Strahan v. Evans

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Utah
DecidedMarch 4, 2022
Docket20-02045
StatusUnknown

This text of Strahan v. Evans (Strahan v. Evans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Strahan v. Evans, (Utah 2022).

Opinion

This order is SIGNED. Eee □□ (a? Ee Of fe □□□ ; ols $e Dated: March 4, 2022 Siig □ □ Sale ae Py) ONG □□ R. KIMBALL MOSIER ir U.S. Bankruptcy Judge a5

IN THE UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF UTAH

In re: CYNTHIA MORRISSEY, Bankruptcy Case No. 20-20505 Chapter 7 Debtor.

DAVID STRAHAN, Hon. R. Kimball Mosier Plaintiff, v. Adversary Proceeding No. 20-2045 CYNTHIA EVANS, Defendant. MEMORANDUM DECISION ON PLAINTIFF’S MOTION TO STRIKE

Plaintiff David Strahan and Defendant Cynthia Morrissey fka Cynthia Evans were married for approximately fifteen years and had four children during that time. When they divorced in 2008, the Plaintiff became obligated to pay child support to the Defendant, but under the terms of the divorce decrees such support would cease with respect to a particular child when that child attained the age of majority or married. The parties’ youngest child, then still a minor and named

here by her initials B.S., married in August 2018. Unaware of the marriage, the Plaintiff continued paying child support for six months. When he discovered the marriage, he ceased paying child support and sought to recover from the Defendant the amount he had paid during those six months. He obtained a judgment

against the Defendant in state court for the overpaid child support plus court costs. After the Defendant filed bankruptcy in this Court, the Plaintiff timely commenced the above-captioned adversary proceeding seeking to except that debt from the Defendant’s discharge. The Defendant moved for summary judgment first, prevailing on one of the Plaintiff’s three claims. Then the Plaintiff filed his own motion for summary judgment. To oppose that motion, the Defendant submitted the affidavit of Jonathan Strahan, one of the parties’ children, whom neither party had disclosed as a witness to that point. The Plaintiff included in his reply memorandum in support of his motion a request to strike Jonathan’s affidavit under Rule 37(c)(1) (Motion to Strike).1 The Court treated it as a motion and established a briefing schedule. The parties fully briefed the motion, and the Court conducted a hearing at which it heard

oral argument and issued its ruling granting the Motion to Strike from the bench. After considering the Motion to Strike and the parties’ memoranda; after considering the parties’ oral arguments; and after conducting an independent review of applicable law, the Court issues the following Memorandum Decision granting the Motion to Strike, which memorializes the Court’s oral ruling without altering its substance or the Court’s final judgment.2

1 See Dkt. No. 28, at 4-5. All subsequent references to docket numbers are to those in this adversary proceeding unless otherwise indicated. 2 This Memorandum Decision constitutes the Court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 52(a), made applicable in adversary proceedings by Fed. R. Bankr. P. 7052. Any of the findings of fact herein are deemed, to the extent appropriate, to be conclusions of law, and any conclusions of law are similarly deemed, to the extent appropriate, to be findings of fact, and they shall be equally binding as both. I. JURISDICTION The Court’s jurisdiction over this adversary proceeding is properly invoked pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1334 and § 157(b)(1). This matter is a core proceeding within the definition of 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(I), and the Court may enter a final order. Venue is appropriate under 28 U.S.C. § 1409.

II. PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND The Plaintiff commenced this adversary proceeding on May 1, 2020, alleging three grounds to except the Defendant’s debt to him from her discharge: 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(2)(A), (a)(5), and (a)(15).3 The Defendant then sought summary judgment on all claims. The Court conducted a hearing on that motion on January 12, 2021, at which the parties conceded that the Defendant was entitled to summary judgment on the § 523(a)(5) claim. Accordingly, the Court granted the Defendant’s motion as to that claim but, after examining the material facts germane to the remaining claims, denied summary judgment on the § 523(a)(2)(A) and (a)(15) claims.4 Three and a half weeks later, on February 5, 2021—which, incidentally, was the fact

discovery cut-off date5—the Plaintiff filed the present motion, which seeks summary judgment on the § 523(a)(15) claim alone. As part of her opposition to that motion, the Defendant submitted the affidavit of Jonathan Strahan. The clear purpose of the affidavit was to create a genuine dispute regarding when the Plaintiff learned of B.S.’s marriage.6 According to the relevant portion of the affidavit, Jonathan and the Plaintiff met for lunch sometime between December 2018 and January

3 All subsequent statutory references are to title 11 of the United States Code unless otherwise indicated. 4 Dkt. No. 24. 5 Dkt. No. 8, ¶ 3. 6 The Defendant has essentially admitted this. See Dkt. No. 31, at 7 (“The rebuttal testimony of Jonathan Strahan was submitted in response to the affidavit filed with plaintiff’s motion in order to identify that David Strahan’s assertion was wrong—or at a minimum ‘in dispute.’”); Dkt. No. 27, at 2 (asserting that summary judgment should be denied because there is a genuine dispute regarding when the Plaintiff first became aware of B.S.’s marriage). 2019—Jonathan does not provide a specific date—at which meeting the Plaintiff informed Jonathan that he had known of B.S.’s marriage for some time, perhaps months. By contrast, the Plaintiff has maintained that he did not know of B.S.’s marriage until February 28, 2019. The Court took note of the Motion to Strike at the preliminary hearing on the Plaintiff’s

motion for summary judgment, set a briefing schedule on whether the Court should receive the affidavit, and declined to consider the Plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment until such briefing was complete. Both parties submitted briefing on the question of whether Jonathan’s affidavit should be stricken.7 The Court then conducted a final hearing, at which it considered and granted the Motion to Strike and considered the Plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment in light of that ruling.

III. DISCUSSION Before dealing with the merits of the Plaintiff’s Motion to Strike, the Court must address the procedural argument raised by the Defendant, namely, that the Motion to Strike is not properly

before the Court due to lack of compliance with Local Rule 7056-1. That rule provides that “[n]o motion may be included in a memorandum in opposition or reply memorandum. Such a motion

7 The Defendant’s brief included what can only be deemed a request to strike the Second Affidavit of David Strahan, see Dkt. No. 31, at 8, which the Plaintiff attached to his reply memorandum in support of his motion for summary judgment. This additional affidavit repeats some information contained in the Plaintiff’s affidavit attached to his motion for summary judgment, but principally contradicts and clarifies the assertions made in Jonathan’s affidavit. Because the Plaintiff did not serve the Second Affidavit of David Strahan with his motion for summary judgment, the Defendant argues that the affidavit runs afoul of Fed. R. Civ. P. 6

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