Xytest Corp. v. Mitchell (In Re Mitchell)

255 B.R. 97, 2000 Bankr. LEXIS 1370, 2000 WL 1720533
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedNovember 15, 2000
Docket19-40279
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 255 B.R. 97 (Xytest Corp. v. Mitchell (In Re Mitchell)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Xytest Corp. v. Mitchell (In Re Mitchell), 255 B.R. 97, 2000 Bankr. LEXIS 1370, 2000 WL 1720533 (Mass. 2000).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

JOAN N. FEENEY, Bankruptcy Judge.

I. INTRODUCTION

The matter before the Court is the Plaintiffs’ Motion to Dismiss, Abstain and/or Stay as to Defendants’ Counterclaims and Third Party Complaint and to Strike Affirmative Defenses and Request for Hearing (the “Motion to Dismiss”). In view of the complete record before this Court, including the Debtors’ Verified Opposition to Plaintiffs’ Motion to Dismiss, the Court finds that oral argument and a hearing are unnecessary. Determination of the Motion requires consideration of the following:

1) the Complaint filed on July 31, 2000 against James H. Mitchell, III and Mary A. Mitchell (the “Debtors” or the “Mitchells”) by Xytest Corporation (“Xytest”) and George R. Berbeco (“Berbeco”) (collectively the “Plaintiffs”), who obtained a judgment against the Debtors and Somerset Capital Corporation (“Somerset”) in June of 1999 from the Superior Court in and for the County of San Mateo, California (the “California Judgment”) and who seek a determination that the California Judgment is nondischargeable either because the claims arose postpetition or, alternatively, because the Debtors’ obligations to them are nondischargeable under 11 U.S.C. §§ 523(a)(2)(A) or (a)(6);
2) the Answer to the Complaint filed by the Debtors;
3) the Fifty-three Affirmative Defenses asserted by the Debtors as follows:
(1) Failure to Join an Indispensable Party (the Debtors did not identify the indispensable party or parties); (2) Plaintiffs Are Not a Real Party in Interest (the Debtors assert the Plaintiffs lack standing to bring the instant adversary proceeding); (3) Plaintiffs are Not a Proper Party to Bring This Action; (4) Defendant Not Responsible for Third Party (the Debtors assert the Plaintiffs’ claims are barred *99 because their injuries, if any, were caused by someone for whose conduct the Debtors were not legally responsible); (5) Failure to State a Claim; (6) Lack of Damages; (7) Failure to Mitigate Damages; (8) de minimis non curat lex (the Debtors maintain the Plaintiffs’ claims are barred by this doctrine which according to Black’s Law Dictionary, (5th ed.1979), means that “[t]he law does not care for, or take notice of, very small or trifling matters (9) Plaintiffs Negligence; (10) Contributory Negligence; (11) Res Judicata; (12) Collateral Es-toppel and Issue Preclusion; (13) Waiver, Estoppel, Novation and Reaffirmation; (14) Breach by the Plaintiff [sic](the Debtors state that the Plaintiffs breached the contracts that are the subject of the present dispute); (15) Doctrine of Illegality; (16) Violation of Laws of Massachusetts (the Debtors state that the Plaintiffs’ violations of Massachusetts and California law caused their injuries); (17) Unclean Hands; (18) Estopped by Own Acts; (19) Fraud Has Not Been Plead with Particularity; (20) Representations Were Made in Good Faith (the Debtors state that all their representations were made in good faith); (21) Plaintiff [sic] Misrepresented Several Facts (the Debtors did not indicate which facts were misrepresented); (22) Spoliation [sic] of Evidence (the Debtors do not identify what evidence was destroyed); (23) Time Barred (the Debtors assert the Plaintiffs are time barred from filing the complaint “at this late date”); (24) Statute of Limitations; (25) Laches; (26) Waiver of Rights; (27) Failure to Honor Obligations; (28) Failure to Provide Reasonable Opportunity to Cure; (29) Not [sic] Proximate Cause; (30) Failure to Perform all Conditions; (31) Set-off; (32) Unreasonable Delay by the Plaintiff [sic]; (33) Lack of Personal Jurisdiction (the Debtors state that the California Court lacked personal jurisdiction over them and Somerset); (34) Lack of Service (the Debtors state that they were never served with the First Amended Complaint in the California action); (35) Lack of Subject Matter Jurisdiction (the Debtors state that the California Superior Court lacked subject matter jurisdiction); (36) Forum Selection Clause (the Debtors state that the forum selection clause required the litigation to take place in Massachusetts, not California); (37) Violation of Decision of the Suffolk Superior Court (the Debtors do not state which decision was violated); (38) Violation of the Automatic Stay (the Debtors claim that the Plaintiffs and their affiliates violated the automatic stay and that any judgment entered is void as a matter of law); (39) Violation of the Discharge Injunction; (40) Failure to Plead Fraud and Concealment (the Debtors state that the Plaintiffs failed to plead fraud against Mary Mitchell); (41) Fraud Not Proven; (42) Lack of Reliance; (43) No Fiduciary Duty; (44) Claims are Based upon Discharged Claims (the Debtors state that the “Plaintiffs’ claims are barred because their claims, if any, are based on claims of FET, Inc., Thermonics, Inc., George B. Kurtz, Paul J. Roberts and James C. Kufis, all of whom failed to file a non-dischargeability [sic] and whose claims are therefore forever extinguished”); (45) Failure to File Opposition (the Debtors state that Ber-beco’s claims are barred because he failed to oppose the Debtors’ motion to amend their schedules); (46) Failure to Object to Characterization of Claims; (47) Judicial Estoppel (the Debtors state that the Plaintiffs made allegations in this case that are contrary to allegations made in the California action); (48) Punitive Damages (the Debtors state that the Plaintiffs’ claims are barred because the punitive damage awarded specified in the Cali *100 fornia Judgment [sic] is contrary to California law and violated the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution); (49) Failure to Seek Relief (the Debtors state that the Plaintiffs failed to seek the relief that they obtained in the California action); (50) California Judgment is Void; (51) California Judgment Was Obtained by Fraud; (52) Fraud upon the Court (the Debtors state that the California judgment was obtained by fraud upon the California court); (53) Judicial Es-toppel (the Debtors state that the Plaintiffs’ claims are barred because the Plaintiffs and their affiliates make [sic] contradictory factual allegations in the California Judgment which were essential to the California Judgment, and thus the Plaintiffs are now judicially estopped from making different factual allegations; 1
4) the “Counterclaims and Third Party Complaint” filed by the Debtors and Somerset 2 against Xytest, Berbeco, and 13 other persons or entities, including Marilyn Mitchell, mother of James H. Mitchell, III, FET/Test, Inc. (“FET”), George B. Kurtz (“Kurtz”), president of FET, Thermonics, Inc. (“Thermonics”), James C. Kufis (“Kufis”), president of Thermonics, and Paul J. Roberts (“Roberts”), president of Xytest, pursuant to which the Mitchells and/or Somerset (the Mitchells and Somerset refer to themselves collectively as the “Somerset Group”) assert the following claims:
Count One: Violation of the Discharge Injunction I: The Somerset Group against Roberts, Kurtz, Kufis, the WP & M Group and the C & 0 Group; 3
Count Two:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
255 B.R. 97, 2000 Bankr. LEXIS 1370, 2000 WL 1720533, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/xytest-corp-v-mitchell-in-re-mitchell-mab-2000.