La Tierra Interiors, Inc. v. Washington Federal Savings

500 F. App'x 286, 500 Fed. Appx. 286, 500 F. App’x 286, 2012 WL 6101863
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedDecember 10, 2012
Docket11-51167
StatusUnpublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 500 F. App'x 286 (La Tierra Interiors, Inc. v. Washington Federal Savings) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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La Tierra Interiors, Inc. v. Washington Federal Savings, 500 F. App'x 286, 500 Fed. Appx. 286, 500 F. App’x 286, 2012 WL 6101863 (5th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

WIENER, Circuit Judge: *

Appellants La Tierra Interiors, Inc. and La Tierra Solid Surfaces, LLC (collectively, “La Tierra”) are creditors in an underlying Chapter 13 bankruptcy case. La Tierra appeals from the district court’s order denying leave to appeal and dismissing its case against appellee Washington Federal Savings (“WFS”), the financial institution from which La Tierra sought discovery in that case. As we do not have jurisdiction to hear that appeal, we DISMISS.

I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

In May 2011, La Tierra served WFS with a subpoena for a Rule 2004 Examination, 1 seeking the financial records of both the bankruptcy debtor, Stephen Patrick Tullius, and his business partner, Edward Lapuma, who is not a party to the bankruptcy proceeding. La Tierra suspected that these two had fraudulently transferred or conveyed Tullius’s assets to shield them from La Tierra and other creditors. WFS sought to quash the subpoena, and, following a hearing in June 2011, the bankruptcy court granted that motion in part, limiting production to those accounts on which Tullius was an authorized signatory. The bankruptcy court also ordered La Tierra to prepay WFS’s costs of complying with the subpoena.

A month later, La Tierra filed a motion to compel, urging the bankruptcy court to revisit its earlier decision limiting the scope of discovery. At the hearing on this motion, the court admonished La Tierra’s counsel for seeking to relitigate old issues, for driving up the non-party bank’s legal costs, and for otherwise ignoring Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 45’s requirement that a party issuing a subpoena take steps to avoid imposing an undue burden. The court denied La Tierra’s motion to compel without prejudice, reiterated that La Tier-ra must prepay WFS’s costs of production, and ordered La Tierra to pay WFS $1,000 *288 as reasonable attorneys fees. 2 The court commemorated its oral pronouncements on both the motion to quash and the motion to compel in a pair of briefly written orders without reasons, entered early in August (collectively, the “discovery orders”).

La Tierra appealed the discovery orders to the district court later that month. After the district court concluded that those orders were interlocutory, it denied La Tierra leave to appeal them under 28 U.S.C. § 158(a)(3) and dismissed the case. It is from this order of the district court that La Tierra now appeals. It contends that the bankruptcy court erred when it limited the scope of discovery, shifted production costs to La Tierra, imposed sanctions, and, in each instance, did so without issuing written reasons in its orders.

WFS seeks dismissal of this appeal, contending that this court lacks jurisdiction to hear an appeal from an order of the district court that is interlocutory. Consequently, WFS also requests sanctions, asserting that La Tierra’s appeal is frivolous.

II. ANALYSIS

A. Jurisdiction

La Tierra advances two bases for this court to exercise jurisdiction over its appeal. First, it disputes WFS’s categorization of the district court’s order as interlocutory, asserting instead that the district court’s dismissal and denial of leave was a final order appealable under 28 U.S.C. § 158(d)(1). Second, it contends that the collateral order doctrine supports this court’s jurisdiction. We address these putative jurisdictional bases in turn.

1. Final order under 28 U.S.C. § 158(d)(1)

Under 28 U.S.C. § 158, district courts have jurisdiction to hear appeals “from final judgments, orders, and decrees” of the bankruptcy court, as well as interlocutory orders and decrees from which the district court has granted leave to appeal. 3 Courts of appeals, however, have jurisdiction over appeals from a district court’s final decisions only. 4 Although it is the finality of the district court’s order that ultimately determines our jurisdiction, in this case, we must consider the finality of the underlying bankruptcy court orders at issue. This is because a district court’s decision generally will be final under § 158(d)(1) only when the bankruptcy court’s order was similarly final under § 158(a)(1). 5

This court has held that discovery orders in civil litigation are interlocutory for *289 the purposes of 28 U.S.C. § 1291 — the statute providing appellate jurisdiction over all final decisions of the district courts. 6 But the finality requirement is applied more flexibly in bankruptcy appeals under § 158 than under § 1291. A bankruptcy case need not be appealed as a single judicial unit at the end of the entire bankruptcy proceeding; rather, an order “must constitute either a ‘final determination of the rights of the parties to secure the relief they seek,’ or a final disposition ‘of a discrete dispute within the larger bankruptcy case for the order to be considered final.’” 7 Notwithstanding this more flexible approach to finality in bankruptcy appeals, federal courts have concluded overwhelmingly that a bankruptcy court’s discovery orders are interlocutory decisions from which an appeal to the district court does not lie as a matter of right. 8

La Tierra seeks to avoid this conclusion by casting the discovery orders at issue *290 here as “final adverse determinations” of its substantive rights to the desired discovery. Its efforts are unavailing for two reasons. First, even though it is not always easy to identify the relevant judicial unit from which an appeal might lie, that is not a problem in this instance. The Rule 2004 discovery process here was but a preliminary step in a larger phase of the instant bankruptcy proceeding, a means of acquiring information for possible later use. The orders at issue, even when viewed together, formed “too small a litigation unit to justify treatment as a final judgment.” 9 Second, those orders did not even resolve all issues pertaining to the discovery process. As La Tierra’s motion to compel was denied without prejudice

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500 F. App'x 286, 500 Fed. Appx. 286, 500 F. App’x 286, 2012 WL 6101863, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/la-tierra-interiors-inc-v-washington-federal-savings-ca5-2012.