Lee v. Peeples ( 2019 )


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  •                                                                                 FILED
    United States Court of Appeals
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS                    Tenth Circuit
    FOR THE TENTH CIRCUIT                     August 12, 2019
    _________________________________
    Elisabeth A. Shumaker
    Clerk of Court
    In re: ADAM L. PEEPLES and
    JENNIFER K. PEEPLES,
    Debtors.
    ------------------------------------------------
    ADRIAN JAMES LEE,
    Plaintiff - Appellant,
    v.                                                        No. 18-4124
    (BAP No. 18-003-UT)
    ADAM L. PEEPLES; JENNIFER K.                       (Bankruptcy Appellate Panel)
    PEEPLES,
    Defendants - Appellees.
    _________________________________
    ORDER AND JUDGMENT *
    _________________________________
    Before HOLMES, BACHARACH, and McHUGH, Circuit Judges.
    _________________________________
    Plaintiff-creditor Adrian James Lee appeals the bankruptcy court’s order that
    dismissed the adversary proceeding filed by him and his wife against Chapter 7
    *
    After examining the briefs and appellate record, this panel has determined
    unanimously that oral argument would not materially assist in the determination of
    this appeal. See Fed. R. App. P. 34(a)(2); 10th Cir. R. 34.1(G). The case is therefore
    ordered submitted without oral argument. This order and judgment is not binding
    precedent, except under the doctrines of law of the case, res judicata, and collateral
    estoppel. It may be cited, however, for its persuasive value consistent with
    Fed. R. App. P. 32.1 and 10th Cir. R. 32.1.
    defendants-debtors Adam L. Peeples and Jennifer K. Peeples (collectively the
    Debtors) and granted the Debtors a discharge.
    Under 11 U.S.C. § 727(a), a bankruptcy court “shall grant the debtor a
    discharge” except in certain specified situations. Relevant here, the Lees sought to
    deny the Debtors a discharge under 11 U.S.C. § 727(a)(2), (a)(3), (a)(4), (a)(5), and
    (a)(6). The bankruptcy court held the Lees failed to carry their burden as to each
    claim and granted the Debtors a discharge.
    [The Lees] don’t believe that [the Debtors] should be able to discharge
    the debt they owe to the Lees. The Lees have been tenacious in their
    efforts to prevent the [Debtors] from discharging that debt and have
    accused the [Debtors] of many wrongs. But after hearing all of the
    evidence presented over three days of trial, the Court has concluded that
    the Lees’ claims amount to nothing more than a tempest in a teapot, and
    the [Debtors] will be granted their discharge.
    Aplt. App. Vol. 2 at 240-41 (emphasis added). 1
    Mr. Lee appealed the bankruptcy court’s decision on his claims under
    § 727(a)(2) and (a)(3) to the Tenth Circuit Bankruptcy Appellate Panel (BAP),
    which affirmed. 2 In this court, Mr. Lee’s only argument concerns § 727(a)(3)—
    Mr. Peeples’s failure to preserve business records as grounds to deny the Debtors a
    discharge. Exercising jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 158(d), we affirm.
    1
    In its memorandum decision, the bankruptcy court explained that
    “[n]otwithstanding the organization of the factual findings, all factual findings are
    equally binding as to all claims.” Aplt. App. Vol. 2 at 243.
    2
    Mr. Lee is an attorney who represented himself and his wife, Angela L. N.
    Lee, in the adversary proceeding. Mrs. Lee, however, did not file a Notice of Appeal
    in either the BAP or this court. The Debtors appeared pro se in the adversary
    proceeding and the BAP. They also appear pro se in this court.
    2
    THE BANKRUPTCY COURT DECISION
    In February 2012—more than two years before the Debtors filed their Chapter
    7 petition in April 2014—the Lees rented a home to the Debtors and their five young
    children. Because the Lees had been unable to sell the home or consistently rent it
    after moving to a different residence three years earlier, they quickly agreed to a
    one-year lease with the Debtors without conducting any credit or background checks.
    The Debtors paid a $3,000 security deposit and $3,000 for the February rent, and they
    also timely paid the March, April, and May rent payments; however, they failed to
    make the June payment.
    The Debtors initially told the Lees they had mailed the June rent check. But as
    time passed their story began to unravel and they admitted to financial problems and
    that they had lied about sending the check. Nonetheless, the Lees agreed that the
    Debtors could make up the June rent by paying $4,000 in July, August, and
    September. When the Debtors missed the July rent payment, the Lees proposed a
    new deal. Despite their knowledge that the Debtors “could not afford to pay the
    rent . . . and that their financial circumstances had taken a turn for the worse,” Aplt.
    App. Vol. 2 at 262, they entered into a contract for the Debtors to buy the home for
    $655,000. Ultimately and unsurprisingly, the Debtors were unable to obtain
    financing and defaulted on the contract. The Lees notified the Debtors the lease was
    back in effect and they owed nearly $12,000 in back rent, late fees, and interest.
    In October 2012, shortly after the Debtors defaulted on the purchase contract,
    the Lees filed an eviction suit and the Debtors’ family vacated the home. The
    3
    Debtors did not defend the suit and in December 2012, the Lees obtained a default
    judgment for approximately $49,000.
    The bankruptcy court found that “after June 2012 the [Debtors] had . . . very
    little income and were struggling financially. In June 2012, Mrs. Peeples applied for
    a sub-prime loan, but was denied. She sold most of her Barbie dolls . . . to raise
    funds. The [Debtors’] car was repossessed in December 2012.” 
    Id. at 266.
    And in
    August 2013, the Debtors and their children “moved in with Mr. Peeples’ mother.”
    
    Id. and 249.
    3 Further, by the summer of 2013, when the Debtors first failed to appear
    at collection proceedings associated with the first default judgment, the bankruptcy
    court found “there was no evidence . . . that . . . the [Debtors] had any property other
    than some household furnishings, [some] Barbie dolls, some used DVDs, and a few
    other items of personal property of minimal value.” 
    Id. at 266.
    From 2011 until the early summer of 2012, Mr. Peeples operated a business
    known as the Silver Eagle Store, which sold commemorative Silver Eagle coins.
    Most of the business was conducted on eBay and PayPal. Mr. Peeples testified that
    he kept a ledger that listed assets, liabilities, owner’s equity, and individual
    transactions; however, the ledger was lost. The Lees maintained that without the
    ledger they could not ascertain the Debtors’ financial condition or understand their
    3
    In July 2013, the Lees filed a second suit against the Debtors. Like the first
    suit, the Debtors failed to defend, and in September 2013, the Lees obtained a default
    judgment for approximately $89,000. By the time the Debtors filed their petition in
    April 2014, the Lees had filed two more suits against Mr. Peeples.
    4
    material business transactions. As such, they argued the Debtors should be denied a
    discharge under § 727(a)(3), which provides:
    (a) The court shall grant the debtor a discharge unless—
    ....
    (3) the debtor has . . . failed to keep or preserve any recorded information,
    including books, documents, records, and papers, from which the debtor’s
    financial condition or business transactions might be ascertained, unless
    such act or failure to act was justified under all of the circumstances of the
    case[.]
    There were, however, some Silver Eagle Store records available from third
    parties. For example, the Lees subpoenaed eBay records, but they did not introduce
    them into evidence. PayPal records, which were also subpoenaed by the Lees, were
    introduced into evidence but only for “the limited purpose of establishing the
    existence, duration, and general activity of the accounts.” Aplt. App. Vol. 2 at 251.
    The Lees also subpoenaed and introduced as evidence, Silver Eagle Store’s bank
    records from JPMorgan Chase Bank (Chase).
    Specifically, the Lees focused on the lack of any records to prove what the
    Debtors did with $29,000 in cash withdrawn from the Chase account in March 2012.
    That month—more than two years prior to the Debtors’ bankruptcy filing—there was
    approximately $38,000 in the account; however, later that month nearly all the money
    was withdrawn, including $29,000 in cash and more than $8,600 in ATM and debit
    card withdrawals. Mr. Peeples testified that he spent the $29,000 to buy coin
    inventory. But the Lees maintained there were no records to prove that the money
    was used to buy inventory and suggested instead that the Debtors might have secretly
    5
    invested $29,000 in bitcoins—an investment that would be worth several million
    dollars today.
    The bankruptcy court gave no weight to Mr. Peeples’s purported admission
    that it was impossible for the Lees to determine the Debtor’s financial condition
    without the ledger. The court found that Mr. Lee—an attorney—was guilty of
    “overreaching,” 
    id. at 241,
    when he improperly “used . . . requests for admission . . .
    to establish the elements of his case by getting the [pro se Debtors] to admit to
    disputed and potentially damaging facts,” 
    id. at 242.
    More to the point, the court
    found that Mr. Peeples’s admission was a “legal conclusion,” 
    id. at 268,
    which was
    the prerogative of the court.
    The bankruptcy court found that although “the PayPal records in particular,
    cannot be fully explained without the testimony of a competent witness, the Court is
    convinced that the [Debtors’] business transactions relating to Silver Eagle Store can
    be ascertained from the[] [third-party] records.” 
    Id. at 268-69.
    What is relevant is whether there were material financial transactions
    that cannot be determined and whether there may be assets remaining
    from those transactions. Although Mr. Peeples lost the ledger that he
    kept for Silver Eagle Store, the records of the store that the third parties
    maintained[,] document the [Debtors’] material business transactions
    and financial condition. And what the evidence clearly shows is that
    Silver Eagle Store was a short-lived, unsuccessful business venture that
    conducted no business for more than a year and a half before the
    [Debtors] filed bankruptcy.
    6
    
    Id. at 269.
    The court therefore determined that the Lees failed to meet their burden
    under § 727(a)(3). 4
    The bankruptcy court also denied the Lees’ other claims under § 727. For
    example, the Lees made a claim under § 727(a)(2) that the Debtors concealed assets;
    under § 727(a)(4) for alleged false statements in their financial disclosures; and under
    § 727(a)(5) for the “loss” of money from the Chase bank account.
    First, the bankruptcy court found “the Lees produced no evidence to show that
    the [Debtors] owned and concealed valuable property when they filed bankruptcy.”
    Aplt. App. Vol. 2 at 267. Second, the court found “absolutely no evidence,” 
    id. at 277,
    that the Debtors had unreported income in 2012 that they “secreted . . . away,”
    id.; instead, “the evidence is that the [Debtors’] family of seven struggled to maintain
    their household in 2012, had no other income, and would need this income for living
    expenses, including payment of rent to the Lees,” 
    id. Last, the
    court rejected the
    Lees’ claim under § 727(a)(5).
    As they have consistently done in this case, the Lees exaggerate the
    significance of the purported [loss] at issue. The Lees make much of
    the [Debtors’] lack of memory regarding what happened to the funds.
    But the majority of the purported 2012 income the Lees have identified
    was received more than two years before the [Debtors’] bankruptcy
    case, and the amount of income at issue was not even great enough to
    place the [Debtors] above the federal poverty guideline for 2012.
    Whatever income the [Debtors] received from their online activities was
    likely consumed by the ordinary, day-to-day expenses of maintaining a
    seven-person household, particularly one that was incurring a $3,000
    per-month rent expense. By late June 2012, the [Debtors] had
    4
    The bankruptcy court further found that Mr. Peeples was justified in not
    preserving the Silver Eagle Store ledger because financial records were available
    from third parties. We need not address this issue to resolve the appeal.
    7
    essentially run out of funds, and Silver Eagle Store was not profitable
    enough to support them. There is no loss of assets in this case.
    
    Id. at 280
    (footnotes omitted). 5
    The bankruptcy court ultimately concluded that “there are sufficient records
    and sufficient evidence for this Court to ascertain the [Debtors’] business transactions
    and financial condition,” 
    id. at 282,
    denied the Lees’ claims as “primarily based on
    inferences, or more accurately speculations,” 
    id. at 264,
    and granted the Debtors a
    discharge.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    “Although this appeal is from a decision by the BAP, we review only the
    Bankruptcy Court’s decision.” First Nat’l Bank of Durango v. Woods (In re Woods),
    
    743 F.3d 689
    , 692 (10th Cir. 2014) (internal quotation marks omitted). “We treat the
    BAP as a subordinate appellate tribunal whose rulings are not entitled to any
    deference (although they certainly may be persuasive).” 
    Id. (brackets and
    internal
    quotation marks omitted).
    “A decision whether to grant or deny a discharge is in the sound discretion of
    the bankruptcy court, and a bankruptcy court’s [grant] of discharge is therefore
    reviewed for abuse of discretion.” United States Tr. v. Garland (In re Garland),
    
    417 B.R. 805
    , 810 (10th Cir. BAP 2009) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    “A court abuses its discretion where it commits a legal error or relies on clearly
    erroneous factual findings, or where there is no rational basis in the evidence for its
    5
    The bankruptcy court found that the Lees abandoned their claim under
    § 727(a)(6).
    8
    ruling.” Gillman v. Ford (In re Ford), 
    492 F.3d 1148
    , 1153 (10th Cir. 2007)
    (brackets and internal quotation marks omitted).
    “We review matters of law de novo, and we review factual findings made by
    the bankruptcy court for clear error.” In re 
    Woods, 743 F.3d at 692
    (internal
    quotation marks omitted). “A finding is not clearly erroneous unless it is without
    factual support in the record or if, after reviewing all of the evidence, we are left with
    the definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been made.” In re 
    Ford, 492 F.3d at 1153
    (internal quotation marks omitted).
    ANALYSIS
    “A prima facie case under § 727(a)(3) requires a showing that a debtor failed
    to maintain and preserve adequate records and that the failure made it impossible to
    ascertain his or her financial condition and material business transactions.” Martinez
    v. Sears (In re Sears), 
    565 B.R. 184
    , 189 (10th Cir. BAP 2017) (brackets and internal
    quotation marks omitted). “If a creditor or trustee meets this initial burden, the
    burden shifts to the debtor to justify his or her failure to maintain the records.”
    
    Id. (internal quotation
    marks omitted). “The ultimate burden under § 727 rests with
    the plaintiff and must be proven by a preponderance of the evidence.” 
    Id. Section 727(a)(3)
    is intended to allow creditors to “reasonably . . . ascertain
    [the debtor’s] present financial condition and to follow his business transactions for a
    reasonable period in the past.” Solis v. Asif (In re Asif), 
    455 B.R. 768
    , 791
    (Bankr. D. Kan. 2011) (internal quotation marks omitted). “[I]f corporate records are
    necessary to determine the debtor’s financial condition, and the debtor has not kept or
    9
    preserved such records, the debtor’s discharge should be denied pursuant to
    § 727(a)(3).” 
    Id. at 792
    (internal quotation marks omitted). In other words, “[t]here
    should be some nexus between the Debtor’s failure to keep records, destruction or
    loss of records and the creditor’s ability to ascertain the debtor’s financial condition.”
    In re Caulfield, 
    192 B.R. 808
    , 823 (Bankr. E.D.N.Y. 1996) (emphasis added).
    “The bankruptcy court has wide discretion” to determine whether the movants
    have satisfied their burden to prove that the debtor’s failure to keep and preserve
    financial records made it impossible to ascertain his or her financial condition and
    material business transactions. Robertson v. Dennis (In re Dennis), 
    330 F.3d 696
    ,
    703 (5th Cir. 2003) (internal quotation marks omitted). This “determination is a
    finding of fact reviewed for clear error.” 
    Id. Bank records
    and credit card statements “may be sufficient to enable creditors
    to trace financial transactions and evaluate the debtor’s financial condition” unless
    they “ran a business enterprise engaged in a steady stream of large scale transactions
    involving substantial sums of money.” In re Juzwiak, 
    89 F.3d 424
    , 428 (7th Cir.
    1996). Unlike the business enterprise in Juzwiak, Silver Eagle Store was “a short-
    lived, unsuccessful business venture,” Aplt. App. Vol. 2 at 269, from which Mr.
    Peeples, on one occasion and more than two years before filing for bankruptcy,
    withdrew $29,000 in cash. These facts distinguish Silver Eagle Store from the facts
    in Juzwiak that justified the denial of a discharge for the failure to maintain adequate
    records.
    10
    Nonetheless, we agree with Mr. Lee that it was error for the bankruptcy court
    to rely on records that were not in evidence or admitted for only a limited purpose—
    the eBay and PayPal records—to satisfy Mr. Peeples’s obligation to preserve the
    ledger. But this argument misses the larger issue—whether the failure to preserve the
    ledger was grounds to deny the Debtors a discharge. 6
    In deciding whether to deny a debtor a discharge, “the Bankruptcy Code must
    be construed liberally in favor of the debtor and strictly against the creditor.”
    Gullickson v. Brown (In re Brown), 
    108 F.3d 1290
    , 1292 (10th Cir. 1997). As such,
    “the reason for denying a discharge to a bankrupt must be real and substantial, not
    merely technical and conjectural.” Jones v. Gertz, 
    121 F.2d 782
    , 784 (10th Cir.
    1941). See also Korrub v. Cohn (In re Cohn), 
    561 B.R. 476
    , 492 (Bankr. N.D. Ill.
    2016) (“Denial of discharge is a drastic remedy reserved only for the worst actors.”);
    Haupt v. Belonzi (In re Belonzi), 
    476 B.R. 899
    , 904 (Bankr. W.D. Pa. 2012)
    (“Completely denying a debtor his discharge . . . is an extreme step and should not be
    taken lightly.”) (alteration and internal quotation marks omitted)).
    The Debtors were in financial difficulties by June 2012 when they could not
    pay their rent and in dire financial straits two years later when they filed for
    6
    Mr. Lee asserts that Mr. Peeples’s testimony that he spent $29,000 to buy
    coin inventory cannot substitute for information in the missing ledger under
    § 727(a)(3). See, e.g., Quicken Loans, Inc. v. Splawn (In re Splawn), 
    376 B.R. 747
    ,
    758 (Bankr. D. N.M. 2007) (“[A] debtor may not use oral testimony to supplement
    information that is absent from the actual records.” (internal quotation marks
    omitted)). But the bankruptcy court did not rely on this testimony.
    11
    bankruptcy. Among other things, the bankruptcy court found that this family of
    seven moved in with Mr. Peeples’s mother, their only car had been repossessed, and
    they were reduced to applying for a pay-day type loan. Further, “[w]hatever income
    the [Debtors] received from their online activities was likely consumed by the
    ordinary, day-to-day expenses of maintaining a seven-person household, particularly
    one that was incurring a $3,000 per-month rent expense.” Aplt. App. Vol. 2 at 280.
    Significantly, the court found no wrongdoing by the Debtors—they were not the
    “worst actors” who deserved the “extreme step” of being denied a discharge.
    According to Mr. Lee, however, because the unsubstantiated disposition of
    $15,000 in cash was grounds to deny the debtor a discharge in United Bank of Denver
    v. Greenwalt (In re Greenwalt), 
    63 B.R. 555
    (Bankr. D. Colo. 1986), the same result
    should obtain here. But Mr. Lee ignores the self-dealing and fraudulent conduct that
    justified the denial of a discharge in Greenwalt, including the violation of
    § 727(a)(2), which involved the preferential transfer of more than $100,000 in cash in
    addition to the unexplained $15,000 cash expenditure. As the Greenwalt court
    explained, this is a “tawdry tale of casual disregard of the provisions of the
    Bankruptcy Code and of the interests of third parties . . . wherein a discharge was
    [previously] denied in the proceedings concerning . . . [the] Debtor’s husband.” In re
    Greenwalt at 556 (citation omitted). The “tawdry” conduct on which the court based
    its decision to deny a discharge in Greenwalt is not present here.
    Last, we will not consider Mr. Lee’s argument that the bankruptcy court was
    bound by Mr. Peeples’s “admission” that it was impossible to determine the Debtors’
    12
    financial condition or material business transactions without the Silver Eagle Store
    ledger. In this regard, the BAP noted that the “bankruptcy court clearly faced
    challenges when dealing with these self-represented parties, including how to weigh
    testimony from the Debtors that was contrary to admissions from them that Mr. Lee
    had obtained through improper use of Requests for Admissions and stipulated facts
    contained in the Pretrial Order.” Aplt. App. Vol. 1 at 7 n.2. But the BAP also
    explained that “Mr. Lee assigns no error in this appeal to any evidentiary rulings
    surrounding prior admissions.” 
    Id. Now, for
    the first time in this court, Mr. Lee
    argues that the court should have “honored” Mr. Peeples’s admission. Aplt. Opening
    Br. at 15. However, Mr. Lee failed to raise the issue in the BAP, and we will not
    consider it for the first time on appeal. See Walker v. Mather (In re Walker),
    
    959 F.2d 894
    , 896 (10th Cir. 1992) (the general rule is that we will not consider an
    issue not raised below).
    CONCLUSION
    The decision to grant the Debtors a discharge was not an abuse of discretion.
    The judgment of the bankruptcy court is affirmed.
    Entered for the Court
    Jerome A. Holmes
    Circuit Judge
    13