Woodard v. Dicks (In Re Dicks)

306 B.R. 700, 17 Fla. L. Weekly Fed. B 121, 2004 Bankr. LEXIS 380, 2004 WL 516575
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedMarch 16, 2004
DocketBankruptcy No. 8:00-BK-02653-MGW, Adversary No. 8:04-AP-00069
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 306 B.R. 700 (Woodard v. Dicks (In Re Dicks)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woodard v. Dicks (In Re Dicks), 306 B.R. 700, 17 Fla. L. Weekly Fed. B 121, 2004 Bankr. LEXIS 380, 2004 WL 516575 (Fla. 2004).

Opinion

PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION

MICHAEL G. WILLIAMSON, Bankruptcy Judge.

This Court has inherent authority to enjoin vexatious litigation by litigants who have settled on a course of conduct involving the repetitive filing of duplicative legal papers rearguing a position rejected a multitude of times by numerous trial and appellate courts, where such litigation causes needless expense to other parties, where the litigants have no objective, good-faith expectation of prevailing, and where the multiple filings place an unnecessary burden on the courts. Ray v. Lowder, Order Granting Injunctive Relief and Directing the Entry of Judgment, Case No. 5:02-cv-316-Oc-10GRJ (M.D.Fla. Sept. 18, 2003)(W. Terrell Hodges, D.J., adopting Report and Recommendation reported at Ray v. Lowder, 2003 WL 22384806 (M.D.Fla. Aug. 29, 2003)(Jones, Mag. J.)) (citing, inter alia, In re Martin-Trigona, 737 F.2d 1254, 1262 (2nd Cir.1984)(“Martirir-Trigona”)). The history of the litigation involving the plaintiffs and defendants, principally Mercantile Bank f/k/a Central Bank of Tampa (“Bank”), and the debtor, T. June Dicks (“Dicks”), falls squarely within the type of conduct that Martinr-Trigona injunctions are designed to prevent. Accordingly, the Court will enter a preliminary injunction directed against each of these defendants enjoining them from continuing this course of conduct subject to the terms and for the reasons set forth below.

*702 Procedural History

This case came on for hearing on February 20, 2004, on the Bank’s and chapter 7 trustee’s (“Trustee”) motion to enjoin pro se vexatious filings filed in the chapter 7 case (Doc. No. 296) and motion for preliminary injunction filed in this adversary proceeding (Doc. No. 2)(collectively, the “Injunction Motion”). The Bank holds a judgment entered in the Circuit Court for Hillsborough County, Florida, on April 29, 1993, against Dicks in the amount of $607,526.30 inclusive of interest through the date of the petition commencing this case (“Judgment”).

The Injunction Motion is directed against Dicks; her husband, Donald Dicks (“Donald Dicks”); her daughter, Cheryl Dicks-Clark (“Dicks-Clark”); and her brother, Thomas P. Lypka (“Lypka”). 1 Dicks-Clark and Lypka are parties to adversary proceedings that were brought and litigated in this Court by the Trustee, resulting in adverse judgments being entered against them. 2

For purposes of the Court’s determination of the Injunction Motion, the Court considers the record to include all of the exhibits that were also considered at the trial that took place in this Court in connection with adversary proceeding number 00-224 that was filed by Dicks at the beginning of this case. In the adversary proceeding, Dicks challenged the validity of the Judgment. This Court entered judgment against Dicks in the adversary, finding that the Judgment must be afforded full faith and credit by this Court under the authority of the Full Faith and Credit Act 3 and under the Rooker-Feldman Doctrine. 4 In addition, this Court will consid *703 er as part of the record all of the various papers that Dicks has filed with this Court over the many months, in fact years, that this case has proceeded.

The Court will also consider as part of the record all of the state court-generated papers, judgments, and orders that have been entered by a number of other courts that have dealt with these matters from 1993 when the Judgment was first entered, to most recently, the Order Denying Motion To Vacate entered January 20, 2004, by the Honorable Vivian C. Maye, Circuit Judge for Hillsborough County, Florida, in which she disposed of Dicks’ most recent attack on the validity of the Judgment. All of these papers are matters of public record and have been either introduced in evidence in this Court or are attached to the filings that have been made in this Court by the Bank, Trustee, or Dicks.

Debtor’s Repeated Contention that the Judgment is Void

In a multitude of papers filed in this Court and others, Dicks takes the position that the Judgment is “void ab initio’’ because it was entered in violation of her due process notice rights. The procedural history relevant to this claim is as follows:

On April 29, 1993, the Honorable Guy W. Spicola, Circuit Judge for Hillsborough County, entered an order finding that Dicks had willfully failed to appear for a pre-trial conference with respect to a proceeding to determine the deficiency judgment in connection with a foreclosure judgment that had previously been entered against her. The Judgment was thereupon entered against her. A motion for rehearing filed by Dicks was also denied because she failed to appear at the rehearing. No appeal was filed by Dicks with respect to the Judgment.

In the years that followed, the Bank undertook collection efforts. In 1997, as part of this process, the Bank domesticated the Judgment in the State of Georgia where Dicks currently resides. In addition to domesticating the judgment in Georgia, the Georgia court entered a second judgment against Dicks for sanctions, finding that Dicks “displayed a lack of candor in post-judgment discovery proceedings.” Order of February 5, 1997, by the Honorable Robert E. Flournoy, Jr., Superior Court Judge, Cobb County, Georgia, Case No. 93-1-8778-22.

The Bank also commenced proceedings supplementary in Monroe County, Florida, in order to levy and execute against certain real property owned by Dicks. That court entered a third judgment against Dicks as well as her husband, Donald Dicks, for sanctions based on the Special Master’s findings that their conduct in the proceeding had been “intentionally evasive and contumacious” and that the proceedings in Monroe County had “been expanded unnecessarily by the conduct of both.” 5

*704 In 1999, Dicks attempted to set aside the Judgment in the court of its rendition — the Circuit Court for Hillsborough County, Florida. 6 On August 11, 1999, a hearing was held before the Honorable Manuel Menendez, Jr., Circuit Judge, on Dicks’ motion to set aside the Judgment. As she has before this Court on numerous occasions, Dicks argued that the Judgment was entered against her without proper notice. In pertinent part, Judge Menen-dez found that Dicks “did receive proper notice of the hearing” and her contention was without merit. 7 Accordingly, Dicks’ motion to set aside the default judgment was denied. 8

Shortly thereafter, having been unsuccessful in either thwarting the Bank’s collection efforts or in having the Judgment set aside, Dicks filed a bankruptcy petition in this Court on February 24, 2000.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
306 B.R. 700, 17 Fla. L. Weekly Fed. B 121, 2004 Bankr. LEXIS 380, 2004 WL 516575, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodard-v-dicks-in-re-dicks-flmb-2004.