Yates v. District of Columbia (In Re Yates)

274 F. App'x 312, 391 B.R. 312
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedApril 21, 2008
Docket07-1148
StatusUnpublished

This text of 274 F. App'x 312 (Yates v. District of Columbia (In Re Yates)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yates v. District of Columbia (In Re Yates), 274 F. App'x 312, 391 B.R. 312 (4th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

Affirmed by unpublished PER CURIAM opinion.

Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.

PER CURIAM:

This appeal arises from an adversary proceeding in bankruptcy court. In that proceeding Melvin Yates sought to enjoin the District of Columbia (the D.C. government or District) from enforcing one aspect of a permanent injunction it obtained in D.C. Superior Court. The portion of the injunction at issue prohibits Yates from operating a moving and storage business in the District without first obtaining a $75,000 surety bond for the protection of Yates’s future customers. The bond obligation was imposed on Yates as a result of a jury finding that he had violated the D.C. Consumer Protection and Procedures Act while previously operating his business. Yates argues that a bankruptcy discharge he received in 2003 bars the D.C. government from enforcing the surety bond obligation. The bankruptcy court rejected Yates’s position, and the district court affirmed. Because we agree that Yates’s discharge does not bar the D.C. government from enforcing the surety bond obligation, we affirm. 1

I.

Beginning sometime prior to 2001 Yates operated a household goods moving and storage business, M.Y. Enterprises, Inc. (MYE), in the District. In June 2001 the D.C. government brought a series of misdemeanor criminal charges against Yates related to his operation of the business. Yates pled guilty to several of these charges in October 2001, for which he received jail time and was ordered to pay $4,195 in restitution and $250 in costs.

In February 2002 the District filed a civil action in D.C. Superior Court against Yates and MYE based on the company’s alleged violations of the D.C. Consumer Protection and Procedures Act. On February 26, 2002, the Superior Court issued a preliminary injunction that, among other things, enjoined Yates and MYE from future violations of the Act and required them to obtain a $100,000 surety bond for the benefit of any consumer harmed by their misconduct while “engaged in the business of transporting, moving, warehousing, or storing goods.” J.A. 87-88. MYE filed for bankruptcy in March 2002 and stopped operating shortly thereafter.

A year later, on March 19, 2003, Yates filed for bankruptcy in the Bankruptcy Court for the District of Maryland, which granted his discharge in June 2003. The D.C. government then filed an adversary proceeding seeking a determination that certain debts owed by Yates were non-dischargeable under 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(2), which excepts from discharge debts obtained by fraud, and § 523(a)(7), which excepts from discharge penalties and fines owed to a governmental unit. Yates, in turn, sought to enjoin the D.C. government from continuing its prosecution of the Superior Court civil action and from enforcing the surety bond obligation entered a preliminary injunction that barred the D.C. government

*315 from conditioning any license or employment opportunity of Mr. Yates based upon his payment or nonpayment or on the posting of the aforementioned surety bond for the benefit of any consumer injured, as defined in the [Superior Court’s] Preliminary Injunction, to the extent such payment, nonpayment, or bond requirement relates to any claims arising prior to March 19, 200S, which have been discharged by the discharge order entered herein unless and until any and all of such claims are determined herein to be nondischargeable.

J.A. 103 (emphasis added). The bankruptcy court’s injunction further stated that the D.C. government was not “enjoined from continuing to prosecute” the civil action in Superior Court or from “enforcing the [Superior Court’s] Preliminary Injunction ... as it relate[s] to the posting of a surety bond for the benefit of any consumer injured ... in regard to a claim against the debtor that has arisen, or may arise, subsequent to March 19, 2003.” J.A. 103-104.

In March 2004 the D.C. government entered a stipulation with Yates under which it agreed to dismiss with prejudice its claim in the bankruptcy proceeding that Yates’s debts were non-dischargeable under the fraud exception, § 523(a)(2). The stipulation also provided that the government would dismiss without prejudice its claim under the government penalties exception, § 523(a)(7).

Yates then filed a motion in limine in the D.C. Superior Court civil action arguing that the dismissal of the § 523(a)(2) claims in the bankruptcy court precluded the D.C. government from introducing any evidence of fraud in the Superior Court action. The Superior Court denied this motion in May 2004. J.A. 124-25.

Next, in a July 2004 order the bankruptcy court denied Yates’s request to permanently enjoin the Superior Court action and instead allowed that action to go forward subject to the terms of the October 2003 preliminary injunction. The bankruptcy court also stated that whether the relief sought in the civil action was non-dischargeable could be determined after any such relief was actually awarded.

Yates then moved in the bankruptcy court for an injunction barring the introduction of fraud evidence in the D.C. Superior Court action. The bankruptcy court denied the motion, reasoning that the dismissal of the § 523(a)(2) claims did not constitute a determination that no fraud existed, but instead only precluded the D.C. government from arguing that any debt owed by Yates was non-dischargeable under § 523(a)(2). Both the district court and Fourth Circuit affirmed. Yates v. District of Columbia, 139 Fed.Appx. 584 (4th Cir.2005) (unpublished).

The D.C. Superior Court held a trial in the civil action in November 2004. At trial the D.C. government introduced evidence to show that Yates had engaged in fraudulent activity while operating MYE. This evidence stemmed from incidents that occurred prior to Yates’s bankruptcy discharge in 2003, and some of the incidents occurred in Virginia and Maryland rather than in the District. The jury found that on numerous occasions Yates and his company violated the D.C. Consumer Protection and Procedures Act through misrepresentations of material fact. In December 2004 the court awarded the D.C. government a $7,000 civil penalty as well as three forms of equitable relief, which applied against Yates and any moving company under his management or control. First, the court enjoined Yates from engaging in an enumerated set of deceptive business practices, such as making misleading statements to consumers. Second, the court required Yates to make affirmative disclo *316 sures to future customers through a prescribed form, which was to be signed by the customers and returned to the D.C. Attorney General. Third, the court required that Yates either refrain from managing or controlling a company in the moving business or obtain, prior to engaging in such business, a $75,000 surety bond. The order stated that the terms of the surety bond must allow execution by either the D.C. government or any injured consumer upon proof that Yates, after the date of the judgment, made material misrepresentations to consumers.

In January 2006 the D.C. Superior Court held Yates in contempt for violating the December 2004 injunction.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
274 F. App'x 312, 391 B.R. 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yates-v-district-of-columbia-in-re-yates-ca4-2008.