Bradley Taggart v. Shelley Lorenzen

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedNovember 24, 2020
Docket16-35402
StatusPublished

This text of Bradley Taggart v. Shelley Lorenzen (Bradley Taggart v. Shelley Lorenzen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bradley Taggart v. Shelley Lorenzen, (9th Cir. 2020).

Opinion

FOR PUBLICATION

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

IN RE BRADLEY WESTON TAGGART, No. 16-35402 Debtor, D.C. No. 3:12-cv-00236- SHELLEY A. LORENZEN, Executor of MO Estate of Stuart Brown; TERRY W. EMMERT; KEITH JEHNKE; SHERWOOD PARK BUSINESS CENTER, LLC, Appellants,

v.

BRADLEY WESTON TAGGART, Appellee. 2 IN RE TAGGART

IN RE BRADLEY WESTON TAGGART, No. 16-60032 Debtor, BAP No. 15-1158 BRADLEY WESTON TAGGART, Appellant,

SHELLEY A. LORENZEN, Executor of Estate of Stuart Brown; TERRY W. EMMERT; KEITH JEHNKE; SHERWOOD PARK BUSINESS CENTER, LLC, Appellees.

IN RE BRADLEY WESTON TAGGART, No. 16-60033 Debtor, BAP No. 15-1119 BRADLEY WESTON TAGGART, Appellant,

TERRY W. EMMERT; KEITH JEHNKE; SHERWOOD PARK BUSINESS CENTER, LLC; SHELLEY A. LORENZEN, Executor of Estate of Stuart Brown, Appellees. IN RE TAGGART 3

IN RE BRADLEY WESTON TAGGART, No. 16-60039 Debtor, BAP No. 15-1119 SHELLEY A. LORENZEN, Executor of the Estate of Stuart Brown, Appellant,

BRADLEY WESTON TAGGART, Appellee.

IN RE BRADLEY WESTON TAGGART, No. 16-60040 Debtor, BAP No. 15-1119 TERRY W. EMMERT; KEITH JEHNKE; SHERWOOD PARK BUSINESS CENTER, LLC; Appellants,

BRADLEY WESTON TAGGART, Appellee. 4 IN RE TAGGART

IN RE BRADLEY WESTON TAGGART, No. 16-60042 Debtor, BAP No. 15-1158 SHELLEY A. LORENZEN, Executor of the Estate of Stuart Brown, Appellant,

IN RE BRADLEY WESTON TAGGART, No. 16-60043 Debtor, BAP No. 15-1158 TERRY W. EMMERT; KEITH JEHNKE; SHERWOOD PARK BUSINESS CENTER, LLC; OPINION Appellants,

BRADLEY WESTON TAGGART, Appellee. IN RE TAGGART 5

On Remand from the United States Supreme Court

Argued and Submitted June 16, 2020 San Francisco, California

Filed November 24, 2020

Before: Edward Leavy, Richard A. Paez, and Carlos T. Bea, Circuit Judges.

Opinion by Judge Bea

SUMMARY *

Bankruptcy

On remand from the Supreme Court, the panel affirmed the Bankruptcy Appellate Panel’s decision reversing the bankruptcy court’s finding of civil contempt and vacating its award of civil contempt sanctions against a debtor’s former business partners for violation of the discharge injunction.

The debtor filed his bankruptcy petition during state court litigation brought against him by his former partners. After the debtor lost non-monetary claims in the state court, the partners moved for attorney’s fees incurred after the filing of the bankruptcy petition, arguing that an exception to the discharge injunction applied because the debtor “returned to the fray” by participating in a post-trial hearing to litigate the terms of his expulsion from the partnership.

* This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader. 6 IN RE TAGGART

The bankruptcy court held the partners in civil contempt for seeking attorney’s fees in the state court.

In a prior decision, the panel affirmed the BAP’s decision because the partners had a good faith belief that the debtor had returned to the fray. The Supreme Court vacated and remanded for further proceedings, holding that an objective, rather than subjective, standard applies, and a court may hold a creditor in civil contempt for violating a discharge order if there is no fair ground of doubt as to whether the order barred the creditor’s conduct. Applying this standard, the panel held that the debtor’s former partners had an objectively reasonable basis to conclude that the debtor might have returned to the fray in the Oregon state court to obtain some economic benefit. The panel therefore affirmed the BAP’s decision to reverse the bankruptcy court’s finding of civil contempt and to vacate the award of civil contempt sanctions. IN RE TAGGART 7

COUNSEL

Daniel L. Geyser (argued), Geyser P.C., Dallas, Texas; John M. Berman, Tigard, Oregon; for Bradley Weston Taggart.

Janet M. Schroer (argued), Hart Wagner LLP, Portland, Oregon; James Ray Streinz, Streinz Law Office, Portland, Oregon, for Shelley Lorenzen.

Hollis Keith McMilan, Hollis K. McMilan P.C., Portland, Oregon; for Terry W. Emmert, Keith Jehnke, and Sherwood Park Business Center LLC.

Michele Miriam Matesi, Emmert International, Clackamas, Oregon, for Terry W. Emmert.

David R. Kuney, Potomac, Maryland, for Amici Curiae The Honorable Eugene Wedoff (Ret.), The Honorable Leif Clark (Ret.), and a Group of Law Professors.

OPINION

BEA, Circuit Judge:

Attempting to pick up, for themselves, the scattered remnants of a soured business relationship, two partners filed an Oregon state court action against the third partner, Bradley Taggart. They sought to expel him from the partnership for misconduct. On the eve of trial, however, Taggart filed a bankruptcy petition, which eventually provided him with a discharge injunction that barred creditors (including his two litigious partners) from collecting any discharged debts and that voided monetary judgments related to any discharged debts. The Oregon state 8 IN RE TAGGART

court correctly dismissed the monetary claims against Taggart, but determined he was a “necessary party” to the non-monetary claims against him and thus denied his motion to be dismissed from the action. Taggart ultimately lost at trial, and the Oregon state court ordered him expelled from the partnership.

The prevailing partners then filed a motion for attorney’s fees incurred after the date that Taggart had filed his bankruptcy petition. While they acknowledged that a bankruptcy discharge injunction generally covers, and thereby precludes, claims for post-bankruptcy petition attorney’s fees, they argued that an exception to the general rule applied: Pursuant to In re Ybarra, 424 F.3d 1018 (9th Cir. 2005), the partners claimed that Taggart had “returned to the fray” in the Oregon state court litigation, after filing his bankruptcy petition, by actively participating in a post- trial hearing to litigate the terms of his impending expulsion. This “return to the fray,” the prevailing partners argued, created an exception to the discharge injunction and made Taggart amenable to a monetary claim for post-petition attorney’s fees. We are tasked with applying a new standard from the Supreme Court to determine whether the prevailing partners had an “objectively reasonable basis” for their conclusion that Taggart had “returned to the fray,” so as to avoid the civil contempt sanctions Taggart seeks on his claim that the partners violated his bankruptcy discharge injunction.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Taggart’s Co-Ownership in SPBC

Taggart, along with partners Terry Emmert and Keith Jehnke, co-owned Sherwood Park Business Center, LLC (“SPBC”), a limited liability company formed by the three IN RE TAGGART 9

partners to develop a small office complex in Oregon. Sherwood Park Bus. Ctr., Ltd. Liab. Co. v. Taggart, 323 P.3d 551, 555 (Or. Ct. App. 2014). Taggart initially served as manager of SPBC and was tasked with securing loans to fund the development project. Id. Ultimately, however, SPBC could not obtain the loans necessary to fund its operation. Saddled with personal financial troubles, Taggart had diverted funds from SPBC for his own personal use. Id. After Emmert and Jehnke discovered Taggart’s misappropriations, they removed him as manager; Taggart then “disappeared for a period of time.” 1 Id.

In need of funds, Taggart sought to liquidate his interest in SPBC, but SPBC’s operating agreement (the “Operating Agreement”) imposed certain selling restrictions such as the right of first refusal for the other partners. Taggart’s attorney John Berman conceived a plan to circumvent these restrictions.

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Bradley Taggart v. Shelley Lorenzen, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bradley-taggart-v-shelley-lorenzen-ca9-2020.