Overstreet v. Foust

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Indiana
DecidedNovember 30, 2021
Docket4:21-cv-00050
StatusUnknown

This text of Overstreet v. Foust (Overstreet v. Foust) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Indiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Overstreet v. Foust, (N.D. Ind. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF INDIANA HAMMOND DIVISION at LAFAYETTE IN RE: ) ) TERRY ALBERT FOUST, ) ) Debtor. ) Appeal from the U.S. Bankruptcy Court ) Northern District of Indiana *********************************** ) ) BETTY OVERSTREET, ) ) Appellant/Creditor, ) ) v. ) No. 4:21 CV 50 PPS ) TERRY ALBERT FOUST, ) ) Appellee/Debtor. ) OPINION AND ORDER Terry Foust sought bankruptcy protection under Chapter 13 of the bankruptcy code, and Betty Overstreet tried to file a proof of claim as one of Mr. Foust’s creditors. The bankruptcy judge held that Overstreet was at least one day late in filing her proof of claim, and he therefore disallowed the claim as untimely. Overstreet now appeals that decision. Because of the importance of maintaining strict filing deadlines in the processing of Chapter 13 petitions, even claims that are filed one day late must be disallowed. Neither equitable tolling nor excusable neglect applies in this area of the law because a more flexible approach could lead to chaos in the administration of Chapter 13 bankruptcies which are often complex pieces of litigation. For this reason, and others discussed below, the holding of the bankruptcy court disallowing the claim will be AFFIRMED. Factual Background On November 18, 2020, Terry Foust filed a voluntary Chapter 13 Bankruptcy petition in the Hammond Division at Lafayette. [DE 1-2 at 7.] In the years leading up to the bankruptcy petition, Foust and Betty Overstreet had been enmeshed in litigation in Illinois, and Overstreet

was therefore a potential creditor in Foust’s bankruptcy. As a result, Overstreet hired counsel in Indiana with the intention of filing a proof of claim in the bankruptcy case. The same day as the Chapter 13 petition was filed, the bankruptcy court set a claims deadline for January 27, 2021. Id. In the bankruptcy world, that is a hard deadline. As discussed below, it is not subject to excusable neglect or equitable tolling. On the day the proof of claim was due with the court (January 27, 2021), Overstreet’s counsel “requested for privilege for electronic filing” with the bankruptcy court. [DE 3-1 at 23.] Evidently, he had never practiced in that court and therefore did not have access to file

electronically at that time. Id. For reasons that are not entirely clear, the privileges were not immediately granted to Overstreet’s counsel. Id. There is no evidence in the record that Overstreet’s counsel sought help with his ECF application or that he attempted to travel to the courthouse in Lafayette to manually file the proof of claim. Instead, counsel sought to meet the deadline another way–through certified mail. Id. Using a postage machine in his office, counsel paid the postage that was due and the machine stamped the date of “January 27, 2021" on the envelope, and he then placed it in the outgoing mail in his office. [DE 3-1 at 41-42.] But the envelope containing the proof of claim wasn’t postmarked by the U.S. Postal Service until the following day – January 28th. [DE 3–1 at 37.] The proof of claim actually arrived at the Clerk’s

2 Office in Lafayette on February 1, 2021, and that is the date it was file-stamped by the Clerk. [DE 3-1 at 65.] As COVID-19 ravaged the nation throughout 2020 and into 2021, courts around the country scrambled to deal with the effects of the pandemic on litigation. Many courts, including our own, issued general orders to keep litigation moving forward as expeditiously, efficiently and safely as possible. Overstreet claims that a couple of General Orders issued by this Court are

especially important to this case. [DE 3 at 5.] First, he points me to General Order No. 2020-20 titled In Re: Court Operations Under the Exigent Circumstances Created by COVID-19, which states that “[f]or those persons without access to the Court’s electronic filing system, all filings for the District Court and Bankruptcy Court matters must be submitted via United States Mail to the relevant divisional mailing address.” N.D.Ind. General Order No. 2020-20 at 4. But this order was only issued because at that time “the divisional locations of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Indiana, including the United States Bankruptcy Court . . . , REMAIN CLOSED TO THE PUBLIC until July 6, 2020 . . .” Id. (All caps and emphasis in the

original). Id. at 3-4. This General Order, by its very terms, expired on July 6, 2020, and, in any event, was superseded at least six more times prior to the date Overstreet’s proof of claim was due on January 27, 2021, and none of those subsequent General Orders made any reference to the Bankruptcy Court. See N.D.Ind. General Orders Nos. 2020-29; 2020-32; 2020-35; 2020-39; 2021-03; 2021-04. The second order that Overstreet points me to is General Order No. 2021-04 titled In Re: Closing of Court Facilities Under the Exigent Circumstances Created by COVID-19, which states that the Clerk’s Office is open during normal business hours only by telephone and email

and otherwise closed to the public . . . If a filing is mailed by a non-prisoner, the filing date shall 3 be deemed to be the postmark date.. . .” Id.1 This General Order, by its clear terms, made no reference to the Bankruptcy Court, its operations or its Clerk’s Office. But according to Overstreet, this General Order created a “mail box rule in the U.S. District Court” for the filing of materials with the Court. [DE 3 at 7.] And since the Bankruptcy Court is part of the U.S. District Court of the Northern District of Indiana, Overstreet claims that this General Order essentially supersedes the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure and allows a proof of claim to

be received by the Court after the deadline so long as it is postmarked before it. [DE 3 at 7.] Ruling from the bench, Chief Judge Grant disallowed Overstreet’s proof of claim finding that it was tardy. [DE 3-1 at 44-47.] At the outset of his ruling, Judge Grant accepted as fact that Overstreet’s Counsel couldn’t get registered as an ECF filer, despite the fact that he waited until the last day to attempt to do so. Id. at 44-45. But in any event, even assuming counsel couldn’t file the proof of claim electronically, Judge Grant held that mailing on the deadline was not a timely substitute, because the Bankruptcy Court has always operated on the principle that “filing” means receipt by the court. Id. at 45. Judge Grant found that the district court’s General

Orders relating to the closing of Court facilities due to COVID-19 had no bearing on the case because they did not explicitly reference the Bankruptcy Court. Id. Judge Grant noted that the Bankruptcy Clerk’s Office remained open throughout the pandemic and stood ready and able to accept paper filings. Id. at 44. What’s more, as Judge Grant noted, even for “after business hours’ filings, the Bankruptcy Court . . . has an emergency filing line.” [DE 3-1 at 44.]

1Overstreet calls this General Order No. “2021-22", but I cannot locate a General Order with that cause number affixed to it. [DE 3 at 7.] I presume she means to say “General Order No. 2021-04" inasmuch as that was the General Order relating to access to the Courthouse that was in place at the time of her filing of the proof of claim. General Order No. 2021-04 also contains the language Overstreet quotes and the expiration date she refers to. [Id.] 4 Therefore, Judge Grant found that the law was clear that a proof of claim had to be “received by the Court” in order to be timely filed, and since the proof of claim in this case wasn’t received until February 1, it was five days late. Id. at 45. Finally, Judge Grant found that even if the district court’s General Order somehow were to trump the

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Bluebook (online)
Overstreet v. Foust, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/overstreet-v-foust-innd-2021.