In re: Bell Family Trust v. Mary Sue Bell, Sue Bell Holdings, L.L.C., and Amerada Hess Corporation

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Louisiana
DecidedDecember 16, 2025
Docket02-05045
StatusUnknown

This text of In re: Bell Family Trust v. Mary Sue Bell, Sue Bell Holdings, L.L.C., and Amerada Hess Corporation (In re: Bell Family Trust v. Mary Sue Bell, Sue Bell Holdings, L.L.C., and Amerada Hess Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re: Bell Family Trust v. Mary Sue Bell, Sue Bell Holdings, L.L.C., and Amerada Hess Corporation, (La. 2025).

Opinion

Ae BANKRUS □□

SO ORDERED. . ae □□ Reale □□ SIGNED December 16, 2025. SP ESS IsTRICT OFS

whe W. KOLWE ED STATES BANKRUPTCY JUDGE

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT WESTERN DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA LAFAYETTE DIVISON

IN RE: BELL FAMILY TRUST CASE NO. 02-50477 Chapter 7 Debtor

BELL FAMILY TRUST, THROUGH W. SIMMONS SANDOZ, TRUSTEE, Plaintiff ADVERSARY PROCEEDING NO. 02-5045 VERSUS MARY SUE BELL, SUE BELL HOLDINGS, L.L.C., and AMERADA HESS CORPORATION, Defendants

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER In the latest chapter of a long running saga, on July 28, 2025, the Plaintiff, the Bell Family Trust (the “Trust”), filed two motions—a Motion to Reopen Adversary Case and a Motion to Revive—aimed at reviving an August 1, 2005, Judgment (the “2005 Judgment”) against Mary Susan Bell (“Ms. Bell”). The Court granted both motions on August 5, 2025.1 On September 9, 2025, Ms. Bell, one of the defendants and judgment debtor under the 2005 Judgment, filed a Motion for Sanctions and a Motion for Clarification. In the sanctions motion, Ms. Bell alleges she was not provided advance notice of the Motion to Revive Judgment, and she claims that if she had received notice, she could have shown the Court that the 2005 Judgment had been satisfied. She also claims the Trustee of the Trust, “without authorization in violation of the Bell Trust instructions and clause of ‘spendthrift’ and La Spendthrift trust law withheld from Mary S Bell her protected distributions of $302,756.79 . . .”2 Thus, she seeks to sanction the Trust, and its Trustee, Greg Mier, for “intentionally falsifying information to this Court” to support the revival of the Judgment. By way of the Motion for Clarification, Ms. Bell seeks “confirmation from this Bankruptcy Court that it does not have authority outside its jurisdiction to prevent Mary S Bell from filing a lawsuit in the Fifteenth Judicial State Court against Gregory Mier for all damages caused.”3 The basis for the clarification motion is uncertain, but it appears to be premised on an order this Court entered in August 2010, during the pendency of the Trust’s Chapter 7 bankruptcy case, that prohibited Ms. Bell from filing any actions against the Trust, the Trustee or the beneficiaries of the Trust in any federal or state court. The Trust filed an opposition to each of Ms. Bell’s motions. The opposition to the sanctions motion points out that advance notice to a judgment debtor of a motion

1 The Plaintiff also revived the 2005 Judgment in 2015 using the same procedure. 2 Motion for Sanctions, (09/09/2025), ECF # 273, p.2. 3 Motion for Clarification, (09/09/2025), ECF # 275, p.1. to revive a judgment is not required under applicable law and thus there is no basis for this Court to award sanctions. With respect to the Motion for Clarification, the Trust claims it has no knowledge of prior orders that may have prohibited Ms. Bell from pursuing litigation in state or federal court. And since Ms. Bell did not provide documentation showing the basis for the Motion for Clarification, they claim the Motion should be denied for lack of any foundational support. Ms. Bell, in a reply, filed several documents which she contends show that she has satisfied the portion of the 2005 Judgment that awarded money damages to the Trust. She also filed documents that she claims relate to the question of whether an order is currently in place that would prevent her from filing any litigation against the Trust or Mr. Mier as Trustee. The Court held a hearing on these matters on October 7, 2025; Ms. Bell appeared pro se, and Mr. Mier appeared for the Trust. During the hearing it became obvious that the ultimate issue facing the court is whether the 2005 Judgment has been satisfied, and the hearing was not helpful in resolving that question. On the one hand, Ms. Bell vacillated from asserting that unverified and unauthenticated accounting records she filed in the record show that she satisfied the 2005 Judgment, to re-arguing legal and factual issues long ago settled either by the 2005 Judgment or other judgments and orders rendered in numerous lawsuits between the parties over the past 20-plus years and in the Trust’s bankruptcy case. On the other hand, the Trust and Mr. Mier pointed to vague deficiencies in Ms. Bell’s performance of her obligations under the 2005 Judgment and the fact that the accounting records referenced by Ms. Bell were not the official accounting records for the Trust. The Court took the matters under advisement, primarily for the purpose of determining the remedy, if any, Ms. Bell or the Trust may have in this Court concerning satisfaction of the 2005 Judgment and to determine whether Ms. Bell’s access to federal and state courts is currently limited. The Court has now considered these issues and finds that the Motion for Sanctions should be denied, as the Motion to Revive and corresponding Judgment of Revival comply with applicable law. However, the Court also finds that the governing law on revival of judgments authorizes Ms. Bell to file a contradictory motion in this Court for the sole purpose of proving that she has satisfied the 2005 Judgment. The Court also concludes that this court, as the court that rendered the 2005 Judgment, has jurisdiction over such contradictory motion. Thus, the Court will all Ms. Bell 30 days from the date of this Memorandum Opinion and Order to file the contradictory motion. As for the Motion for Clarification, the court finds that this Court’s previous order that prohibited Ms. Bell from pursuing litigation against the Trust, its Trustee and beneficiaries in federal or state courts was based on the automatic stay that was in place under section 362 of the Bankruptcy Code during the pendency of the Trust’s Chapter 7 bankruptcy case. Since the final decree was entered in the bankruptcy case over 13 years ago, and the case closed, the stay is no longer in place, and this Court is not aware of any other restrictions that would prevent Ms. Bell from pursuing litigation against the Trust and related parties in Louisiana state Courts. However, the United States District Court for the Western District of Louisiana and the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit have entered orders that prohibit Ms. Bell from bringing frivolous, vexatious and abusive filings against the Trust and related parties and attorneys in federal court. Given the litigation history between the parties, which is outlined below, the Court finds that this restriction must remain in place, except for the aforementioned contradictory motion, which Ms. Bell is allowed to pursue in this Court for the sole purpose of showing the 2005 Judgment has been satisfied. The Court will explain its reasoning for these decisions below. BACKGROUND The parties have a history of litigation that spans nearly 25 years. Since one of the issues facing the Court is whether there is a sanction or other court order presently in place that would limit Ms. Bell’s access to this and other courts, this history is relevant here. Thus, the Court will set forth the basis of the original dispute between the parties and the history of the litigation between the parties.4

A. Formation of the Bell Family Trust and accompanying property transfers Wilfred Bell created the Bell Family Trust in October 1996, naming Ms. Bell and her five siblings as beneficiaries. Ms. Bell was initially appointed as trustee, but she long ago ceded the position. In creating the trust, Mr. Bell donated several tracts of immovable property to the Trust, including a one acre tract on which his home was located. Shortly after Mr. Bell donated the Property to the Trust, he signed a promissory note agreeing to pay $40,000.00 he allegedly owed to Ms. Bell. The debt was secured by a collateral mortgage in favor of Ms. Bell that encumbered the Trust’s Property. Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
In re: Bell Family Trust v. Mary Sue Bell, Sue Bell Holdings, L.L.C., and Amerada Hess Corporation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-bell-family-trust-v-mary-sue-bell-sue-bell-holdings-llc-and-lawb-2025.