Jerry Waugh v. Reuben Eldridge , 95 F.3d 706 ( 1996 )


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  •                                    ___________
    No. 95-3835
    ___________
    In re:    Jerry Waugh,                 *
    *
    Debtor.                *
    *
    *
    --------------------------------*
    *
    * Appeal from the United States
    Jerry Waugh,                           * District Court for the
    * Eastern District of Arkansas.
    Plaintiff - Appellant,       *
    *
    v.                                *
    *
    Reuben Eldridge; Sandra                *
    Eldridge;                              *
    *
    Defendants - Appellees.*
    *
    *
    James C. Luker,                        *
    *
    Trustee.                     *
    ___________
    Submitted:    April 12, 1996
    Filed:   September 12, 1996
    ___________
    Before MCMILLIAN, JOHN R. GIBSON, and BOWMAN, Circuit Judges.
    ___________
    JOHN R. GIBSON, Circuit Judge.
    Jerry Waugh appeals the district court's judgment holding that his
    contingent debt to Reuben and Sandra Eldridge was non-dischargeable under
    section 523(a)(6) of the Bankruptcy Code and reversing the decision of the
    bankruptcy court.   Waugh argues that the bankruptcy court was correct in
    its determination that the debt was dischargeable because Waugh did not
    willfully and maliciously remove assets from Rising Fast Trucking Company
    in violation of the Eldridges' rights as creditors.   We affirm the judgment
    of the district court.
    Waugh and members of the Clem Moore family formed Rising Fast
    Trucking in 1979.   Waugh was president of the company and a fifty- percent
    shareholder.   The company grew from 5 trucks to approximately 150 trucks
    by 1985.
    On July 14, 1986 a truck owned by Rising Fast Trucking and a
    Trailways bus driven by Reuben Eldridge collided.     The Eldridges brought
    suit against Rising Fast Trucking.   In the liability phase of a bifurcated
    trial, the jury found Rising Fast Trucking liable for the accident and no
    negligence on the part of Reuben Eldridge.   Before the damages phase could
    begin, the parties entered into an agreed judgment for $3,000,000 in
    compensatory damages.    Because of other claims arising from the accident,
    the Eldridges received only $59,000 from Rising Fast Trucking's $1,000,000
    liability insurance policy in partial satisfaction of their judgment
    against the company.
    Waugh filed a voluntary Chapter 7 petition in bankruptcy in February
    1993 and was granted a discharge on July 7, 1993.      No objections to his
    discharge or the dischargeability of any debts were filed within the time
    frame allowed by the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure.
    In an attempt to obtain satisfaction of their judgment, the Eldridges
    filed suit in Arkansas state court to set aside transfers
    -2-
    of property and pierce the corporate veil between Waugh and the company.
    In his answer Waugh raised his bankruptcy discharge as a defense.
    Waugh   then   sought    to   reopen    his   bankruptcy   case,   asking   the
    bankruptcy court to find that any personal liability arising from                the
    state court action was discharged in bankruptcy.         The Eldridges responded
    that the debt was non-dischargeable because they did not receive notice of
    the bankruptcy proceeding in time to object to the discharge under section
    523(a)(3) of the Bankruptcy Code.           See 
    11 U.S.C. § 523
    (a)(3) (1994).
    Further, the Eldridges argued that Waugh violated section 523(a)(6) by
    willfully and maliciously removing assets from the company, thus preventing
    them from obtaining satisfaction of their judgment.
    The bankruptcy court ruled that the Eldridges did not receive notice
    of Waugh's bankruptcy case.    See In re Waugh, 
    172 B.R. 31
     (Bankr. E.D. Ark.
    1994).   The court also found that the Eldridges had the burden of proving
    that the debt was non-dischargeable under section 523(a)(6).             The court
    concluded that section 523(a)(3)(B) preserves the right of a creditor not
    receiving notice to litigate the dischargeability of a claim.1
    The bankruptcy court next addressed the section 523(a)(6) exception
    to dischargeability and concluded that Waugh did not act willfully and
    maliciously toward the Eldridges.      Thus, any debt that Waugh might owe to
    the Eldridges was discharged in bankruptcy.
    In drawing this conclusion, the bankruptcy court found that Rising
    Fast Trucking was a growth company where, until 1986, past profits and
    additional shareholder capital were invested into the company.           The court
    found that in 1986 "the shareholders authorized
    1
    Neither of the bankruptcy court's holdings regarding the lack
    of notice or the burden of proof were appealed.
    -3-
    nearly 1.5 million dollars in dividends and loans to the shareholders," all
    of which were authorized before the July 14 accident.
    The court then found that because Rising Fast Trucking was unable to
    raise additional working capital in the form of accounts receivable
    financing from its bank, the formation of a new corporation called Rising
    Fast Transport was authorized in June 1986.                However, the articles of
    incorporation for this new corporation were not filed until August 29,
    1986.       Waugh and the Moores each owned fifty percent of the new company
    which together with Rising Fast Trucking operated as a single company,
    hauling the same cargo, using the same drivers, and being dispatched from
    a common pool of available trucks.
    The bankruptcy court found that because of economic conditions the
    companies' operations decreased in 1989.            In November of that year, Rising
    Fast        Trucking    and   Rising   Fast    Transport   were   sold   to   Alliance
    Transportation.        Alliance paid $1,000 for the companies' names, trademarks,
    telephone numbers, goodwill, and customer lists.              Alliance also employed
    2
    Waugh at a yearly salary of $66,756.                Waugh also agreed to a four-year
    consulting agreement for $25,000 per year.
    The court found that Waugh's "actions with regard to his corporations
    were imprudent and lacking in business judgment," but were not targeted at
    the Eldridges.         The court believed the Eldridges' expert who testified that
    the dividends and loans made by Rising Fast Trucking to the shareholders
    placed the company in a position where it would not be able to pay its
    debts as they became due.              However, relying heavily on the corporate
    minutes
    2
    The bankruptcy court indicated a salary of $1,000 per month.
    However, the employment agreement introduced at the hearing
    specifies a yearly salary of $66,756.
    -4-
    introduced at the hearing, the bankruptcy court found that these dividends
    and loans were authorized before the July 14 accident.            The minutes also
    indicated that the formation of Rising Fast Transport was authorized
    several weeks before the accident.      The court found that all available cash
    had been extracted from the corporations before the accident, and at the
    time of the accident, "there were few, if any, assets for unsecured
    creditors to reach."
    Finally, the court stated that while it believed that Waugh had acted
    imprudently and in a self-serving manner, he had been candid with the
    court.   In particular, the bankruptcy court believed Waugh's explanation
    of his comments to Dale Cole, president of Worthen National Bank of
    Batesville,3 and his testimony regarding the formation of Rising Fast
    Transport.   The court concluded that Waugh did not remove assets from the
    corporation in violation of the Eldridges' rights.        Thus, any debt owed to
    the Eldridges was discharged.
    The district court held that the bankruptcy court's factual finding
    that Waugh's actions were not willful and malicious with respect to the
    Eldridges was clearly erroneous.      See Eldridge v. Waugh, 
    198 B.R. 545
     (E.D.
    Ark. 1995).        The district court held that the entirety of the record
    revealed "an intentional pattern of activity by [Waugh] targeted at harming
    the financial interests of the Eldridges and other creditors and at
    improving    the     financial   condition   of   the   [Rising   Fast   Trucking]
    shareholders."
    The district court first concluded that even if Waugh's testimony
    about the reasons for forming Rising Fast Transport were
    3
    Cole testified that Waugh had stated that he had transferred
    assets to his children, to Clem Moore, and to trusts in order to
    protect himself from other creditors and that the bank would be
    repaid.   Waugh later testified that the conversation with Cole
    concerned the assets of Rising Fast Rentals, not Rising Fast
    Trucking.
    -5-
    believed, his later actions showed an intent to remove assets from Rising
    Fast Trucking.     The court noted that after the formation of Rising Fast
    Transport, a corporation called Rising Fast Leasing purchased trucks
    financed by Navistar Financial Corporation and leased them to Rising Fast
    Transport.    Due to an interlocking guaranty with Navistar, Rising Fast
    Leasing and Rising Fast Trucking each became liable for the other's
    obligations to Navistar.       Thus, the district court found that while the new
    assets were added to Rising Fast Leasing and leased to Rising Fast
    Transport, Rising Fast Trucking incurred liabilities from the transaction.
    The district court next addressed the financial condition of Rising
    Fast Trucking.    The court explained that the certified public accountant
    responsible for auditing Rising Fast Trucking had issued a qualified audit
    report because "there were related party transactions that were not
    disclosed and because of the uncertainty of [Rising Fast Trucking's]
    financial future due to the potential lawsuits from the 1986 wreck."
    The district court then turned to the issuance of dividends by Rising
    Fast   Trucking   in   1986.     The   court   noted   that   the   corporation,   an
    S-corporation, had never paid dividends before 1986.          However, in 1986 the
    board of directors approved several dividend payments.              According to the
    corporate minutes introduced at the hearing, dividends were declared in the
    following amounts in 1986:         $550,000 on April 7; $10,000 on April 28;
    $50,000 on May 12; $6,000 on May 20; $10,000 on June 11; $30,000 on June
    23; and $40,000 on June 27.        Addressing the Eldridges' argument that the
    dates in the corporate minutes could not be believed, the district court
    noted that the certified public accountant responsible for auditing Rising
    Fast Trucking testified that the audit showed no dividend payments until
    after the July 14 accident, when a total of $800,000 was paid on July 28
    and 31.   The accountant also testified that from the time the audit work
    was completed in March 1986 and
    -6-
    when the report was published on May 23, 1986, the auditing firm would have
    inquired if the financial position of Rising Fast Trucking had materially
    changed and included any such change in the final published audit.         The
    accountant stated that the firm did not learn of any dividend payments
    during this period of time, or it would likely have included them in the
    audit report.
    In addition, the district court highlighted a transaction described
    by Waugh that appears to contradict the dividend authorization dates in the
    minutes.   Waugh testified that he received $275,000 from the first $550,000
    dividend payment.   The minutes showed that this dividend was declared on
    April 7.   Waugh testified:   "I went to the bank and borrowed $265,000.   The
    same day I wrote Rising Fast a check for $262,000.       The next day Rising
    Fast Trucking Company paid me a dividend of $275,000 and that same day I
    went and paid the bank back where I'd borrowed it, so [it was] just a swap
    out to get the debt I owed Rising Fast off the books.       I paid the debt.
    They paid me a dividend actually so I could pay the debt."          On cross
    examination, Waugh was asked why the March 31, 1986 Rising Fast Trucking
    balance sheet did not reflect the debt he owed to Rising Fast Trucking.
    Waugh responded that it was because he had paid off the debts the "day
    before that report."   The district court recognized that it would have been
    impossible for Waugh to use an April 7 dividend payment to pay off his debt
    to Rising Fast Trucking on March 31.
    A certified public accountant who testified as an expert for the
    Eldridges testified that it was uncommon for an S-corporation like Rising
    Fast Trucking to distribute dividends that did not result from the current
    or immediately previous year's profits.    In addition, the court noted the
    bankruptcy court's finding that at the time the dividends were paid
    reasonable grounds existed to believe that the corporation would be unable
    to pay its debts as they became due.
    -7-
    Finally, the district court focused on the sale of Rising Fast
    Trucking to Alliance.        The court noted that at the time of the sale, Waugh
    was jointly and severally liable for the $1.8 million that Rising Fast
    Trucking and Rising Fast Leasing owed to Navistar.                    However, in exchange
    for assigning the four $25,000 payments from his consulting agreement with
    Alliance, Waugh and the Moores were released from liability on the debt.
    Waugh later agreed with Navistar to a $2.9 million consent judgment against
    Rising Fast Trucking and Rising Fast Leasing, a judgment which released him
    individually.    The court determined that "[t]hese actions, taken after the
    accident,     harmed   the     Eldridges'    interests    by     selling     [Rising       Fast
    Trucking's] assets for a low price."
    The district court concluded:                "After the accident, Waugh used
    [Rising Fast Trucking's] assets to receive debt release for himself, to the
    detriment of the Eldridges. . . . [A]fter the accident Waugh engaged in an
    intentional     course    of   conduct   designed    to   insulate       assets     from    the
    Eldridges."    Thus, the district court held that any debt owed by Waugh to
    the Eldridges was non-dischargeable because it was within the willful and
    malicious     exception   to    dischargeability,     and       the    bankruptcy    court's
    4
    findings to the contrary were clearly erroneous.
    Waugh argues that his conduct was not willful and malicious under
    section 523(a)(6) of the Bankruptcy Code.            He contends that the findings
    of the bankruptcy court were not clearly erroneous and the district court
    erred in so holding.
    When reviewing a bankruptcy court's decision to deny
    discharge, we apply the same standard of review that the
    4
    In addition to the factors discussed above, the district
    court also mentioned the bankruptcy court's discussion of several
    facts excluded from evidence at trial. While the bankruptcy court
    refused to allow Waugh to testify regarding other accidents and
    claims against Rising Fast Trucking, the bankruptcy court discussed
    this evidence in its decision.
    -8-
    district court is supposed to apply: we review the bankruptcy
    court's factual findings for clear error and its conclusions of
    law de novo. Although the district court's conclusions about
    the bankruptcy court's decision may carry some persuasive
    weight, our appellate review of the bankruptcy court's decision
    is independent of the district court's opinion.
    United States v. Foust (In re Foust), 
    52 F.3d 766
    , 768 (8th Cir. 1995) (per
    curiam) (citations omitted).
    The     bankruptcy   court's   determination   of   whether   a   party    acted
    willfully and maliciously inherently involves inquiry into and finding of
    intent, which is a question of fact.     See First Nat'l Bank v. Phillips (In
    re Phillips), 
    882 F.2d 302
    , 305 (8th Cir. 1989).          We may not reverse the
    bankruptcy court's factual findings unless after reviewing the record we
    are left with the "definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been
    committed."    Anderson v. City of Bessemer City, 
    470 U.S. 564
    , 573 (1985)
    (quoting United States v. United States Gypsum Co., 
    333 U.S. 364
    , 395
    (1948)).     Even when based on witness credibility, the bankruptcy court's
    factual findings are not completely insulated from appellate review.             See
    Griffin v. City of Omaha, 
    785 F.2d 620
    , 626 (8th Cir. 1986).                   "Where
    physical, documentary or other forms of objective evidence contradict a
    witness's story, or that story is so internally inconsistent or implausible
    that a reasonable factfinder would not credit it, a reviewing court may
    find clear error even `in a finding purportedly based on a credibility
    determination.'" 
    Id.
     (quoting Anderson, 
    470 U.S. at 575
    ).
    Section 523(a)(6) of the Bankruptcy Code provides that a debt may not
    be discharged when the debtor has willfully and maliciously injured another
    entity or the property of another entity.       
    11 U.S.C. § 523
    (a)(6) (1994).
    Willful is defined as "`headstrong and knowing' conduct," while malicious
    is "conduct `targeted at the creditor at least in the sense that the
    conduct is certain or almost certain to cause harm.'"       Johnson v. Miera (In
    re Miera),
    -9-
    
    926 F.2d 741
    , 743-44 (8th Cir. 1991) (quoting Barclays Am./ Business
    Credit, Inc. v. Long (In re Long), 
    774 F.2d 875
    , 881 (8th Cir. 1985)).
    "While intentional harm may be very difficult to establish, the likelihood
    of harm in an objective sense may be considered in evaluating intent."
    Long, 
    774 F.2d at 881
     (footnote omitted).
    After carefully studying the record before us, we hold that the
    bankruptcy     court's    findings   regarding    Waugh's     conduct    under   section
    523(a)(6) of the Bankruptcy Code were clearly erroneous.                As illustrated
    by the district court's opinion, the record is replete with documentary
    evidence and inconsistencies that contradict Waugh's testimony and the
    findings of the bankruptcy court.       See Anderson, 
    470 U.S. at 575
    ; Griffin,
    
    785 F.2d at 626
    .
    When viewed in its entirety, the record reveals that Waugh, as
    president and fifty-percent shareholder of Rising Fast Trucking, repeatedly
    engaged   in     transactions   to   the    benefit    of    himself    and    the   other
    shareholders and to the detriment of Rising Fast Trucking creditors.
    There are two statements in the district court's opinion that are
    troublesome.      The court stated it believed that the evidence as a whole
    revealed "an intentional pattern of activity by the debtor targeted at
    harming the financial interests of the Eldridges and other creditors and
    at   improving    the    financial   condition    of   the   [Rising    Fast   Trucking]
    shareholders."     The court concluded by saying that it believed "that after
    the accident Waugh engaged in an intentional course of conduct designed to
    insulate assets from the Eldridges."         When these statements are considered
    closely, however, we do not see them as evidencing factual findings, but
    rather as being introductory or conclusory statements in a careful analysis
    under the clearly erroneous test.       This court has held on several occasions
    that the district court reviews an order of the bankruptcy court as an
    appellate court, and may not make its own
    -10-
    independent factual findings or take additional evidence to support such
    findings.     Wagner v. Grunewaldt, 
    821 F.2d 1317
    , 1320 (8th Cir. 1987);
    Foust, 
    52 F.3d at 768
    .    We conclude that the district court scrupulously
    followed its responsibility to review the bankruptcy court order under the
    clearly erroneous analysis.       It analyzed the bankruptcy court order in
    light of the entire record, demonstrating numerous internal inconsistencies
    and the implausibility of the testimony.          We are satisfied that the two
    statements using the word "believe," statements which have caused us some
    concern, do not constitute factual findings and do not nullify the district
    court's detailed analysis determining whether the factual findings are
    clearly     erroneous.   In     any   event,    this   court    has    the   ultimate
    responsibility of making an independent determination as to whether the
    findings of the bankruptcy court were clearly erroneous.
    Without elaboration, the bankruptcy court accepted as true the dates
    shown on the Rising Fast Trucking minutes.         The court also found Waugh's
    testimony    credible.    The    Eldridges     argue   that    these   findings    are
    inconsistent and cannot be reconciled.
    The minutes show that the $550,000 dividend was authorized on April
    7, 1986.    Waugh testified that he received $275,000 of this dividend and
    used it to repay a bank loan whose proceeds he had used to repay loans from
    Rising Fast Trucking.    When asked why the Rising Fast Trucking loans did
    not appear on the March 31, 1986 balance sheet, Waugh testified that he
    repaid the Rising Fast Trucking loan the day before the balance sheet was
    issued.     He also testified that the day after he repaid the Rising Fast
    Trucking loan, he received the dividend payment and repaid the bank.              Thus,
    Waugh stated he repaid a bank loan with a dividend that was not authorized
    by the board of directors until about a week later.           As the district court
    recognized, it would have been impossible for Waugh to have used the April
    7 dividend to repay a loan he testified was paid off several days earlier.
    This is the type of internal inconsistency discussed in Anderson, 
    470 U.S. at 575
    , a
    -11-
    contradiction of Waugh's testimony by objective evidence, that undermines
    the underpinnings of the bankruptcy court's finding and       causes us to
    conclude it is clearly erroneous.
    Furthermore, Waugh's testimony fails to mesh with the testimony of
    Rising Fast Trucking's auditor.     The auditor testified that no dividend
    payments were reported or discovered between the time when the audit was
    completed in March and when it was published in May.     We are well aware
    that   "[w]here there are two permissible views of the evidence, the
    factfinder's choice between them cannot be clearly erroneous."   Anderson,
    
    470 U.S. at 574
    .     This is not, however, a question of two permissible
    views.     Instead, it involves a situation where the testimony of the
    principle witness is contradicted by other parts of his testimony, by
    documentary evidence, and by the testimony of other witnesses.   If Waugh's
    testimony was internally consistent, the auditor's testimony would have
    verified the payment of dividends during the time frame shown in the
    minutes.   Simply put, the unbiased independent evidence in the record does
    not confirm that the dividends were declared or paid before the July 14
    accident, and Waugh's own testimony contradicts the dates shown in the
    minutes upon which he relies.5
    The record also demonstrates that Waugh's actions with regard to
    Rising Fast Trucking were knowing and certain to harm the Eldridges.   See
    Miera, 
    926 F.2d at 743-44
    .
    The Eldridges' expert, whom the bankruptcy court found to be well
    qualified and credible, testified that it would be unusual for
    5
    While we must not second guess the availability of certain
    items of evidence, or the reason for not introducing a particular
    item of evidence at trial, we find it interesting that neither
    party introduced bank records or cancelled checks showing when the
    dividends were actually paid and cleared through Rising Fast
    Trucking's bank.
    -12-
    an S-corporation such as Rising Fast Trucking to pay dividends like it did
    in   1986.    Further, the bankruptcy court also accepted the expert's
    testimony that at the time "when the dividends were authorized in 1986,
    there were reasonable grounds to believe that the corporation would be
    unable to pay creditors as debts became due."    This testimony, accepted by
    the court, is objective evidence contradicting Waugh's testimony and the
    bankruptcy court's finding that Waugh's actions were not directed at the
    Eldridges and other creditors.    Thus, we must conclude that the bankruptcy
    court's finding was clearly erroneous.
    As the district court pointed out, these practices continued after
    the accident and harmed the Eldridges' interest as contingent creditors,
    while    continuing to benefit Waugh and the other shareholders.         The
    corporation received only $1,000 for the sale of Rising Fast Trucking.
    Waugh, however, received an employment contract for $66,756 and a four-year
    consulting contract for $25,000 per year.       On December 4, 1989, Waugh
    assigned the proceeds from the consulting contract to Navistar in exchange
    for the release of Waugh and the Moores from personal liability on the
    debts owed to Navistar.    Waugh testified that Rising Fast Trucking was also
    released from liability, but the record fails to support this testimony.
    The assignment releases only Waugh and the Moores.      Further, the consent
    judgment executed on December 14, 1989, not discussed by the bankruptcy
    court, dismissed Waugh and the Moores, but continued to hold Rising Fast
    Trucking and Rising Fast Leasing jointly and severally liable for debts
    owed to Navistar.   Again, this illustrates the internal inconsistencies in
    Waugh's testimony that are contradicted by objective evidence in the
    remainder of the record.    Moreover, it demonstrates an ongoing pattern of
    intentional conduct continuing well after the accident--a pattern certain
    to harm the Eldridges' financial interests, while benefiting Waugh and the
    other shareholders.
    -13-
    We realize that the bankruptcy court found that Waugh had been candid
    with it, and that Waugh did not remove assets from the corporation in
    violation of the Eldridges' rights.         While Anderson, 
    470 U.S. at 575
    ,
    underscores the great deference that is given to credibility findings such
    as these, it also demonstrates that there is a limit to that deference when
    "the story itself [is] so internally inconsistent or implausible on its
    face that a reasonable factfinder would not credit it."          We conclude that
    the   bankruptcy   court's   findings,   even   though   based    on   credibility
    determinations, were clearly erroneous under the scope of review outlined
    in Anderson.
    In sum, we are left with the "definite and firm conviction that a
    mistake has been committed."      
    Id. at 573
    .     We hold that the bankruptcy
    court's finding that Waugh did not act willfully and maliciously with
    respect to the Eldridges was clearly erroneous, and we affirm the district
    court's judgment holding that Waugh's contingent debt to the Eldridges was
    not discharged in bankruptcy.
    A true copy.
    Attest:
    CLERK, U. S. COURT OF APPEALS, EIGHTH CIRCUIT.
    -14-