Traylor v. First Family Financial Services, Inc. (In re Traylor)
This text of 202 B.R. 790 (Traylor v. First Family Financial Services, Inc. (In re Traylor)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
OPINION ON RENEWED MOTION TO REMAND
A. POPE GORDON, Bankruptcy Judge.
Pamela L. Traylor filed a motion on September 12,1994 to withdraw the reference of this adversary proceeding or to remand the proceeding to state court.
The district court reserved ruling on the motion to withdraw the reference pending consideration by this court of the motion to remand.1
The motion to remand came on for hearing on May 10, 1995. For the following reasons, the court concludes that the motion should be granted.
Pamela Traylor and her parents, Billy and Linda Traylor, filed this action initially in the Circuit Court of Randolph County, Alabama. The Traylors alleged various state law claims against First Family Financial Services arising out of the alleged attempted wrongful foreclosure of their residence.2 The Traylors demanded a jury trial.
First Family removed the action to the District Court for the Middle District of Alabama under 28 U.S.C. § 1334.3
The Traylors filed a motion to abstain and remand the action to the Circuit Court of Randolph County, Alabama.
The district court referred the action to this court.
This court denied the motion to abstain and remand because of suspected issue involving bankruptcy law.4
The court dismissed Billy and Linda Tray-lor because their claims are property of their bankruptcy estate, and the chapter 7 trustee is the real party in interest to those claims.
[792]*792Pamela Traylor filed the instant motion to withdraw the reference and renewed, in the alternative, her motion to remand this proceeding to state court.
28 U.S.C. § 1452 allows the court to remand this adversary proceeding to state court on “any equitable ground” (emphasis added).
There are several equitable grounds to support remand of the instant adversary proceeding.
The bankruptcy case to which this action relates was filed by Billy and Linda Traylor in 1991 and closed in 1992. The bankruptcy ease was reopened solely because of the state court action which was not filed until 1993.
The action involves purely state law claims and does not involve any issues of bankruptcy law.5 The case could not have been commenced in federal court because the parties are not completely diverse and no federal question is involved.
The Circuit Court of Randolph County will have jurisdiction over the parties to this action. Pamela Traylor, a Georgia resident, submitted herself to the jurisdiction of the state court by filing the action in Alabama.
The action is a non-core proceeding under 28 U.S.C. § 157(b). The court does not have the authority to enter final judgments in non-core proceedings.6
Pamela Traylor who is not a debtor has requested and appears to be entitled to a jury trial in this case. Pamela Traylor has not consented to a jury trial by the bankruptcy court. The authority of the bankruptcy court to conduct a jury trial absent the consent of all parties is in question.7
The claims of Pamela Traylor should not be bifurcated from the claims of the chapter 7 trustee. All of the claims are predicated on the assumption that the Traylors were not in default on the loan from First Family at the time First Family attempted foreclosure of the Traylor residence. Both judicial economy and the risk of inconsistent results dictate that this issue should be decided by only one court.8
There is no evidence before the court that this adversary proceeding cannot be timely adjudicated by the Circuit Court of Randolph County, Alabama.
A separate order will enter remanding this adversary proceeding to the Circuit Court for Randolph County, Alabama.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
202 B.R. 790, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 2118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/traylor-v-first-family-financial-services-inc-in-re-traylor-almb-1995.