Ellenberg v. Henry (In Re Henry)

38 B.R. 24, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 5007
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Georgia
DecidedNovember 16, 1983
Docket19-51705
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 38 B.R. 24 (Ellenberg v. Henry (In Re Henry)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ellenberg v. Henry (In Re Henry), 38 B.R. 24, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 5007 (Ga. 1983).

Opinion

OPINION

WILLIAM L. NORTON, Jr., Bankruptcy Judge.

The plaintiff-trustee has moved the Court for a Bankruptcy Rule 8005 stay of this Court’s order dated June 14, 1983, as clarified and amended on June 24, 1983, dismissing certain specified counts of plaintiffs adversary complaint by reason of lack of subject matter jurisdiction. The Court previously found that it lacked subject matter jurisdiction over these certain counts because of the Northern Pipeline decision, 458 U.S. 50, 102 S.Ct. 2858, 73 L.Ed.2d 598 (1982), and despite the so-called Emergency Local Rule.

The said motion came on regularly for hearing, and the Court heard argument of counsel and received citations of authority, and the Court has considered the record in this adversary proceeding.

(A). The Stare Decisis Argument 1

The plaintiff seems to argue, as have other plaintiffs in adversary proceedings in this Court, that, because several Circuit Courts and District Courts in other jurisdictions have already ruled on these issues in favor of the legality of (1) the bankruptcy jurisdiction of the District Court and (2) the Emergency Local Rule, the federal judges in this district should follow such decisions under the principle of stare decisis.

Such reliance on greater numbers of decisions favoring the Rule ignores the strong legal arguments against (1) bankruptcy jurisdiction in the District Court and (2) its authority to delegate and supervise bankruptcy jurisdiction in the Bankruptcy Court. Stare decisis must be rejected where independent legal analysis leads to a conclusion that is contradictory to earlier decisions. In the present circumstances stare decisis must be rejected.

As pointed out in Brown v. C & S Bank, 32 B.R. 590, 10 B.C.D. 1375 (Bkrtcy.N.D.Ga.1983), since August 1, 1983, the effective date of the new national Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure, the Circuit Court and District Court decisions rendered prior thereto, which obviously did not consider these rules, are ineffective authority for the argument that the Emergency Local Rule is superior to the new national rules. In re Morrissey (Frank v. Arnold), 717 F.2d 100, 10 B.C.D. 1398 (CA3, 1983), decided by the Third Circuit, September 15, 1983, accords with Brown on the new rules issue, but, of course, is far more persuasive authority for the proposition that the Emergency Rule is not founded on statute and must “yield” to the procedure established by the national Bankruptcy Rules. Thus, stare decisis is inapplicable as to pre-August 1, 1983 decisions.

Jurisdictional Issues

There are two primary questions for courts to determine after Northern Pipeline and the promulgation of the controversial Emergency Rule. The first is the legality of the asserted jurisdiction of the District Court. Even if it is concluded that the District Courts have pervasive exercisable bankruptcy jurisdiction, the second primary question is the legality and constitu *27 tionality of the Emergency Rule. The determination of the legality of the Emergency Rule involves three sub-issues:

(1) Whether the District Court has statutory or other authority over the separate Bankruptcy Court to conscript independent Bankruptcy Judges as pseudo-special masters in the face of the statutory role of Bankruptcy Judges under §§ 201, 404, 405 and 406 of the Reform Act.
(2) If so, whether the District Court has the legal authority to ordain the new adjudicatory system to the broad extent provided in the Rule in the face of the Bankruptcy Reform Act, the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and the Bankruptcy Rules. South Portland Shipyard, infra; Romeo Roy, infra; Morrissey, supra.
(3) If so, whether non-Article III Bankruptcy judges can constitutionally exercise the extent of the judicial responsibilities delegated under the Rule. Northern Pipeline, supra; South Portland Shipyard, infra; Romeo Roy, infra.

While the several Article III decisions rendered prior to August 1, 1983, and cited as the basis for the application of stare decisis found it easy to invoke the inherent power of § 1334 or § 1471(a) and (b), 28 U.S.C., to give bankruptcy jurisdiction to the District Courts, none of them have managed to discuss or deal with the first sub-issue, i.e., the statutory authority of the District Courts to seize the mechanism and personnel of the separate and independent Bankruptcy Courts and to delegate jurisdiction and supervise the Bankruptcy Judges as pseudo-special masters. Some courts, just as easily and without dealing with sub-issue one, have found the Emergency Rule valid. There is no authority for the independent District Court trial court to assume control or authority of the bankruptcy trial court made separate and independent after October 1, 1979, under §§ 404 and 405 of the Reform Act. On this one point, there is no appellate authority at all. Nor have the Circuit Courts dealt with the scope of the Rule. See Seven Springs, fn. 24, infra, ¶ VIII. Further, the legal analysis of some decisions is either omitted as in the Fifth Circuit’s Braniff decision, In re Braniff Airways, Inc., 700 F.2d 214, 10 B.C.D. 418 (CA5, 1983), or fuzzy and unclear as to the three sub-issues above mentioned.

Moreover, the doctrine of stare decisis should not be so stringently applied in matters of threshold federal jurisdiction such as the current serious national issue of constitutional bankruptcy trial jurisdiction in the face of disputed readings of Northern Pipeline. The late Justice Logan Bleckley, who served on the Supreme Court of Georgia in the late 1800’s, commented on the application of the doctrine of stare decisis in his decision in Ellison v. Georgia Railroad and Banking Co., 87 Ga. 691, 13 S.E. 809 (1891). After noting that the doctrine is so quickly adhered to by courts “not only [as] a canon of the public good, but a law of self-preservation,” he concluded that:

[m]inor errors, even if quite obvious, or important errors if their existence be fairly doubtful, may be adhered to and repeated indefinitely; but the only treatment for a great and glaring error affecting the current administration of justice in all courts of original jurisdiction, is to correct it. When an error of this magnitude and which moves in so wide an orbit competes with truth and the struggle for existence, the maxim for a supreme court, supreme in the majesty of duty as well as in the majesty of power, is not stare decisis, but Fiatjust-itia ruat coelum. *

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Bluebook (online)
38 B.R. 24, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 5007, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellenberg-v-henry-in-re-henry-ganb-1983.