Metropolitan Life Insurance v. Alside Supply Center of Knoxville (In Re Clemmer)

178 B.R. 160, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 165, 1995 WL 66373
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 15, 1995
DocketBankruptcy No. 94-33182. Adv. No. 95-3004
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 178 B.R. 160 (Metropolitan Life Insurance v. Alside Supply Center of Knoxville (In Re Clemmer)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Metropolitan Life Insurance v. Alside Supply Center of Knoxville (In Re Clemmer), 178 B.R. 160, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 165, 1995 WL 66373 (Tenn. 1995).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM ON DEFENDANTS’ MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT, PLAINTIFF’S MOTION TO QUASH SUBPOENA AND FOR PROTECTIVE ORDERS, AND PLAINTIFF’S REQUEST FOR A PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION

RICHARD S. STAIR, Jr., Bankruptcy Judge.

The Plaintiff, Metropolitan Life Insurance Company (MetLife), initiated this adversary proceeding with the filing of its Complaint on January 23,1995, seeking damages and sanctions for the Defendants’, Alside Supply Center of Knoxville (Alside) and David A. Lufkin, alleged civil contempt and intentional, willful violations of the automatic stay. The Plaintiff also seeks to enjoin the Defendants from committing future violations of the automatic stay, including continuing the prosecution of a garnishment action against it in the Chancery Court for Knox County, Tennessee, in connection with Alside’s efforts to obtain satisfaction of a prepetition judgment entered against the debtor in a matter styled Alside Supply Center of Knoxville v. Smith Heritage Siding Co., Inc. & Dennis Clemmer, No. 107342-3. In response to the Complaint, the Defendants filed a Motion for Summary Judgment and a Motion for Sanctions as to Rule 11 on January 24, 1995.

*162 A hearing was held on January 25, 1995, on an Order to Show Cause entered on January 23, 1995, upon motion of the Plaintiff, requiring the Defendants to appear and show cause why a preliminary injunction should not be issued. 1 At the hearing, the parties announced that the state court hearing that precipitated the Plaintiffs request for a preliminary injunction had been continued from January 30 to March 6, 1995. Consistent with the court’s ruling at the January 25, 1995 hearing, an Order was entered on January 26, 1995, requesting, inter alia, that the parties submit a proposed agreed order disposing of the Plaintiffs request for a preliminary injunction, and file motions and responses with supporting briefs on issues raised by the parties at the January 25, 1995 hearing regarding allegedly improperly issued subpoenas and potential conflicts of interest. The Order also denied the Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment, with the exception of a standing issue, and directed the Plaintiff to respond to the Defendants’ assertion that it lacked standing to challenge the Defendants’ alleged violations of the automatic stay.

The Plaintiff filed a Motion to Quash Subpoena and for Protective Order and a Memorandum in Support of MetLife’s Motion to Quash Subpoena and for Protective Order on February 1, 1995; a Memorandum in Response to Defendants’ Motion for Sanctions on February 2, 1995; its response to the standing issue raised in the Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment on February 7, 1995; and a Memorandum in Support of MetLife’s Request for Injunctive Relief on February 8, 1995. The Defendants filed their Answer to the Complaint on February 6,1995; and a Response to MetLife’s Motion to Quash Subpoena and for Protective Order and a Brief in Support of Defendants’ Contention That a Preliminary Injunction Should Not Issue on February 8, 1995.

The parties did not submit an agreed order disposing of the Plaintiffs request for a preliminary injunction. Instead, as permitted by the January 26, 1995 Order, the parties filed the previously mentioned briefs in support of their respective theories on the preliminary injunction issue on February 8, 1995. A hearing was held on February 9, 1995, to consider the standing issue raised by the Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment and to hear oral argument on certain of the various other issues raised by the parties, excluding the Defendants’ Motion for Sanctions. 2

This is a core proceeding. 28 U.S.C.A. § 157(b)(2)(A), (G) (West 1993).

I

The issues in this adversary proceeding center on the events related to the Defendants’ prosecution of a garnishment action initiated against the Plaintiff in the Knox County Chancery Court prior to the debtor’s commencement of his bankruptcy case in connection with Alside’s efforts to obtain satisfaction of a judgment entered against the debtor in a matter styled Alside Supply Center of Knoxville v. Smith Heritage Siding Co., Inc. & Dennis Clemmer. The underlying facts are, of course, set forth in the averments contained in the Plaintiffs Complaint. The Defendants, in their Answer, admit and deny various averments. As the standing issue raised by the Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment is a purely legal issue, the court will rely only on those facts it believes to be essentially undisputed.

In the state court action, the court awarded Alside a judgment against the debtor on October 31, 1991. The amount of that judgment is not clearly established by the present *163 record. Thereafter, in March 1993, the Defendants commenced garnishment proceedings against MetLife in an attempt to reach certain annuity contracts owned by the debt- or and issued by MetLife. 3 As a result of the garnishment proceedings, the Defendants, allegedly without proper notice to MetLife, obtained two garnishment orders, dated October 31 and December 15, 1994, respectively.

On December 29, 1994, allegedly before learning of the commencement of the debt- or’s bankruptcy ease, MetLife forwarded two checks to John Weaver, Clerk and Master of the Chancery Court for Knox County, in alleged satisfaction of the October 31 and December 15, 1994 Orders. As established by the Affidavit of Peter Leone, a staff consultant for MetLife in its accounting department, filed on February 1, 1995, the two checks totaled $83,455.24 and were drawn against the debtor’s two annuities. The day before MetLife forwarded the cheeks to the state court, December 28, 1994, Dennis Clemmer commenced his bankruptcy case under Chapter 7 and faxed a copy of his petition to MetLife, to the attention of Ga-briele Prewitt. Allegedly, Ms. Prewitt did not receive the petition until December 29, 1994, after the checks had been forwarded. MetLife promptly notified the debtor of the problem in a letter dated December 29,1994, that advised him to have his attorney contact the state court so that it could act appropriately when the checks arrived. A copy of the letter was allegedly sent to David Lufkin and the Clerk and Master of the Chancery Court. 4

On January 15, 1995, the chancery court allegedly vacated and set aside its previous garnishment orders. However, in an attempt to again enforce the garnishment proceedings against MetLife, Mr. Lufkin, representing Alside, filed a Motion to Set Petition and proposed Conditional Judgment Order with the chancery court on January 18, 1995, requesting that a Petition for Scire Facias filed with the court in June 1994 be set for hearing and that a conditional judgment be entered against MetLife. MetLife asserts in this adversary proceeding that the January 18, 1995 filings by Mr. Lufkin attempt to enforce a judgment against and obtain property of the debtor in violation of the automatic stay.

The Defendants, in their Answer to the Complaint, allege that the January 18, 1995 filings in state court attempt to obtain and enforce a judgment against MetLife, not the debtor.

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Bluebook (online)
178 B.R. 160, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 165, 1995 WL 66373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metropolitan-life-insurance-v-alside-supply-center-of-knoxville-in-re-tneb-1995.