Ballstaedt v. Curtis (In re Ballstaedt)

500 B.R. 586
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Iowa
DecidedOctober 21, 2013
DocketBankruptcy No. 12-01990; Adversary No. 13-9001
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 500 B.R. 586 (Ballstaedt v. Curtis (In re Ballstaedt)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ballstaedt v. Curtis (In re Ballstaedt), 500 B.R. 586 (Iowa 2013).

Opinion

[588]*588ORDER ON MOTION TO DISMISS ADVERSARY AND MOTION FOR DEFAULT JUDGMENT

THAD J. COLLINS, Chief Judge.

These matters came before the Court on Debtor David John Ballstaedt’s Motion for Default Judgment and Defendants Dawn R. Curtis and James Peters’ Motion to Dismiss. The Court held a hearing on the matters on June 24, 2013. Attorney and Defendant James Peters appeared on behalf of himself and Defendant Dawn R. Curtis. David John Ballstaedt appeared pro se. After hearing the arguments, the Court took the matters under advisement. The parties submitted post-hearing briefs. This is a core proceeding under 18 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(G).

STATEMENT OF THE CASE

Debtor filed this adversary action against Dawn R. Curtis (“Curtis”), Creditor in Debtor’s Bankruptcy and Debtor’s former spouse, and James Peters, Curtis’ attorney (collectively “Defendants”). Debtor alleges that Defendants violated Debtor’s automatic stay by allowing the Linn County District Court to issue an injunction that prohibits Debtor from contacting Curtis. Defendants argue that the injunction does not fall under the protection of the automatic stay. Even if it did, they argue that they had no affirmative duty to prevent the Iowa District Court from issuing the ruling after Debtor filed for bankruptcy. Defendants also note they have not made any attempts to enforce the order and the order has nothing to do with Debtor’s property, liabilities, or any other matters relevant to bankruptcy.

PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL HISTORY

Curtis and Debtor’s marriage was dissolved on November 8, 2010. Curtis filed for an injunction against Debtor in Linn County District Court in 2012. The Iowa District Court held a hearing on August 22, 2012. On October 22, 2012, two months later, Debtor filed a voluntary Chapter 13 petition. Debtor listed Curtis in his bankruptcy Petition as a party in six state court cases, as a party having received transfers of property from Debtor, as Debtor’s ex-spouse, and as a creditor of Debtor. On November 4, 2012, the Iowa District Court issued the injunction. It prohibited Debtor from having purposeful contact or communication or coming within 200 feet of Curtis’ home or place of employment until November 4, 2017.

The Iowa District Court made the following findings of fact in support of its order:

Dawn and David were married from 2005-2010. The Iowa Court of Appeals affirmed the Dissolution Decree in 2011. There were no children born during the marriage. Dawn has two children from her first marriage. David never adopted the children. David acknowledges he has no legal right to visit or communicate with Dawn’s children. The parties do not share any debt. They don’t own jointly any property. Dawn and David do not have any joint business interests.
The parties met in 2004. They moved in together in April 2005 and married in March 2006. The evidence establishes this has been a tumultuous relationship. Dawn obtained a domestic abuse protective order in 2010 that remained in place during the pendency of the divorce. At one point in time David faced contempt for violating the court order prohibiting him from contacting Dawn. David ran Dawn, and her children, off the road while each was driving on a public street.
[589]*589Dawn believes that David is responsible for threats against her safety in April 2011 on Craig’s List. David was not charged with any criminal act for those Craig’s List postings. In July 2011 David filed a civil lawsuit against Dawn seeking damages for his time in jail on charges or allegations of contempt that were later dismissed when the allegations were not established beyond a reasonable doubt in court.
Dawn filed for bankruptcy relief in 2011. David filed documents in Dawn’s bankruptcy alleging she acted fraudulently and that she had hidden assets ($15,000 worth of jewelry). Dawn had to defend against the allegations. The bankruptcy was delayed as a result of David’s allegations of fraud.
David filed a lawsuit against Dawn in early 2012. He again sought damages he claimed resulted from the harassment charge filed in April 2011 that was dismissed after David was found to be not guilty by a jury in September 2011. Dawn receives hundreds of text messages from David. The messages don’t contain threats. The number and content of some of the messages causes Dawn to feel as if David is watching her. Most frequently David asks to see Dawn’s children. In the few instances Dawn has responded to David to ask that he leave her alone, the frequency of the text messages escalates. Dawn is unable to keep her phone number private. She has changed her phone number at least ten times. She works for U.S. Cellular and her phone number is on her business cards. She needs to be available to her clients and this makes her phone number available to David as well.
Despite his acknowledgment that he has no legal right to contact Dawn’s children, David persists in his contact with Dawn purportedly to pass information to her children. He acknowledges he has sent numerous text messages, and frequently tells Dawn that he will stop sending text messages as soon as she allows him to have contact with her children.
In February 2012 David and Dawn went to the same restaurant, Capone’s, located in Cedar Rapids. Dawn danced with a friend, and then discovered that David was in the same restaurant. She and her friend left. David followed her out. He yelled her name a number of times from across the street. He told her to tell the girls that he loves them, he told her to enjoy her evening and that he was leaving. The encounter made Dawn nervous.
In April 2012 Dawn and a co-worker stopped at a Road Ranger convenience store. Dawn rode in her manager’s vehicle. She saw David’s truck drive slowly past. She then began receiving text messages from David.
On St. Patrick’s Day 2012 Dawn left her house to go to a bar. She heard David’s Ford Mustang. She began to run. David pulled up, stopped his vehicle and began running after her. He insisted on talking with Dawn about “stuff.” These encounters diminish Dawn’s sense of security and personal safety. It causes her stress each time David contacts her.

Curtis v. Ballstaedt, Linn Co. No. CVCV073970, Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law, and Ruling at *1-2 (Iowa Dist.Ct. Nov. 4, 2012).

Peters sent a copy of the District Court’s order to Debtor. Debtor responded by letter to Peters, requesting that Peters inform Debtor if he planned to seek relief from the automatic stay regarding the injunction order. Debtor stated that he had filed for bankruptcy and he be[590]*590lieved the injunction order was void because it violated the automatic stay. Peters responded that he did not believe the injunction order was covered by the automatic stay. Debtor responded again restating his belief that the injunction order was void.

On November 9, 2012 Debtor fíled a Motion for New Trial and Motion to Vacate the Ruling in Linn County District Court. That court denied Debtor’s motions. Debtor then filed a Motion to Enlarge Findings in the same court. The court denied the motion.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

George E. Robb, jr
S.D. Florida, 2025
Stieg v. Hanson (In re Stieg)
509 B.R. 148 (S.D. Ohio, 2014)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
500 B.R. 586, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ballstaedt-v-curtis-in-re-ballstaedt-ianb-2013.