BERMAN, DELEVE, KUCHAN & CHAPMAN, LLC v. 417 RENTALS, LLC

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 20, 2020
DocketSD36233
StatusPublished

This text of BERMAN, DELEVE, KUCHAN & CHAPMAN, LLC v. 417 RENTALS, LLC (BERMAN, DELEVE, KUCHAN & CHAPMAN, LLC v. 417 RENTALS, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
BERMAN, DELEVE, KUCHAN & CHAPMAN, LLC v. 417 RENTALS, LLC, (Mo. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Missouri Court of Appeals Southern District Division One

BERMAN, DELEVE, KUCHAN & CHAPMAN, LLC, ) ) Appellant, ) ) vs. ) No. SD36233 ) 417 RENTALS, LLC, ) FILED: April 20, 2020 ) Respondent. )

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF GREENE COUNTY

Honorable Jason R. Brown, Judge

REVERSED

The law firm Berman, Deleve, Kuchan & Chapman, LLC (“BDKC”) appeals the circuit

court’s judgment setting aside the registration of an order (“the order”) by the United States

Bankruptcy Court for the Western District of Missouri (“the bankruptcy court”) awarding BDKC

fees and expenses in the bankruptcy proceeding of 417 Rentals, LLC (“417 Rentals”). BDKC

contends that, by setting aside the registration, the circuit court misapplied the law in the

following two respects: first, because 417 Rentals failed to comply with the provisions of

section 511.760 and Rule 74.14 for setting aside a foreign judgment registration, 1 the trial court

had no authority to set aside the registration; and second, because the order was final and

1 All statutory references are to RSMo (2016). All rule references are to Missouri Court Rules (2019).

1 enforceable under federal law, the circuit court’s finding that it was not entitled to full faith and

credit was erroneous. Finding merit in BDKC’s first point and that its resolution is dispositive of

this appeal, we reverse the circuit court’s judgment. 2

Factual and Procedural Background

The following facts are uncontested. On January 18, 2019, BDKC filed in the circuit

court an “AFFIDAVIT OF JUDGMENT CREDITOR AND NOTICE TO JUDGMENT

DEBTOR” (“the registration affidavit”), which identified BDKC as the “Judgment Creditor”

and 417 Rentals as the “Judgment Debtor[,]” and contained a certification that a true copy was

sent by certified mail, return receipt requested, to 417 Rentals’ registered agent. As referenced in

the registration affidavit as being attached thereto, a copy of the order was attached to the

registration affidavit accompanied by an “Exemplification Certificate” captioned in 417 Rentals’

bankruptcy case and signed by the clerk of the bankruptcy court and the bankruptcy judge

(“Judge Norton”) that certified, among other things, that the attached copy of the order was a true

copy of the order “now remaining among the records of the court.” The order, captioned in the

417 Rentals’ bankruptcy case and entered and filed on January 16, 2019, stated that it was the

“Order of the Court SUSTAINING IN PART the Application for Compensation for Ronal S.

Weiss, Joel Pelofsky and the firm of [BDKC] in the amount of – Fees: $146,848.50, Expenses:

$13,980.57.”

2 417 Rentals filed a motion to dismiss this appeal on the grounds that first, BDKC waived its right to appeal because it did not file an appeal in the bankruptcy court; and second, the order was not a final judgment of the bankruptcy court and, therefore, there was no predicate judgment from which to appeal. BDKC, however, is appealing from the circuit court judgment setting aside a foreign judgment registration. “An order setting aside a registration constitutes a final judgment in favor of the judgment debtor[,]” section 511.760.10, and “[a]n appeal may be taken by either party from judgment or order sustaining or setting aside a registration on the same terms as an appeal from a judgment or order of the same court[,]” section 511.760.11. 417 Rentals’ motion to dismiss is denied.

2 On January 25, 2019, a “Notice of Filing of Foreign Judgment” was filed by the clerk

of the circuit court and mailed to 417 Rentals. That notice stated, “Enclosed is a copy of a

foreign judgment registered in this court under Supreme Court Rule 74.14. This notice is being

mailed to you in compliance with Supreme Court Rule 74.14(c).” Beginning in February 2019,

BDKC proceeded to engage in garnishment and execution proceedings against 417 Rentals.

More than five months later, on July 15, 2019, 417 Rentals filed a motion, with

supporting exhibits, asserting four separate grounds as to why the registration should be set aside

(“motion to set aside the registration”). The first ground, proffered under the heading,

“MOTION TO SET ASIDE AND VACATE FOREIGN JUDGMENT[,]” asserted that

because the order was not a final judgment of the bankruptcy court, it was not a “foreign

judgment” entitled to full faith and credit by the courts of the State of Missouri under Rule

74.14. 3

BDKC filed a response and then a supplemental response opposing 417 Rentals’ motion

to set aside the registration. BDKC argued, in pertinent part, that none of the proffered grounds

raised by 417 Rentals provided a legal basis for setting aside the registration.

3 In its first point, BDKC challenges each of the four grounds asserted by 417 Rentals in its motion to set aside the registration, claiming that none provide a legal basis for setting aside the registration. 417 Rentals’ second, third, and fourth grounds, asserted under Rule 74.06(a), Rule 74.06(d), and section 511.200, respectively, were not addressed in the circuit court’s judgment. In its brief, 417 Rentals omits any substantive argument that any of these latter three grounds support the circuit court’s judgment. Rather, 417 Rentals’ only tangentially mentions them in passing asserting that [BDKC] rambles on about Rule 74.06 pleading and proof and the trial court’s misapplication of facts and law. [BDKC’s] arguments in this respect are without merit. [BDKC] goes to great lengths to distort the specific facts and issues and [BDKC’s] argument continues as a “smoke and mirrors” approach designed to “muddy the waters.” [BDKC] tries to confuse and divert this Court’s attention from the relevant issues and actual facts of the case because they do not favor [BDKC]. Instead, the entirety of 417 Rentals’ argument on this point is directed exclusively to its contention that the order was not a final judgment of the bankruptcy court as alleged in the first ground of its motion to set aside the registration and as expressly addressed in the circuit court’s judgment. Because 417 Rentals has chosen to narrowly confine the parties’ dispute to whether the circuit court erred in setting aside the registration on this ground alone, we accordingly eliminate any potential confusion by limiting our discussion to that ground and will not divert our attention to any of 417 Rentals’ other alleged grounds in its motion to set aside the registration.

3 Ultimately, the circuit court entered its judgment setting aside the registration on the basis

of the first of the four grounds proffered by 417 Rentals in its motion to set aside the registration.

Addressing its reasoning, the circuit court stated as follows:

Court further reviews briefs of counsel, Exhibit(s) and [case law] cited. Court notes the subject Order sought to be registered does not state as to whom or which party the Order applies; does not order any party to pay any amount; has not been affirmed or approved by any other court; was subsequently described by the Bankruptcy Judge as “not a final determination” and “reviewable,” pending a subsequent determination. The Order is not entitled to any greater weight in this Court than it has or had in the Bankruptcy Court which rendered it.

The Court thus finds [BDKC]’s [case law] is distinguishable from the procedural facts here. The subject Order is thus not entitled to full faith and credit. For these and other reasons cited by [417 Rentals], [BDKC]’s petition for registration of foreign judgment is now respectfully set aside and otherwise denied.

BDKC timely appeals the circuit court’s judgment setting aside the registration.

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BERMAN, DELEVE, KUCHAN & CHAPMAN, LLC v. 417 RENTALS, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berman-deleve-kuchan-chapman-llc-v-417-rentals-llc-moctapp-2020.