In Rе: RANSFORD CRAIG HECKERT, Debtor. RANSFORD CRAIG HECKERT, a/k/a R.C. Heck Heckert, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. HAROLD L. DOTSON, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 98-2825
United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
Argued: September 23, 1999. Decided: November 16, 2001
Before WIDENER and MICHAEL, Circuit Judges, and Frank J. MAGILL, Senior Circuit Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, sitting by designation.
PUBLISHED. Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of West Virginia, at Parkersburg. Joseph Robert Goodwin, District Judge. (CA-98-242-6, BK-87-40033, AP-87-0107). Vacated and remanded with instructions by published opinion. Judge Widener wrote the opinion, in which Judge Michael and Senior Judge Magill joined.
COUNSEL
ARGUED: Thomas J. Gillooly, Charleston, West Virginia, for Appellant. William Berkley Richardson, Jr., Parkersburg, West Virginia, for Appellee.
OPINION
WIDENER, Circuit Judge:
Plaintiff, Ransford Craig Heckert, appeаls the district court’s order affirming the bankruptcy court’s entry of a judgment order with respect to a nondischargeable debt that a state court had already reduced to judgment. Heckert filed a motion to vacate the bankruptcy court’s order under
I.
In 1983, defendant, Harold L. Dotson, obtained a jury verdict in the Circuit Court of Wood County, West Virginia for $7000 against Heckert in a suit for wrongful discharge from employment. West Virginia has a ten-year statute of limitations on the execution of judgments.
Dotson made his first efforts to collect the bankruptcy court judgment in November 1996 and obtained a writ of execution on the bankruptcy court judgment in November 1996. The timе allowed for executing on the West Virginia judgment under West Virginia law had expired in 1993 under
II.
First, we find that, contrary to Dotson’s arguments, this appeal is not a collateral attack on an original determination of subject matter jurisdiction that is barred by Chicot County Drainage District v. Baxter State Bank, 308 U.S. 371 (1940), for this cаse is not a collateral attack. The bankruptcy court reopened the adversary proceeding by order on July 14, 1997. This appeal flows directly from review of a motion and decision made in the reopened case, not from any collateral attack.
III.
Heckert argues that this judgment is void under
Only in the most rare case, however, may federal courts refuse to give full faith and credit to a state court judgment, and then only if “a later statute contains an express or impliеd partial repeal” of
Two of our recent cases are instructive in this regard. See In re Genesys Data Technologies, 204 F.3d 124 at 127-129 (examining application of full faith and credit to bankruptcy allowance proceedings); In re Ansari, 113 F.3d 17 at 19-20 (4th Cir. 1997) (applying Virginia collateral еstoppel rules in bankruptcy dischargeability proceeding). In In re Genesys, we examined the effect of an Hawai’i state court default judgment on a later involuntary bankruptcy allowance proceeding. In accordance with the Supreme Court’s Marese decision, we examined whether the bankruptсy code contained an implied par-
Although these two cases did not involve the entry of a second money judgment, we believe they are directly apposite here and we especially note both gave effect to state court judgments in bankruptcy. Res judicata is applied to prevent the re-litigation of claims, and thus prevent the unsettling of a prior judgment, whether by increasing or decreasing the award or by reversing the result. In the instant case, the bankruptcy and district courts allowed re-litigation of the underlying wrongful termination claim contrary to West Virginia preclusion rulеs and
Furthermore, we do not think that it matters whether the bankruptcy court’s judgment reverses the judgment of the state court or whether the bankruptcy court determines that the original judgment should be changed or diminished in some respect. In the case at hand, the bankruptcy and district courts not only changed the interest rate, they changed the initial statute of limitatiоns on collection of the state judgment from 1993 until 1998. See
In the instant case, the bankruptcy court determined that Heckert’s debt should earn federal rather than state interest rates. This actiоn, of course, had the effect of changing the amount of the debt owed by Heckert. The bankruptcy court also substituted its judgment entered in 1988 for the judgment of the state court which had been entered in 1983. By so doing, it extended the initial deadline for execution on the judgment from 1993 until 1998. See
The only issue in the bankruptcy court in the case at hand was whether the West Virginia judgment was dischargeable. Once the court decided that question, it had completed its duties because all the other issues sometimes left to the bankruptcy court to determine, such as the amount of, and interest on, a nondischargeable debt, had already been decided by the state court, whiсh was binding in bankruptcy. Gertsch v. Johnson & Johnson Finance Corp. (In re Gertsch), 237 B.R. 160, 172 (B.A.P. 9th Cir. 1999).
In sum, the authority granted the bankruptcy court under
Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is vacated and the case is remanded to the district court for further remand to the bankruptcy court, which will enter its order, amending the orders appealed from in this case so as to leave in effect only the state judgment which was entered in 1983, but holding that same state judgment to have been nondischargeable.
VACATED AND REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS3
