Sterling v. Southlake Nautilus Health & Racquet Club, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Indiana
DecidedJune 10, 2024
Docket2:23-cv-00349
StatusUnknown

This text of Sterling v. Southlake Nautilus Health & Racquet Club, Inc. (Sterling v. Southlake Nautilus Health & Racquet Club, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Indiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sterling v. Southlake Nautilus Health & Racquet Club, Inc., (N.D. Ind. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF INDIANA HAMMOND DIVISION

JACQUELINE STERLING, ) Bkrtcy. Case No. 09-24206 ) Adv. Proc. No. 12-2102 Appellant, ) ) v. ) Cause No. 2:23-cv-349-PPS ) SOUTHLAKE NAUTILUS HEALTH & ) RACQUET CLUB, INC., ) ) Appellee. ) )

OPINION AND ORDER

Jacqueline Sterling appeals a Bankruptcy Court Order that awarded her damages and attorney fees totaling roughly $110,000 for the contemptuous behavior of her creditor, Southlake Nautilus, a local health club. Southlake attempted to collect a debt against Sterling that had been extinguished in bankruptcy. Sterling believes she is entitled to a larger award. But because Bankruptcy Judge Ahler did not abuse his discretion in arriving at a damage and fee award, his decision must be affirmed. Background This case arises from a 2001 debt of approximately $500 in unpaid membership dues owed by Sterling to the Southlake Nautilus Health & Racquet Club, Inc. Shockingly, this rather paltry unpaid debt has spawned over two decades of litigation: there was an initial collection action in state court, followed by a bankruptcy proceeding, then a wrongful arrest and detention of Ms. Sterling, an adversary proceeding in the bankruptcy court, an appeal to this court and then a reversal in the Seventh Circuit, which then led to another proceeding in bankruptcy court. It is this

latter proceeding which is before me now. Here are the details: Sterling evidently didn’t pay her bill to Southlake which prompted Southlake to pursue a collection action against her in the Superior Court of Lake County, Indiana. Southlake obtained a default judgment against Sterling in February 2002, and over the course of the next decade, it aggressively sought to collect on that judgment.

In September 2009, Sterling filed a Chapter 7 bankruptcy. [Bankr. Case No. 09- 24206.] A short while later, the Bankruptcy Noticing Center sent a notice to Southlake that Sterling had initiated the bankruptcy. Southlake did not send a copy of this notice to its attorneys at Austgen Kuiper & Associates, P.C. (“Austgen”), who represented Southlake in the Lake County collection case. Nor did the Lake County judiciary receive

notice of Sterling’s bankruptcy. In December 2009, Southlake, through its attorneys at Austgen, filed a motion for proceedings supplemental in the Lake County case to enforce the 2002 judgment against Sterling. A month later, in January 2010, the bankruptcy court entered a Discharge Order that discharged Sterling’s financial obligations, including to Southlake.

The Bankruptcy Noticing Center sent a prompt letter to Southlake notifying it of the Discharge Order. At this critical juncture, Southlake did not inform its attorney (Austgen) or the Lake County judiciary of its receipt of the Discharge Order. But, importantly, neither did Sterling, even though a local rule requires such notice. Here’s what that rule says:

Immediately upon the entry of an order for relief, give written notice of the bankruptcy to any court or other tribunal where an action or other proceeding is being maintained against the debtor, whether or not the matter has proceeded to final judgment, and to all the parties involved in any such action or proceeding.

N.D. Ind. L.R. B-4002-1(a)(2). On April 27, 2010, after Sterling failed to appear at a hearing on Southlake’s motion for proceedings supplemental, the Lake County court, unaware of Sterling’s bankruptcy case or the Discharge Order, issued a bench warrant for Sterling’s arrest. That’s when matters took a terrible turn. About a year later, a police officer with the town of Dyer, Indiana stopped to assist Sterling with a flat tire. Upon learning of the outstanding April 2010 warrant for her arrest, the officer detained Sterling, and she ended up spending the weekend in jail. She was detained on Friday and Saturday night in a cell with more than 20 other women. They shared one open air toilet and did not have access to feminine hygiene products. On Sunday, the jail transferred Sterling to a different cell with a single cellmate. Sterling’s employer at the time, the Horseshoe Casino in Hammond, Indiana, suspended Sterling after her arrest. However, after her release, the Horseshoe Casino reinstated Sterling’s employment later that same month. Sterling had to disclose her arrest to the Indiana Gaming Commission each year to renew her gaming license, though these disclosures did not prohibit the successful annual renewal of her license. Following her arrest, Sterling first filed suit in state court to seek damages against Southlake, Austgen, and David Austgen (the head of Austgen) for their part in

her March 2011 arrest in violation of the Discharge Order. Sterling’s state court action was unsuccessful, so on June 25, 2012, she initiated an adversary proceeding in bankruptcy court against Southlake, David Austgen, and his law firm. [Adversary Proceeding No. 12-02102.] Sterling sought to hold all three in civil contempt. The bankruptcy court held a bench trial from November 12-13, 2014, granted defendants’ motion for judgment on partial findings to dismiss David Austgen individually from

the case, and ultimately entered judgment for Southlake and Austgen (the law firm) on August 25, 2016. [Adversary Proceeding No. 12-02102, DE 87.] Sterling appealed the judgment to this court, and the matter was assigned to Judge Van Bokkelen who affirmed the bankruptcy court on August 2, 2018. See Sterling v. Southlake Nautilus Health and Racquet Club, Inc., et al., No. 2:16-CV-384, 2018 WL 3660058 (N.D. Ind. Aug. 2, 2018).

On appeal to the Seventh Circuit, Sterling challenged the district court’s findings that both Southlake and Austgen lacked the knowledge necessary to be held in contempt for violating the Discharge Order issued pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 524(a). The Seventh Circuit affirmed the district court’s decision with respect to Austgen but reversed with respect to Southlake and held that Southlake, in pursuing its collection

efforts after the debt had been discharged, was in contempt. In re Sterling, 933 F.3d 828 (7th Cir. 2019). In remanding, the Seventh Circuit issued a reminder to debtors (and their counsel) of the importance of compliance with Local Bankruptcy Rule B–4002–1(a) and left “to the bankruptcy court’s discretion whether to factor [Sterling’s noncompliance with this rule] into the damages calculation.” Id. at 836. So, the case was

remanded to the bankruptcy court for a hearing on damages. In the hearing on remand, Sterling sought damages for lost wages, emotional distress, false arrest, loss of reputation, and attorney fees. Southlake argued that Sterling was not entitled to any damages or, alternatively, that the bankruptcy court should reduce Sterling’s damages and attorney fees because of her failure to comply with Local Bankruptcy Rule B–4002–1(a). Judge Ahler rejected the notion that a failure to comply

with Rule B–4002–1(a) should prohibit any recovery, reasoning that such a result “could incentivize creditors to ignore a discharge order” and would “undermine the civil contempt finding against Southlake.” [DE 4-2 at 16.1] But Judge Ahler commented that “this entire unfortunate occurrence may have been avoided had Sterling complied [with Rule B–4002–1(a)].” [Id.] On that basis, Judge Ahler split the baby assigning 50% fault to

each side and thereby reducing Sterling’s damages and attorney fees award by 50% to reflect “the role Sterling played in the resulting litigation.” [Id. at 17.] In particular, Judge Ahler found damages in the amount of $18,000 for the emotional distress Sterling endured by being wrongfully jailed for three days ($6,000 per day) plus $1,449 in lost wages.

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Sterling v. Southlake Nautilus Health & Racquet Club, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sterling-v-southlake-nautilus-health-racquet-club-inc-innd-2024.