Young v. Repine

536 F.3d 512, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 15420
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 22, 2008
Docket06-20807
StatusPublished
Cited by109 cases

This text of 536 F.3d 512 (Young v. Repine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Young v. Repine, 536 F.3d 512, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 15420 (5th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

EMILIO M. GARZA, Circuit Judge:

This is an appeal in a bankruptcy case. Appellant Patsy Young (“Young”) appeals from the District Court order affirming the Bankruptcy Court opinion. The Bankruptcy Court held that Young willfully violated the automatic bankruptcy stay of 11 U.S.C. § 362 and awarded actual and punitive damages along with attorney’s fees to the debtor, Appellee Ronald Eugene Repine (“Repine”). We VACATE in part and AFFIRM in part.

I

Young represented Elizabeth Pollard-Repine (“Pollard”) in connection with a child support enforcement action against Repine, her former-husband. Liza Greene (“Greene”) represented Repine in the child support enforcement action. From January 2000 through June 2003, Repine typically earned between $60,000 and $147,000 for a full year’s employment with the high point being $147,000 in 2000 and the low point being $20,000 sometime thereafter because he was unemployed for some part of 2001 through 2003. In June 2003, the family court held Repine in criminal contempt for failure to pay child support and ordered that he be incarcerated for 180 days, ending in December 2003, subject to earlier release for “good time” credit. Additionally, the family court ordered that Repine thereafter be confined for civil contempt day-to-day until he paid child support arrears of $22,859 plus attorneys fees to Young of $2,027. The family court ordered Repine to pay these amounts to Pollard and to Young in separate money judgments.

On the first day of Repine’s incarceration, Pollard filed a child support lien against Repine’s property. On July 1, 2003, while still incarcerated, Repine filed for bankruptcy under Chapter 13 through his bankruptcy attorney (“Mills”). Mills provided Young with notice of the bankruptcy on or before July 22. Pollard, however, was represented in connection with the bankruptcy by another attorney (“McClure”). Pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 362(a), Repine’s filing of a petition for Chapter 13 bankruptcy protection automatically stayed all actions against him, including Pollard’s child support enforcement action. Mills specifically informed Young of the stay and warned her that *516 efforts to collect her attorney’s fees from Repine would violate the stay.

The bankruptcy stay notwithstanding, in July and August, Pollard and Repine apparently negotiated options for settling the child support enforcement action and securing Repine’s release from jail. One option included Repine deeding his home to Pollard who would then sell it and credit the proceeds toward his child support arrears. Young, however, resisted out of concern for collecting her attorney’s fees, specifically informing Pollard in a letter dated August 8, 2003:

I am not willing to sign the Agreed and Unopposed Motion for Suspension of Commitment. If you want to enter into such an Order and if I receive the attorney’s fees and costs already awarded to me, I will withdraw from the contempt ease in the 245th Judicial District Court and you can sign the Order, pro se, that is as your own lawyer.

It is unclear from the record whether Pollard or Young ever signed the motion.

On September 11, the Bankruptcy Court entered an agreed order, lifting the automatic stay “for the purpose of allowing [Pollard] to exercise her state law rights with respect to [the child support enforcement action]” (“Agreed Order”). The Agreed Order also required Repine to deed his home to Pollard. Upon selling the home, the Agreed Order provided that Pollard should extinguish the first lien debt on the home and reimburse herself for all reasonable and necessary repairs to the residence. Thereafter, the Agreed Order provided that Pollard should credit any remaining money to those amounts Repine owed her: first, to all debts and fees relating to the home; and second, to

all pre-petition and post-petition child support arrears, including all pre-petition interest thereon, and including all attorney’s fees due and owing to Patsy Young pursuant to the child support lien filed on June 30, 2003, in the amount of $2,026.75 plus all remaining attorney’s fees due and owing to her, ..., all of which attorneys’ fees are deemed additional child support.

To the extent that the proceeds from the sale of the home were insufficient to cover child support, the Agreed Order provided that “those remaining amounts, including reasonable attorneys’ fees due and owing to Patsy Young ..., shall be provided for as Priority Unsecured Claims in [Repine’s] Chapter 13 Plan.”

On September 12, 2003, in light of the Bankruptcy Court’s entry of the Agreed Order, the family court held a hearing on Repine’s motion for suspension of commitment. At the hearing, 1 Young opposed Repine’s release because she was concerned that her fees would not be paid despite the wishes of her client, Pollard, that Repine be released. 2 Pollard con *517 firmed that she wanted Repine to be released in September 2003. 3 The family court denied Repine’s motion for suspension, however, because he still had not paid child support, and Repine remained in jail.

Two things occurred on September 23: Repine’s period of criminal incarceration ended in light of his earning a “good time” credit leaving only his day-to-day incarceration for civil contempt until he paid child support and fees; and Repine’s father passed away. In a fax to McClure that same day, Young threatened that she would not “appear in court to submit” an agreed order releasing Repine from jail (despite Pollard’s wishes), until she received “a copy of the certified checks” for her attorney’s fees, noting that Mills and Greene “can disgorge some of the money they received if necessary.” On September 24, Repine and Pollard jointly moved to enforce the Agreed Order in the Bankruptcy Court and for Repine’s immediate release from jail to attend his father’s funeral. Greene, Mills, and McClure appeared, explained their clients’ wishes that Repine be released, and further explained that Young would not agree to Repine’s release until she was paid attorney’s fees. The Bankruptcy Court ordered Young to appear the next day and show cause why she should not be held in contempt for attempting to collect her attorney’s fees in violation of the automatic stay.

Despite being personally served with the order to appear and show cause, Young failed to appear before the Bankruptcy Court, and a warrant was issued for her arrest. The U.S. Marshal’s Service took Young into custody. The Bankruptcy Court ordered that Young be released following a hearing in which it admonished Young to cease her efforts to collect attorney’s fees from the bankruptcy estate. Nevertheless, Young continued her efforts to collect her pre-petition debt from the bankruptcy estate and continued to refuse to consent to Repine’s release from jail to attend his father’s funeral.

In October, Young moved to withdraw as Pollard’s counsel.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
536 F.3d 512, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 15420, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-repine-ca5-2008.