In re: Minon Miller

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedMarch 11, 2019
DocketCC-18-1267-SFL
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re: Minon Miller (In re: Minon Miller) 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
In re: Minon Miller, (bap9 2019).

Opinion

FILED MAR 11 2019 NOT FOR PUBLICATION SUSAN M. SPRAUL, CLERK U.S. BKCY. APP. PANEL OF THE NINTH CIRCUIT

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY APPELLATE PANEL OF THE NINTH CIRCUIT

In re: BAP No. CC-18-1267-SFL

MINON MILLER, Bk. No. 2:13-bk-35116-RK

Debtor.

MINON MILLER,

Appellant,

v. MEMORANDUM*

EDWARD GILLIAM; VIC RODRIGUEZ,

Appellees.

Submitted Without Oral Argument on February 21, 2019

Filed – March 11, 2019

Appeal from the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Central District of California

* This disposition is not appropriate for publication. Although it may be cited for whatever persuasive value it may have, see Fed. R. App. P. 32.1, it has no precedential value. See 9th Cir. BAP Rule 8024-1. Honorable Robert N. Kwan, Bankruptcy Judge, Presiding

Appearances: Appellant Minon Miller, pro se, on brief; Vic Rodriguez on brief for appellees.

Before: SPRAKER, FARIS, and LAFFERTY, Bankruptcy Judges.

INTRODUCTION

Minon Miller appeals from an order granting in part Edward

Gilliam’s motion for sanctions under Rule 9011.1 By way of the motion,

Gilliam sought to recover $77,200 in attorney’s fees he incurred obtaining

an order dismissing Miller’s sixth bankruptcy case based on bad faith and

improper purpose. The bankruptcy court awarded $50,875 in fees and

disallowed the rest as unreasonable.

Miller contends that the bankruptcy court erred in granting the

motion because Gilliam lacked standing. Miller is correct. Gilliam’s claim

for fees was property of his chapter 7 bankruptcy estate. Because Gilliam

never scheduled this claim as an asset in his bankruptcy case, it continued

to be estate property when his bankruptcy case was closed. As a result,

only his chapter 7 trustee had standing to pursue recovery of the fees.

1 Unless specified otherwise, all chapter and section references are to the Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. §§ 101-1532, and all “Rule” references are to the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure.

2 Because the bankruptcy court should have denied the motion for lack of

standing, we REVERSE.

FACTS

Miller and Gilliam have been litigating against each other for over ten

years. The litigation originally arose from a 2007 real property lease, with a

purchase option, covering Gilliam’s residence in Carson, California. As a

result of the litigation, the Orange County Superior Court entered

judgment against Miller for roughly $53,000.00. The state court later

entered a separate judgment for the same amount against Miller’s wholly-

owned tax return preparation business, Nonim, LLC.

There have been numerous additional actions in state court, some

brought by Gilliam, and some brought by Miller. Each party also has filed

multiple voluntary bankruptcy petitions. Gilliam commenced three chapter

13 bankruptcy cases in 2008. He also filed a chapter 7 bankruptcy petition

in 2017. The chapter 7 trustee in that case filed a no asset report, and the

bankruptcy court entered a discharge order in Gilliam’s favor on July 3,

2017.

For her part, Miller has commenced six bankruptcy cases. The only

one relevant to this appeal is the sixth and final case, which she

commenced in 2013. Shortly after commencement, Gilliam moved to

dismiss this case on the ground that the bankruptcy was filed in bad faith

and solely for the purpose of impeding him from collecting on his

3 judgments. Gilliam additionally alleged that Miller had grossly

understated her income in her bankruptcy schedules. After holding a trial

on the motion to dismiss, the bankruptcy court ruled in favor of Gilliam

and entered an order dismissing the case in September 2015.

Miller appealed the dismissal order to this Panel. Miller v. Gilliam (In

re Miller), BAP No. CC-15-1328-KiTaKu, 2016 WL 5957270, at *1 (9th Cir.

BAP Oct. 13, 2016). We affirmed, holding that the bankruptcy court’s

dismissal of the bankruptcy case on the ground of bad faith was not an

abuse of discretion. Id. at *13. Miller then appealed our decision to the

Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, which also affirmed. Miller v. Gilliam (In re

Miller), 708 F. App’x 396 (9th Cir. 2017).

On October 29, 2015, while Miller’s appeal to this Panel was pending,

Gilliam filed a motion for sanctions under § 105 and Rule 9011. According

to Gilliam, Miller’s latest bankruptcy filing was one in a series of abusive

and improper bad faith bankruptcy filings Miller had initiated as part of

her campaign to defeat his judgment collection efforts. Gilliam also relied

on Miller’s understatement of her gross income, as the bankruptcy court

had found when it dismissed her bankruptcy case.

On November 16, 2015, Miller responded to Gilliam’s sanctions

motion. She once again denied that she had filed her sixth bankruptcy

petition for an improper purpose or that she had misstated her gross

income. After receiving Gilliam’s sanctions motion and Miller’s response,

4 the bankruptcy court decided to hold the sanctions motion in abeyance

pending the disposition of Miller’s appeals from the case dismissal order.

On May 2, 2018, after the Court of Appeals issued its mandate, the

bankruptcy court reset the matter for hearing on May 30, 2018.

Shortly thereafter, Miller filed a request for judicial notice in support

of her opposition to the sanctions motion. In relevant part, Miller asked the

bankruptcy court to take judicial notice of the filing of Gilliam’s 2017

bankruptcy case and Gilliam’s receipt of a discharge therein. She further

pointed out that Gilliam’s bankruptcy schedules did not list his pending

sanctions motion or his claim for attorney’s fees under Rule 9011.

Consequently, Miller reasoned, Gilliam’s entitlement (if any) to recover his

fees remained property of his bankruptcy estate, and he lacked standing to

pursue them on behalf of his estate.

Gilliam filed a declaration in response to Miller’s request for judicial

notice. Gilliam noted that he had listed one of his judgments against Miller

in his amended bankruptcy schedules.2 He also noted that his amended

schedules mentioned Miller’s latest bankruptcy filing. But Gilliam’s

amended schedules did not list his claim against Miller for attorney’s fees

as an asset in his bankruptcy case. In fact, Gilliam stated in his schedules

2 Gilliam has not disputed that his original schedules, filed in March 2017, did not list any of his claims against Miller. Gilliam did not file his amended schedules until August 2017, after he received his discharge and after his chapter trustee issued a no asset report.

5 only that Miller’s 2013 bankruptcy case prevented him from collecting on

his judgment. This was not true, inasmuch as Miller’s case already had

been ordered dismissed as a bad faith and improper bankruptcy filing.

The bankruptcy court heard Gilliam’s sanctions motion on May 30,

2018. The bankruptcy court acknowledged that Gilliam did not schedule

his claim for attorney’s fees against Miller. But the court was not concerned

that this presented an obstacle to Gilliam’s sanctions motion. The court

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