Stephenson Ex Rel. Al-Mansoob v. Malloy

700 F.3d 265, 68 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1255, 2012 WL 5306046, 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 22349
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedOctober 30, 2012
Docket11-1671
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 700 F.3d 265 (Stephenson Ex Rel. Al-Mansoob v. Malloy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stephenson Ex Rel. Al-Mansoob v. Malloy, 700 F.3d 265, 68 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1255, 2012 WL 5306046, 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 22349 (6th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION

DANNY C. REEVES, District Judge.

Senan Al-Mansoob filed this lawsuit in July 2009. When he instituted Chapter 7 *267 bankruptcy proceedings two months later, he did not list his claims against Defendants Matthew Malloy and Wilburn Archer Trucking, Inc., among his assets. Upon learning of the omission, Defendants sought summary judgment, arguing that Al-Mansoob was judicially estopped from pursuing the claims. Relying on a Sixth Circuit case decided a few days before Al-Mansoob filed his response, the district court granted summary judgment and denied a subsequent motion for reconsideration by the bankruptcy trustee, who had been substituted as the real party in interest. On appeal, the trustee contends that judicial estoppel should not apply to him and that Al-Mansoob’s failure to disclose the case was inadvertent in any event. We find both arguments persuasive.

I.

The parties’ dispute arises out of a traffic accident involving Al-Mansoob and Matthew Malloy. When the accident occurred, Malloy was driving a truck owned by Wilburn Archer Trucking, Inc. Al-Mansoob sued Malloy and Wilburn Archer Trucking for negligence, filing his first amended complaint in Wayne County Circuit Court on July 19, 2009. 1 Defendants timely removed the case to the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan.

Al-Mansoob sought Chapter 7 bankruptcy protection on September 30, 2009. In his bankruptcy filings, Al-Mansoob did not list this lawsuit among his assets or as an action to which he was a party, as required by the bankruptcy code. 2 He did, however, list a suit against State Farm arising out of the same accident. Amendments to his bankruptcy filings on December 31, 2009, and February 18, 2010 did not cure the omission. The bankruptcy court granted Al-Mansoob a discharge on March 3, 2010.

In July 2010, Defendants moved for summary judgment, arguing that Al-Man-soob was judicially estopped from pursuing his claims because he had failed to disclose them in the bankruptcy proceeding. They cited the three-prong test adopted by this circuit in Browning v. Levy, 283 F.3d 761 (6th Cir.2002), for judicial estoppel in the bankruptcy context. Under that test, judicial estoppel bars a party from (1) asserting a position that is contrary to one he asserted under oath in a prior proceeding; (2) the prior court adopted the contrary position either as a preliminary matter or as part of a final disposition; and (3) the party’s conduct was not inadvertent. Id. at 775-76. Browning identified “two circumstances under which a debtor’s failure to disclose a cause of action in a bankruptcy proceeding might be deemed inadvertent”: first, “where the debtor lacks knowledge of the factual basis of the undisclosed claims,” and second, “where the debtor has no motive for concealment.” Id. at 776. In their motion, Defendants asserted that Al-Mansoob’s pursuit of this action was inconsistent with his failure to disclose it in the bankruptcy proceedings; that the bankruptcy court had adopted the contrary position by granting him a discharge; and that his omission of the instant claims was not inadvertent because he knew of them at the time he filed for bankruptcy and had a motive for concealing them, namely, “wanting] to keep any settlement, verdict or judgment to himself.”

*268 Al-Mansoob responded to the summary-judgment motion on August 16, 2010. He denied that he had asserted inconsistent positions in the two proceedings. He also suggested that his failure to disclose this action was inadvertent because he had “lacked sufficient knowledge of the differences in the factual bas[e]s” of the instant suit and his suit against State Farm, which had been listed among his assets. Al-Mansoob argued that, if he had intended to mislead the bankruptcy court, he would have omitted the State Farm case as well. However, despite citing Sixth Circuit precedent that judicial estoppel does not apply where the plaintiff has “take[n] affirmative steps to inform the trustee and the Bankruptcy Court” of omitted claims, he presented no evidence or argument that the bankruptcy trustee, Michael Stephenson, had been aware of this action.

Nor did Al-Mansoob’s response address White v. Wyndham Vacation Ownership, Inc., 617 F.3d 472 (6th Cir.2010), which had been decided five days earlier. White added a bad-faith inquiry to the inadvertence prong of the judicial-estoppel test set out in Browning. See id. at 478. In White, this bad-faith element was met because the plaintiffs “attempts to advise the bankruptcy court and the trustee of her [omitted] claim” were insufficient. Id. at 484.

At a motion hearing held on September 23, 2010, counsel for Defendants argued that White was “directly on point.” With respect to the issue of inadvertence, he asserted:

When I filed this motion, and until August 27, the bankruptcy trustee never knew anything about this lawsuit. In response to the motion, you don’t have an affidavit from Mr. Mansoob’s bankruptcy attorney who says yes, I did disclose this. It was just inadvertently left out of the schedules. It was left out of the bankruptcy proceeding.
Even today, [Al-Mansoob’s counsel Phil] Serafini has an affidavit from the trustee that he allowed me to review before-: hand, as I’m sure he’s going to present to the Court, even that doesn’t indicate that the trustee knew about this lawsuit at the time Mr. Mansoob was going through his bankruptcy proceeding. Based on White, there is zero indication why Plaintiff—why Plaintiffs claim shouldn’t stop today.

Serafini responded, “as an officer [of] the court,” that the trustee had been aware of the case since the previous fall. He stated that when the trustee became involved in the case against State Farm, they (Serafini and the trustee) discussed the instant action as well. In addition, according to Serafini, he and the trustee “discussed [this lawsuit] numerous times over the course of the negotiations that took place from that day forward.” Nevertheless, his description of the trustee’s affidavit—which was apparently presented to the district court at the conclusion of the hearing but does not appear in the record—suggested that it did not contain any information as to when the trustee learned of Al-Mansoob’s claims against Malloy and Wilburn Archer Trucking.

Defendants’ attorney replied:

Comments about conversations with bankruptcy trustees, there’s nothing in front of the Court to substantiate that, other than the statements of counsel. We don’t have affidavits and it is not the Defendant[s’] responsibility to show that he did this on purpose. It’s simply to show that this omission was not inadvertent, that the disclosure [sic] was not inadvertent.

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700 F.3d 265, 68 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1255, 2012 WL 5306046, 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 22349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stephenson-ex-rel-al-mansoob-v-malloy-ca6-2012.