Stephens v. Hedback (In Re Stephens)

425 B.R. 529, 63 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 764, 2010 Bankr. LEXIS 597, 2010 WL 842321
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMarch 12, 2010
Docket09-6083
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 425 B.R. 529 (Stephens v. Hedback (In Re Stephens)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stephens v. Hedback (In Re Stephens), 425 B.R. 529, 63 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 764, 2010 Bankr. LEXIS 597, 2010 WL 842321 (bap8 2010).

Opinion

FEDERMAN, Bankruptcy Judge.

Debtor G. Yvonne Stephens appeals from the Order of the Bankruptcy Court 1 approving a settlement entered between the Trustee in her Chapter 7 bankruptcy case, John A. Hedback, and the Trustee in her husband’s separate Chapter 7 bankruptcy case, Mary Jo A. Jensen-Carter. The Debtor asserts that the Bankruptcy Court’s approval of the settlement was error because it failed to consider her claimed homestead interest in the property involved. For the reasons that follow, we AFFIRM the Bankruptcy Court’s Order.

G. Yvonne Stephens, also known as Georgina Yvonne Stephens, filed a Chapter 7 bankruptcy case in August 1998. Her case is related to a separate case filed in 1998 by her then-husband, Larry Kenneth Alexander. As the Bankruptcy Court in this case has previously phrased it, *531 these two cases have lengthy and thoroughly-litigated histories, 2 much of which involved property located at 875 Laurel Avenue in St. Paul, Minnesota, which Ms. Stephens occupies as her residence and now claims is her homestead.

The details concerning the Laurel property, and the litigation involving it, have been recited numerous times, 3 and, by an Order Granting Partial Summary Judgment against Ms. Stephens entered on January 4, 2006 (the 2006 Order), 4 the Bankruptcy Court ultimately resolved all of the relevant facts regarding the Laurel property. That 2006 Order was affirmed by both the District Court for the District of Minnesota and the Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit. 5 Hence, we need not, and do not, discuss in detail the events leading up to the 2006 Order but, instead, relate what the Bankruptcy Court concluded in that Order, what the District Court said in its Memorandum Opinion and Order affirming it, and the events occurring subsequent to those decisions.

In sum, the Bankruptcy Court determined in the 2006 Order that neither Ms. Stephens, nor Mr. Alexander, was entitled to claim an ownership interest in the Laurel property, and, further, that neither of them had properly claimed a homestead exemption in it. 6 The Bankruptcy Court also found that Stephens’ trustee had not abandoned the estate’s interest in the Laurel property. 7 Consequently, the Bankruptcy Court concluded that the fight over the house was between the trustees of the debtors’ respective bankruptcy estates. 8

The Bankruptcy Court then concluded in the 2006 Order that summary judgment was not appropriate as to the issues between the two trustees — ie., whether, by virtue of a March 1998 deed, Mr. Alexander properly conveyed an interest in the 875 Laurel property to Ms. Stephens, which would be an interest belonging to Ms. Stephens’ bankruptcy estate, and whether such transfer could be avoidable by Alexander’s bankruptcy trustee. 9 However, because there was “no fact or legal question now undetermined relative to either Larry Alexander or Georgina Stephens with respect to the property,” summary judgment was appropriate as to her claimed interests in it. 10 In its disposition, the Court expressly ordered that “G. Yvonne Stephens and Larry Kenneth Alexander are each declared to have no ex *532 emption in and no ownership interest in the property at issue herein, the real property commonly described as 875 Laurel Avenue in Saint Paul, Minnesota.” 11 The Bankruptcy Court ordered that the property be sold, with the net proceeds to be held by Alexander’s trustee pending a final determination of the issues remaining as between the two bankruptcy estates as to their claimed interests in the property.

As stated, the District Court affirmed the 2006 Order, expressly and unambiguously agreeing with the conclusion that neither Alexander, nor Ms. Stephens, had an ownership or exemption interest in the property. 12 Moreover, the District Court found that Ms. Stephens and Mr. Alexander were vexatious litigants who were congesting the courts’ dockets, and barred them from making “any further filings of any kind relating to 875 Laurel Avenue, the Stephens bankruptcy, the Alexander bankruptcy, or the Jensen-Carter adversary proceeding” in either the Bankruptcy Court or the District Court, unless the filing was signed by an attorney pursuant to Rule 1 1 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, or they had obtained the court’s advance authorization to file such pleading. 13 Ms. Stephens appealed the Bankruptcy Court and District Court’s decisions to the Eighth Circuit, which affirmed in all respects. 14

Meanwhile, on March 28, 2006, while the Bankruptcy Court’s 2006 Order was on appeal to the District Court, Ms. Stephens filed amended schedules listing the Laurel property and claiming it exempt as her homestead. Both trustees objected to the claimed exemption. The objections to exemptions were stayed by the Bankruptcy Court pending the outcome of the appeal of the 2006 Order. Although the appeal of the 2006 Order was decided in the trustees’ favor, as discussed above, these latest objections to exemptions were never placed back on the Court’s docket.

Then, in November 2009, the two trustees entered into an agreement which resolved the issues between the two bankruptcy estates as to how the proceeds from the sale of the Laurel property were to be divided. On November 20, 2009, they filed motions to approve the settlement in the two bankruptcy cases. On December 14, 2009, Ms. Stephens, pro se, without prior court approval, filed an objection to the settlement, in contravention of the District Court’s bar against her filing such pleadings. The Bankruptcy Court conducted a hearing on the settlement on December 17, 2009, and allowed Ms. Stephens to argue her position. The Bankruptcy Court then ruled that the prior orders had been conclusive that neither Stephens nor Alexan *533 der had an interest in the property and, further, that Ms. Stephens’ attempt in 2006 to claim the Laurel property exempt had no effect. In addition, although the Bankruptcy Court had allowed Ms. Stephens to argue her position in court, he admonished her for filing her objection to the settlement in total disregard of the orders of the courts. That same day, December 17, 2009, the Bankruptcy Court entered an Order approving the settlement. Ms. Stephens appeals from that Order.

The trustees 15 point out first that Ms. Stephens’ objection to the settlement was filed in contravention of the District Court’s bar against her filing pleadings pro se,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
425 B.R. 529, 63 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 764, 2010 Bankr. LEXIS 597, 2010 WL 842321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stephens-v-hedback-in-re-stephens-bap8-2010.