22-1000 In re: Kimberly Bruce UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT ______________
August Term 2022
(Argued: April 18, 2023 | Decided: August 2, 2023)
Docket No. 22-1000
KIMBERLY BRUCE, Debtor and Plaintiff on behalf of herself and all others similarly situated, AKA Kimberly A. Bruce, AKA Kimberly Antrell Bruce,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
CITIGROUP INC. and CITIBANK, N.A.,
Defendants-Appellants. 1 ______________
Before: WESLEY, PARK, and ROBINSON, Circuit Judges:
Defendants-Appellants Citigroup Inc. and Citibank, N.A. (collectively, “Citi”) appeal from the bankruptcy court’s order granting in part and denying in part Citi’s motion, pursuant to Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure 7012, to dismiss Plaintiff-Appellee Kimberly Bruce’s amended complaint, or, alternatively, to strike or dismiss the nationwide class action allegations therein.
On appeal, Citi advances two primary arguments. First, Citi argues that a bankruptcy court’s civil contempt power is limited to the enforcement of its own orders, and, therefore, that the Bankruptcy Code does not authorize one bankruptcy court to adjudicate the claims of a nationwide class of former debtors
1 The Clerk of the Court is directed to amend the official caption as set forth above. seeking to hold Citi in contempt of discharge orders entered by other bankruptcy courts across the country. Second, Citi argues that plaintiff’s claim for violation of her discharge order and injunction under 11 U.S.C. § 524(a)(2) fails to satisfy the civil contempt standard under Taggart v. Lorenzen, 139 S. Ct. 1795 (2019). We agree with Citi’s first argument but disagree with the second. Accordingly, we AFFIRM IN PART and REVERSE IN PART the bankruptcy court’s order and REMAND the case to the bankruptcy court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. _________________
GEORGE F. CARPINELLO, Boies Schiller Flexner LLP, Albany, NY (Adam R. Shaw, Jenna C. Smith, Boies Schiller Flexner LLP, Albany, NY; Charles Juntikka, Charles Juntikka & Associates LLP, New York, NY, on the brief), for Plaintiff-Appellee.
EAMON P. JOYCE (Benjamin R. Nagin, Jonathan W. Muenz, James R. Horner, on the brief), Sidley Austin LLP, New York, NY, for Defendants-Appellants.
Robert J. Pfister, KTBS Law LLP, Los Angeles, CA, for Amici Curiae National Consumer Bankruptcy Rights Center; National Association of Consumer Bankruptcy Attorneys in Support of Plaintiff-Appellee. _________________
WESLEY, Circuit Judge:
Unwelcome as insolvency may be, bankruptcy relief ultimately provides
hope for the debtor that a new financial life awaits. The notion of a fresh start is
at the Bankruptcy Code’s core and is typically achieved through a discharge order,
which, at a bankruptcy proceeding’s conclusion, releases the debtor of
2 pre-bankruptcy debts covered by the order, and acts as an injunction to bar
creditors from further attempts to collect those debts. See 11 U.S.C. § 524(a)(2).
In this case, a putative nationwide class of former debtors, led by Kimberly
Bruce, claim that Citi violated their respective discharge injunctions. They ask that
Citi be held in contempt, and, in addition to contempt sanctions, ask for
declaratory relief and restitutionary damages.
As an initial matter, we reject plaintiff’s suggestion that she has asserted
separate and distinct claims for declaratory relief and damages. For one, plaintiff’s
characterization of her complaint is in tension with the complaint itself, which
asserts a single cause of action claiming that “[d]efendants have violated
§ 524(a)(2) and are in contempt of this Court.” App’x 75. Furthermore, as Citi
points out on reply, plaintiff has previously referred to this action as “a proceeding
for contempt,” see Brief of Plaintiffs-Appellees at 3, In re Nyree Belton, Kimberly
Bruce, No. 19-648 (2d Cir. Nov. 11, 2019), ECF No. 105—as has this Court, see In re
Belton v. GE Cap. Retail Bank, 961 F.3d 612, 616 (2d Cir. 2020) (“[T]he Debtors have
pursued this remedy through a contempt proceeding.”). Accordingly, we
consider only plaintiff’s motion for contempt.
3 Relatedly, plaintiff’s class-wide contempt proceeding hinges on a
bankruptcy court’s authority under the Code to hold a creditor in civil contempt
for violating discharge orders entered by other bankruptcy courts across the
country. The bankruptcy court declined to dismiss plaintiff’s class-wide request
that Citi be held in contempt and sanctioned. It concluded that its contempt power
extends to the enforcement of other bankruptcy courts’ discharge injunctions. We
disagree that a bankruptcy court has the authority to hear and adjudicate a
class-wide contempt proceeding. That leaves only plaintiff’s individual claim
against Citi.
Accordingly, the final question in this appeal is whether plaintiff’s
allegations that Citi should be held in contempt for violating her discharge order
are sufficient to survive Citi’s Rule 12(b)(6) threshold attack. 2 The bankruptcy
court answered that question in the affirmative. We agree. Accordingly, we affirm
in part and reverse in part, and remand for further proceedings consistent with
this opinion.
2The sufficiency of a complaint in an adversary proceeding is evaluated under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). See Fed. R. Bankr. P. 7012(b). 4 BACKGROUND
I. Facts
This dispute began in 2009, when Kimberly Bruce, plaintiff in this action,
stopped making payments on her Citi credit card account. Eventually, Citi
informed credit reporting agencies that she had a balance due of $1124, which Citi
“charged off”—that is, adjusted from a receivable to a loss in the bank’s internal
accounting books.
Years later, plaintiff voluntarily filed a Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition in
which she listed Citi as a creditor. Her complaint alleges, without any dispute
from Citi, that she provided Citi notice of her initial bankruptcy filing and her
eventual discharge order, entered in May 2013. That order “released” plaintiff
from “all dischargeable debts,” App’x 29, and enjoined “any attempt to collect
from the debtor a debt that has been discharged,” id. at 30.
In September 2013, months after her fresh financial start, plaintiff accessed
her credit report and discovered that it still listed her debt with Citi as “charged
off,” without any indication it had been discharged in bankruptcy. She notified
Citi in December 2013 that its description of her Citi account status—also known
5 as a “tradeline”—on her report was incorrect and requested that the bank remove
the charge-off notation. Citi, she says, refused.
In March 2014, plaintiff successfully moved to reopen her Chapter 7 case
and commenced an adversary proceeding seeking to hold Citi in contempt of her
bankruptcy discharge order. About two weeks after plaintiff moved to reopen,
Citi finally contacted the credit reporting agencies and requested that they remove
the charge-off notation on the tradeline referring to plaintiff’s credit card account.
Plaintiff alleges that Citi’s refusal to correct her credit report is part of a
“willful policy of attempting to lay a trap for Plaintiff and other Class Members
until the point that they need an accurate credit report, and they cannot obtain
such a credit report without paying on a discharged debt.” App’x 61. Citi lays
this “trap” by “refusing the debtors’ requests to remove ‘charge offs’ and other
similar ‘past due’ notations . . . despite [Citi’s] knowledge that such debts have in
fact been discharged in bankruptcy.” Id. at 69–70. “These notations adversely
affect Plaintiff’s and every Class Member’s ability to obtain credit or employment
and have the inherent coercive effect of inducing Plaintiff and all other Class
Members to make payment on the debt.” Id. at 68–69.
6 Plaintiff claims that Citi financially benefits from the policy: third-party debt
collection agencies—such as Midland Funding LLC, which, prior to plaintiff’s
bankruptcy, purchased plaintiff’s delinquent debt—will pay a higher price to Citi
if they believe Citi will not update debtors’ credit reports, thereby increasing the
likelihood that, notwithstanding a discharge, confused debtors might nonetheless
pay off their cards. In essence, plaintiff claims that Citi’s post-bankruptcy
discharge policy increases, in the eyes of the third-party debt collection agencies,
the value of the delinquent debt at the front end, when the agencies purchase that
debt.
Plaintiff also contends that although Citi sold plaintiff’s debt, it maintains
ties to it in other ways. For example, she alleges that Citi collects the discharged
debt on behalf of the third-party debt collection agencies, and that credit reporting
agencies will not permit those agencies (including Midland) to request changes in
tradelines listed in the original creditor’s name. She adds that Citi remained
identified as the creditor in the tradeline, notwithstanding that it sold plaintiff’s
debt to Midland. Thus, she continues, Citi knows that unless it correctly reports
7 the bankruptcy discharge’s effect on the otherwise delinquent debt, the tradeline
will remain in error.
Plaintiff alleges that by willfully failing to update credit reports, Citi is “in
contempt of this Court,” App’x 75, she “prays that the practices of [Citi] be
declared to be in violation of the rights of Plaintiff and Class Members under the
Bankruptcy Code and a contempt of the statutory injunction set forth in
§ 524(a)(2),” id. at 76, and she asks that the bankruptcy court “order that
defendants be held in contempt of court,” id. She also seeks to certify a nationwide
class of former debtors on the ground that Citi similarly refused numerous
post-discharge requests to correct erroneous tradelines.
II. Procedural History
This case has made its way to this Court once before. At its outset, Citi
moved to compel arbitration based on its credit card agreement with plaintiff.
Relying largely on our decision in In re Anderson, 884 F.3d 382 (2d Cir. 2018), this
Court affirmed the district and bankruptcy courts’ denial of that motion,
reiterating that contempt proceedings for violations of § 524(a)(2) are not
arbitrable, and are instead subject to the bankruptcy court’s exclusive
8 enforcement. See In re Belton, 961 F.3d at 616–17 (citing In re Anderson, 884 F.3d at
389–92).
On remand, Citi moved to dismiss plaintiff’s complaint, or in the alternative,
to strike or dismiss her class allegations. The bankruptcy court, in the decision Citi
now appeals, largely rejected the bank’s request. Although it dismissed plaintiff’s
request for injunctive relief, it otherwise denied Citi’s motion. 3
The bankruptcy court purported to resolve two questions: first, whether
plaintiff plausibly pleaded a discharge violation under Federal Rule of Civil
Procedure 12(b)(6), and, second, whether one bankruptcy court has the authority
to determine a creditor in contempt of a discharge order entered by another
bankruptcy court.
With respect to the 12(b)(6) issue, the bankruptcy court concluded that
plaintiff plausibly stated a claim for relief. It explained that while mere inaccurate
credit reporting without some further act does not violate the discharge, plaintiff
3Regarding plaintiff’s request for injunctive relief, the bankruptcy court held that because the discharge under § 524 acts as a statutory injunction against further efforts to collect on discharged debts, there was “already an injunction.” App’x 188. Plaintiff does not challenge that ruling here. 9 had sufficiently pleaded that Citi’s refusal to correct her (and class members’)
tradeline(s) is pursuant to a willful policy of pressuring former debtors to pay off
discharged debts. In measuring the adequacy of the complaint, the court
employed the Supreme Court’s decision in Taggart v. Lorenzen, in which the
Supreme Court held that a bankruptcy court may hold a creditor in civil contempt
when there is objectively “no fair ground of doubt” that the alleged violator’s
action did, in fact, violate the discharge. 139 S. Ct. 1795, 1799 (2019).
The court then turned to the nationwide class issue and rejected Citi’s
motion to strike plaintiff’s class allegations. Although it acknowledged that
whether one bankruptcy court can enforce other bankruptcy courts’ discharge
orders “raise[s] a very close question,” App’x 264, it grounded that authority in
§ 105 of the Bankruptcy Code, which provides that a bankruptcy court “may issue
any order, process, or judgment that is necessary or appropriate to carry out” the
Code. 11 U.S.C. § 105.
After the district court certified the bankruptcy court’s order for direct
appeal, App’x 291, this Court granted Citi’s request for leave to appeal, id. at 293.
10 DISCUSSION 4
This appeal principally concerns § 524(a)(2) of the Bankruptcy Code, which
provides that a bankruptcy discharge:
[O]perates as an injunction against the commencement or continuation of an action, the employment of process, or an act, to collect, recover or offset any such debt as a personal liability of the debtor, whether or not discharge of such debt is waived.
11 U.S.C. § 524(a)(2). The section invokes an injunction that takes effect with the
discharge order. Together the order and injunction aim to prevent debtors from
being “pressured” to repay discharged debts. In re Kalikow, 602 F.3d 82, 96 (2d Cir.
2010) (internal quotation marks omitted). Like many parties aggrieved by the
violation of an injunction outside of the bankruptcy context, aggrieved debtors
have resorted to civil contempt proceedings to vindicate their rights under the
discharge order. See, e.g., In re Belton, 961 F.3d at 616; see also 4 Collier on Bankruptcy
¶ 524.02[2][c] (2023).
4The denial of a motion to dismiss is reviewed de novo. Rothstein v. Balboa Ins. Co., 794 F.3d 256, 261 (2d Cir. 2015). Additionally, as the parties agree, Citi’s motion to strike or dismiss plaintiff’s class allegations presents a pure question of law; the bankruptcy court’s decision on that issue therefore constitutes a legal determination likewise meriting de novo review. See In re Anderson, 884 F.3d at 387.
11 In this case, however, plaintiff sets her sights broadly; she seeks relief on
behalf of herself and a nationwide class, accusing Citi of uniformly flouting the
discharge orders of similarly situated debtors across the country. Citi’s abusive
practices, according to her, are pervasive.
Plaintiff’s careful, even novel, pleading strategy raises a threshold issue.
The viability of her nationwide pursuit depends on the authority of one
bankruptcy court to enforce the discharge orders and injunctions entered by other
bankruptcy courts from across the country. It is a novel, broad vision of an
injunction’s enforcement mechanism, and raises thorny issues regarding one
bankruptcy court’s ability to hold a party in civil contempt on behalf of other
bankruptcy courts whose separate discharge orders are alleged to have been
violated.
I. The Bankruptcy Code does not authorize a bankruptcy court to enforce another bankruptcy court’s discharge injunction.
Plaintiff asks that the bankruptcy court entertain a nationwide class action
contempt proceeding, comprised of the mirroring claims of other discharged
debtors who, like plaintiff, requested to no avail that Citi correct their erroneous
tradelines. Specifically, the putative class invites the bankruptcy court to enforce
12 not just the discharge order it entered in plaintiff’s case, but also those entered for
similarly situated debtors by bankruptcy courts across the country.
The class-wide relief sought by plaintiff raises a fundamental question: does
the Bankruptcy Code authorize one bankruptcy court to employ its contempt
power on behalf of other bankruptcy courts in a nationwide class action to enforce
those bankruptcy courts’ discharge orders? 5
Neither this Court nor the Supreme Court has confronted the issue.
However, decisions from both courts, as well as from the courts of appeals that
have weighed in on the matter, help guide the way. In the end, as has long been
the case outside of the bankruptcy context, a particular bankruptcy court’s civil
contempt authority does not extend beyond the enforcement of its own orders.
For example, although Taggart sets forth the “fair ground of doubt”
standard governing a bankruptcy court’s exercise of its civil contempt authority to
enforce § 524(a)(2)’s discharge injunction—a matter somewhat adjacent to the
5 Plaintiff spends much of her brief defending the bankruptcy court’s subject matter jurisdiction to adjudicate the nationwide class claims. But “[t]he nature of the relief available after jurisdiction attaches is, of course, different from the question whether there is jurisdiction to adjudicate the controversy.” William E. Arnold Co. v. Carpenters Dist. Council, 417 U.S. 12, 19 (1974). 13 nationwide class issue—the Supreme Court’s analysis is instructive. The Court
has explained that § 524(a)(2)’s injunction, along with the bankruptcy court’s § 105
authority to issue any “order” or “judgment” that is “necessary or appropriate” to
“carry out” other bankruptcy provisions, “bring with them the ‘old soil’ that has
long governed how courts enforce injunctions.” 139 S. Ct. at 1801. From there, the
Court cautioned that although this “old soil” includes “civil contempt,” the
bankruptcy statutes “do not grant courts unlimited authority to hold creditors in
civil contempt.” Id. Instead, they incorporate “traditional standards in equity
practice for determining when a party may be held in civil contempt for violating
an injunction,” and, to pinpoint those standards, looked to “cases outside the
bankruptcy context.” Id.
Taggart therefore provides a framework for analyzing the limits of a
bankruptcy court’s civil contempt authority. Courts should understand that
authority as coextensive with—not greater than—the civil contempt authority
wielded by courts outside of bankruptcy. In short, well-established equity practice
regarding the judicial exercise of civil contempt authority guides any inquiry into
what that authority looks like in the bankruptcy context.
14 Emerging from the “‘old soil’ that has long governed how courts enforce
injunctions,” id., is the longstanding equitable principle that “civil contempt
proceedings leave the offended judge solely responsible for identifying, prosecuting,
adjudicating, and sanctioning the contumacious conduct.” Int'l Union, United
Mine Workers of Am. v. Bagwell, 512 U.S. 821, 831 (1994) (emphasis added); see also
In re Debs, 158 U.S. 564, 595 (1895); Waffenschmidt v. MacKay, 763 F.2d 711, 716 (5th
Cir. 1985) (“Enforcement of an injunction through a contempt proceeding must
occur in the issuing jurisdiction because contempt is an affront to the court issuing
the order.”); Fed. R. Civ. P. 4.1 Advisory Committee Notes to 1993 Amendment
(“Contempt proceedings, whether civil or criminal, must be brought in the court
that was allegedly defied by a contumacious act.”); cf. Klett v. Pim, 965 F.2d 587,
591 (8th Cir. 1992) (explaining that the “plain meaning” of the contempt statute, 18
U.S.C. § 401, “prevents a federal court from imposing a sanction for contempt of
another court’s injunction”). This Court has long followed this equitable principle.
See, e.g., Stiller v. Hardman, 324 F.2d 626, 628 (2d Cir. 1963) (denying enforcement
of an injunction in a New York court that was issued by an Ohio court because
15 “[v]iolation of an injunctive order is cognizable in the court which issued the
injunction”).
Plaintiff fails to offer a single example of one court exercising its civil
contempt authority on behalf of another court’s injunction. 6 Nor are we aware of
any. As telling as that gap is, it’s of no surprise. The civil contempt power is, at
its core, uniquely personal to each court; by providing a mechanism to mandate
compliance when a court is confronted with disobedience, it is a necessary
corollary to a court’s authority to issue binding orders. “Courts thus have
embraced an inherent contempt authority . . . as a power necessary to the exercise
6 Indeed, plaintiff has failed to offer any compelling examples of one court enforcing injunctions entered by another court—even without resorting to its civil contempt authority. The cases she cites concern statutory grants of power which in specific, limited cases broaden a court’s power to protect or provide relief from orders entered by other courts. See, e.g., Smith v. Woosley, 399 F.3d 428, 433–34 (2d Cir. 2005) (construing the relitigation exception to the Anti-Injunction Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2283); Smith v. New York, No. 12 Civ. 4851, 2014 WL 6783194 (E.D.N.Y. Dec. 2, 2014) (analyzing Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b)(6), which authorizes courts to provide relief from final judgments based on extraordinary circumstances). No doubt, Congress is free to pass laws which provide for departures from longstanding equity practice. Yet “a major departure from the long tradition of equity practice should not be lightly implied.” eBay Inc. v. MercExchange, L.L.C., 547 U.S. 388, 391 (2006). These cases hardly establish an across-the-board rule that one court may enforce another court’s injunction. Accordingly, even if plaintiff’s complaint is construed as asserting separate and distinct causes of action including, but not limited to, a claim for contempt—a characterization which, as explained above, we reject—it is far from clear that her quest for class-wide relief would be any less difficult. 16 of all others.” Bagwell, 512 U.S. at 831 (internal quotation marks omitted); see also
Leman v. Krentler-Arnold Hinge Last Co., 284 U.S. 448, 454 (1932) (“[T]he proceeding
for civil contempt for violation of the injunction should be treated as a part of the
main cause.”). Against this backdrop, plaintiff’s theory of a free-wielding
contempt authority, capable of exercise by one court on behalf of another court,
would “present the anomalous proceeding of one court taking cognizance of an
alleged contempt committed before and against another court, which possessed
ample powers, itself to take care of its own dignity and punish the offender.” Ex
parte Bradley, 74 U.S. 364, 372 (1868); see also Myers v. United States, 264 U.S. 95, 104
(1924) (“By disobeying the order, plaintiffs . . . defied an authority which that
tribunal was required to vindicate.” (emphasis added)).
Further still, a court’s broad authority to identify, prosecute, adjudicate, and
sanction contumacious conduct makes for a “potent weapon,” Taggart, 139 S. Ct.
at 1801, which, in Taggart, undergirded the Supreme Court’s conclusion that civil
contempt should not be employed where there is a fair ground of doubt as to the
wrongfulness of the defendant’s conduct. Heeding the Supreme Court’s
cautionary approach, we decline to expand the availability of a bankruptcy court’s
17 civil contempt authority to any similarly aggrieved party, anywhere in the
country, that comes before one court seeking relief from an alleged contemnor’s
comparable affront to a different court. Doing so could “wreak havoc on the
federal courts to leave enforcement of the injunctive order of a bankruptcy court
in one district to the interpretive whims of a bankruptcy court in another district.”
Alderwoods Grp., Inc. v. Garcia, 682 F.3d 958, 970 (11th Cir. 2012).
Plaintiff’s reasoning is also in tension with our repeated observation that “a
bankruptcy court has ‘unique expertise in interpreting its own injunctions and
determining when they have been violated.’” In re Gravel, 6 F.4th 503, 513 (2d Cir.
2021) (quoting In re Anderson, 884 F.3d at 390–91); see also In re Belton, 961 F.3d at
617. She acknowledges as much, but contends that, unlike a judge-crafted,
“bespoke” injunction, the generally uniform nature of § 524(a)(2)’s statutory
injunction minimizes the unique insight courts normally have into their own
injunctions. See Appellee Br. at 35–37.
As an initial matter, we rejected that line of argument in Anderson, and again
in Belton. Specifically, the appellant in Anderson advocated for the arbitrability of
discharge violation claims by arguing that because the discharge injunction under
18 § 524(a)(2) arises from statute and is executed by a bankruptcy court on a standard
form using boilerplate language, “the unique powers of the bankruptcy court are
not implicated in any meaningful way.” 884 F.3d at 391. We saw it differently,
reasoning that “[n]either the statutory basis of the order nor its similarity—even
uniformity—across bankruptcy cases alters the simple fact that the discharge
injunction is an order issued by the bankruptcy court and that the bankruptcy
court alone possess the power and unique expertise to enforce it.” Id.
Similarly, upon Citi’s request in Belton to reconsider our holding in
Anderson, we reaffirmed the non-arbitrability of § 524(a)(2) discharge violations,
explaining—at plaintiff’s urging—that the “issuing court is uniquely positioned to
assess” the various considerations at play in contempt proceedings. In re Belton,
961 F.3d at 617.
True, discharge orders, which might often be issued on standard forms, 7
trigger a statutory, rather than a judge-crafted, injunction. Yet, beyond the mere
7 Citi points out that the discharge order form utilized by the bankruptcy court below differed from the standard form available on the federal government’s website. See Appellant Br. at 65 (comparing App’x 29 with Form B 18 [https://www.uscourts.gov/forms/bankruptcy-forms/discharge-debtor]). 19 determination whether a discharge order has been violated, the appropriateness
of civil contempt sanctions, and in what form, are considerations that can still
benefit from the unique insight a bankruptcy court can gain in presiding over a
proceeding. Taggart makes that much clear; the Court provided that “a party’s
record of continuing and persistent violations and persistent contumacy,” on the
one hand, and, on the other hand, “a party’s good faith, even where it does not bar
civil contempt, may help to determine an appropriate sanction.” 139 S. Ct. at 1802
(internal citations and quotation marks omitted). Plainly, the bankruptcy court’s
familiarity with the matter remains important.
In any event, Taggart does not suggest that the statutory basis of the
discharge injunction is of any significance in determining its manner of operation
or how it might be enforced. To the contrary, the Supreme Court made clear that
“traditional civil contempt principles apply straightforwardly to the bankruptcy
discharge context,” id., and as explained above, a straightforward application of
longstanding civil contempt principles suggests that only the issuing court may
exercise its civil contempt powers to enforce its discharge order, and the injunction
which springs from it.
20 At bottom, plaintiff seeks a bankruptcy-specific expansion of the civil
contempt power beyond its longstanding limits at equity. Congress is capable of
intervening to guide the exercise of a bankruptcy court’s civil contempt power.
But “a major departure from the long tradition of equity practice should not be
lightly implied.” eBay Inc. v. MercExchange, L.L.C., 547 U.S. 388, 391 (2006); see also
Zuckerman v. Metro. Museum of Art, 928 F.3d 186, 196 (2d Cir. 2019). Nothing in the
Code suggests that Congress intended to displace well-established principles
regarding the exercise of the civil contempt power.
Although the bankruptcy court grounded its authority in §§ 524 and 105,
Taggart examined those provisions and concluded they incorporate traditional
standards of equity practice, see Taggart, 139 S. Ct. at 1801, which, as provided
above, includes the principle that a court cannot exercise its civil contempt
authority to enforce another court’s injunction. Moreover, as the Fifth Circuit
explained in Crocker, the Bankruptcy Code, at one time, provided that an order of
discharge could be registered in another district and “enforced in like manner” in
the new district as in the issuing district. See In re Crocker, 941 F.3d 206, 213 (5th
Cir. 2019) (quoting Pub. L. No. 91-467, § 3, 84. Stat. 990, 991). However, upon the
21 adoption of the Bankruptcy Code in 1978, that provision was revised to remove
that language. See id. Current Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure 4004(f)
“guides registration but does not authorize ‘like manner’ enforcement as did its
predecessor.” In re Crocker, 941 F.3d at 214. We presume that Congress’s removal
of this language “entail[ed] a change in meaning.” See Yu v. Hasaki Rest., Inc., 944
F.3d 395, 418 (2d Cir. 2019) (quoting Antonin Scalia & Bryan A. Garner, Reading
Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts 256 (2012)); see also id. (“Statutory history is
. . . an accepted and uncontroversial tool in the interpretation of statutory texts.”
(citation omitted)). Plaintiff’s version of a more robust civil contempt power may
have once found, but no longer finds, support in the Code.8
In sum, there may be policy considerations that counsel in favor of a
nationwide mechanism for a class of former debtors to enforce their respective
discharge orders against a common creditor’s systemic disruption of their new
8The bankruptcy court minimized the significance of this statutory history, pointing to Rule 4004(f)’s language that “the order of discharge shall have the same effect as an order of the Court of the district where registered.” App’x 266 (quoting Fed. R. Bankr. P. 4004(f)). Yet whether an injunction has force beyond where it was originally issued is a different question than the nature and availability of the means to enforce that injunction. Rule 4004(f) simply makes clear that, upon registration, a party’s legal duty to comply with the injunction extends to the district of registration. It does not speak to how an aggrieved debtor might remedy violations that occur in the new district. 22 financial lives. Indeed, given the “fresh start” philosophy underlying the Code,
establishing a broad enforcement mechanism for § 524, or expanding a bankruptcy
court’s civil contempt powers with respect to discharge orders, may likely be good
policy. But courts must take statutes as they find them, and, as written, the Code
leaves intact the longstanding equitable principles regarding the enforcement of
injunctions. A bankruptcy court’s civil contempt authority does not extend to
other bankruptcy courts’ discharge orders in a nationwide class action. The
class-wide relief sought by plaintiff is therefore unavailable under the Bankruptcy
Code.
II. Plaintiff has stated a claim for civil contempt under Taggart’s “fair ground of doubt” standard.
Only plaintiff’s individual contempt claim remains. Taggart provides the
yardstick to measure her claim: a bankruptcy court may hold a creditor in civil
contempt for violation of the discharge order only if, as an objective matter, “there
is no fair ground of doubt as to whether the order barred the creditor’s conduct.”
139 S. Ct. at 1799 (emphasis omitted).
23 That standard is satisfied here. 9 As provided above, plaintiff alleges that,
post-bankruptcy, the credit report’s tradeline for her Citi credit card listed Citi as
a creditor and incorrectly listed her balance as “charged off” instead of discharged
in bankruptcy. App’x 62. She claims that she asked Citi to update the tradeline,
but the bank refused. Id. at 63. That refusal, she continues, is part of a deliberate
policy of coercing debtors to pay off discharged debts. Plaintiff explains that Citi
is fully aware that its behavior is coercive because Citi mails “collection letters” to
debtors before their bankruptcy filings “stating that ‘charge offs’ will ruin their
ability to obtain credit and conversely promising to remove the ’charge off’ if they
pay the delinquent debt in full.” Id. at 71. After the bankruptcy filing and
discharge order, Citi “know[s] that the existence of such inaccurate information”
in the credit reports will “damage . . . credit ratings,” and that debtors will “often
9Seeking to chart a path to relief in the event that her contempt claim fails, plaintiff argues that Taggart’s “fair ground of doubt” standard “does not speak at all” to whether she (and her proposed fellow class members) are entitled to declaratory relief and damages. Appellee Br. at 24. That is an issue we need not decide given that plaintiff has cleared Taggart’s high bar; a successful contempt claim is necessarily accompanied by a determination that the creditor violated the discharge order, and opens the door to recovery of damages, including restitution. Whether and to what extent relief short of contempt sanctions is available in the case of a discharge violation for which a fair ground of doubt remains is a question for another day. 24 feel it necessary to pay off the debt despite [the] discharge in order to remove the
inaccurate information from their credit reports.” Id. at 70.
She also explains, in a nonconclusory fashion, the way Citi financially
benefits from the practice: third-party debt collection agencies “are willing to pay
more” for Citi’s delinquent receivables given that, due to the confusion created by
Citi’s policy, the agencies “know they can collect on discharged debts.” Id. at 64.
Accepting these allegations as true, plaintiff has plausibly alleged that Citi
employs a policy and practice of refusing to correct erroneous tradelines to coerce
payment of discharged debts. In short, plaintiff plausibly alleges that Citi’s refusal
to correct her tradeline was objectively, and purposively, coercive. See In re Pratt,
462 F.3d 14, 19 (1st Cir. 2006).
Citi offers various arguments as to why plaintiff’s allegations fall short.
None persuade. Citi claims, for example, that § 524(a)(2) applies only to
affirmative efforts to collect a discharged debt, but that plaintiff alleges, at best,
that Citi merely failed to ask credit reporting agencies to update a tradeline on an
account Citi had sold years earlier. See Appellant Br. at 33–34. Failing to act, the
bank says, cannot amount to a discharge violation.
25 Faithfully read, the complaint describes a course of conduct by Citi which
includes, but is not limited to, Citi’s refusal to correct post-discharge tradeline
errors. As detailed above, plaintiff explains (a) how and why the post-discharge
“charged off” notation pressures former debtors; (b) how Citi takes advantage of,
and financially benefits from that fear; and (c) how Citi’s post-discharge control of
the tradeline, despite selling the debt to third-party debt collection agencies, plays
an important part in Citi’s scheme.
Taken together, plaintiff plausibly claims that Citi’s refusal to correct the
tradeline at plaintiff’s request was part of a systematic effort to pressure or coerce
plaintiff (and similarly situated debtors) to pay off her (and their) discharged debt.
Plaintiff pleads facts which, taken as true, establish an intentional course of
conduct aimed at collecting discharged debts. In other words, although the
“failure of a furnisher of credit information to take affirmative steps to update the
information that it has reported on a consumer’s account is not, standing alone, a
violation of [§] 524(a)(2),” In re Ho, 624 B.R. 748, 755 (Bankr. E.D.N.Y. 2021),
plaintiff’s allegations are not so limited.
26 Consequently, there is no § 524 “affirmative act” deficiency here. An
intentional and systematic refusal to update the credit report upon the debtor’s
request constitutes “an act to collect” under § 524(a)(2) where, objectively, it has
the practical effect of improperly coercing the debtor into paying off a discharged
debt. See Roth v. Nationstar Mortg., LLC (In re Roth), 935 F.3d 1270, 1276 (11th Cir.
2019); Venture Bank v. Lapides, 800 F.3d 442, 448 (8th Cir. 2015); In re Paul, 534 F.3d
1303, 1308 (10th Cir. 2008); In re Pratt, 462 F.3d at 19. As provided above, the
connection between Citi’s course of conduct—including its refusal—and its
objective, coercive effect on discharged debtors is obvious.
Citi also suggests that having sold plaintiff’s debt to Midland
pre-bankruptcy, it was no longer her creditor, and therefore is beyond § 524(a)(2)’s
reach. Not true. As an initial matter, the bankruptcy court’s discharge order
explained that it “prohibits any attempt to collect from the debtor a debt that has
been discharged.” App’x 30. Although the order provided elsewhere that all
“creditors” are enjoined from “engaging in any act to collect [] debts . . . of the
debtor,” id. at 29, it also made clear that its reach applied more broadly, that is, to
all efforts to collect a discharged debt. See also 11 U.S.C. § 524(a)(2) (enjoining “an
27 act to collect, recover, or offset any such debt” without specifying that only current
creditors are enjoined).
Moreover, plaintiff alleges that despite the sale to Midland, Citi continued
to appear as the sole creditor on the tradeline, and that, by collecting discharged
debts and forwarding those payments to Midland, Citi acted as Midland’s agent
and remained involved in the collection of discharged debt—and the value of that
involvement generally was reflected in the premium Midland paid Citi for
plaintiff’s debt. App’x 71. Indeed, plaintiff alleges that under the terms of Citi and
Midland’s agreement, only Citi may “report the sold debts as sold or transferred”
and “Midland will not be responsible for correcting or updating information on
any debts listed in” Citi’s name. Id. at 64. The complaint thus plausibly alleges
that Citi is “fully aware that [its] deliberate failure to update a discharged debtor’s
. . . account coerces the debtor to pay said account.” Id. at 71. We decline to impose
a rule whereby creditors can avoid their obligations under a discharge order by
28 covertly passing their debt off to third parties. Citi remained within § 524(a)(2)’s
reach. 10
Throughout its brief, Citi relies on this Court’s decision in In re Kalikow, 602
F.3d 82 (2d Cir. 2010). That case makes clear that discharge orders are not so
limitless to extend to debts incurred post discharge, or to third parties who have
“no relation to the reorganization proceedings,” id. at 95, no interest, either
indirectly or indirectly, against the debtor, and who did nothing to pressure the
debtor into paying a discharged debt. Id. at 95–96. That’s not this case. Far from
having no relation to the reorganization proceeding, plaintiff alleges that she listed
her debt with Citi in her bankruptcy petition and provided Citi notice both of that
fact, as well as of her eventual discharge. Plaintiff also explains how Citi maintains
an interest against the debtor; she describes in detail the way Citi retains control
over the tradeline, as well as why its policy of refusing to correct the tradeline is
designed to coerce discharged debtors into paying off discharged debts.
10Citi also seeks to draw on its obligations under the Fair Credit Reporting Act (“FCRA”), which, it argues, places the burden of substantively responding to bankruptcy-related credit reports requests on the credit reporting agencies, rather than the furnishers of that information. Citi’s obligations under the FCRA are not determinative of its obligations under the Bankruptcy Code. 29 At bottom, accepting her nonconclusory allegations as true and drawing
reasonable inferences in her favor, plaintiff has plausibly alleged that Citi’s refusal
to correct her tradeline stems from a policy of coercing unwitting debtors to pay
off discharged debts. There is no fair ground of doubt that, if true, Citi’s conduct
amounts to a violation of the discharge. See Taggart, 139 S. Ct at 1799. We therefore
affirm the bankruptcy court’s denial of Citi’s motion to dismiss plaintiff’s
individual contempt claim.
CONCLUSION
Accordingly, we AFFIRM IN PART and REVERSE IN PART the
bankruptcy court’s order and REMAND for further proceedings consistent with