Bank of Cushing v. Vaughan (In Re Vaughan)

311 B.R. 573, 2004 Bankr. LEXIS 887, 2004 WL 1532194
CourtBankruptcy Appellate Panel of the Tenth Circuit
DecidedJuly 7, 2004
DocketBAP No. WO-03-094. Bankruptcy No. 99-17361-NLJ
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 311 B.R. 573 (Bank of Cushing v. Vaughan (In Re Vaughan)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Bankruptcy Appellate Panel of the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bank of Cushing v. Vaughan (In Re Vaughan), 311 B.R. 573, 2004 Bankr. LEXIS 887, 2004 WL 1532194 (bap10 2004).

Opinion

OPINION

BROWN, Bankruptcy Judge.

The Appellant in this case obtained a partial summary judgment against the *576 Debtors, determining that its debt was nondischargeable under Section 523(a)(2) of the Bankruptcy Code. 2 It then obtained relief from stay to collect on the judgment and recorded a lien on the Debtors’ homestead. The Debtors in turn filed a Section 522(f) motion to avoid the Appellant’s lien, which the bankruptcy court granted. The Appellant contends that the bankruptcy court erred when it allowed the Debtors to utilize Section 522(f) to avoid its lien and, among other things, has asked this Court to consider (1) whether Section 522(f) may be used to set aside a lien that arises post-petition in connection with a nondischarge-ability judgment; (2) whether attorneys’ fees earned post-petition in connection with the nondischargeability proceeding constitute a pre-petition debt; and (3) whether the parties’ stipulated agreement as to the amount of the judgment rendered the lien recorded after the judgment a “consensual lien.”

1. Background

Prior to the bankruptcy filing, Appellees (the “Debtors”) executed guaranty agreements in favor of Appellant Bank of Cush-ing (the “Bank”), to guarantee the indebtedness of Americare U.S.A. Limited (“Americare”). When Americare defaulted on its loan obligations, the Bank made a demand on the Debtors. In the course of negotiating a repayment arrangement, the Debtors provided the Bank with a personal financial statement. Eventually the Bank and the Debtors entered into a settlement agreement, which allowed the Debtors to repay their guaranty obligations over time, on a secured basis. They did not complete their repayment plan, but instead filed bankruptcy.

The Bank filed an adversary proceeding against the Debtors, objecting to both the dischargeability of its debt under 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(2)(A) & (B) and to the general discharge of the Debtors under Section 727. 3 The Bank asserted, among other things, that the Debtors had omitted numerous assets from their personal financial statement and that the Bank had been defrauded into entering into the settlement agreement with the Debtors. The Debtors’ Chapter 7 trustee filed a separate proceeding, also objecting to the Debtors’ general discharge. The two actions were consolidated “for purposes of administration and trial only.” 4 The bankruptcy court later granted partial summary judgment on the Bank’s Section 523(a)(2) claims in its January 10, 2002 Order. It reserved any ruling on the Bank’s attorneys fees incurred in connection with the adversary proceeding. In its August 21, 2002 Order, the bankruptcy court awarded substantial fees to the Bank.

The Bank and the Debtors alike proceeded as if the August 21, 2002 Order represented a final judgment. The Debtors appealed the Order, but missed the filing deadline for the appeal by fourteen days. The Bank requested relief from the automatic stay for purposes of collection on the nondischargeable debt set forth in the August 21, 2002 Order. In a sur-reply to the Bank’s stay motion, the Debtors requested, as an alternative form of relief, that the bankruptcy court certify the August 21, 2002 Order as a final judgment, pursuant to Bankruptcy Rule 7054. “This *577 was the bankruptcy court’s first indication that the Debtors did not consider the August 21 Order to constitute a final and immediately appealable judgment.” The bankruptcy court declined to certify its August 21, 2002 Order as final. It then granted the Bank’s request to lift the automatic stay (the “Stay Order”) for purposes of allowing it to collect on its debt.

The Debtors appealed the Stay Order to the district court. The District Court vacated the Stay Order on the basis that it had been premised on the erroneous legal conclusion that the August 21, 2002 Order was a final order (the “District Court Stay Order”). Because the bankruptcy court had not yet certified the order under Bankruptcy Rule 7054, the district court found that there was no final judgment on which the Bank could execute.

Prior to the district court ruling, the Bank recorded a judgment lien against the Debtors’ primary residence. 5 The Debtors filed a motion to avoid this lien under Section 522(f). The bankruptcy court granted this motion (the “Section 522(f) Order”), setting aside the Bank’s judgment lien, finding that even though the attorney fees awarded to the Bank in the August 21, 2002 Order represented fees earned post-petition, the obligation to pay the fees was incurred pre-petition and, therefore, was a pre-petition debt that gave rise to a judicial lien that was avoidable under Section 522(f) because it impaired the Debtors’ homestead exemption. 6 In the present appeal, the Bank seeks to overturn this Section 522(f) Order.

Subsequent to the oral arguments on this appeal, the bankruptcy court certified the August 21, 2002 Order as final for purposes of appeal. 7 The Debtors have appealed the underlying judgment. In oral arguments, the parties informed this Court that the Trustee’s Section 727 discharge claims remain pending, but that the bankruptcy court has taken under advisement summary judgment motions on the Trustee’s Section 727 claims.

II. Appellate Jurisdiction

The Debtors filed a timely notice of appeal under Fed. R. Bankr.P. 8002. The Bankruptcy Court’s Order of November 21, 2003, granting the Debtors’ Motion to avoid the judicial lien of the Bank, is a final, appealable order for purposes of this Court’s jurisdiction. 8 With the consent of the parties, this Court has jurisdiction to hear appeals from “final judgments, orders, and decrees” of bankruptcy courts within the Tenth Circuit. 9 Neither party has opted to have this appeal heard by the United States District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma and, therefore, they are deemed to have consented to the jurisdiction of this Court. 10

III. Standard of Review

Where, as here, the salient facts are undisputed, we conduct a de novo re *578 view of the lower court’s conclusions of law. 11 When conducting a de novo review, the appellate court is not constrained by the trial court’s conclusions, and may affirm the trial court on any legal ground supported by the record. 12

IV. Discussion

A. Debtors May Use Section 522(f) to Set Aside Liens on Certain Non-dischargeable Judgments

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Bluebook (online)
311 B.R. 573, 2004 Bankr. LEXIS 887, 2004 WL 1532194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-cushing-v-vaughan-in-re-vaughan-bap10-2004.