Celeste G. Broughton

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. North Carolina
DecidedAugust 31, 2020
Docket14-07268
StatusUnknown

This text of Celeste G. Broughton (Celeste G. Broughton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Celeste G. Broughton, (N.C. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF NORTH CAROLINA RALEIGH DIVISION IN RE: C/A No. 14-07268-5-DRD Celeste G. Broughton, Chapter 7 ORDER Debtor.

This matter is before the Court on the following: (1) Application for Compensation for Walter L. Hinson, attorney for the trustee [Docket No. 534]; (2) Application for Compensation for Walter L. Hinson, chapter 7 trustee [Docket No. 536]; (3) Motion to Disqualify Judge David Duncan filed by the debtor Celeste Broughton [Docket No. 543]; (4) Objection to Payment of a Claim to Charles Pace and an amendment to the objection filed by Mrs. Broughton [Docket No. 545 and 548]; and (5) Objection to Claim of Aldridge for Payment and an amendment to the objection filed by Mrs. Broughton [Docket No. 546 and 549]. The Court held a hearing on all matters on August 5, 2020. At the conclusion of the hearing, the Court ruled on all matters. The Court now issues this order. BACKGROUND This bankruptcy case follows years of domestic litigation between Mrs. Broughton and her ex-husband, Robert B. Broughton, that began in the early 1970s and led to litigation with his probate estate. In connection with the parties’ divorce, Mr. Broughton deeded real property located at 2529 White Oak Road, Raleigh, North Carolina (the “Property”) to Mrs. Broughton. After Mr. Broughton died in 2007, Mrs. Broughton became involved in litigation with his estate - and Wells Fargo Bank (“Wells Fargo”), the co-executor of his estate, seeking increased alimony:

Due to Mrs. Broughton’s tactics in the estate litigation, including filing frivolous pleadings and violating court orders, the state court entered a total of eight judgments for sanctions against Mrs. Broughton. Mrs. Broughton borrowed. money secured by liens on the Property to pay some of the judgments. Mrs. Broughton was unable to pay the final two judgments, and filed her bankruptcy case the day prior to a scheduled execution sale of the Property. Mrs. Broughton’s bankruptcy case has proceeded in largely the same fashion as the state court litigation. The case has lasted nearly six years. The docket in the bankruptcy case currently contains 561 entries. Additionally, while the case was pending in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of North Carolina after withdrawal of the reference, over 200 entries were entered on the District Court docket. There have been adversary proceedings, civil litigation, and appeals. Including the undersigned, nine judges have been assigned to the bankruptcy case. Mrs. Broughton has filed ten appeals, often appealing numerous orders at one time. Mrs. Broughton, who has represented herself throughout this case, originally filed her chapter 13 bankruptcy petition on December 15, 2014. Her case was converted to one under chapter 7 on July 14, 2015 and Mr. Hinson was appointed as the chapter 7 trustee. On August 6, 2015, Mr. Hinson filed a motion to sell the Property free and clear of liens. Over the course of the next five years, Mrs. Broughton vehemently fought the sale of the Property. Mrs. Broughton’s arguments focus almost solely on the dispute with her ex-husband, his estate, Wells Fargo, and the attorneys involved. Mrs. Broughton’s main argument, repeated innumerable times throughout this case, is that these parties, along with the trustee and the judges assigned to her bankruptcy case, engaged in a conspiracy to deprive her of the Property. Mrs. Broughton has advanced a variety of additional arguments to retain the Property, including that the Property was

fully exempt pursuant to bankruptcy statutes relating to domestic support obligations, that orders entered by the judges in this case are void ab initio due to fraud, and often, that she did not receive notice of hearings or service of pleadings. She also engaged in extrajudicial efforts, such as reentering the Property, despite orders requiring her to vacate and remain away from the Property, posting no trespassing signs on the Property, and contacting potential purchasers of the Property to discourage them from purchasing. Those efforts resulted in two different judges finding Mrs. Broughton in civil contempt and ordering her into the custody of the United States Marshal. In the latter instance, due to her repeated violations of court orders and her refusal to agree to comply with court orders, Mrs. Broughton was incarcerated for a period of approximately a month and a half. As a result of her continuous frivolous and inflammatory filings and her relentless interference with Mr. Hinson’s attempts to sell the Property, the Court also imposed a prefiling injunction, barring Mrs. Broughton from filing any documents relating to the Property, the sale of the Property, or any other matters regarding the trustee and his professionals or the purchasers of the Property, unless she obtained prior authorization from the Court. [Docket No. 466]. This Court was not the first to impose a prefiling injunction on Mrs. Broughton. In September 2009, Wake County Chief District Court Judge Rader issued an order prohibiting Mrs. Broughton from filing documents relating to her domestic litigation. That order was later expanded by Superior Court Judge Titus due to continued filings by Mrs. Broughton in violation of Judge Rader’s order. United States District Court Judge Margaret B. Seymour also imposed a prefiling injunction in Broughton v. Gregory on October 21, 2019. [District Court Case No. 5:19-cv-00066-S, Docket No. 23].

Ultimately, Mrs. Broughton’s attempts to undermine the efforts of the trustee in her bankruptcy case were unsuccessful. Mr. Hinson obtained a contract for the sale of the Property for $2.1 million dollars—an amount sufficient to pay all creditors and provide a significant surplus in excess of $315,000.00 to Mrs. Broughton. The sale of the Property was completed in October 2019. Mr. Hinson filed his final report and his applications for compensation on June 18, 2020. The Court’s rulings on the matters heard at the August 5 hearings are set forth below. ANALYSIS 1. Motion to Disqualify Judge David Duncan The Honorable Margaret B. Seymour was assigned to this case on April 9, 2019. The undersigned was designated to hold bankruptcy court in the Eastern District of North Carolina by the Fourth Circuit on April 17, 2019. [Docket No. 402]. Judge Seymour then vacated the withdrawal of reference and referred the case to the undersigned on May 6, 2019. [Docket No. 399]. Mrs. Broughton filed her motion to disqualify the undersigned on June 29, 2020. The motion states that the undersigned is involved in a criminal conspiracy with other judges, creditors, and the trustee. The motion details various crimes Mrs. Broughton alleges the undersigned has committed in connection with her case, and concludes that as a result of these crimes, the undersigned should be disqualified. Additionally, Mrs. Broughton complains of the time she spent incarcerated and the inhumane conditions she claims to have endured during the incarceration, following a finding of civil contempt. This is not the first request for disqualification of the undersigned made by Mrs. Broughton. On June 14, 2019, Mrs. Broughton filed a document entitled “Motion for Judge Duncan to Obey 28 USC 455(a).” [Docket No. 428]. That document contained a lengthy recitation of Mrs. Broughton’s allegations of criminal activity by United States District Judge

Reidinger in connection with her case and goes on to state that Judge Duncan’s perspective on the case is “exactly that of Reidinger” and that Judge Duncan is “intellectually a virtual twin of Reidinger in his relevant attitudes to the issues of this case.” The June 14 motion states that the undersigned has an appearance of partiality and that he is required to recuse himself. On June 26, 2019, after a hearing on the matter held June 21, 2019, the Court issued an order denying the motion. [Docket No. 443].

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Celeste G. Broughton, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/celeste-g-broughton-nceb-2020.