Case Information
*1 Before F LAUM , W ILLIAMS , and H AMILTON , Circuit Judges. H AMILTON , Circuit Judge.
This appeal presents a recurring issue that can arise when a debtor files for bankruptcy protec- tion without disclosing a contingent claim, such as an employ- ment discrimination lawsuit, and later seeks to correct the failure to disclose the claim. In this case, the defendant- employer moved for summary judgment. It argued that the plaintiff should be judicially estopped from pursuing her employment discrimination case because she had failed to list it in the schedules of her bankruptcy petition. The plaintiff then sought and obtained leave to reopen her bankruptcy case to amend her disclosures to include the employment discrimina- tion claim. The district court granted the employer’s motion, finding that the plaintiff had intended to conceal the claim and tried to correct her failure only after her omission had been caught.
If the facts were as described by the district court, we would affirm. But the district court’s decision did not account for the plaintiff’s testimony that she orally disclosed the employment discrimination claim to the bankruptcy court long before the employer filed its motion for summary judgment in this case. In light of this evidence, plaintiff’s intent is genuinely in dispute. We reverse the grant of summary judgment. I. Facts for Purposes of Summary Judgment
As required under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56(a), we set forth the facts by examining the evidence in the light reasonably most favorable to the non-moving party, giving her the benefit of reasonable, favorable inferences and resolving conflicts in the evidence in her favor. E.g., Perez v. Thorntons, Inc. , 731 F.3d 699, 703 (7th Cir. 2013). Plaintiff Anne Spaine worked for defendant Community Contacts as a seasonal employee from 2008 until 2011. She helped low-income and disabled persons register for state and federal housing assis- tance.
Throughout her employment, Spaine alleges, she was harassed and unfairly disciplined because of her race. She alleges she was told when her seasonal employment ended in 2011 that instead of being reinstated automatically as in past years, she would have to reapply for employment the next year. Spaine interpreted this to mean she had been fired. In July 2012, Spaine filed this suit against Community Contacts under 42 U.S.C. § 1981 alleging that she was harassed and eventually fired because she is African American.
Spaine had previously filed for bankruptcy protection in 2010, but that petition had been dismissed without a discharge of debts because Spaine had failed to pay the filing fee. In November 2012, four months after filing her complaint against Community Contacts, Spaine filed a new petition for protec- tion under Chapter 7 of the bankruptcy code. Spaine was represented by counsel in this action against Community Contacts, but she was proceeding without a lawyer in the bankruptcy case.
On her schedule of personal property for the 2012 bank- ruptcy case, Spaine was required to list “contingent and unliquidated claims of every nature.” She listed nothing. In the separate 2012 statement of financial affairs, Spaine was required to list lawsuits to which she was party within the preceding year. She listed two eviction suits that came after her 2010 bankruptcy but did not list her suit against Community Contacts. Spaine filed those schedules with the bankruptcy court on November 5, 2012. The meeting of creditors was held about five weeks later. See 11 U.S.C. § 341.
Spaine’s affidavit in opposition to Community Contacts’ motion for summary judgment stated: “During the course of the 2012 (re-filed) Chapter 7 Bankruptcy filing, I discussed with [Bankruptcy] Judge Black the fact that I had a pending Civil claim as to Community Contacts, Inc.” Her affidavit also said (a) that she did not hide this pending claim from the bank- ruptcy court or the bankruptcy trustee, and (b) that she was not told by the bankruptcy court of any need to amend her schedules listing assets.
Complicating the factual picture, Spaine has included in her appellate appendix a partial transcript of the meeting of creditors on December 12, 2012. The transcript shows that Spaine told the bankruptcy trustee about her lawsuit against Community Contacts, and that she did so at the very first opportunity after filing her incomplete Chapter 7 schedules of assets with the petition itself. Community Contacts urges us to disregard this transcript because it was not part of the record before the district court.
The status of this transcript is troublesome. On one hand,
we have said that we may take judicial notice of publicly
available records of court proceedings, see
Scherr v. Marriott
Int’l, Inc.
,
Further, and as a general rule of course, we should reverse
a district court’s decision on the basis of evidence or arguments
not presented to the district court only in highly unusual and
compelling circumstances. See, e.g.,
Economy Folding Box
Corp. v. Anchor Frozen Foods Corp.
,
In this case, the transcript seems to clarify and perhaps to correct Spaine’s affidavit. Perhaps she told the trustee instead of the bankruptcy judge; perhaps she told both. Ultimately, though, we do not rely on the transcript in this appeal. As we explain below, Spaine’s affidavit saying that she told the court about the claim against Community Contacts and was never told of any need to correct or amend her bankruptcy schedules is sufficient to create a genuine issue of material fact. The transcript will be available for use as evidence on remand.
In any event, after the creditors meeting the trustee con- cluded that Spaine’s bankruptcy was a “no asset” case, and on February 12, 2013, she received a general discharge of her unsecured debts. Soon after that discharge, the bankruptcy trustee wrote to Spaine’s lawyer in this case about this claim against Community Contacts and its possible value as an asset. The two then spoke, and the trustee said he was not reopening the bankruptcy case or making any claim for any assets that might result from the case. He told Spaine’s lawyer he did not need to report further on the matter.
On March 21, 2013, Spaine wrote the trustee, with a copy to the bankruptcy judge, asking the trustee to classify her claims against Community Contacts as exempt property and asserting that she would need any potential recovery for living expenses. See 11 U.S.C. § 522(d)(11)(E). In her letter, Spaine expressed the mistaken view that she had a constitutional right to discharge of her debts without “sacrificing” compensation for her wrongful termination.
On May 3, 2013, Community Contacts moved for summary judgment. The motion did not contest the suit on the merits but argued only that Spaine either lacked standing or should be judicially estopped from pursuing her claims of employment discrimination because she had concealed those claims from the bankruptcy court. About two weeks after Community Contacts filed its motion, Spaine asked the bankruptcy court to reopen her bankruptcy case so that she could amend her list of assets to add her claims against Community Contacts. The bankruptcy court allowed the amendment.
II. Standing/Real Party in Interest
Community Contacts argued in the district court that
Spaine lacked standing to assert her claims because they had
become the property of her bankruptcy estate. Such issues are
addressed sometimes in terms of standing, sometimes in terms
of the real party in interest, and sometimes in terms of both.
See, e.g.,
Biesek v. Soo Line R. Co.
,
Because standing implicates subject matter jurisdiction, we
address the question without being prompted by the parties.
The district court correctly found that Spaine has standing to
continue her suit against Community Contacts. The bank-
ruptcy case had been reopened and then closed again after the
trustee undoubtedly knew about the civil case. That sequence
of events indicated that the trustee had abandoned the lawsuit
as property of the Chapter 7 estate, so the property reverted to
the debtor, plaintiff Spaine. See 11 U.S.C. § 554(c);
Cannon-
Stokes v. Potter
,
III. Judicial Estoppel
Although Spaine has standing, the district court found that the evidence raised an inference that Spaine had omitted the lawsuit from her bankruptcy schedules to hide the potential recovery from her creditors. On that basis, the court explained, it would exercise its discretion and find Spaine judicially estopped from pursuing the lawsuit. The court’s order did not mention, however, Spaine’s testimony that she had disclosed the lawsuit against Community Contacts during the bank- ruptcy case.
The doctrine of judicial estoppel prevents litigants from
manipulating the judicial system by prevailing in different
cases or phases of a case by adopting inconsistent positions.
See
New Hampshire v. Maine
, 532 U.S. 742, 749 (2001);
Grochocinski v. Mayer Brown Rowe & Maw, LLP
,
Viewing the summary judgment record in the light reason- ably most favorable to plaintiff Spaine, judicial estoppel does not apply here. Spaine’s affidavit testimony that she had disclosed her lawsuit against Community Contacts during the bankruptcy case is material. Without considering the creditors meeting transcript submitted on appeal, her testimony on this point is not even disputed. Spaine’s disclosure made the trustee aware of the litigation, and the trustee made a decision about its value to her creditors. That testimony protects Spaine from an inference on summary judgment that she deliberately concealed her claim from the bankruptcy trustee and her creditors.
Community Contacts suggests that it was somehow
harmed by Spaine’s incomplete Chapter 7 schedules. That view
misunderstands the reasons for applying judicial estoppel in
Cannon-Stokes
and similar cases. Courts do not apply judicial
estoppel for the benefit of the defendant but try to protect
courts and creditors from deception and manipulation. Judicial
estoppel is an equitable doctrine intended to “induce[ ] debtors
to be truthful in their bankruptcy filings.” 453 F.3d at 448.
Again, though, the evidence in this case shows nothing more
than incomplete schedules that were timely corrected through
an oral disclosure. That evidence certainly does not compel an
inference of deceit on Spaine’s part. See
Ah Quin v. County of
Kauai Dep’t of Transp.
, 733 F.3d 267, 272–73 (9th Cir. 2013)
(explaining that presumption of deceit does not arise if debtor
corrects omissions from bankruptcy schedules in manner that
permits bankruptcy court to assess case “with the full and
correct information”);
Ryan Operations G.P. v. Santiam-Midwest
Lumber Co.
,
Spaine’s creditors were not and could not have been injured
by incomplete Chapter 7 schedules that were orally corrected
before Spaine received a discharge. That’s why her case is
different from
Cannon-Stokes
. See also
Stephenson v. Malloy
,
Spaine’s situation
is also unlike
In re Superior
Crewboats, Inc.
, 374 F.3d 330 (5th Cir. 2004), and
Eastman v.
Union Pac. R.R. Co.
,
The district court wrote that it would not be appropriate to
allow Spaine to go forward with this case based on her
reopened and amended bankruptcy. The court reasoned that
such a ruling would encourage debtors to conceal assets as
long as possible and then, if the omission is caught, to retreat
and make a quick correction. See
Krystal Cadillac-Oldsmobile
GMC Truck, Inc. v. General Motors Corp.
,
If there were undisputed evidence that Spaine intentionally
concealed her claim, we would agree. As noted above, though,
the district court overlooked Spaine’s testimony about her oral
disclosure during the bankruptcy. Honest mistakes and
oversights are not unheard of. That’s one reason why trustees
meet with debtors. The disclosures in the initial filings are not
necessarily final on this issue. The bankruptcy code explicitly
provides for further investigation into the debtor’s financial
affairs, 11 U.S.C. §§ 341, 704(a)(4), and contemplates
amendments to a debtor’s initial schedules,
id.
§ 350(b); Fed. R.
Bankr. P. 1009(a); see also
In re Waldron
,
That is not to say that Spaine’s oral disclosure of the lawsuit
would necessarily foreclose use of judicial estoppel if
Community Contacts could prove that Spaine’s omission,
though later cured, was an intentional effort to conceal an asset
from her creditors. See
Ah Quin
,
The district court’s judgment in favor of defendant Community Contacts is REVERSED and the case is REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
[*] After examining the briefs and record, we have concluded that oral argument is unnecessary. Thus, the appeal is submitted on the briefs and record. See FED. R. APP. P. 34(a)(2)(C).
