Fernandez-Lopez v. Fernandez-Lopez (In Re Fernandez-Lopez)

37 B.R. 664, 1984 Bankr. LEXIS 6023
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedMarch 27, 1984
DocketBankruptcy No. 180-01263, Adv. No. 182-1086, BAP No. EC-82-1428-AsEV
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 37 B.R. 664 (Fernandez-Lopez v. Fernandez-Lopez (In Re Fernandez-Lopez)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel 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
Fernandez-Lopez v. Fernandez-Lopez (In Re Fernandez-Lopez), 37 B.R. 664, 1984 Bankr. LEXIS 6023 (bap9 1984).

Opinion

OPINION

VOLINN, Bankruptcy Judge:

Debtor appeals from the denial by the bankruptcy court of an injunction against a creditor who, after bankruptcy, sued and took a judgment in state court on a discharged pre-bankruptcy debt. The general issue in this appeal is whether appellant’s assertion of a bankruptcy discharge as a defense in a state court action seeking recovery on a pre-bankruptcy debt and his subsequent filing of a notice of appeal to the California Court of Appeals bar him from seeking later injunctive relief in the bankruptcy court. The court below dismissed appellant’s complaint for such relief at a pretrial conference on grounds of lach-es and estoppel.

BACKGROUND

Because of the unusual nature of the ruling and the context in which it was made, closer and more specific examination of the record is called for than would ordinarily be the case.

Appellant’s excerpts of the record contain a transcript of the pretrial conference on the complaint for enforcement of injunction brought by the debtor. The 18-page hearing transcript consists entirely of colloquy between court and counsel. References to the state court proceeding in the. form of argument were varied and confusing. It is difficult to perceive which aspect of the *666 record was examined or considered by the Court.

REVIEW OF STATE COURT ACTIONS Appellant has attached or incorporated in his excerpts the complaint for enforcement of the injunction and for contempt. This complaint specifies that the co-defendant, Pat Fernandez-Lopez, the debtor’s sister (her co-defendant is her attorney, Gary O’Neil) on March 22,1979, filed a complaint in the West Kern Municipal Court in Bakersfield, California, for the recovery of a $3,000 debt incurred May 26, 1977, obtaining judgment thereon of $3,434.50 on May 2, 1979. Copies of this state court complaint and judgment are attached to the bankruptcy court complaint and have been included in the excerpts of the record.

This debt was listed in the bankruptcy filed by debtor on July 23, 1980. The complaint presently at issue before the bankruptcy court alleged that Mrs. Lopez sued on the same debt after bankruptcy, on a different theory, that is, resulting trust, in the Kern County Superior Court for California. The debtor served an answer alleging that the debt had been previously sued upon and discharged by the bankruptcy court. These pleadings were attached to the complaint now at issue.

The Kern County Superior Court complaint filed September 12, 1981, more than one year after bankruptcy, alleges the debt- or borrowed $3,000 from Mrs. Lopez on May 26,1977. From the record there is no doubt that the same $3,000 transaction was involved in both actions.

The debtor appeared and answered, in pro per, in the post-bankruptcy action, contending, inter alia,

“Any and all obligations and debts of defendants to plaintiff were discharged in the bankruptcy of Jimmy Fernandez-Lopez, United States Bankruptcy Court, Eastern District of California, No. 180-01263 in which a Discharge of Debtor was ordered by the court on December 9, 1980, as per the attached copy marked Exhibit A. Plaintiff, Pat Fernandez-Lopez, was listed as a creditor and any debt to her has been discharged...”

The debtor also prayed “for an order of the court that plaintiff has no interest in the real property commonly known as 201 East Moneta, Bakersfield, California...” The foregoing property had been set aside as exempt to the debtor in the bankruptcy proceedings, without objection by any party in interest.

The debtor presented his former bankruptcy attorney, Robert S. Williams, only as a witness in the post-bankruptcy action. Mr. Williams testified that the debtor had filed bankruptcy and received a discharge. The record shows that on March 23, 1982 judgment was entered declaring a resulting trust and awarding the debtor’s home to appellee. At this point appellant retained counsel who filed a motion for a new trial.

The excerpts of the record include the memorandum of points and authorities in support of motion for new trial in the California Superior Court action. Among the points made by debtor’s counsel were the following:

1. That the damages awarded by the court were excessive in that the court awarded the debtor’s entire interest in the real estate in question to Mrs. Lopez for her investment of $3,000 at 18%; that Mrs. Lopez herself contended that she had provided $3,000 for the downpayment and would receive only one-half of the proceeds of the sale of the house.
2. That the debtor had raised the discharge in bankruptcy and that the court had not dealt with this issue at all.

Mr. O’Neil, on behalf of Mrs. Lopez, filed a responsive memorandum of points and authorities.

The memorandum concedes that the state court judgment was excessive:

“Plaintiff, however, is willing to concede that the proper measure of damages in this case is the proportion of the money contributed by plaintiff to the total purchase price of the house. ..
Plaintiff, as stated in oral argument, is willing to accept a remittitur from the *667 original judgment which ordered the title be conveyed to plaintiff to an amount as set forth above.” (Emph. supp.)

The pleading further states:

“Secondly, even if the court finds that this resulting trust somehow is construed to be a debt, defendant’s own hand comes back to impale himself by virtue of his answer to plaintiff’s complaint. No doubt, the court issued its ruling based on all available testimony, both written and oral. Part of the record is defendant’s answer wherein defendant admits that he borrowed $2,500 from plaintiff. This admission is none other than a clear reaffirmation in writing signed by the defendant in his verification of the pre-existing debt, tortuously find this debt, the debt was clearly affirmed according to the formalities of the new Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1978. 1 Plaintiff asserts however that this issue need not be reached because a resulting trust is not dischargeable as a debt and, in fact, is not an action at law based on an underlying obligation at all.”

It is evident from the pleading, that the alleged resulting trust complaint was a reprise of the previous action resulting in a money judgment for $3,000 which had been set forth in the debtor’s schedules.

The superior court, on June 9, 1982, entered an order denying the motion for new trial stating that:

“The judgment declaring resulting trust dated March 23,1982 shall stand as previously ordered.”

THE PRE-TRIAL CONFERENCE

A.

As previously indicated, appellant initiated this action seeking to enforce, in bankruptcy court, the injunction against suit on pre-bankruptcy debt imposed by 11 U.S.C. Sec. 524.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 B.R. 664, 1984 Bankr. LEXIS 6023, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fernandez-lopez-v-fernandez-lopez-in-re-fernandez-lopez-bap9-1984.