Lee v. Roessler-Lobert (In Re Roessler-Lobert)

567 B.R. 560, 2017 Bankr. LEXIS 1353, 64 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 46
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedMay 15, 2017
DocketBAP CC-15-1429-FCTa; Bk. 9:15-bk-11174-PC; Adv. Pro. 9:15-ap-01065-PC
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 567 B.R. 560 (Lee v. Roessler-Lobert (In Re Roessler-Lobert)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lee v. Roessler-Lobert (In Re Roessler-Lobert), 567 B.R. 560, 2017 Bankr. LEXIS 1353, 64 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 46 (bap9 2017).

Opinion

OPINION

FARIS, Bankruptcy Judge:

INTRODUCTION

Appellant Mary Lee, in her capacity as personal representative of the Estate of Juliana March, appeals from the bankruptcy court’s order dismissing her adver *564 sary complaint against chapter 7 1 debtor Carey A. Roessler-Lobert. Although the bankruptcy court was understandably frustrated with Ms. Lee’s attorney’s misrepresentations and noncompliance with the applicable court order and rules, it abused its discretion in dismissing the complaint at the initial status and scheduling conference. Accordingly, we REVERSE the dismissal order and REMAND this case to the bankruptcy court.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

On June 2, 2015, Ms. Roessler-Lobert, proceeding pro se, filed a chapter 7 petition in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Central District of California. On September 3, Ms. Lee, though her attorney, Seymour I. Amster, timely filed an adversary complaint to determine dis-chargeability. 2

That same day, the bankruptcy court promptly issued the summons required by Rule 7004 via CM/ECF, The summons set a status and scheduling conference for November 5, 2015 and required Ms. Roes-sler-Lobert to respond to the adversary complaint by October 5, 2015.

The court simultaneously issued a scheduling conference order regarding the Civil Rule 26(f) meeting, initial disclosures, and Civil Rule 16(b) status conference. The scheduling conference order directed the plaintiff to serve a copy of the scheduling conference order with the summons. It also directed the parties to meet and confer at least twenty-one days prior to the November 5 status conference; discuss the nature of their claims and defenses, arrange for initial disclosures, discuss discovery issues, and propose a discovery plan; make initial disclosures; consider alternative dispute resolution; and file a joint status i’eport no later than seven days before the status conference. According to the notice of electronic filing, the bankruptcy court e-mailed CM/ECF notification of the scheduling conference order to Mr. Amster’s e-mail address on record with the court and mailed a hard copy to his address in Granada Hills, California, which was listed on the complaint,

Mr. Amster failed to timely serve Ms. Roessler-Lobert with the summons and scheduling conference order. At some point, he logged into his CM/ECF account and retrieved the summons and scheduling conference order. He attempted service on Ms. Roessler-Lobert on October 17, and she received the documents on October 20 — fifteen days after her deadline to respond to the complaint and only sixteen days before the status conference. Mr. Amster did not file a proof of service of the summons with the court.

On November 1, four days before the status conference, Mr. Amster called Ms. Roessler-Lobert and asked her to agree that they had met and conferred ahead of the status conference. According to Ms. Roessler-Lobert, the call lasted about eight minutes and “he said that he was just going to go ahead and file a unilateral statement. ... [BJasically it was just about as far as whether or not to meet and confer and just say that I have.” At approximately 8:15 pm the night before the conference, Mr. Amster filed a unilateral status report on behalf of Ms. Lee.

*565 Mr. Amster did not appear at the November 5 status conference; instead, attorney Laura Dewey made a special appearance in his place. Ms. Dewey represented to the court that Mr. Amster was involved in a death penalty trial. She stated that Ms. Roessler-Lobert had not answered the complaint and requested that the court continue the status conference.

Ms. Roessler-Lobert explained to the court that she had only received the summons on October 20 and that Mr. Amster had called her four days prior and asked her to agree that they had met and conferred. The court noted that, in addition to the tardy service of the summons and the late meet-and-confer, Ms. Lee had not filed a status report 3 or a proof of service of the summons. In response, Ms. Dewey said that Mr. Amster has “been stuck in this very long-standing death penalty case and has simply fallen behind in his administrative work in his practice.”

The court dismissed the case for want of prosecution, failure to file a status report that Local Bankruptcy Rule (“LBR”) 7016-1 requires, and violation of the scheduling conference order. It entered an order (“Dismissal Order”) dismissing the adversary proceeding the same day.

Ms. Lee filed a timely motion to set aside or reconsider the Dismissal Order (“Motion for Reconsideration”). Mr. Am-ster, on behalf of Ms. Lee, argued that he did not receive a copy of the summons or scheduling conference order because the court mistakenly sent the hard copy to an old address. (This was a false statement.) He logged into CM/ECF at an unspecified date and found the summons, then served the summons, complaint, and scheduling conference order on Ms. Roessler-Lobert on October 17.

He said that he called Ms. Roessler-Lobert on November 1 to obtain her support in creating a joint status report. He said that she did not understand what she was supposed to do, so he told her that he would file a unilateral status report.

Mr. Amster explained that he was unable to personally attend the November 5 status conference because he was involved in the so-called “Grim Sleeper” death penalty case and “was devoting a significant amount of his time to that matter which caused the delays in this matter.”

Mr. Amster again did not show up for the hearing on the Motion for Reconsideration. Rather, attorney William C. Beall appeared on behalf of Ms. Lee. Mr. Beall argued that the court should reconsider the Dismissal Order based on Mr. Am-ster’s neglect. He represented that “the hard copy summons [went] to the wrong address, so [Mr. Amster] didn’t see it, and then he eventually did go into EOF and got it.” He repeatedly reminded the court that Mr. Amster was “involved in a multiple murder death penalty case down south. He got himself in too deep in this case. He wasn’t able to give it the attention that it deserved, and so now, however, he is.” 4

The court was unsympathetic. It said that the court routinely issues the sum *566 mons and scheduling conference order in every adversary proceeding. The scheduling conference order requires the plaintiff to contact the defendant and arrange a Civil Rule 26(f) meeting no later than twenty-one days prior to the status conference. It also stated that the local bankruptcy rules require the plaintiff to file a status report fourteen days 5 prior to the status conference and to appear at the status conference.

The court rejected Mr. Amster’s excuse for not timely serving the summons. It said that the court had e-mailed notice of the issuance of the summons to Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
567 B.R. 560, 2017 Bankr. LEXIS 1353, 64 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-roessler-lobert-in-re-roessler-lobert-bap9-2017.