In the Matter of: Wendell Dwayne O’Neal d/b/a/ Thirteenth Dimension, LLC

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Alabama
DecidedMarch 27, 2026
Docket22-80001
StatusUnknown

This text of In the Matter of: Wendell Dwayne O’Neal d/b/a/ Thirteenth Dimension, LLC (In the Matter of: Wendell Dwayne O’Neal d/b/a/ Thirteenth Dimension, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In the Matter of: Wendell Dwayne O’Neal d/b/a/ Thirteenth Dimension, LLC, (Ala. 2026).

Opinion

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ALABAMA NORTHERN DIVISION

In the Matter of: } } Wendell Dwayne O’Neal } Miscellaneous Proceeding d/b/a/ Thirteenth Dimension, LLC, } No. 22-80001-CRJ } } Movant. }

MEMORANDUM OPINION ON MOTION TO REINSTATE MISCELLANEOUS PROCEEDING

This matter is before the Court on the Motion to Reinstate the Miscellaneous Proceedings Pursuant to the District Court’s Amended Injunction, ECF No. 50 (hereinafter the “Motion to Reinstate”), and the Application to Have the Chapter 7 Filing Fee Waived, ECF No. 51, filed by Movant, Wendell Dewayne O’Neal (hereinafter “O’Neal”), seeking to reinstate the above-styled Miscellaneous Proceeding. The Court has carefully considered the Motion to Reinstate, the Application to Have the Filing Fee Waive, including all attachments thereto, and the applicable law and hereby makes the following findings of fact and conclusions of law pursuant to Rule 9014(c) of the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure, finding that O’Neal has failed to establish that cause exists to reinstate the above-styled Miscellaneous Proceeding for the reasons stated below.1 I. Procedural History and Findings of Fact On April 28, 2022, O’Neal first sought leave from this Court to file a Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition by filing an Application for Leave to File a Chapter 11 Bankruptcy Petition in Accordance with the Order of the Northern District of Alabama, ECF No. 1 (“Application for Leave to File”),

1 To the extent any of the Court’s findings of fact constitute conclusions of law, they are adopted as such. Alternatively, to the extent any of the Court’s conclusions of law constitute findings of fact, they are adopted as such. seeking permission to file for relief under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code, in part, for the stated purpose of discharging a sanctions order entered by the United States District Court for the Northern District of Alabama, Northeastern Division (hereinafter the “District Court”) against O’Neal in the amount of $6,500.00 for vexatious litigation tactics (hereinafter the “Sanctions Order”).2 A. Sanctions Order The District Court entered the Sanctions Order on December 4, 2020, dismissing a Complaint filed by O’Neal against Allstate Indemnity Insurance Company, Inc. (hereinafter “Allstate”), the attorneys involved in the Allstate litigation, and the presiding state court judge who approved his

settlement with Allstate for a policy-limit payout. The Complaint generally alleged that the Allstate defendants conspired to deny O’Neal full recovery under his mother’s uninsured/underinsured motorist policy. The District Court dismissed the Complaint based on lack of subject-matter jurisdiction but explained that dismissal alone would not be a sufficient deterrent to O’Neal’s vexatious litigation tactics, stating: O’Neal, a seasoned and prolific filer of abusive lawsuits, must be sanctioned for bringing yet another meritless action, one of dozens that he’s brought in legal fora across the country. This case is but one of twenty that he has filed in the Northern District of Alabama, a home-district concentration that belies the national scope of his litigious zeal.3

The District Court further explained that O’Neal had filed at least twenty lawsuits in the Northern District of Alabama and was involved in at least forty-seven other cases in District Courts across the country; O’Neal had also been party to at least twenty-seven appeals in various Circuits; and that O’Neal had “demonstrated a years-long pattern of filing frivolous lawsuits throughout the country, imposing enormous costs on defendants, attorneys, and judicial systems throughout the country.”4 Turning to the action filed against the Allstate defendants, the District Court specifically found that the

2 District Court Order 5:20-CV-743-LCB, ECF No. 105. 3 Id. at 13-14 (citations omitted). 4 Id. at 19. Complaint was based on a legal theory that did not have a reasonable chance of success and that it could not be advanced as a reasonable argument to change existing law; that the claims were without merit and frivolous; that the case had been brought for an improper purpose following successive suits brought on the same facts; and that the motions for sanctions filed by O’Neal against the Allstate defendants served only to harass. Based on these findings, the District Court concluded that O’Neal is a vexatious litigant who will be “deterred from continuously filing frivolous lawsuits only with the imposition of both monetary and non-monetary injunctions.”5 Accordingly, the District Court imposed monetary sanctions against

O’Neal in the amount of $6,500.00 and entered an injunction requiring O’Neal to seek leave of court before filing future pro se pleadings in any federal court.6 The Sanctions Order further provided that any new action filed in a federal court must be accompanied by a $1,000.00 surety bond, refundable upon a finding that the proceeding was filed in good faith.7 On October 19, 2021, the Eleventh Circuit entered an Opinion affirming the Sanctions Order, finding that the District Court properly dismissed O’Neal’s claims for lack of subject matter jurisdiction and did not abuse its discretion in imposing monetary sanctions and the prefiling injunction.8 The Court of Appeals explained that the “District Court acted well within its discretion to sanction O’Neal for costly, abusive, and vexatious filing behavior.”9 The Eleventh Circuit stated that the “record fully supports the district court’s finding that by filing this lawsuit and moving for sanctions without an objective basis in law, O’Neal violated Rule 11 and that the sanctions were appropriate both under Rule 11 and the district court’s inherent powers.”10 The Eleventh Circuit further determined that

5 Id. at 20. 6 Id. at 25-34. 7 Id. at 28. 8 O’Neal v. Allstate Indem. Ins. Co. Inc. et al., Case No. 20-14712, 2021 WL 4852222 (11th Cir. Oct. 19, 2021). 9 Id. at 10. 10 Id. the pre-filing injunction was a “reasonable response to O’Neal litigious history,” and explained that “[F]ederal courts can protect their dockets from abuse by frequent filers so long as the measures taken are a reasonable response to the abuse and access to the courts is not entirely foreclosed.”11 On February 25, 2022, the mandate issued and the Eleventh Circuit’s Order became a final judgment. Three days later on February 28, 2022, the District Court entered an Order Denying Movant’s Motion for Leave to Obtain Relief from the Renewed Monetary Sanctions Order Based upon Newly Discovered Evidence that Allstate Withheld $3,002.86 in Insurance Proceeds Contrary to Settlement Agreement Terms as Provided Pursuant to FRCP. Rule 60(b)(2)(3)(4)(5)(6), stating, in part:

As best the Court can ascertain, O’Neal seeks to vacate the injunction issued on December 4, 2020, insofar as it requires O’Neal to pay monetary sanctions and to post a $1,000 bond before filing any new action or other proceeding. . . . The majority of O’Neal’s motion appears to be a rehash of issues that have already been decided by [the District Court] and affirmed by the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals.12

B. Application for Leave to File After O’Neal filed his Application for Leave to File in this Court on April 28, 2022, the Court entered an Order scheduling the matter for hearing on May 18, 2022 to determine whether O’Neal should be permitted to file a Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition, ECF No. 3. Prior to the scheduled hearing, O’Neal filed an Argument for Leave to File a Chapter 7 or 11 Bankruptcy Petition in Accordance with the District Court of Alabama’s Permanent Injunction Order, requesting a one-month continuance in order to obtain legal representation for his company Thirteenth Dimension, LLC, ECF No. 5.

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In the Matter of: Wendell Dwayne O’Neal d/b/a/ Thirteenth Dimension, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-wendell-dwayne-oneal-dba-thirteenth-dimension-llc-alnb-2026.