OPINION
Larry L. Abboud (Debtor) appeals an Order and Judgment of the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Oklahoma overruling his objection to a proof of claim filed by Thomas J. Abboud (Creditor), and allowing the Creditor’s claim.
See Abboud v. Abboud (In re Abboud),
BACKGROUND
The Debtor defaulted under a Contract for Deed that would have allowed certain property to be reconveyed to him upon payment of certain sums to the Creditor. The Creditor initiated a foreclosure action in the District Court in and for Tulsa County, Oklahoma (State Court), and the Debtor defended, arguing that the Creditor was precluded from foreclosing because his claim was barred under the applicable statute of limitations. The State Court, rejecting the Debtor’s statute of limitations defense, entered judgment in favor of the Creditor in the amount of $174,916.30, plus costs and interest, recognized the validity of the lien held by the Creditor, and ordered the sale of the property (Judgment). 1
The Debtor appealed the Judgment, but prior to a ruling from the appellate court, filed a petition for relief under Chapter 13. Relying on the Judgment, the Creditor filed a proof of claim against the Debtor’s estate and asserted a secured claim in the amount of $182,726.28. The Debtor objected to the Creditor’s proof of claim, arguing that it should be disallowed in its entirety because the Judgment was “voidable.”
Objection to Claim of Thomas Ab-
Because the Debtor sought to avoid the lien recognized in the Judgment, the bankruptcy court treated the contested claim objection as an adversary proceeding. Fed. R. Bankr.P. 3007 and 7001. After trial and post-trial briefing, the bankruptcy court entered an Order and Judgment overruling the Debtor’s claim objection, allowing the Creditor’s claim in its entirety, and finding that the claim was secured by the Creditor’s lien against the property to the extent provided in 11 U.S.C. § 506. 2 Contemporaneously with its Order and Judgment, the bankruptcy court entered a Memorandum Opinion, explaining that the Judgment was valid and enforceable, and that:
[T]he Objection in this Court is “inextricably intertwined” with the merits of the State Court Action. In order to sustain the Objection, this Court must effectively vacate and/or reverse the decision of the State Court on the statute of limitations issue; indeed, the Debtor has expressly requested this Court to revisit the statute of limitations issue. The Rooker-Feldman doctrine prevents the Court from doing so. Debtor’s only appropriate avenue of review is through an appeal to the Oklahoma Supreme Court.
Abboud,
STANDARD OF REVIEW
The bankruptcy court’s Order and Judgment was a ruling that it lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the Debtor’s claim objection.
Kiowa Indian Tribe v. Hoover,
The bankruptcy court overruled the Debtor’s objection to the Creditor’s proof of claim on the basis that it was prevented from reversing or vacating the Judgment under the
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine as established in
Rooker v. Fidelity Trust Co.,
The only grounds for the Debt- or’s objection to the Creditor’s proof of claim in the bankruptcy court was that the Judgment entered by the State Court, upon which the Creditor’s claim was based, was “voidable” because the underlying foreclosure action was barred by an Oklahoma statute of limitations. The application of the statute of limitations was the precise issue presented to and rejected by the State Court when it rendered its Judgment, and, apparently, is the issue before the state appellate court. As such, the bankruptcy court did not err in concluding that the Rooker-Feldman doctrine was applicable. A ruling on the merits of the Debtor’s claim objection by the bankruptcy court would have amounted to impermissible appellate review of the State Court’s Judgment. 5
In
Pepper,
the “dominant and controlling stockholder” of the debtor corporation obtained a state court judgment for alleged salary claims pursuant to a scheme to defraud creditors, including Pepper who was a judgment creditor of the debtor.
The facts in this case are not analogous to those in
Pepper.
The Creditor in this case is not an insider • of a debtor-corporation, and fraud has not been asserted. Furthermore, unlike
Pepper,
the Judgment is not “without lawful existence.”
Id.
Although the Debtor summarily maintains, apparently for the first time on appeal, that the Judgment is “void,” which, like the judgment in
Pepper,
would make it subject to collateral attack in the bankruptcy court, there is nothing in the record to support the Debtor’s contention. It is unclear whether we should look to state or federal law to determine whether a judgment is “void.”
See Wilke v. Win
The record before us does not indicate that any of these grounds exist in this case. Rather, the Debtor simply argues that the Judgment is void because the State Court failed to apply a statute of limitations. Even if the State Court did err in its interpretation of the Oklahoma statute of limitations, the Judgment is not “void,” but, at most, it is “voidable.”
See Moore’s
at § 130.04[4], A “voidable” judgment is not invalid and may not be collaterally attacked.
See, e.g., Kolp v. State ex rel. Commissioners of the Land Office,
This case is more analogous to
Heiser,
Undoubtedly, since the bankruptcy act authorizes a proof of claim based on a judgment, such a proof may be assailed in the bankruptcy court on the ground that the purported judgment is not a judgment because of want of jurisdiction of the court which rendered it over the persons of the parties or the subject matter of the suit, or because it was procured by fraud of a party. But it is quite another matter to say that the bankruptcy court may reexamine the issues determined by the judgment itself.
Heiser,
The Debtor makes much of the fact that his appeal of the Judgment in the state appellate court has been stayed. He alleges that this stay is the fault of the Creditor because the Creditor allegedly filed a Notice of Bankruptcy 7 with the appellate court. If the appeal of the Judgment is stayed as a result of § 362(a), the Debtor has a remedy pursuant to § 362(d).
CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, the bankruptcy court’s Order and Judgment is hereby AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The State Court concluded that it would be “ 'error to cancel [a] mortgage on the ground that it is stale and unenforceable, and defendant should have been required as a condition to cancellation, to pay the amount secured thereby under the equitable rule that he who seeks equity must do equity.’ ”
Abboud,
. Unless otherwise noted, all future statutory references are to Title 11 of the United States Code.
. The bankruptcy court also considered the preclusive effect of the Judgment under 28 U.S.C. § 1738 as required under
Marrese v. American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons,
. The Court in
Johnson
stated that the
Rook-er-Feldman
doctrine involves a challenge to a state court judgment "based on the losing party’s' claim that the state judgment itself violates the loser's federal rights.”
. The bankruptcy court stated that "[t]he determinative issue when applying the
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine is whether the claim at issue is 'inextricably intertwined' with the state court judgment.”
Abboud,
. In Pepper, the Court stated:
"[F]or many purposes 'courts of bankruptcy are essentially courts of equity, and their proceedings inherently proceedings in equity.’ Local Loan Co. v. Hunt,292 U.S. 234 , 240,54 S.Ct. 695 , 697,78 L.Ed. 1230 ,93 A.L.R. 195 .... Among the granted powers are the allowance and disallowance of claims; the collection and distribution of the estates of bankrupts and the determination of controversies in relation thereto; [and] the rejection in whole or in part 'according to the equities of the case' of claims previously allowed. In such respects the jurisdiction of the bankruptcy court is exclusive of all other courts.”
Hence, this Court has held that a bankruptcy court has full power to inquire into the validity of any claim asserted against the estate and to disallow it if it is ascertained to be without lawful existence. And the mere fact that a claim has been reduced to judgment does not prevent such an inquiry-
. This fact is not part of our record on appeal.
