CONSUMER FINANCIAL PROTECTION BUREAU v. HOWARD LAW, P.C.; The Williamson Law Firm, LLC; Williamson & Howard, LLP; Vincent D. Howard; Lawrence Williamson
Nos. 15-56089, 15-56576
United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit
October 26, 2016
954, 955, 956
Before: REINHARDT, WARDLAW, and OWENS, Circuit Judges.
Argued and Submitted October 5, 2016 Pasadena, California
III
Finally, we decline to expand the certificate of appealability to encompass Smith‘s six uncertified issues because no “substantial showing of the denial of a constitutional right” has been made with respect to these claims.
AFFIRMED.
Kent Kawakami, Assistant U.S. Attorney, Office of the U.S. Attorney, Los Angeles, CA, Kristin Bateman, Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, Washington, DC, for Plaintiff-Appellee.
Kathleen J. McCarthy, Esquire, Bankruptcy Counsel, The Law Office of Thomas
Sean A. O‘Keefe, Okeefe & Associates Law Corporation, PC, Costa Mesa, CA, Vincent D. Howard, Attorney, Howard Law, PC, Anaheim, CA, for Movants-Appellants.
MEMORANDUM*
Howard Law, P.C., The Williamson Law Firm, LLC, Williamson & Howard, LLP, Vincent D. Howard, and Lawrence Williamson (collectively “Attorneys“) appeal the district court‘s “Clarification Order” of July 6, 2015, and its order holding them in contempt for violating the Permanent Injunction (“Contempt Order” of October 9, 2015). We have jurisdiction pursuant to
1. The district court failed to adequately explain its reasons for binding the Attorneys to the June 18, 2015 injunction as non-parties under
The district court did not clearly explain which of these grounds supported its orders. The Clarification Order rested on the finding that the Attorneys were in “active concert or participation with” Morgan Drexen while it was illegally collecting advance fees from the “Affected Customers.” At one point in the Contempt Order, the district court again recited this finding, which suggests that the Attorneys were legally identified, or acting in concert, with Morgan Drexen before the district court issued the Permanent Injunction. However, later in the Contempt Order, the district court stated that the Attorneys were bound because they “became a disguised continuance of Morgan Drexen,” invoking a form of successor liability.
The problem with relying on a successor theory here, however, is that the Permanent Injunction did not expressly bind “successors.” Moreover, the record in its current iteration does not support a finding that the Attorneys acquired Morgan Drexen‘s assets after the Permanent Injunction was entered, see Golden State Bottling, 414 U.S. at 179-80, and even if they did so, the Permanent Injunction failed to provide notice that “successors” would be bound. It could be, however, that the Attorneys and Morgan Drexen were so “identified ... in interest”
2. Civil contempt actions are “in the nature of a trial,” and thus come within the “preference for use of oral testimony in open court” embodied in
REVERSED and REMANDED.
