In Re Marshall

291 B.R. 855, 2003 Bankr. LEXIS 320, 41 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 46, 2003 WL 1882519
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, C.D. California
DecidedMarch 27, 2003
DocketLA02-30769SB
StatusPublished

This text of 291 B.R. 855 (In Re Marshall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, C.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Marshall, 291 B.R. 855, 2003 Bankr. LEXIS 320, 41 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 46, 2003 WL 1882519 (Cal. 2003).

Opinion

AMENDED OPINION ON RECUSAL AND REASSIGNMENT

SAMUEL L. BUFFORD, Bankruptcy Judge.

I.INTRODUCTION

Pierce Marshall (“Pierce”) brings this motion for reassignment or recusal as to this entire bankruptcy case, which was filed voluntarily by his brother J. Howard Marshall (“Howard”) and his wife. 1 The court denies both branches of the motion.

II.RELEVANT FACTS

Howard and his wife llene filed this voluntary chapter 11 bankruptcy case on July 23, 2002. They scheduled Pierce as a disputed creditor in the amount of $12 million. This debt resulted from a monetary judgment that Pierce obtained against Howard in the Texas probate case for their father J. Howard Marshall II (“J. Howard”). Howard suffered this judgment after he unsuccessfully contested Pierce’s receiving all of their father’s assets pursuant to the applicable will and family trust.

Pierce appeared in this court in the well-publicized chapter 11 case filed by their late father’s third wife Vickie Marshall (“Vickie”), also known as Anna Nicole Smith. In an adversary proceeding in that case, this court awarded summary judgment against Pierce on his claim against Vickie’s estate for defamation. The court also awarded judgment in Vickie’s favor after trial in the amount of $449,754,134 plus punitive damages of $25 million. This judgment was based on Vickie’s claim that Pierce tortiously interfered with her expectancy of a gift from her late husband. See Marshall v. Marshall (In re Marshall), 253 B.R. 550 (Bankr.C.D.Cal.2000). On trial de novo, the district court increased the punitive damages to $44.3 million and remeasured the compensatory damages at $44.3 million. See Marshall v. Marshall (In re Marshall), 275 B.R. 5 (C.D.Cal.2002).

In that adversary proceeding, this court sanctioned Pierce for destroying records subject to pending discovery requests, refusing to provide discovery and disobeying discovery orders. The final judgment as to liability was based in part on Pierce’s refusal to provide discovery. In the trial de novo in the district court, Pierce produced the documents at issue. After trial, the district court found:

The level of misconduct is far worse than even the bankruptcy court, which awarded $25 million in punitive damages, believed was present-Only because the Court recognizes that the amount of punitive damages must have a rational nexus to the actual damages award does the Court limit the total award to a doubling of the actual damages.

Id. at 58. That decision is now on appeal to the Ninth Circuit.

III.STANDING

This motion was brought and argued before the deadline for filing claims in this chapter 11 case. The court assumed at that time that Pierce would file a claim, and that his claim would be one of *858 the largest in this case. Indeed, it was his $12 million judgment that in part precipitated this bankruptcy filing.

However, Pierce declined to file a claim in this case. Before deciding the pending motion on these grounds, however, the court decided that it would benefit from briefing and argument of counsel on this point. 2 In consequence, the court issued an order to show cause why the pending motion should not be denied on these grounds, because the refusal to file a claim substantially circumscribes the standing of a creditor in a bankruptcy case.

The court finds that Pierce did have standing to make this motion, because, when he made the motion, he was a creditor listed on the debtors’ schedules, and the deadline for filing a claim had not yet arrived. The court assumes without deciding that Pierce continues to have standing as to this issue, notwithstanding his failure to file a claim. The order to show cause is discharged.

IV. REASSIGNMENT

There is no doubt that this case is related to the Vickie’s case. Both eases arose out of the disposition of the assets of J. Howard II, the father of Pierce and Howard and the husband of Vickie. Vickie filed her chapter 11 case because she had not received any assets from her husband’s estate to support her expensive living style, and her own income was insufficient. After Pierce filed a claim in her case, she filed a counterclaim which resulted in the outstanding district court judgment for $88.6 million (half of which is punitive damages). Howard moved to intervene in that litigation, but the motion was denied in favor of having that dispute resolved in the Texas probate case.

Howard contested the J. Howard II probate case in Texas, and lost an attorney’s fee award to Pierce in an amount now exceeding $12 million. Pierce has received all of the J. Howard II inheritance, which now is probably worth more than $2 billion, and is trying to protect this inheritance. Were it not for this complex relationship among the Marshalls, and the pri- or litigation in Vickie’s case in this court, this motion for recusal or reassignment would never have been made.

Neither Bankruptcy Rule 1015(b) 3 nor Local Rule 1015-2 4 exhausts the ways in *859 which cases can be related. Each of these rules lists some of the more common ways that the business relations of two or more entities may be sufficiently connected to have specific consequences. Rule 1015(b) authorizes the administrative consolidation of certain related entities. Local Rule 1015-2 requires the disclosure of certain related cases, but makes no provision as to the consequences resulting from the disclosure.

A court has broad discretion in interpreting and applying its local rules and general orders regarding assignment of cases. United States v. DeLuca, 692 F.2d 1277, 1281 (9th Cir.1982). A federal court’s general order for assignment “is a housekeeping rule for the internal operation of the ... court which has a large measure of discretion in interpreting and applying it.” United States v. Torbert, 496 F.2d 154, 157 (9th Cir.1974).

In this court, a judge is assigned to a case at the moment that the case is filed. A chapter 11 case 5 is assigned in random fashion to a judge in the division where the case is filed, unless the case is related to another case. Where a related case has been assigned to a judge still sitting in a division of the court, the new case is typically assigned to the same judge.

Thus, there are two routes by which I may have been assigned this case. 6 First, I may have received it pursuant to the random selection process, the “luck of the draw.” Second, the clerk’s office may have decided that this case is related to the Vickie case.

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Related

Liteky v. United States
510 U.S. 540 (Supreme Court, 1994)
United States v. Thomas Norman Torbert
496 F.2d 154 (Ninth Circuit, 1974)
United States v. Clarence Christian Nelson
718 F.2d 315 (Ninth Circuit, 1983)
United States v. Ruth Studley
783 F.2d 934 (Ninth Circuit, 1986)
Marshall v. Marshall (In Re Marshall)
275 B.R. 5 (C.D. California, 2002)
Marshall v. Marshall (In Re Marshall)
253 B.R. 550 (C.D. California, 2000)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
291 B.R. 855, 2003 Bankr. LEXIS 320, 41 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 46, 2003 WL 1882519, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-marshall-cacb-2003.