In this appeal we must decide whether the' district court properly exercised its discretion in holding Plaintiff Wayne Gard^ ner is judicially estopped from pursuing his personal injury claims against Defendants because he failed to disclose his pending claims to the bankruptcy court in the context of his chapter 7 bankruptcy. Our jurisdiction arises under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We conclude the district court properly exercised its discretion, and affirm.
I.
Gardner was injured in an auto accident while in the employ of Defendant Union Pacific Railroad (UPRR). Gardner, represented by a personal injury attorney, filed an action (along with a coworker) in federal district court for damages in September 2003 against UPRR pursuant to the Federal Employers’ Liability Act. See 45 U.S.C. §§ 51-60. He alleged Wyoming state law negligence claims against the remaining Defendants pursuant to the supplemental jurisdiction statute. See 28 U.S.C. § 1367. With his personal injury claims pending, Gardner (and his wife) retained a bankruptcy attorney and in May 2004 filed a voluntary chapter 7 bankruptcy petition. Gardner did not notify his personal injury attorney of the bankruptcy-
The bankruptcy petition, which Gardner signed under penalty of perjury, failed to disclose his pending lawsuit as a potential asset of the estate. By signing the petition, Gardner verified he had read the petition, schedules, and statement of financial affairs, and the information contained therein was true and correct. On schedule B relating to personal property, Gardner checked “none” as to item 20. Item 20 required Gardner to disclose “[ojther contingent and unliquidated claims of every nature[.]” Item. 4 on his statement of financial, affairs required Gardner to “[ljist all suits and administrative proceedings to which the debtor is or was a party” within the preceding year. Gardner listed two collection suits. Cpnspicuously absent from the list was Gardner’s pending personal injury lawsuit against Defendants.
At the § 341 meeting of creditors in June 2004, Gardner unequivocally responded “no” when the trustee asked him if he had a personal injury suit pending. When given a second chance to set the record straight, Gardner failed to do so. Instead, Gardner let his bankruptcy attorney do the talking:
Trustee: Do either of you have a personal injury suit pending?
Gardner: No.
Trustee: Have you been in an accident, . or anything like that?
Gardner: Ya, I was in an accident.
Attorney: On work?
Gardner: On work.
Trustee: Ok. So, it would be Workers’ Comp?
Attorney: It’s not Workers’ Comp, per se, because its on the railroad and they have a different.
*1154 Trustee: Oh, and they have their own little world.
Attorney: Yes, yes.... [My clients] know exactly what you mean when you say their own little world, because it’s a real mess. They’re not getting him any hearing aids until the whole thing’s all completely done. I mean, they won’t do medical things for him in the meantime.
Trustee: So, you just continue to hang out there, huh?
Attorney: Ya.
Trustee: Are there any creditors here for the Gardners? I don’t see that there is anything to administer. I am going to close this as a “No Asset” case. This 341 is completed.
In August 2004, the bankruptcy court entered an order granting Gardner a discharge under chapter 7 of the bankruptcy code. Neither the district court nor counsel involved in- Gardner’s personal injury suit had yet to learn of his bankruptcy.
Nearly a year later, Gardner’s personal injury attorney became aware of his bankruptcy while performing a routine court search under Gardner’s name. Counsel promptly notified the bankruptcy trustee, and in July 2005, the trustee moved to reopen the chapter 7 bankruptcy case and list Gardner’s pending lawsuit as an asset of the estate. According to the trustee’s motion, “[t]he debtors testified at the 341 Meeting of Creditors that there was workers’ compensation action for Mr. Gardner that was considered to be exempt.” Subsequently, “the Trustee was notified of the pending personal injury action regarding Mr. Gardner that was a Rail Road Workers’ Compensation action which is not exempt.” 1 The bankruptcy court entered an order reopening the case next day.
At a pretrial hearing before the district court the next week, Gardner’s personal injury attorney informed the court and defense counsel that he recently discovered Gardner had filed for bankruptcy and received a discharge during the pendency of the personal injury action. After the trustee unsuccessfully attempted to sell the lawsuit to Gardner for the benefit of his creditors, the court granted the trustee leave to intervene and substituted the trustee as Plaintiff and real-party-in-interest in the personal injury action. See Fed. R.Civ.P. 17(a). Defendants shortly thereafter moved for summary judgment against both Gardner and the trustee based on the equitable defense of judicial estoppel.
Applying the principles set forth in
New Hampshire v. Maine,
What the Court finds most telling ... is the fact that when given the opportunity at the meeting of creditors to reveal the *1155 pending litigation, Mr. Gardner did not disclose his personal injury action. First, he explicitly: denied having a personal injury action pending. Second, his attorney represented that the claim was not workers’ compensation “per se,” but indicated that any claim was related to an on-the-job injury, leading the Trustee to believe that the claim was similar in nature to a workers’ compensation claim. Third, Mr. Gardner’s attorney referred to UPRR’s failure to provide hearing aids to Mr. Gardner, misrepresenting the extent of the claims involved. Mr. Gardner had an affirmative duty to speak up and let the trustee know the nature of his lawsuit against UPRR as well as eight other defendants....
Id. at 16-17. Careful not to suggest Gardner or his bankruptcy attorney intentionally lied to the bankruptcy court in an effort to conceal assets, the district court nonetheless refused to “take the benign view that the failure to disclose was inadvertent:”
If the only defendant in the personal injury action had been Mr. Gardner’s employer, UPRR, the Court might have been swayed that Mr. Gardner attempted to disclose the lawsuit. Certainly, there was a discussion in the meeting of creditors of a work related injury. As it stands, however, no reference was ever made, however slight, to the eight other defendants involved in the personal injury action, six of whom are not even tangentially related to UPRR. The Bankruptcy Court was misled, and it is incumbent upon this Court to protect the integrity of the judicial process....
Id. at 18. This appeal followed. 2
II.
At the outset we note that shortly prior to the district court’s decision, the trustee settled the personal injury action with two named Defendants who are not before us on appeal. This ultimately provided the bankruptcy estate with sufficient assets to pay all allowable creditors’ claims. With Gardner’ debts satisfied, the bankruptcy court entered an order directing the trustee to abandon the estate’s interest in this appeal, and the trustee has done so. Accordingly, we grant the parties’ pending motions to substitute Plaintiff Gardner in this appeal as the real-party-in-interest in place of the bankruptcy trustee, amend the caption of this appeal to reflect such change, and proceed. See Fed. R.App. P. 43(a). 3
This appeal arises in the context of summary judgment, so we view the
*1156
facts and all reasonable inferences to be drawn therefrom in a light most favorable to the nonmoving party,
i.e.,
Gardner.
See Roberts v. Barreras,
Whether we apply state or federal estoppel principles in our analysis is another matter. Certainly we apply federal principles to Gardner’s federal claims.
See Burnes v. Pemco Aeroplex, Inc.,
A.
The Supreme Court first recognized the doctrine of judicial estoppel in
New Hampshire v. Maine.
The Court explained that the doctrine’s “purpose is to protect the integrity of the judicial process by prohibiting parties from deliberately changing positions according to the exigencies of the moment.”
New Hampshire,
*1157 B.
On appeal, Gardner takes aim at the inferences the district court drew from the historical facts. Contrary to the district court’s characterization of the facts, Gardner asserts his failure to disclose in no uncertain terms his pending personal injury action to the bankruptcy court resulted from “[mjistake, inadvertence, confusion, lack of understanding, lack of legal sophistication, and the like[.j” Gardner places the blame on his bankruptcy attorney whom Gardner claims he informed of the pending lawsuit early in the bankruptcy proceedings: “Mr. Gardner is an unsophisticated layman, unschooled in legal niceties, happily working on the railroad and knowing only that he got hurt ‘on work,’ relying on the educated professionals around him to file the right papers.” In short, Gardner claims ignorance.
1.
To be sure, in
New Hampshire,
The most recent example is the Seventh Circuit’s decision in
Cannon-Stokes v. Potter,
The First Circuit delivered a similarly terse message to the debtor in
Payless Wholesale Distrib., Inc. v. Alberto Culver (P.R.) Inc.,
Yet another example is the Fifth Circuit’s decision in
Jethroe v. Omnova Solutions, Inc.,
2.
Given the overwhelming weight of authority, the district court’s decision to employ judicial estoppel against Gardner under the circumstances presented is undoubtedly sound. The sole circuit court case on which Gardner relies to any extent is not to the contrary. In
Eubanks v. CBSK Fin. Group, Inc.,
Those are not the facts here. Nowhere on the petition, schedules, or statements Gardner filed with the bankruptcy court did he disclose his pending personal injury action. Then, unlike
Eubanks,
when the trustee specifically asked Gardner whether he had a personal injury suit pending, he unequivocally responded “no.” As the district court ably explained, the trustee’s subsequent conversation with Gardner’s attorney only served to diffuse the situation and divert attention from the extent of Gardner’s pending claims. Gardner’s attorney, perhaps unaware of the situation, led the trustee to believe any claim Gardner had against UPRR involved relatively minor medical damages,
i.e.,
things like hearing aids.
See Barger,
*1159
Even more egregious and equally as telling was Gardner’s failure to even mention UPRR’s eight co-defendants, whom he also had sued, or recognize in any way his state law negligence claims against them. The bankruptcy code imposes a duty upon a debtor to disclose all assets, including contingent and unliquidated claims. See 11 U.S.C. § 521(1). That duty encompasses disclosure of all legal claims and causes of action, pending or potential, which a debt or might have. See
In re Coastal Plains,
Gardner too had a motive to sweep his personal injury action “under the rug” so he could obtain a discharge free and clear of his creditors. The ever present motive to conceal legal claims and reap the financial rewards undoubtedly is why so many of the cases applying judicial estoppel involve debtors-turned-plaintiffs who have failed to disclose such claims in bankruptcy. The doctrine of judicial estoppel serves to offset such motive, inducing debtors to be completely truthful in their bankruptcy disclosures.
See id.
We think Gardner’s case is indistinguishable from the overwhelming majority of cases where debtors, who have failed to disclose legal claims to the bankruptcy court without credible evidence of why they did so, have been judicially estopped from pursuing such claims subsequent to discharge. A large portion of debtors who file for chapter 7 bankruptcy surely are as “unsophisticated” and “unschooled” as Gardner, yet have little difficulty fully disclosing their financial condition to the bankruptcy court. Gardner’s assertion that he simply did not know better and his attorney “blew it” is insufficient to withstand application of the doctrine.
See id.
at 447-49;
Jethroe,
3.
A debtor, once he files for bankruptcy, disrupts the flow of commerce and promptly benefits from an automatic stay.
See
11 U.S.C. § 362. The debtor then receives the ultimate benefit of bankruptcy when he receives a discharge. A chapter 7 discharge, like Gardner received from the bankruptcy court, relieves the debtor of any obligation to pay outstanding debts.
See id.
§ 727(b). This in the aggregate drives up interest rates and harms creditworthy borrowers.
See Cannon-Stokes,
That Gardner’s bankruptcy was reopened and his creditors were made whole once his omission became known is inconsequential. A discharge in bankruptcy is sufficient to establish a basis for judicial estoppel, “even if the discharge is later vacated.”
Hamilton,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Under Wyoming law, workers' compensation claims do not constitute property of the bankruptcy estate. See Wyo. Stat. Ann. §§ 1-20-109; 27-14-702.
. Although, the trustee filed a notice of appeal prior to the district court’s entry of final judgment, Fed. R.App. P. 4(a)(2) generally allows a premature notice of appeal filed from a nonfinal order to ripen upon subsequent entry of final judgment.
See Lewis v. B.F. Goodrich Co.,
. Quite likely the district court’s application of judicial estoppel against the trustee was inappropriate, at least to the extent Gardner’s personal injury claims were necessary to satisfy his debts.
See Parker v. Wendy’s Int’l., Inc.,
. Although we had resisted application of the doctrine of federal judicial estoppel for years prior, in
Johnson v. Lindon City Corp.,
