In Re Schultz

251 B.R. 823, 2000 Bankr. LEXIS 872
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Texas
DecidedJune 30, 2000
Docket19-40446
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 251 B.R. 823 (In Re Schultz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Schultz, 251 B.R. 823, 2000 Bankr. LEXIS 872 (Tex. 2000).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION REGARDING MOTION TO VALIDATE STATE COURT JUDGMENT

BILL G. PARKER, Bankruptcy Judge.

This matter is before the Court upon the Motion for Relief from Automatic Stay to Annul Automatic Stay and to Validate State Court Judgment (the “Motion”) filed in the above-referenced reopened Chapter 7 case by Eloísa Corpus, Individually and as Representative of the Estate of John Abel Corpus, Deceased (the “Plaintiff’). The Court has jurisdiction to consider the Motion in this case pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1334 and 28 U.S.C. § 157(a). The Court has the authority to enter a final order regarding this contested matter since it constitutes a core proceeding as contemplated by 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(A), (G), (I) and (0). This Memorandum of Decision disposes of all issues presented by the Motion.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

On July 17, 1994, John Abel Corpus was killed in a single-vehicle automobile accident while on a fishing trip with the Debt- or, Kevin Schultz. Mr. Schultz allegedly offered the use of his pickup if Mr. Corpus, a nineteen year-old individual at the time, would drive it to a nearby store to purchase additional quantities of beer. Mr. Schultz entrusted his vehicle to Mr. Corpus, even though Mr. Corpus was allegedly at that time clearly intoxicated.

Approximately two years later, on July 16, 1996, the Plaintiff filed an original petition in the 128th Judicial District Court of Nueces County, Texas, styled as Eloisa Corpus, Individually and as Representative of the Estate of Johnny Abel Corpus, Deceased v. Kevin Schultz and assigned cause no. 96-3511-E (the “state court litigation”), alleging that the death of Johnny Corpus was proximately caused by the negligence and/or gross negligence of Kevin Schultz and that Mr. Schultz was liable to the Plaintiff for an unspecified amount of damages. Mr. Schultz failed to appear or to answer the allegations of the Plaintiffs petition and a default judgment in the amount of $537,500.00 was subsequently entered by the state district court on March 6, 1997 in that action (the “state court judgment”).

The above actions were taken by the Plaintiff in the state court litigation without the knowledge that, on May 2, 1995, some fourteen months prior to the initiation of the state court litigation, Kevin Schultz (the “Debtor”), 1 had filed a voluntary petition for relief under Chapter 13 of the Bankruptcy Code in this Court. That Chapter 13 case was subsequently convert *825 ed to a Chapter 7 liquidation on June 17, 1996 and Jason Searcy was appointed as the Chapter 7 trustee in the case. 2 Mr. Searcy determined that there were no assets available for distribution and he filed a Report of No Distribution with the Court on July 25, 1996. The Debtor subsequently received a discharge on October 18,1996 and the bankruptcy - case was closed on October 31, 1996. There is no factual dispute that the Plaintiff was never listed on the creditor matrix filed in the case nor was any claim arising from the death of Mr. Corpus listed or referenced in any manner in the schedules and statements filed by the Debtor in the bankruptcy case.

After some apparent but unidentified attempt by the Plaintiff to collect on the state court judgment, the Debtor attempted to assign to the Plaintiff a bad faith claim against his putative insurance carrier, Old American County Mutual Fire Insurance Company (“Insurer”) based in part upon the failure of the Insurer to defend against the Plaintiffs claim. Upon realizing that such claim might, in fact, constitute property of the bankruptcy estate, the Plaintiff and the Debtor jointly requested this Court to reopen the Chapter 7 case for the purpose of administering this potential asset and the Court granted' that request.

The Plaintiff thereafter filed her “Motion for Relief from Automatic Stay to Annul Automatic Stay and to Validate State Court Judgment.” The Motion sought an annulment of the automatic stay as it applied to the commencement and continuation of the state court litigation and for validation of the judgment ultimately rendered in that litigation based upon the admitted fact that the Debtor never notified the Plaintiff of the pendency of the bankruptcy case. Following a hearing conducted on the motion, during which the Debtor joined in the request of the Plaintiff and the only opposition to the annulment .of the stay was. voiced by the Insurer, this Court issued an “Interim Order Annulling Automatic Stay and Requiring Written Submission Regarding Modification of Discharge Injunction” which, on the basis of oral findings read into the record at the hearing, granted the Plaintiffs request for annulment of the automatic stay imposed by § 362 of the Bankruptcy Code as to the commencement and continuation of the state court litigation.

Because the March 6, 1997 state court judgment was rendered, however, at a time in which the automatic stay had been displaced as a matter of law by the discharge injunction imposed by § 524 of the Bankruptcy Code, the Plaintiffs request for a validation of the state court judgment would necessarily require a modification of that discharge injunction, even though the motion was not characterized as such and despite the fact that the parties wholly failed to address that issue at the hearing. Thus, in order to minimize costs to the parties and because there was no factual dispute as to the sequence of events upon which the motion was based, the parties were directed to tender to the Court a written submission as to whether the discharge injunction could and should be retroactively modified so as to validate the March 6, 1997 state court judgment as requested in the Plaintiffs Motion.

II. DISCUSSION

The Plaintiffs request for the validation of the state court judgment raises some interesting issues regarding the nature and scope of a debtor’s discharge in a Chapter 7 ease. Though the term “validation” is not a term of art under the Bankruptcy Code, the Plaintiff is essentially asking the Court for a judicial determination that the state court judgment entered in March, 1997 constitutes a valid *826 and subsisting judgment against the Debt- or, notwithstanding the prior discharge of debts received by the Debtor pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 727 in October, 1996, and the simultaneous imposition of the discharge injunction on such date pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 524. The Insurer is the sole objecting party to the request, asserting that the Plaintiff has no standing to request, and this Court has no power to grant, a modification of the discharge injunction arising from § 524.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
251 B.R. 823, 2000 Bankr. LEXIS 872, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-schultz-txeb-2000.