Court Opinion

ID: 69002
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2010-04-26 06:40:10+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:36:08.669571
License: Public Domain

IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT  United States Court of Appeals
                                                    Fifth Circuit

                                                 FILED
                                                                           October 2, 2009

                                     No. 09-20061                      Charles R. Fulbruge III
                                   Summary Calendar                            Clerk

In the Matter of: DONALD L SWOR, deceased; MYRA L SWOR,

       Debtors

MYRA L SWOR

                                                   Appellant

v.

BARTLEY TEXAS BUILDERS HARDWARE INC,

                                                   Appellee

                   Appeal from the United States District Court
                        for the Southern District of Texas
                              USDC No. 4:08-CV-644

Before JONES, Chief Judge, and DENNIS and HAYNES, Circuit Judges.
EDITH H. JONES, Chief Judge:*
       Bartley Texas Builders Hardware, Inc. (“Bartley”) objected to the
discharge of a debt in Donald and Myra Swor’s (“the Swors”) Chapter 7

       *
         Pursuant to 5TH CIR . R. 47.5, the court has determined that this opinion should not
be published and is not precedent except under the limited circumstances set forth in 5TH CIR .
R. 47.5.4.
                                  No. 09-20061

bankruptcy case because the Swors impermissibly diverted their business’s trust
funds to themselves.       The bankruptcy court ruled that the debt was
dischargeable, finding that the Swors were allowed to repay loans they made to
the business. The district court reversed, concluding that this repayment was
not a valid use of trust funds.
      We agree with the district court that the diversion of trust funds in this
manner would render the debt nondischargeable. But because the account from
which the payments were made included both trust and non-trust funds (as
allowed under Texas law), it is unclear whether Bartley met its burden to trace
the payments to trust funds. We therefore reverse the decision of the district
court and remand for this determination and further appropriate proceedings.
                              I. BACKGROUND
      Swor’s Glass & Mirror, Inc. (“Swor’s Glass”), the debtors’ small business,
filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy (later converted to chapter 7) in October 2005.
The Swors later filed a voluntary chapter 7 petition to discharge their personal
debts, which included Donald Swor’s guarantee of the business’s debts.
      It is undisputed that the Swors made exemplary efforts involving personal
sacrifice to maintain the business. The bankruptcy court described these:
      Mrs. Swor testified that once Swor’s Glass began having financial
      difficulty, in order to continue operating the business, she and her
      husband infused over $106,000 of their personal funds into the
      business. They refinanced their home, cashed in life insurance
      policies, and Mr. Swor sold a small plane he owned. The funds from
      all of these sources were put into the business in order to maintain
      operations and attempt to avoid having to file bankruptcy.
                                      ...
      The Swors honorably ran their business for over thirty years,
      devoted all of their energy into maintaining their business and
      trying to provide for their employees. Although [the Swors] invested
      their life savings into the business, took meager salaries, and lived

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      modestly, late in their lives they were unable to continue operating
      Swor’s Glass successfully.
During this period of the business’s financial difficulty, however, the Swors
wrote checks to themselves from corporate accounts.
      When Swor’s Glass entered bankruptcy, it owed $8,883.08 to Bartley for
commercial construction hardware. Although Swor’s Glass received payment for
construction projects on which the hardware was used, no funds remained to pay
Bartley.   Bartley argues that this debt is non-dischargeable in bankruptcy
because of the payments the Swors made to themselves.
      The bankruptcy court found the debt dischargeable.          It apparently
determined that the infusions of money by the Swors to Swor’s Glass were loans
and that the checks to the Swors constituted repayment. Based on this factual
determination, the bankruptcy court reached the legal conclusion that the funds
received on the projects upon which Bartley supplied materials were not
misapplied by the Swors.
      On appeal, the district court reversed the bankruptcy court, finding that
the Swors did not loan money to the business but instead made capital
contributions. It then held that the Swors improperly paid themselves with
money they held in trust for Bartley, and these actions rendered the debt non-
dischargeable.
      Before this court, Mrs. Swor argues: (1) The repayment of the loans they
made to the company was an ordinary business expense of the company and thus
a legitimate use of trust funds, and (2) even if impermissible, Bartley failed to
meet its burden to show that the payments were made using trust funds.
                                II. ANALYSIS
      This court reviews a bankruptcy court’s application of the law de novo and
its findings of fact for clear error. Richmond Leasing Co. v. Capital Branch,
N.A., 762 F.2d 1303, 1307–08 (5th Cir. 1985).

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                                  No. 09-20061

      Section 523(a)(4) of the Bankruptcy Code exempts certain debts from
discharge: “A discharge . . . does not discharge an individual debtor from any
debt—for   fraud   or   defalcation   while   acting   in   a   fiduciary   capacity,
embezzlement, or larceny.” 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(4). Defalcation includes the
failure to produce funds entrusted to a fiduciary, even where such conduct does
not reach the level of fraud.         See In re Faulkner, 213 B.R. 660, 664
(Bankr. W.D. Tex. 1997).
      The Texas Property Code requires, “Construction payments are trust
funds . . . if the payments are made to a contractor . . . under a construction
contract for the improvement of specific real property in this state.” T EX. P ROP.
C ODE § 162.001(a). The contractor holds these construction payments in trust
for the benefit of the materialmen that furnished construction material. T EX.
P ROP. C ODE §§ 162.002–003. The Fifth Circuit has determined that violation of
this trust can result in non-dischargeability under § 523(a)(4). In re Nicholas,
956 F.2d 110, 112–14 (5th Cir. 1992).
      Texas law does not require trust funds to be kept in separate accounts.
In re Boyle, 819 F.2d 583, 592 (5th Cir. 1987). Nor must these funds be spent
only on the project for which they were received—they may be spent on other
projects or on expenses related to general business overhead. Id. Mrs. Swor
does not dispute that they held the payment in trust for Bartley or that if
impermissible payments were made using trust funds, § 523(a)(4) would render
the debt to Bartley non-dischargeable.
      Permissibility of Payments to the Swors
      Although Mrs. Swor characterizes the funds they infused into the business
as loans and the checks as repayment, the district court correctly treated money
provided to the business as capital contributions:
            A loan is a capital contribution when payments correlate with
      the debtor’s sense of his own financial situation and the debtor

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                                  No. 09-20061

      repays the money at his own discretion. The Swors had to show the
      court—an objective outsider—that they were debtors of their
      company, not just unwise investors.

            The Swors cannot prove debt.          The absence of either
      documentation of the loan or interest payments indicates capital
      rather than debt. The Swors never had its company issue a
      promissory note for the loan nor did they enable the company to pay
      interest regularly to them.
We agree with the district court that the bankruptcy court clearly erred in its
conclusion that the Swors had loaned money to Swor’s Glass.
      Withdrawing capital from a business is not a permissible use of trust
funds. See T EX. P ROP. C ODE § 162.031(a) (“A trustee who, intentionally or
knowingly or with intent to defraud, . . . diverts trust funds without first fully
paying all current or past due obligations incurred by the trustee to the
beneficiaries of the trust funds, has misapplied the trust funds.”); In re Faulkner,
213 B.R. at 665(“[I]f the funds in question were retained, used, or diverted to any
use other than ‘actual expenses directly related to the construction or repair of
[an] improvement,’ then they will be held to have been ‘misapplied’ in a fashion
that is actionable under section 523(a)(4).” (alteration in original) (quoting T EX.
P ROP. C ODE § 162.031(b)).
      Use of Trust Funds
      The only remaining question is whether the funds with which the Swors
paid themselves were trust funds. Neither the bankruptcy court nor the district
court made any factual findings on this point.
      Bartley quotes Moody v. Pitts, 708 S.W.2d 930 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi,
1986, no writ), for the proposition that tracing is unnecessary: “If a trustee
commingles trust funds with the trustee’s own, the entire commingled fund is
subject to the trust.” Id. at 937. While this appears correct where trust funds
have been improperly mingled with non-trust funds, Texas law permits

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                                   No. 09-20061

contractors the mingling that occurred here. In re Boyle, 819 F.2d 583, 592 (5th
Cir. 1987) (“[T]he Texas statute . . . does not require any segregation of funds;
it does not obligate the fund holder to maintain the separate identity of any trust
res; it imposes no bookkeeping obligations on the fund holder.”); cf. T EX. P ROP.
C ODE § 162.006(a) (“A contractor who enters into a written contract with a
property owner to construct improvements to a residential homestead for an
amount exceeding $5,000 shall deposit the trust funds in a construction account
in a financial institution.”).
         Where the law unambiguously permits trust and non-trust funds to
mingle, the trustee will not be punished by merging the full amount into the
trust.    Bartley, therefore, bore the burden to show that trust funds were
misused, causing the debt to fall within the § 523(a)(4) exception. See In re
Nicholas, 956 F.2d 110 (5th Cir. 1992).
         Tracing payments from a blended account back to trust or non-trust
deposits is greatly aided by the presumption that “[w]hen a trustee has
commingled funds and has expended funds, the money expended is presumed to
be the trustee’s own.” Moody, 708 S.W.2d at 937. Applying this presumption,
one possible method of tracing is the “lowest intermediate balance” test. See
5 Collier on Bankruptcy, ¶ 541.11 (15th ed. rev. 2008). Under this approach, the
amount of trust funds in a commingled account increases whenever trust funds
are deposited but decreases only when the account balance drops below the trust
amount.
         The district court correctly reversed the bankruptcy court’s finding that
the Swors’ payments to themselves constituted permissible use of trust funds.
But the payments came from an account mingling trust funds with non-trust

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                                       No. 09-20061

funds, and neither court analyzed whether the payments were made with trust
funds.1
                                  III. CONCLUSION
       For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the district court’s judgment that the
debt is non-dischargeable and remand for determination whether the Swors paid
themselves out of trust funds, and for further appropriate proceedings.
                                                    REVERSED AND REMANDED.

       1
        To the extent Mrs. Swor is arguing that there was no evidence on the use of trust
funds, we conclude that Bartley did provide some evidence on this subject. Mrs. Swor testified
about her accounts, and the court admitted exhibits, such as Defendant’s Exhibit 6, regarding
the accounts.

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