Jacqueline Sterling v. Southlake Nautilus Health & Racquett Club, Incorpo

140 F.4th 924
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJune 20, 2025
Docket24-2021
StatusPublished

This text of 140 F.4th 924 (Jacqueline Sterling v. Southlake Nautilus Health & Racquett Club, Incorpo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jacqueline Sterling v. Southlake Nautilus Health & Racquett Club, Incorpo, 140 F.4th 924 (7th Cir. 2025).

Opinion

In the

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________________

No. 24-2021 IN RE: JACQUELINE M. STERLING, Debtor-Appellant. ____________________

JACQUELINE M. STERLING, Plaintiff-Appellant,

v.

SOUTHLAKE NAUTILUS HEALTH & RACQUET CLUB, INC., Defendant-Appellee. ____________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Indiana, Hammond Division. No. 2:23-cv-349 — Phillip P. Simon, Judge. ____________________

ARGUED JANUARY 22, 2025 — DECIDED JUNE 20, 2025 ____________________

Before ROVNER, BRENNAN, and ST. EVE, Circuit Judges. ST. EVE, Circuit Judge. Five hundred dollars in unpaid gym membership fees to Southlake Nautilus Health and Racquet Club—and a series of unfortunate intervening events— landed Jacqueline Sterling in jail for a weekend. After Sterling 2 No. 24-2021

failed to pay the membership fees, Southlake obtained a de- fault judgment against her in a collection action in the Supe- rior Court of Lake County, Indiana. Later, a bankruptcy court in the Northern District of Indiana discharged Sterling’s debt to Southlake, but Southlake continued its efforts to enforce the judgment, in violation of the discharge order. Sterling, for her part, failed to notify the Lake County court of her bankruptcy, despite a local bankruptcy rule that requires such notice, or to appear at a hearing in the collection action. Unaware of the discharge order, the Lake County court issued a bench war- rant for Sterling’s arrest based on her failure to appear at the hearing. A year later, a police officer who stopped to help her fix a flat tire discovered the bench warrant. In this civil contempt proceeding, the bankruptcy court found that Southlake’s violation of the discharge order had contributed to Sterling’s arrest and weekend in jail—and re- sulting lost wages and emotional distress. Likewise, the court found that Sterling had contributed by her fault to her injury. Based on these findings, and applying principles of compara- tive fault, the bankruptcy court allocated half the liability for Sterling’s lost wages and emotional distress—as well as for the reasonable attorney’s fees Sterling incurred in prosecuting the contempt proceeding—to each party. But compensatory damages and attorney’s fees are analyt- ically distinct. A compensatory damages award in a civil con- tempt proceeding resembles a tort judgment for compensa- tory damages. Based on this analogy, we have held that a court typically must award compensatory damages as a civil contempt sanction if the complainant proves that the defend- ant’s actions in violation of a court order caused her injury— that is, as in a tort action, a court has limited discretion to deny No. 24-2021 3

relief. Likewise, Sterling concedes that the doctrine of com- parative fault reduces a defendant’s liability for the injury, and so the compensatory damages award, if the defendant proves that the complainant’s blameworthy conduct contrib- uted to her injury—that is, tort principles also limit a court’s discretion to grant relief. These limits on a court’s discretion distinguish an award of compensatory damages in a civil con- tempt proceeding from traditional equitable relief. By contrast, a court has broad discretion to shift attorney’s fees as a contempt sanction. When a court shifts fees pursuant to civil procedures, the court can shift only those fees incurred because of the contemptuous conduct. Otherwise, the court has broad discretion to grant or deny relief—including, we conclude, the discretion to hold the defendant fully liable for the attorney’s fees the complainant incurred, regardless of whether she contributed to her injury. Accordingly, the bank- ruptcy court had the discretion to hold Southlake fully liable for the reasonable attorney’s fees Sterling incurred. The bankruptcy court appeared not to recognize that dif- ferent principles apply to compensatory damages and attor- ney’s fee awards, so its finding that Sterling contributed by her fault to her arrest and weekend in jail did not require it to apportion liability for the attorney’s fees. We thus vacate the judgment of the district court in part and remand to the bank- ruptcy court for it to decide, in light of its broad fee-shifting discretion, whether to reduce Southlake’s liability for the at- torney’s fees Sterling incurred based on her failure to notify the Lake County court of her bankruptcy. Neither the bankruptcy court’s opinion nor the judgment order mentioned costs. We interpret this silence as allowing 4 No. 24-2021

costs, and we leave it to the bankruptcy court on remand to set the deadline for Sterling to file a bill of costs. I. Background In March 2011, a flat tire stopped Sterling as she was driv- ing. A police officer pulled over to assist her, then arrested her and took her to jail after he discovered a bench warrant for her arrest. She spent a Friday night to Sunday in jail. As a re- sult, Sterling missed four shifts at her job as a poker dealer at Horseshoe Casino in Hammond, Indiana. Her arrest and weekend in jail related to a proceeding ini- tiated by Southlake in the Superior Court of Lake County, In- diana, to collect on $518 in unpaid gym membership fees. In February 2002, Southlake obtained a default judgment against Sterling for $957 (the unpaid gym membership fees plus in- terest), and in December 2009, Southlake filed a motion for “proceedings supplemental” to enforce the judgment. The Lake County court held a hearing on the motion in April 2010, but Sterling failed to appear, so the court issued a bench war- rant authorizing her arrest—the bench warrant the police of- ficer discovered when he stopped to help her fix her tire. The wrinkle central to this case is that a bankruptcy court discharged Sterling’s debt to Southlake in January 2010, be- fore the Lake County court issued the bench warrant. Sterling filed for bankruptcy in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Indiana in September 2009. She listed Southlake as a creditor, so the Bankruptcy Noticing Center sent notice to Southlake of the bankruptcy and the Jan- uary 2010 discharge order. But Southlake did not forward these notices to its outside attorneys, who continued to pur- sue Sterling’s debt to Southlake. And Sterling failed to give No. 24-2021 5

notice of the bankruptcy to the Lake County court, in contra- vention of a local bankruptcy rule. See N.D. Ind. L.R. B-4002- 1(a)(2) (requiring a debtor to “give written notice of the bank- ruptcy to any court or tribunal where an action or other pro- ceeding is being maintained against the debtor”). After her release from jail, Sterling filed a complaint in the bankruptcy court, asking the court to hold Southlake in civil contempt for violating the discharge order. See 11 U.S.C. § 524. After a bench trial, the bankruptcy court ruled in favor of Southlake, and the district court affirmed. In an appeal from that decision, however, we concluded that Southlake had acted in civil contempt when its attorneys pursued Ster- ling’s debt in violation of the discharge order, and we re- manded the case to the bankruptcy court for further proceed- ings. In re Sterling, 933 F.3d 828, 832–36 (7th Cir. 2019). On remand, the bankruptcy court found $18,000 in emo- tional distress ($6,000 for each day in jail) and $1,449 in lost wages from Sterling’s arrest and incarceration. The court dis- missed Sterling’s evidence of loss of reputation—she has had to disclose her arrest to an employer and to state gaming com- missions through the gaming licensure process—as insuffi- cient, given that she has neither lost a job nor her gaming li- cense because of these disclosures.

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Bluebook (online)
140 F.4th 924, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacqueline-sterling-v-southlake-nautilus-health-racquett-club-incorpo-ca7-2025.