Brawders v. County of Ventura (In Re Brawders)

503 F.3d 856, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 21731, 2007 WL 2596468
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 11, 2007
Docket05-55988
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 503 F.3d 856 (Brawders v. County of Ventura (In Re Brawders)) 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
Brawders v. County of Ventura (In Re Brawders), 503 F.3d 856, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 21731, 2007 WL 2596468 (9th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

Opinion by Judge PAEZ; Dissent by Judge KLEINFELD

PAEZ, Circuit Judge:

Robert and Cheryl Brawders (“the Brawders”) appeal from a decision of the Bankruptcy Appellate Panel (“BAP”) reversing in part and remanding a bankruptcy court judgment which awarded them damages for the County of Ventura’s (“County”) violation of an automatic stay in the Brawders’ prior Chapter 13 proceeding. The bankruptcy court had determined in a summary judgment ruling that the Chapter 13 Plan (“Plan”) discharged the Brawders’ liability for pre-petition property taxes owed the County, including the amount secured by a lien on the Braw-ders’ real property. As a result of this ruling, the court’s damages award included a refund for overpayments of pre-petition taxes in excess of the amount paid under the Plan. The BAP agreed that the County was liable for damages resulting from its violation of the automatic stay, but held that the Plan did not alter the County’s lien rights to recover pre-petition taxes that remained unpaid. Therefore, the BAP held that the Brawders were not due a refund of the taxes paid in excess of the confirmed Plan amount.

We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 158(d)(1), and we affirm. 1 We adopt as our own the BAP’s thorough and well-reasoned opinion, 325 B.R. 405 (B.A.P. 9th Cir.2005), attached as an Appendix. See Appendix infra. We further elaborate upon the facts of the case and address the effect of the parties’ stipulation in the current Chapter 13 adversary proceeding on the County’s right to enforce its lien to recover the pre-petition taxes that were not paid fully by the prior Plan payments. We conclude that, in light of the bankruptcy court’s summary judgment ruling, the stipulation did not affect the County’s right to recover pre-petition taxes. 2

*860 I.

The Brawders owned a house in Ventura County. They fell behind on their property tax, mortgage, and other payments, and, as a result, filed a Chapter 13 petition on February 8, 1995 in bankruptcy court in the Central District of California, No. ND 95-10521 RR. The Brawders proposed a Plan that identified the County as a Class Two creditor with a tax indebtedness secured by the Brawders’ property. The Plan stated that the Brawders were in default to the County in the amount of $9,350, and proposed to repay the County $11,109.21, including interest, over a period of 60 months. The Plan provided that Class II Secured Creditors would retain their lien rights. The County received notice of the Plan by mail, but did not timely object. 3 Bankruptcy Judge Robin Riblet ordered the Plan confirmed on March 31, 1995. 4 As a result of the Plan confirmation, the automatic stay remained in effect. See 11 U.S.C. § 362(c)(1). The Chapter 13 Trustee made payments to the County pursuant to the Plan beginning April 28, 1995, and the County accepted them.

In June 1997, the County violated the automatic stay by sending two notices, “Notice of Impending Tax Collector’s Power to Sell” to the Brawders and Green-Point Mortgage Funding, Inc. (“Green-Point”), the holder of the first deed of trust on the Brawders’ home. One was in the amount of $30,264.32 and the other, erroneously, in the amount of approximately six billion dollars. The Brawders contacted the County and were told to pay $1,622.20 in post-petition taxes. They did so.

In January 1998, GreenPoint contacted the office of the Chapter 13 Trustee and was advised that the only taxes remaining to be paid to the County via the Plan were in the amount of $4,273.01. The following month, GreenPoint issued a check for $26,-380.88 — the total unpaid taxes and interest claimed by the County less the amount due under the Plan.

GreenPoint then sought to foreclose on the Brawders’ property to recoup the amount it paid the County. 5 It moved to have the automatic stay modified so that it could commence foreclosure proceedings. The Brawders and GreenPoint stipulated that the Brawders would pay GreenPoint the amount it paid to the County, but the Brawders later defaulted on the stipulation. GreenPoint again moved for relief from the automatic stay. Its request was granted in November 1999, and Green-Point initiated foreclosure proceedings.

As a result, the Brawders filed a second Chapter 13 bankruptcy petition to stop the foreclosure sale on June 27, 2000 in the *861 Central District of California, No. SV00-15661KL. The second plan was approved on December 11, 2000. In this bankruptcy proceeding, the Brawders filed an adversary complaint against both the County of Ventura Tax Collector and GreenPoint. In their second amended complaint, the Brawders alleged claims for: (1) declaratory relief and an accounting against Green-Point and the County; (2) damages for violation of the automatic stay against GreenPoint and the County, for Green-Point paying, and the County accepting payment on, the Brawders’ past due property taxes; (2) injunctive relief and an order voiding the notice of default, notice of sale, and foreclosure sale by Green-Point; (4) damages for the County’s violation of the automatic stay by its issuing of the notices of tax sale and other acts demanding payments of pre-petition taxes; (5) damages for the County’s maintenance of a fraudulent claim seeking overpay-ments; and (6) damages for abuse of process by the County. 6 The County moved for summary judgment. In support of its motion, the County argued that the confirmed Plan did not remove or alter its secured tax lien, see Cal. Rev. & T.Code § 2187, and therefore that it could properly initiate foreclosure proceedings to collect the balance of the pre-petition taxes owed.

The bankruptcy court ruled on the motion for summary judgment on April 8, 2002. It granted summary judgment in favor of the County on the second, fifth and sixth claims for relief, and — although the Brawders had not moved for summary judgment — granted summary judgment in favor of the Brawders on the fourth claim for violation of the automatic stay. In a corresponding “Memorandum on Legal Issue: The Effect of the Provision for the County’s Claim and Lien Interest in the Plan Confirmed in Case No. ND 95-10521 RR,” filed April 8, 2002, the court, in rejecting the County’s legal argument, determined that the Plan, which had been confirmed without objection by the County, “provided for payment in full of the County’s claim as a class 2 secured claim of approximately $11,000.” The court therefore concluded that “the County’s pre-petition claim against the Debtors has been paid in full and the real property subject to said lien revested in the Debtors free of any lien interest held by the County on account of its pre-petition claims.”

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Bluebook (online)
503 F.3d 856, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 21731, 2007 WL 2596468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brawders-v-county-of-ventura-in-re-brawders-ca9-2007.