Williams v. King (In re King)

480 B.R. 321
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedOctober 9, 2012
DocketBAP No. 12-6014
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 480 B.R. 321 (Williams v. King (In re King)) 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
Williams v. King (In re King), 480 B.R. 321 (bap8 2012).

Opinion

KRESSEL, Chief Judge.

Frank Williams and Stephen Sherman Wyse appeal from a February 7, 2012 bankruptcy court1 order granting in part and denying in part Wyse’s Motion to Reconsider Order of the Court Granting in part the Motion for Sanctions. The bankruptcy court ruled that Williams had to dismiss count I of a state court complaint within 15 days of the order but could continue to pursue counts II and III. The order reaffirmed an award of $1,500.00 in attorney fees to be paid by Wyse to the debtor, Chester Wayne King. We affirm.

[323]*323BACKGROUND

King filed a chapter 13 petition on February 18, 2010. Williams was one of King’s creditors at the time of filing but was not listed as a creditor in King’s schedules. The bankruptcy court granted King a voluntary conversion to chapter 7 on April 12, 2010.

Williams and King entered into an agreement on April 19, 2010 that said:

Chester W. King owe [sic] Frank L. Williams $81,000 (eighty one thousand dollars) for a personal loan, to be paid in weekly installments of $600 (six hundred dollars) beginning April 12, 2010, and ending November 10, 2012, for a total of 135 payments. Minimum payments of $300 (three hundred dollars) will be accepted only on occasion on the first of the month payments, and these partial payments will be totaled at the end of the loan with interest added accordingly.

King filed his conversion schedules on April 21, 2010, and once again, Williams was not listed as a creditor. King received his discharge on September 16, 2010. The trustee filed a Report of No Distribution on October 27, 2010 and the case was closed on November 22, 2010.

On March 4, 2011, King filed a motion to reopen the case to add creditors. The case was reopened and an amended schedule F was filed. Williams was listed on the amended schedule F as being owed a debt of $76,200 outstanding on a personal loan made in 2008 and the Wyse Law Firm was listed as Williams’ representation. Four other creditors with claims totaling $5,339.41 were also added to King’s schedule F. King also filed a Notice of Reopening of Bankruptcy Case to Add Creditor, which in addition to listing the five creditors to be added, their respective debts and that the debts would be general unsecured debts, stated the following:

The above named creditor has 30 days from the date of service below to object to reopening of the case for addition of the claim, of to file a complaint objecting to discharge of the debt or discharge of the debtor under 11 U.S.C. §§ 523, 727. If neither an objection to reopening nor a complaint under § 523 or § 727 is filed by the deadline, the creditor’s claim will be discharged and the case will be re-closed without further notice or hearing.2

Williams filed an objection to the motion to reopen on March 28, 2011. In his objection, Williams stated:

[T]he debt was re-incorporated and [King] obtained additional funding on April 19, 2010, into a new $81,000 debt. Mr. King notified me of his bankruptcy3 but asserted he would not include any obligation to me in his bankruptcy action and in reliance upon that promise I thereafter extended additional4 credit for him and his ongoing business activity, the “King’s Pickle” and $76,200.00 remains unpaid.

Williams also stated that “King’s promise not to include his debts to me in his bankruptcy was used to induce me to provide additional funding to him ... [King] should not now be allowed to deny this promise and discharge his obligation to me.” The objection lists two debts extended after the conversion date that were not listed on King’s amended Schedule F. Those debts are $11,500 outstanding on a $15,200 loan extended on October 2, 2010 [324]*324and $1,500 outstanding on a $1,900 loan extended at some point or throughout 2010. The objection was signed and filed by Williams.

The bankruptcy court’s March 30, 2011 docket entry directed King’s attorney, Harvey A. Hoffman, to serve the Notice of Reopening of Bankruptcy Case to Add Creditors(s) within three days on any parties that did not receive electronic notice. The order also set a hearing on the motion for April 14, 2011. On April 1, Hoffman filed a Certificate of Service certifying that the notice was sent by mail, but the certificate does not indicate to which creditors he mailed the notice.

At the April 14th hearing5, Wyse appeared on Williams’ behalf — the docket minute entry states, “Atty Wyse did appear for pro se creditor, Frank Williams.” The bankruptcy court overruled Williams’ objection, noted that Williams failed to file an adversary proceeding within 30 days of the notice, ordered the case reopened as of April 14th and added the five previously omitted creditors. The case was then re-closed on April 29, 2011.

On or about May 17, 2011, Williams sued King in the Boone County Circuit Court. Count I of the suit asked for damages in the amount of $81,915 on an outstanding debt of $76,200 from a loan of $81,000 made on April 17, 2010. Count II sought $11,845 in damages on an outstanding debt of $11,500 on a loan of $15,200 made on October 2, 2010. Count III invoked the doctrine of money had and received6 asking for a sum of $1,514 on funds loaned throughout 2010 totaling $1,900. King answered with a motion to dismiss stating that the debts sought in counts I — III were discharged in his bankruptcy case.

On October 5, 2011, King filed another motion to reopen his case, this time to file an adversary proceeding. The motion complained that Williams, through his attorney, Wyse, filed the Boone County Circuit Court suit to collect a discharged debt. The certificate of service indicates that only Wyse received notice through regular mail and anyone else receiving notice received such notice by electronic filing. The bankruptcy court granted the order to reopen the case on October 6, 2011. The order included instructions that King must file any separate subsequent motions with notice or an adversary complaint.

On October 10, 2011, King served the order reopening the case on the Wyse Law Firm by regular mail. That same day King also filed a motion that recited the progress of the state court proceeding and asked for sanctions against Wyse for pursuing collection of the discharged debt in state court. Additionally, the motion asked for an order requiring Wyse to dismiss the state court suit or in the alternative an order enjoining the state circuit court from hearing the proceeding. There was no request for relief made against Williams. The motion for sanctions was served on parties of interest by both electronic notification and regular mail.

The bankruptcy court set a November 1, 2011 deadline to respond to the motion for sanctions. Wyse did not respond. The sanctions motion was granted in part on November 2, 2011. The bankruptcy court found that Wyse violated the discharge injunction and ordered him to pay dam[325]*325ages in the amount of $1,500 and required Wyse to dismiss the state court action against King. The order made no mention of Williams. King was directed to serve the order on parties not receiving electronic notice' — which he did that day.

On November 15, 2011 Wyse filed a motion to reconsider7

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Bluebook (online)
480 B.R. 321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-king-in-re-king-bap8-2012.