Moyer v. Koloseik (In Re Sutton)

470 B.R. 462, 2012 WL 1605591
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Michigan
DecidedApril 27, 2012
Docket20-02012
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 470 B.R. 462 (Moyer v. Koloseik (In Re Sutton)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moyer v. Koloseik (In Re Sutton), 470 B.R. 462, 2012 WL 1605591 (Mich. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION RE: TRUSTEE’S SEPTEMBER 2, 2011 MOTION-DEFAULT JUDGMENT

JEFFREY R. HUGHES, Bankruptcy Judge.

Jeff Moyer (“Trustee”) has asked that a default judgment be entered against Mark Koloseik, the defendant in this adversary proceeding. The question is whether this court has the constitutional authority to do so.

BACKGROUND

Trustee has sued many persons to recover amounts due on open account. 1 Ko-loseik is among those defendants who did not file an answer. 2 Accordingly, Trustee asked that a default judgment enter in the amount of $1,850.59. The court in turn scheduled a hearing to give Koloseik a final opportunity to have the default set aside. The notice also advised Trustee that the court intended to discuss with him whether it had the constitutional authority to enter the requested relief.

Koloseik did not appear. As for the court’s authority, Trustee disagreed with the preliminary determination that a final judgment 3 could not enter and that a re *465 port and recommendation 4 would have to be made instead. Therefore, Trustee was given an opportunity to both brief the issue and to offer additional argument at a second hearing.

TRUSTEE’S ARGUMENT

Stem v. Marshall 5 is the Supreme Court’s most recent decision regarding a bankruptcy judge’s authority. However, Northern Pipeline, 6 a much earlier decision, had already held that bankruptcy courts were constitutionally incapable of entering a judgment when only a contract claim against a non-creditor was involved. Therefore, this court had not anticipated much resistance from Trustee when it raised Northern Pipeline as a reason for not entering a final judgment. If anything, Stern seemed to confirm what that case had previously decided.

However, in preparing his complaint, Trustee was careful not to include an actual contract claim. He instead seeks recovery under Section 542(b). 7

[A]n entity that owes a debt that is property of the estate and that is matured, payable on demand, or payable on order, shall pay such debt to, or on the order of, the trustee....

Trustee argues that pleading his case in this fashion distinguishes it from Northern Pipeline. He points out that the matter there involved only state law claims that the debtor could have pursued just as easily prepetition. On the other hand, this action is based upon what Trustee contends is a power created solely under the bankruptcy laws to enable him to marshal the estate’s property, including the debt Koloseik owes. 8

As for Stem, Trustee actually relies on it to reinforce his contention that the Court has carved out only a very small part of what otherwise is still a robust list of activities that fall within this court’s core authority. 9 Trustee relies particularly upon Chief Justice Roberts’ own comment concerning the practical significance of what he and the other three justices joining him characterized as only a narrow ruling.

We do not think the removal of counterclaims ... from core bankruptcy jurisdiction meaningfully changes the division of labor in the current statute; we agree with the United State that the *466 question presented here is a “narrow” one.

Stern, 131 S.Ct. at 2620.

The inference that Trustee of course wants to draw is that a bankruptcy court’s oversight of the estate’s assets, including its accounts receivable, has to be among the many allocated tasks that the Chief Justice implied are still constitutionally sound. Cf. 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(A) and (0) (“Core proceedings include ... matters concerning the administration of the estate” and “other proceedings affecting the liquidation of the assets of the estate.... ”).

DISCUSSION

Other opinions have already provided the details in Stem. 10 In short, a bankruptcy court had awarded Vicki Marshall, as debtor-in-possession, a substantial judgment against Pierce Marshall, her stepson, on account of what was clearly a state law claim — tortious interference. However, unlike the plaintiff in Northern Pipeline, Vicki had not simply sued Pierce as a non-creditor defendant. Rather, she had made a counterclaim as part of her overall objection to the proof of claim that Pierce himself had filed. Cf. Fed. R. BankeP. 3007(b). Therefore, when Pierce later questioned the judgment’s validity, Vicki argued that the bankruptcy court had acted appropriately notwithstanding the nature of her claim because its core authority included even after Northern Pipeline all “counterclaims ... against persons filing claims against the estate.” 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(C).

The Supreme Court, however, did not agree, finding that Vicki had still pled the type of common law claim that “we held in Northern Pipeline and Granfinanciera must be decided by an Article III court.” Stern, 131 S.Ct. at 2616. But Justice Roberts, in writing for the Court, was also careful to limit the ruling to only the “isolated” issue addressed.

We conclude today that Congress, in one isolated respect, exceeded that limitation in the Bankruptcy Act of 1984. The Bankruptcy Court below lacked the constitutional authority to enter a final judgment on a state law counterclaim that is not resolved in the process of ruling on a creditor’s proof of claim.

Id. at 2620.

This court has already given its reasons in Teleservices 11 why it believes that Stem’s implications are much broader— that the due process concerns it raised requires that the remainder of what 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2) delineates as a bankruptcy judge’s core authority must also be tested. However, other courts have declined, preferring Trustee’s reading of Stem instead.

The Narrow Interpretation

Direct Response 12 has labeled this supposedly more conservative approach as the “Narrow Interpretation.” As Direct Response explained:

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Bluebook (online)
470 B.R. 462, 2012 WL 1605591, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moyer-v-koloseik-in-re-sutton-miwb-2012.