Rollins v. Campbell (In Re Rollins)

243 B.R. 540, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 23690, 1997 WL 1189609
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Georgia
DecidedApril 2, 1997
Docket1:96-cv-02901
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 243 B.R. 540 (Rollins v. Campbell (In Re Rollins)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rollins v. Campbell (In Re Rollins), 243 B.R. 540, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 23690, 1997 WL 1189609 (N.D. Ga. 1997).

Opinion

ORDER

G. ERNEST TIDWELL, District Judge.

The above-styled matter is presently before the court on: the bankruptcy briefing schedule [docket no. 1]; appellants’ motion to supplement the record [docket no. 6]; and appellee’s motion for leave to file sur-reply brief [docket no. 13].

Motion to supplement record

Appellants move to supplement the record on appeal. Specifically, appellants move to supplement the bankruptcy appellate record with two items that were filed in the above-styled main bankruptcy proceeding, namely: (1) an order, entered on August 24, 1995, denying the Trustee’s motion to dismiss; and (2) an order, entered on December 27, 1995, dismissing appellee’s Chapter 13 bankruptcy case. Appellants contend that while this information is not critical to their appeal, it does provide the court with helpful information relating to how appellee’s bankruptcy case ultimately was resolved.

*542 Appellee does not oppose appellants’ motion to supplement the record. In addition, the orders, with which appellants wish to supplement the record, address undisputed matters. Accordingly, the court GRANTS appellants’ motion to supplement the record [docket no. 6]. PROVIDED, however, that the court will consider these documents only for the limited purpose of establishing that Rollins’ underlying Chapter 13 bankruptcy case has now been dismissed.

Motion for leave to file sur-reply brief

Appellee moves the court for leave to file a sur-reply brief. Appellee contends that he should be permitted to submit a sur-reply brief to point out to the court, and to rebut, the extraneous material that appellants raised in their reply brief. Appellee, however, admits in the first sentence of his sur-reply brief that when preparing appellants’ reply brief, “the latest counsel for appellants has taken the exact same materials presented in the lower court and presented in the appellants’ initial brief and restated same ...” (emphasis added). Further, appellee has failed to point to any issue that appellants addressed in their reply brief that was not raised in appellants’ initial brief or appellee’s response. Indeed, in his proposed sur-reply brief, appellee merely expands and restates arguments he makes in his responsive brief. Under these circumstances, the court finds that appellee is not entitled to file a sur-reply brief.

Neither the federal rules of bankruptcy procedure nor the local rules of this court permit the filing of sur-reply briefs. See Bankruptcy Rule 8009(c); LR 220-1, NDGa. While this court may, under appropriate circumstances, consider additional argument and authority, appellee in this instance has failed to justify his request to file a sur-reply brief. Accordingly, appel-lee’s motion for leave to file a sur-reply brief [docket no. 13] is DENIED.

In addition, after reviewing the docket, it appears that appellee has filed an “Amendment to Appellee’s Reply Brief’ [docket no. 14] in which appellee seeks to add two paragraphs of argument and citation of authority to his “reply brief.” Ap-pellee neither seeks this court’s permission to amend his “reply brief’ nor shows why this information was not, in the first instance, included in appellee’s responsive materials. Therefore, this court, when reaching the merits of the bankruptcy appeal before it, will not consider any argument or citation of authority presented in appellee’s “Amendment to Appellee’s Reply Brief’ [docket no. 14].

Bankruptcy appeal

1. Factual Background

Appellants appeal from the August 19, 1996 order, entered in the above-styled adversary proceeding, sanctioning appellants for willfully violating the automatic stay found at section 362(a) of the bankruptcy code. To understand the issues raised and the arguments presented by the parties to the instant appeal, it is helpful to examine the factual context within which the current appeal arises.

On July 13, 1990, appellee, Steve Rollins (“Rollins”), and his former wife, Bonnie, were divorced in accordance with a Final Judgment and Decree that was entered upon the docket of the Superior Court of Cobb County. The Final Judgment and Decree adopted and incorporated a consent agreement into which Rollins and Bonnie had previously entered settling the issues raised in their divorce. According to the terms of that consent agreement, Rollins was required to pay the sum of $312, per month, in support of his minor child, Joshua. Rollins was required to make this support payment directly to the Cobb County Child Support Receiver.

On that same day, based upon information Bonnie provided in an affidavit, the Magistrate Court of Cobb County issued a criminal warrant against Rollins (Warrant No. 90W8928). That warrant charged that Steve Rollins, in violation of O.C.G.A. § 19-10-1 (Georgia’s child abandonment *543 statute), had, for a period in excess of thirty days, failed and refused to support his son Joshua. Joshua Rollins was two years old at the time.

Rollins was arrested the next day. Thereafter, then acting Cobb County Solicitor, Patrick Head, formally accused Rollins of committing the criminal offense of willful, voluntary abandonment of a minor child and commenced a criminal action in the State Court of Cobb County. State v. Steve Rollins, Case No. 90M 5028.

Rollins waived formal arraignment on October 4, 1990. Rollins’ trial date was initially set for October 22, 1990. On January 7, 1991, after several delays, Rollins appeared before Judge Mary Staley, on his own behalf, and entered a plea of nolo contendré to the state’s charges of willful abandonment. After accepting Rollins’ nolo contendré plea in open court, Judge Staley sentence Rollins to twelve months in prison. But Judge Staley suspended Rollins’ twelve month sentence upon condition that Rollins: pay a $240 fine (plus a $10 per month probation supervisory fee during the two months during which Rollins paid his fine); and comply fully with the terms of the terms of the July 13, 1990 divorce Final Judgment and Decree. Judge Staley also ordered plaintiff Rollins: not to violate the criminal laws of any governmental unit; to avoid injurious and vicious habits (especially alcoholic intoxication, narcotics, and other dangerous drugs not medically prescribed); to avoid persons or places of disreputable or harmful character; to report to his probation supervisor and to permit the supervisor to visit him at his home or elsewhere; to work faithfully at his employment; not to change where he lived, move, or leave the state without prior permission; and to support his dependents to the best of his ability.

At the time Rollins received his sentence, the task of monitoring and supervising Georgia suspended and probated sentences was performed by the Georgia Department of Corrections.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
243 B.R. 540, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 23690, 1997 WL 1189609, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rollins-v-campbell-in-re-rollins-gand-1997.