Chicago Truck Drivers v. Brotherhood Labor Leasing

207 F.3d 500, 2000 WL 303021
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMarch 24, 2000
Docket99-1913
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 207 F.3d 500 (Chicago Truck Drivers v. Brotherhood Labor Leasing) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chicago Truck Drivers v. Brotherhood Labor Leasing, 207 F.3d 500, 2000 WL 303021 (8th Cir. 2000).

Opinion

ALSOP, District Judge.

Appellants, Chicago Truck Drivers, Helpers and Warehouse Workers Union Pension Fund and its present trustees (the “Fund”), moved before a magistrate judge for certification of facts supporting a finding of contempt against the Appellees and their sole officer and shareholder, Steven Gula. The magistrate judge denied the motion, finding that the Fund was “unable to produce evidence sufficient for a finding that the defendants have assets for making the judgment debt payments.” We remand.

*503 I.

The Fund sued Gula’s corporations, but not Gula personally, for interim payments of withdrawal liability under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA), as amended by the Multiemployer Pension Plan Amendments Act of 1980, 29‘U.S.C. §§ 1381-1405. The parties consented to have a magistrate judge 2 hear and decide the case. On December 4, 1996, the district court granted the Fund’s motion for summary judgment and ordered the Appellees to commence making interim payments within sixty days.

When the Appellees failed to pay as ordered, the Fund sought to amend the judgment to require that the Appellees make all past-due interim payments plus interest. The Fund’s motion also sought attorneys’ fees and prospective relief, in the form of an order directing that the Appellees make future interim payments in accordance with a schedule determined by the court. On June 25, 1997, the district court granted the Fund’s motion and issued an amended judgment that required Appellees to pay all past-due amounts, attorneys’ fees and expenses, and future quarterly interim payments on a prescribed schedule commencing on August 1, 1997 and continuing through February 1, 2003. Both the initial and amended judgments contained no reference to either Gula specifically or the Appellees’ officers or other agents generieally.

On March 18, 1998, this Court affirmed without comment the judgments of the district court. Chicago Truck Drivers Pension Fund v. Brotherhood Labor Leasing, 141 F.3d 1167 (8th Cir.1998) (table decision). 3 The Supreme Court subsequently returned Appellees’ petition for certiorari as untimely filed.

In November 1998, having received none of the court-ordered payments, the Fund filed a motion for contempt and sanctions against the corporate Appellees and Gula personally. The district court issued an order to show cause why they should not be held in contempt. At the hearing on the show cause order, the court took no testimony but instead ordered that Gula submit to a judgment debtor examination by way of deposition. See FED. R. CIV. P. 69(a). In ordering the deposition, the court observed that the Fund was “entitled to a fair opportunity to locate the assets of the judgment debtors, and to levy execution of them to the extent the law allows.”

The Fund took Gula’s deposition on February 9, 1999. He acknowledged that the Appellees’ corporate books and accounts had been his responsibility since 1992. He confirmed that he prepared and signed the 1997 consolidated federal tax return for Appellee MFI Leasing Company (“MFI”) and its subsidiaries. 4 That tax return’s balance sheet showed a $182,000 cash and cash equivalents balance as of December 31, 1997. Gula testified that he calculated this amount from MFI’s bank statement. When asked to produce the statement, Gula replied that he had a practice of destroying all bank statements and canceled checks after filing the tax returns, “because of space.”

The same tax return showed an $89,000 cash value life insurance balance as of December 31, 1997. Gula testified that he cashed out the policies sometime in April or May of 1998 — after losing the appeal in this case — and endorsed the checks over to the Appellees’ lawyers.

Gula also testified that one of the corporate Appellees received “somewhere *504 around” $26,000 from a mortgage debtor “to generate cash to pay legal fees ... somewhere in like April to August of ’97.” When asked what he did with this money, Gula replied that he wrote checks, from that and other of the Appellees’ accounts, for “over the last few years, hundreds of thousands of dollars for attorneys fees.” He estimated that the total amount of legal fees he paid was “a little bit more than three hundred thousand dollars.”

Following Gula’s deposition, the district court resumed its earlier hearing on the motion for contempt. Appellees’ counsel essentially conceded that the Fund had established the following: (1) Appellees had made none of the ordered payments, and (2) at the time the payments were due, the Appellees had the financial resources to make at least some of those payments. Counsel explained that the Appellees, relying on the advice of their then-lawyers, used those resources to pay their legal fees instead.

The Fund presented this evidence concerning the Appellees’ assets, and the dissipation of those assets. The Fund then rested, saying it had “no further evidence at this time.” The court asked defense counsel if it had any evidence “in response to the pending motion.” Defense counsel replied, “I don’t either.”

On February 17, 1999, the district court issued a two-page order denying the contempt motion. In that order, the court wrote:

During the pendency of the motion, the Court allowed the plaintiffs to conduct discovery of available information about the defendants’ assets. Following this discovery, plaintiffs have been unable to produce evidence sufficient for a finding that the defendants have assets for making the judgment debt payments but did not do so.

The Fund appeals from this order.

II.

We review the denial of a contempt order for abuse of discretion. Independent Fed’n of Flight Attendants v. Cooper, 134 F.3d 917 (8th Cir.1998). The party moving for contempt sanctions bears the burden of proving facts warranting a civil contempt order by clear and convincing evidence. Id.

The Fund argues that the district court abused its discretion by improperly placing the burden on the Fund to prove that the Appellees had a present ability to pay the amounts ordered. It argues that established contempt law only requires the mov-ant to show that the alleged contemnors violated a court order, and the alleged contemnors bear the burden of showing their inability to comply.

The Appellees respond that the district court, in a proper exercise of its discretion, chose to enforce its payment orders through judgment debtor discovery and execution. They contend that the district court properly concluded that use of its contempt power would be “premature.” They also argue that they sufficiently established a present inability to comply with the payment orders. Finally, they argue that they reasonably relied on their prior counsel’s advice to pay counsel instead of the Fund.

III.

One of the overarching goals of a court’s contempt power is to ensure that litigants do not anoint themselves with the power to adjudge the validity of orders to which they are subject. United States v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
207 F.3d 500, 2000 WL 303021, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-truck-drivers-v-brotherhood-labor-leasing-ca8-2000.