Moss v. Citizens Bank of Tulsa (In Re Moss)

267 B.R. 834, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 1175, 2001 WL 1159453
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedOctober 2, 2001
Docket01-6014, 01-6015 WM
StatusPublished

This text of 267 B.R. 834 (Moss v. Citizens Bank of Tulsa (In Re Moss)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moss v. Citizens Bank of Tulsa (In Re Moss), 267 B.R. 834, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 1175, 2001 WL 1159453 (bap8 2001).

Opinion

I.

SCOTT, Bankruptcy Judge.

In 1989, the debtor sued her employer for sexual harassment, hiring as her attorneys two law firms, Burton & Norris and Gronemeir & Barker. Several years into the litigation, the debtor fired these firms and hired another attorney. The lawsuit went to trial in Arizona, but while the jury was deliberating, the parties settled the case, with the debtor receiving three million dollars. The debtor’s trial attorney received forty-five percent of that settlement, leaving the debtor with $1,650,000. Thereafter she sued her original attorneys for legal malpractice in the California Superior Court and the attorneys filed a counterclaim for their fees. The state court awarded the attorneys $600,000 plus interest, and that award, twice appealed by the debtor, was affirmed by the state appellate *836 court. The judgment was recorded in California pursuant to California law on September 28, 1993. 1 During the litigation in California, the debtor created numerous entities, including a trust, transferring the vast majority of her assets, including cash, automobiles, and real property, to those entities as well as to family members.

On August 6, 1998, the debtor filed a chapter 7 petition in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Western District of Missouri, claiming she owned virtually no assets. 2 Apparently seeking to avoid the section 341(a) meeting, she first maneuvered a continuance. Thereafter, she requested that she be excused from that meeting, submitting a medical statement which declared that she could not control her bowels and intimated that she could not speak. She then reported herself dead. Ultimately, she was convicted of a bankruptcy crime relating to the filing of these false documents. 3

In April 2000, the debtor filed a motion to amend her petition to show Arizona 4 as her residence and requested transfer of venue to that state, asserting that the Missouri bankruptcy court no longer had jurisdiction over her chapter 7 case. The debtor’s motions to transfer venue, to amend her petition and to dismiss and stay based upon improper venue were denied. Her interlocutory appeal resulted in those orders being affirmed by the district court. A subsequent appeal to the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals was dismissed for lack of jurisdiction.

In September 2000, the trustee commenced two separate adversary proceedings against the Citizens Bank of Tulsa and Prudential Securities 5 in addition to the debtor being named in each case, to avoid and recover fraudulent transfers made by the debtor. The Citizens Bank of Tulsa and Prudential Securities inter-pleaded the assets sought into the registry of the court and were dismissed, leaving only the debtor and her numerous aliases as defendants. 6 The bankruptcy court 7 concluded that the bank accounts and securities which were the subject of the proceedings were property of the estate and directed turnover of those assets to the chapter 7 trustee. From these orders, the debtor now ap *837 peals, raising primarily jurisdictional arguments. She does not contest the bankruptcy court’s conclusions that the transfers were fraudulent in nature or that turnover is appropriate. Rather, she lists six separate arguments relating to the fact that her primary creditors, her former attorneys, never registered their judgment in the state of Missouri, and that venue is improper in Missouri.

II.

We review the bankruptcy court’s findings of fact for dear error and its conclusions of law de novo. Blackwell v. Lurie (In re Popkin & Stern), 228 F.3d 764, 765 (8th Cir.2000). Since the debtor raises primarily legal arguments, our review is primarily de novo.

III.

The debtor asserts that since her California judgment creditors did not register their judgment in Missouri, they have no valid claim and, therefore, the trustee has no authority to sue and the assets do not become property of the estate. Essentially, under the debtor’s theory, if there are no unsecured claims, the trustee has no standing to sue for turnover of assets of the estate. The trustee characterizes this argument as ludicrous and frivolous. We agree.

Jurisdiction and procedure in the federal courts is governed by title 28. Jurisdiction over bankruptcy cases, proceedings and property is conferred by 28 U.S.C. § 1334(a), (b), and (e), and bankruptcy court authority and procedure is governed by 28 U.S.C. § 157(a), (b). Neither the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure nor a state statute confer jurisdiction or limit bankruptcy court’s jurisdiction to hear and determine cases and proceedings. Moreover, the validity or collectibility of a particular obligation of an individual who is a debtor under title 11 has no impact upon whether the bankruptcy court has jurisdiction over a case or proceeding. The allowability of a claim is part of the claims process and does not affect jurisdiction.

Thus, the debtor’s arguments that state statutes asserting jurisdiction over property and governing collection methods somehow deprive the bankruptcy court of jurisdiction to hear either a case or proceeding is without merit. The fact that an Arizona statute provides for exclusive jurisdiction over Arizona trusts, does not, as the debtor asserts, deprive the bankruptcy court of jurisdiction. Indeed, section 1334(e) of title 28 provides for exclusive federal jurisdiction over property of the debtor wherever located and property of the estate, and 11 U.S.C. § 541 defines property of the estate. To assert that an Arizona statute preempts the federal law also ignores the Supremacy Clause of the United State Constitution, and is, as the trustee asserts, a frivolous argument.

In a similar vein, the debtor’s argument that the trustee has no standing to avoid a transfer of property is without merit. Under title 11, the trustee is the person who is the representative of the estate and has the capacity to sue on behalf of the estate. 11 U.S.C. § 323. In that capacity, the trustee is charged with collecting the assets of the estate, liquidating them and disbursing the proceeds to the creditors whose claims have been allowed in the bankruptcy case pursuant to the distribution scheme established by section 726.

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Block v. Citizens Bank (In Re Moss)
249 B.R. 200 (W.D. Missouri, 2000)
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266 B.R. 697 (Eighth Circuit, 2001)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
267 B.R. 834, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 1175, 2001 WL 1159453, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moss-v-citizens-bank-of-tulsa-in-re-moss-bap8-2001.