In re: Cottingham, No. 11-8042 (6th Cir. 2012)
Annotate this CaseIn the 1990s debtors owned a business that failed and incurred liabilities from unpaid taxes. They had a monthly payment obligation to the IRS. Husband obtained employment; 2003 to 2009, his yearly gross income was between $53,000 and $59,000. In addition, he receives $1,300 per month from a settlement annuity. Wife was employed as a bookkeeper until 1999. In 2000, she pled guilty to felony embezzlement of funds from her former employer and was sentenced to probation and required to pay restitution of $800 per month. Before her indictment wife obtained employment as a bookkeeper for plaintiff, began embezzling, and deposited stolen funds to Debtors’ joint bank accounts. By 2006, she had embezzled $283,391.88 from plaintiff and forged credit card purchases of $2,821.43. In 2007, she embezzled $328,516.10. In 2008, she embezzled $11,230.21. She stole goods valued at $127,156 from her employer. Debtors spent accordingly. The Bankruptcy Court entered an order excepting debt owed to plaintiff from discharge under 11 U.S.C. 523(a)(6), finding that husband conspired with wife to convert embezzled funds and other property. The Sixth Circuit affirmed, holding that Debtors’ conduct constituted willful and malicious injury to plaintiff.
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