Lavenhar v. First American Title Insurance (In Re Lavenhar)

808 F.3d 794, 2015 WL 9239231
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedDecember 17, 2015
Docket14-1391
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 808 F.3d 794 (Lavenhar v. First American Title Insurance (In Re Lavenhar)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lavenhar v. First American Title Insurance (In Re Lavenhar), 808 F.3d 794, 2015 WL 9239231 (10th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

MURPHY, Circuit Judge.

I. INTRODUCTION

This appeal arises out of a Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition filed by Jeffrey Lavenhar. Jeffrey’s ex-wife, Laurie Lavenhar, filed a proof of claim in Jeffrey’s bankruptcy proceeding in the amount of $347,400. She asserted the claim was a domestic support obligation entitled to priority under 11 U.S.C. § 507(a)(1). First American Title Insurance Company (“First American”), a creditor in Jeffrey’s bankruptcy proceeding, filed an objection to Laurie’s proof of claim. It asserted the entirety of the domestic support obligation underlying Laurie’s proof of claim was obtained as a result of collusion between Jeffrey and Laurie in state-court divorce proceedings. First American also sought relief from the automatic stay so it could seek a state-court declaration that the judgment upon which Laurie’s claim was based was obtained by fraud on the court. In an order designed to prevent the state-court proceedings from intruding qn the prerogatives of the Chapter 7 Trustee, the bankruptcy court granted First American’s motion to lift the stay. The district court affirmed that order on appeal. Laurie appeals to this court, asserting the bankruptcy court erred in granting First American’s motion to lift the stay. According to Laurie, First American lacks standing to litigate the validity of any component of the state-court judgment because the power to control property of the bankruptcy estate belongs solely to the Trustee. This court exercises jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 158(d) and affirms the narrowly tailored order of the bankruptcy court lifting the automatic stay.

II. BACKGROUND

The events leading up to this bankruptcy ease began in 2007, when First Ameri *796 can brought suit against Jeffrey in Colorado state court. 1 On October 28, 2010, the state trial court entered an order ruling in favor of First American and awarding damages in the amount of $434,913,39, plus interest. Judgment entered on January 3, 2011.

During the pendency of this state-court litigation between Jeffrey and First American, the Lavenhars sought a divorce. The divorce decree, which issued in November 2010, incorporated a separation agreement dated October 26, 2010. The separation agreement included an agreed-upon division of marital assets and contained a requirement that Jeffrey pay Laurie spousal support in the amount of $4400 per month. Notably, the separation agreement contained the following recital:

10. Real Property
A. The property located at 3227 Antelope Ridge Trail, Parker, Colorado, 80138, is owned by the Laurie H. Lavenhar Living Trust. The property is and has always been the sole property of the Laurie H. Lavenhar Living Trust.
B. The parties agree that 3227 Antelope Ridge Trail, Parker, Colorado, 80138 shall remain the separate property of the Laurie H. Lavenhar Living Trust without claim from the Husband.

After judgment entered in its favor in its suit against Jeffrey, First American sought to collect its damages. It filed suit against the Lavenhars and the Laurie H. Lavenhar Living Trust, asserting the transfer of Jeffrey’s interest in the Antelope Ridge Trail property to the Laurie H. Lavenhar Living Trust was a fraudulent conveyance. In addition to that independent lawsuit, First American sought to intervene in the Lavenhars’ divorce, seeking, inter alia, a declaration that the Lavenhars’ divorce proceeding was a fraud upon the court designed to hinder its ability to collect on the judgment against Jeffrey. First American asserted the Lavenhars conspired to fraudulently induce the state court to take jurisdiction over their marital assets to hinder and defraud First American. These conspiratorial actions allegedly included the Lavenhars delaying the divorce proceedings until the resolution of the lawsuit against Jeffrey and then backdating the signatures on the separation agreement to make it appear Jeffrey signed the document before he knew the outcome. The state divorce court granted First American’s motion to intervene.

Before the resolution of the various legal proceedings instituted by First American against the Lavenhars, Jeffrey filed a Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition. In the schedules to his bankruptcy petition, Jeffrey listed a priority domestic support obligation to Laurie in the amount of $464,300 and noted the Antelope Ridge Trail property was “[transferred [to Laurie] pursuant to divorce decree.” First American filed a motion to lift the automatic stay as to the Antelope Ridge Trail property, asserting it should be able to litigate its state-court fraudulent conveyance action and, if successful in that litigation, perfect a judgment lien against the property. The bankruptcy court denied the motion, concluding that only the Chapter 7 Trustee had standing to bring the type of avoidance claim embodied in First American’s state-court fraudulent conveyance action.

Shortly thereafter, Laurie filed a priority unsecured claim for domestic support obligations, see 11 U.S.C. § 507(a)(1), in the amount of $347,400. In support thereof, Laurie attached documentation from the divorce decree to her proof of claim. First American filed a new motion to lift *797 the automatic stay, asserting the domestic support obligation underlying Laurie’s proof of claim was obtained via fraud on the state divorce court. Accordingly, First American sought permission to litigate its complaint in intervention in the Lavenhars’ divorce proceeding. In seeming disregard of the fact First American’s new motion to lift the automatic stay was directed to its complaint in intervention in the state-court divorce proceeding, rather than its separate state-court suit to avoid fraudulent conveyances, Laurie simply asserted as follows:

First American asserts the property division in the dissolution proceeding is an avoidable fraudulent transfer. As this Court previously ruled in connection with a prior motion seeking relief from stay filed by First American, “a prepetition creditor lacks standing to pursue avoidance claims, as such claims become property of the estate. Therefore, only the Chapter 7 Trustee has standing to pursue” fraudulent conveyance claims.

For his part, the Chapter 7 Trustee filed a statement in support of First American’s motion to lift the stay. The Trustee noted that the relief sought in First American’s most recent request for relief from the stay was entirely distinct from the relief sought in First American’s first such motion:

The only effective way that a creditor, such as First American, or the Trustee could successfully object to the Laurie Lavenhar proof of claim is to directly attac[k] the orders of the [divorce court] in state court and ask that they be set aside. The Rooker-Feldman doctrine would prohibit a direct challenge of the state court orders that are the basis of the claim in this Court or any federal court.

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Bluebook (online)
808 F.3d 794, 2015 WL 9239231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lavenhar-v-first-american-title-insurance-in-re-lavenhar-ca10-2015.