CRS Steam, Inc. v. Engineering Resources, Inc. (In Re CRS Steam, Inc.)

233 B.R. 901, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 578, 34 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 475, 1998 WL 1055171
CourtBankruptcy Appellate Panel of the First Circuit
DecidedMay 19, 1999
DocketBAP MW 98-099
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 233 B.R. 901 (CRS Steam, Inc. v. Engineering Resources, Inc. (In Re CRS Steam, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Bankruptcy Appellate Panel of the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
CRS Steam, Inc. v. Engineering Resources, Inc. (In Re CRS Steam, Inc.), 233 B.R. 901, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 578, 34 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 475, 1998 WL 1055171 (bap1 1999).

Opinion

HAINES, Bankruptcy Judge.

Before the panel is Engineering Resources, Inc.’s appeal of the bankruptcy court’s orders denying its motion for partial summary judgment and entering default and default judgment against it in an adversary proceeding initiated by co-plaintiffs (and affiliated Chapter 11 debtors) CRS Steam, Inc. and Thomas F. LeBlanc. For the reasons set forth below, we vacate the default judgment and remand for further proceedings.

Background

The debtors’ voluntary Chapter 11 petitions followed closely on the heels of adverse rulings entered by the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit in litigation with Engineering Resources, Inc. (“ERI”). Following a jury determination that CRS Steam and LeBlanc had misappropriated ERI’s trade secrets and had used those secrets wrongfully to obtain two patents, the District Court entered judgment against CRS Steam and LeBlanc for $1,150,000 (comprised of compensatory and punitive damages), enjoined them from further utilizing ERI’s secrets, and ordered LeBlanc to assign the patents to ERI.

The District Court’s damages award and injunctive order were ultimately affirmed by the Seventh Circuit. The patents were assigned to ERI, but, within 90 days thereafter, CRS Steam and LeBlanc each filed a voluntary Chapter 11 petition in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Worcester, Massachusetts.

CRS Steam and LeBlanc then jointly filed a thirteen-count adversary complaint seeking, inter alia, to avoid the court-ordered patent assignment as a preference. ERI vigorously defended the action. It moved (successfully) to dismiss several counts. It answered the complaint, participated in the initial pretrial conference (joining in an initial stipulation), pursued extensive discovery, and moved for summary judgment. Although ERI obtained summary judgment on two fraudulent transfer counts, in a published decision the bankruptcy court denied summary judgment on the preference count. See CRS Steam, Inc. v. Engineering Resources, Inc. (In re CRS Steam, Inc.), 225 B.R. 833 (Bankr.D.Mass.1998).

The court set a final pretrial conference for October 29, 1998. Before that conference convened, however, ERI’s local coun *903 sel, Bowditch & Dewey, L.L.P., obtained leave of court to withdraw from the case. Although ERI continued to be represented by Illinois counsel, Frederick W. Acker of Stamos & Trueco, it was left without a local attorney. At Stamos & Trucco’s request, the October 29, 1998, pretrial conference was continued to November 9, 1998. Trial remained calendared for early December.

ERI failed to appear at the rescheduled pretrial conference. Plaintiffs’ counsel explained to the court that they had been unable to obtain ERI’s counsel’s cooperation in preparing the supplemental stipulation required for the conference. The court confirmed that the earlier pretrial conference had been continued on Stamos & Trucco’s request, that Bowditch & Dewey lawyers had been present at court on October 29 to discuss the continuance with plaintiffs’ counsel, and that a notice of the rescheduled conference had issued.

The following colloquy ensued:

MS. DEVINE (for LeBlanc): Your hon- or, in accordance with [local] Rule 7016(e) we would request that the defendants [sic] be defaulted in this matter. They failed to respond and failed to participate in this pre-trial hearing. In light of the fact that we have a trial pending, scheduled for December 3rd, and no indication of what the status is with respect to their appearance here or their defense of our action, sanctions are appropriate in accordance with 7016(e), and we would request that they be defaulted.
COURT: Well, I guess I — I would think a default is warranted at this point. They asked — they have Chicago counsel. Local counsel has withdrawn. We had a pre-trial scheduled last time. They asked for a continuance. We granted that continuance to today, and there’s been absolutely no one show up today.
MS. DEVINE: That’s correct, Your Honor.
COURT: I don’t know why a default isn’t appropriate.

(J.A. at 507-08.)

The court went on to discuss other matters, returning later to the status of ERI’s defense. Plaintiffs’ counsel informed the judge that they understood that, in addition to ERI having no local counsel, Mr. Acker had left Stamos & Trucco’s employ. They expressed an expectation that Bowditch & Dewey might re-enter the case as local counsel for ERI. The discussion continued:

COURT: [ ]Now you said earlier, Ms. Devine, you said that Bowditch & Dewey, there was some possibility for them coming back in to the case?
MS. DEVINE: That was my understanding, Your Honor. That was part of what we were waiting for, to see how that was going to resolve itself. In light of that, we agreed to the continuance to this week, for this pre-trial hearing.
COURT: Oh, you mean Bowditch & Dewey — the folks from Bowditch & Dewey who were here on the 29th said there was some—
MS. DEVINE: Right.
COURT: — possibility—
MS. DEVINE: Right.
COURT: — about them coming back?
MS. DEVINE: That’s correct, Your Honor.
COURT: But have you talked to Bowditch & Dewey since?
MS. DEVINE: We haven’t spoken directly to them; however, we did also CC them on the pre-trial stipulation that went to Chicago counsel—
COURT: Mmhmm.
MS. DEVINE: — with the same cover letter—
COURT: Mmhmm.
MS. DEVINE: — indicating our intention to file it on Friday of last week and to contact us with any changes, or to participate with us in the joint pre-trial statement.
*904 MS. [DEVINE]: That was hand-delivered to Bowditch & Dewey on Friday, I think, that—
COURT: And Bowditch & Dewey had notice of today’s hearing obviously.
MS. DEVINE: That’s correct, Your Honor.
COURT: It participated in the setting of today’s date.
MS. DEVINE: That’s correct, Your Honor.
COURT: Well, okay. .All right, then it looks as though you’re entitled to default judgment. I think what I’d like to do is have you prepare the default judgment. ...

(J.A. at 510-11.)

Pursuant to the judge’s instruction, CRS Steam and LeBlanc filed a motion for default judgment on November 12, 1998. ERI promptly filed a motion to vacate the default and opposition to entry of default judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
233 B.R. 901, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 578, 34 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 475, 1998 WL 1055171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crs-steam-inc-v-engineering-resources-inc-in-re-crs-steam-inc-bap1-1999.