Soares v. Brockton Credit Union

107 F.3d 969, 1997 WL 93317
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedMarch 13, 1997
Docket96-2110
StatusPublished
Cited by297 cases

This text of 107 F.3d 969 (Soares v. Brockton Credit Union) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Soares v. Brockton Credit Union, 107 F.3d 969, 1997 WL 93317 (1st Cir. 1997).

Opinion

. SELYA, Circuit Judge.

“[T]he dead tree gives no shelter.” T.S. Eliot, The Waste Land, I, The Burial of the Dead (1922). Like a shade tree, the automatic stay which attends the initiation of bankruptcy proceedings, 11 U.S.C. § 362(a) (1994), must be nurtured if it is to retain its vitality. This appeal, which pits a Chapter 13 debtor bent on saving his home against a *-612 creditor bent on enforcing its rights under a mortgage, raises issues which touch upon the degree of judicial protection that the automatic stay invites. These issues are whether the automatic stay precludes a state court from undertaking ministerial acts after a bankruptcy filing; if not, what acts are exempt under that rubric; whether a bankruptcy court may grant retroactive relief from the automatic stay; and if so, what legal standard it should apply in prescribing such an anodyne.

I. LAYING THE FOUNDATION

We begin by retracing the labyrinthine corridors through which this litigation has passed.' In 1990 the debtor, Napoleon G. Soares, purchased a home in Brockton, Massachusetts. He executed a $70,000 promissory note to the Brockton Credit Union (BCU) and secured the note by a first mortgage on the real estate. After sustaining injuries in a motorcycle accident, Soares lagged in his monthly payments. BCU grew festive and commenced foreclosure proceedings in the state superior court. Soares did not file an answer. On March 22, 1995, BCU sent a letter to the clerk of court seeking an order of default and a judgment authorising foreclosure. Two days later Soares filed a bankruptcy petition, thus triggering the automatic stay. He immediately gave notice to BCU, but neither party alerted the state court. On April 10, with the stay still firmly in place, a judge of that court issued the requested default order. One week later, she authorized the entry of a foreclosure judgment.

Soares missed some post-petition mortgage payments. On June 14, 1995, BCU, without apprising the bankruptcy court of the orders previously obtained in the state proceedings, filed á motion seeking relief from the automatic stay. The debtor’s then-counsel, Gerard Williamson, neglected to oppose BCU’s motion. The bankruptcy court granted the unopposed motion on June 29 (the same day, coincidentally, that Soares, unbeknownst to the judge, paid the post-petition arrearage). The court subsequently refused to entertain a belated objection filed by Williamson.

When Soares missed his November payment, BCU activated the state court judgment. At the ensuing foreclosure sale, held on November 29, BCU itself bid in the mortgaged premises and paid approximately $14,-200 in overdue municipal taxes to clear the title. Soares thereafter sought relief in the state court on the ground that the foreclosure judgment had been issued in contravention of the automatic stay. The court denied the motion,' saying that its post-petition actions had been “ministerial” and that any error was harmless. 1

Soares’ unsuccessful foray apparently rang warning bells for BCU, which asked the bankruptcy court to clarify whether the June 29 order (lifting the automatic stay) ratified the earlier state court judgment. BCU served this so-called clarification motion on the attorney, Williamson, but not on Soares. 2 In a margin order entered on February 9, 1996, Judge Kenner addressed the question of retroactivity for the first time and vacated the automatic stay retroactive to March 24, 1995, “such that the [state] judgment and movant’s foreclosure shall not be deemed to have violated the automatic stay.”

Less than three weeks later Soares, through newly retained counsel, filed a motion to reconsider both the February 9 order and the original grant of relief from the automatic stay. Judge Kenner denied the reconsideration motion on the merits 3 and *-611 also denied a companion motion to void the foreclosure sale. The judge advanced three reasons for having lifted the automatic stay retroactively on February 9. First, because BCU “had done everything right,” it would be inequitable to upset its expectations. Second, because the foreclosure had wiped out junior lienholders, it would be too complicated to “unscramble the egg.” Third, because Soares could not immediately repay the funds that BCU had expended to clear title to the property, the economic realities favored ratification of the foreclosure.

Soares appealed. The district court temporarily stayed further proceedings (blocking both a planned eviction and a possible resale of the property). Eventually, however, the district court — although finding that BCU had neglected its responsibility to apprise the state tribunal of Soares’ bankruptcy (an error which it termed “harmless”) — determined that the retroactive lifting of the automatic stay did not constitute an abuse of discretion.

Soares again appealed. We enlarged the earlier stay on condition that Soares make monthly payments to BCU for use and occupancy of the premises (to be credited against the mortgage indebtedness, should Soares prevail on appeal).

II. DISCUSSION

To the extent that the threshold inquiries in this ease involve questions of statutory interpretation, we exercise plenary review. 4 See In re Jarvis, 53 F.3d 416, 419 (1st Cir. 1995). From this vantage point we first address the purported exemption for “ministerial acts,” as it is only necessary to reach the retroactivity question if a violation of the automatic stay in fact occurred.

A. The Nature of the State Court’s Actions.

The parties clash head-on in respect to classification of the state court’s actions. The debtor claims that the state court order and judgment transgressed the automatic stay. The creditor claims that these entries, though occurring post-petition, were purely ministerial and, thus, not offensive to the stay. The debtor has the better argument.

Section 362(a)(1) of the Bankruptcy Code provides that the filing of a bankruptcy petition stays the commencement or continuation of all nonbankruptcy judicial proceedings against the debtor. 5 Here, the state court default order eventuated more than two weeks after Soares filed for bankruptcy and the foreclosure judgment one week later. The issue, then, is whether these entries contravened the mandate of section 362(a)(1). BCU asserts that they did not because the stay was not in effect when the creditor requested the state court to act and because the state court’s actions, when taken, constituted ministerial acts.

The creditor’s first assertion is mere buzznaeking. The focus here is whether or not the state court’s actions, when effected, transgressed the automatic stay.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
107 F.3d 969, 1997 WL 93317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/soares-v-brockton-credit-union-ca1-1997.