reconcile Debtor’s profit and loss statements with his 5 underlying bank statements, Debtor offered only the conclusory statement that “not all 6 of the deposits on my bank statements are ‘income’ and not every withdrawal on my 7 bank statement was an expense.’”51 Improperly attempting to shift the costs of 8 disclosure onto the Horners, Debtor then went on to assert that the Horners “could have 9 asked for more details and explanation and I would have happily provided it.”52 But the 10 Horners did ask for more details and explanation, and Debtor did not provide it. 11 Debtor’s approach is also backwards – it is Debtor who “has an obligation to 12 come forward” and explain his financial situation, and Debtor “cannot abuse the 13 bankruptcy process by obfuscating the true nature of his affairs and then refusing to 14 provide a credible explanation.” In re Martin, 698 F.2d 883, 888 (7th Cir. 1983). Debtor 15 should have provided disclosures to the Horners that would have enabled them to easily 16 validate whether the figures on Debtor’s profit and loss statement were consistent with 17 the figures on his bank statements.53 The disclosures Debtor did provide precluded the 18 Horners from conducting such a validation without performing a costly forensic 19 examination of the bank statements. Indeed, it is questionable whether even a forensic 20 accountant would have been able to validate the profit and loss statements, because 21 many of the entries on the supporting bank statements Debtor produced are online 22 transfers from other accounts, and Debtor failed to specify the source of the transferred 23 funds. 24 Debtor had a final opportunity to rectify his inadequate disclosures in testimony 25 provided at the evidentiary hearings conducted by this Court on Plan confirmation. 26 Unfortunately, Debtor elected not to avail himself of this opportunity. Debtor failed to 27 51 Debtor Decl. (dkt. 175) at ¶ 33. 52 Id. at ¶ 35. 28 53 As noted above, such disclosures were required by Debtor’s obligation to properly complete Schedule I, this Court’s discovery orders, and by § 521(f)(4). 1 provide the type of detailed, plausible explanation for the discrepancies between the 2 profit and loss statements and the underlying bank statements that would be expected 3 from someone possessing his education and experience. Debtor instead attempted to 4 blame the Horners for supposedly failing to take full advantage of Rule 2004 discovery. 5 Once again, Debtor’s approach attempts to turn the bankruptcy system upside down – it 6 is Debtor who is obligated to provide full and forthright disclosures in exchange for 7 receiving the benefits of chapter 13, and creditors should not be forced to incur 8 significant effort or cost simply to compel a recalcitrant debtor to adhere to his statutory 9 obligations. 10 As explained earlier in this Memorandum Decision, the payment of all disposable 11 income to creditors under a confirmed plan is the price a chapter 13 debtor must pay for 12 the privilege of simultaneously obtaining a discharge and retaining his property. Here, 13 Debtor’s inadequate disclosures prevented the adversary process from functioning 14 properly by depriving objecting creditors of the information necessary to meaningfully 15 test whether Debtor had satisfied the disposable income requirement. Debtor did not 16 even provide creditors a profit and loss statement for Strong Wealth Management 17 covering the period of January to August 2023: what he produced was nothing more 18 than a summary of the deposits and withdrawals on Debtor’s bank accounts, and even 19 that summary was not accurate. The profit and loss statements for Strong Wealth 20 Management that Debtor did provide covered only the limited period of January to June 21 2022 and could not be validated because Debtor failed to supply the disclosures or 22 explanation necessary to tie the figures on those statements to the supporting bank 23 statements. Compounding these very serious omissions, the materially deficient 24 disclosures Debtor did provide came only after substantial delay, multiple requests 25 made by the Horners, and the Horners’ motion to dismiss Debtor’s case. “Neither the 26 trustee nor the creditors should be required to engage in a laborious tug-of-war to drag 27 the simple truth into the glare of daylight.” In re Colston, 539 B.R. 738, 748 (Bankr. 28 W.D. Va. 2015) (internal quotations and citation omitted). For all these reasons, this 1 Court is compelled to find that Debtor’s plan was not proposed in “good faith.” 2 § 1325(a)(3). 3 In addition to all of the lack of financial disclosure (described above and in 4 Creditors’ filed papers and trial exhibits), Creditors point out how Debtor’s prior 5 bankruptcy case and this current bankruptcy case were filed at times that caused critical 6 disruption to their nonbankruptcy litigation. See, e.g., Lieb Decl. (dkt. 172). Debtor 7 offers excuses, but this Court finds that the principal reason for the timing was to inflict 8 maximum disruption on Creditors, and to frustrate Creditors’ ability to liquidate and 9 collect their claims. 10 Based on all of the foregoing this Court concludes that Debtor has exhibited not 11 just some of the grounds for finding a lack of good faith but every single one of those 12 grounds as typically articulated in the reported decisions. Debtor has “misrepresented 13 the facts” by greatly delaying any meaningful financial disclosures, and then very 14 belatedly providing incomplete and opaque financial information, despite multiple 15 different obligations to provide such disclosures and information. Welsh, 711 F.3d 16 1120, 1123 (citations and internal quotation marks omitted). Debtor has attempted to 17 “manipulate[] the Bankruptcy Code” (id.) and has filed his bankruptcy petition and 18 proposed Plan “in an inequitable manner” (id.) by pleading poverty, and alleging an 19 inability to earn projected disposable income greater than what would support a two- 20 basis-point Plan, while failing to provide remotely adequate support for that alleged lack 21 of earning power. Debtor has a history of bankruptcy filings that this Court has found 22 were timed to cause maximum disruption to nonbankruptcy litigation. See id. Debtor 23 has intended to frustrate liquidation and collection of Creditors’ claims. See id. Finally, 24 Debtor has engaged in “egregious behavior” (id.), and an “abuse of the provisions, 25 purpose, [and] spirit of Chapter 13 in the proposed plan” (Norwood, 178 B.R. 683, 687- 26 88 (citations and internal quotation marks omitted)), by his repeated failures and 27 refusals to provide meaningful financial disclosures and information, the timing of his 28 bankruptcy petitions and postpetition discovery, and his attempts to blame Creditors for 1 being able to untangle his “combined accrual and cash basis accounting” (dkt. 175, 2 21) and his incomplete profit and loss statements that did not match his bank records. 3 CONCLUSION 4 Debtor has amply demonstrated his utter lack of “good faith” in proposing his 5 Having demonstrated his lack of trustworthiness and his willingness to frustrate 6 || discovery into whatever his true financial history or prospects might be, no amended 7 || Plan could cure his lack of good faith. 8 Hitt 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 Date: June 28, 2024 NGL, 25 United States Bankruptey Jude 26 27 28 -27-
Document Info
Docket Number: 2:22-bk-13069
Filed Date: 6/28/2024
Precedential Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/2/2024