Roesing v. Moccio (In Re Moccio)

41 B.R. 268, 1984 Bankr. LEXIS 5401
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedJune 27, 1984
Docket17-12438
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 41 B.R. 268 (Roesing v. Moccio (In Re Moccio)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roesing v. Moccio (In Re Moccio), 41 B.R. 268, 1984 Bankr. LEXIS 5401 (N.J. 1984).

Opinion

On Complaint to hold debt nondischargeable pursuant to 11 U.S.C. sec. 523(a)(6)

AMEL STARK, Bankruptcy Judge:

The Plaintiff in this complaint charges that a $21,170.71 default judgment obtained against the Debtor in the Superior Court of New Jersey should be excepted from discharge under section 523(a)(6) of the Bankruptcy Code for the reason that the judgment was based upon a “willful and malicious” assault and battery against the Plaintiff by the Debtor. The Debtor concedes that he was involved in a “fight” with the Plaintiff, but contends that the Plaintiff willingly entered the fight and was not the innocent bystander he portrays himself to be. The primary difficulty facing the Court is to evaluate the credibility of the parties. The secondary issue, if it appears that the Plaintiff was indeed a willing participant, would be whether the assault might nevertheless have been willful and malicious because of its alleged unreasonable severity. Because the Court concludes that the Plaintiff did not willingly participate in the conflict with the Debt- or, the secondary issue need not be addressed.

Facts and Procedural History

1. The Plaintiffs and Debtor’s versions of the facts will be reviewed separately. The Plaintiff testified as follows:

a. On January 28, 1978, the Plaintiff, Adam H. Roesing, met his friend Dave Richards at a tavern some time after midnight and requested a ride home. Richards drove the Plaintiff to the Bottoms Up Tavern in Hazlet, New Jersey, where Richards hoped to meet someone from whom he could learn the location of a party. The bar was closed when they arrived but a number of cars were in the parking lot. Richards said to the Plaintiff, “Let’s pull a gag;” he then went to a yellow Chevette belonging to Louis Bauch and began taking air out of the tires. The Plaintiff approached another automobile, a Grand Prix, but did not, he testified, let any air out of the tires.

*270 b. The following persons then all arrived at the parking lot in the same car: the Debtor (Robert Moccio), Louis “Buddy” Bauch, Steve Citro, and a girlfriend of Ci-tro’s. Bauch approached both the Plaintiff and Richards, who were standing side by side, and asked “What are you letting the air out of my tires for?” He then started pushing the Plaintiff and Richards responded, “what are you picking on him for? I let the air out of your tire.... ” Bauch and Richards then began a fist fight. The Plaintiff testified that he then moved 15 or 20 feet from them and leaned on another car because he considered the exchange between Bauch and Richards to be a “one-on-one fight.” The Debtor then approached the Plaintiff, spoke some words which the Plaintiff could not remember and, while the Plaintiff was leaning against the car with his hands in his pockets, the Debtor hit him, rendering him briefly unconscious.

c. Thereafter, Plaintiff awoke feeling numb and dizzy, with his face covered with blood and his vision fuzzy. He walked to his brother’s house nearby, where his brother cleaned him and put him to bed. The next morning his face was swollen and he could not open his eyes. He went to a hospital where he was a patient for 15 days under the care of an eye specialist, a neurologist and a surgeon.

2.The Debtor and Bauch testified that, far from being an innocent bystander, the Plaintiff was as much an aggressor as each of the other parties. The Debtor and Bauch agree that the Debtor arrived at the Bottoms Up parking lot in a separate ear from Bauch, a short while after the arrival of Bauch. Bauch contends that when he saw the Plaintiff and Richards taking air out of his tires he asked “what are you doing to my car,” to which Richards responded “Louie, I’ll hit you with the f-ing wrench,” referring to a vice grip Richards held in his hand. The three of them began fighting, and by the time the Debtor joined the fight, both Bauch and the Debtor contend, Bauch was holding the Plaintiff against a car, choking him with his hands around his neck, while Richards was on Bauch’s back holding the wrench with which he had allegedly threatened to hit Bauch. Both testified that the Debtor then joined the fight, knocked the wrench out of Richards’ hands, and Steve Citro threw it out of everyone’s reach, but did not join the fight. The four fighters separated momentarily, and a fight then ensued with all four participating. When the Plaintiff tried to get between the Debtor and Richards, the Debtor hit the Plaintiff in the face, knocking him into a car, from which position he slumped to the ground on his knees. The Debtor admitted that he saw no one else hit the Plaintiff, although he felt that someone might have. At some point, the Plaintiff supposedly swung at the Debtor and the Debtor avoided the punch. As the fight proceeced among the other participants, the Debtor and Bauch testified, they saw the Plaintiff run away across the highway. Thereafter, the fight ended and Bauch and the Debtor went inside with Richards and “cleaned him up.”

3. Such was the testimony in this court on September 12, 1983. All parties had also given prior testimony regarding these events, however, in a criminal prosecution of both the Debtor and the Plaintiff in Hazlet Township Municipal Court on October 17, 1978, only nine months after the events took place. This testimony, which is admissible as admissions of a party under F.R.E. 801(d)(2) and as prior inconsistent statements of a witness under F.R.E. 801(d)(1)(A), is of great assistance in judging the credibility of the witnesses. In addition, certain inconsistencies developed within the Debtor’s testimony in this court.

4. At the Municipal Court hearing, Bauch testified that he had no physical involvement with the Plaintiff prior to his fight with Richards, and that he could not remember what the Plaintiff was doing during his fight with Richards, which squarely contradicts his testimony in this court. Bauch’s extremely brief testimony in the earlier hearing is open to reinterpretation, however, and he would admittedly have had an incentive at that time to avoid *271 implicating himself in an assault and battery.

5. The Debtor’s testimony in the earlier hearing contained no hint that the Plaintiff had been physically involved in a fight before the Debtor’s entry into the fight, and his description of the Debtor’s participation is very mild, in spite of the fact that he would have had a strong incentive at that time to implicate the Plaintiff in an assault and battery. In addition, although he originally claimed in this court that the Plaintiff at one point tried to strike back at him, the Debtor appeared to recant this testimony. These inconsistencies áre discussed at length in the Discussion section below.

6. At the time of this fight, Bauch and the Debtor worked together at a bar in the area, where Bauch was a bouncer and the Debtor was a bartender. They had also attended high school together, with the Plaintiff. They were good friends at that time and continued to see each other thereafter, but at the time of this proceeding had not seen each other for some time.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 B.R. 268, 1984 Bankr. LEXIS 5401, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roesing-v-moccio-in-re-moccio-njb-1984.