OPINION
The chapter 7 debtor, who developed “buyer’s remorse” when the trustee and creditors became aggressive, appeals the denial of his motion to dismiss his case. He contends his desire to return to state court and exercise his Seventh Amendment jury trial right against a creditor
FACTS
At the first session of the meeting of creditors in the voluntary chapter 7 case of appellant Randall Hickman on June 25, 2007, trustee Gerald Davis was not satisfied that assets and financial dealings were accurately disclosed. He continued the meeting until July 16, 2007, to afford Hickman time to amend his schedules and statements and to turn over records, including bank statements, an accounting for a trust, and a tax return.
Hickman was so distressed by the June 25 interrogation conducted on behalf of Linda Hana, who was the plaintiff in an automatically stayed state-court action against him, that he “decided to simply dismiss the bankruptcy and litigate the issues in state court before a jury of my peers.” 2
Hickman did not attend the July 16 session, did not obey the trustee’s direction to produce information and records, and did not file the promised amendments of his schedules and statement of financial affairs. The meeting was eontin-ued several more times and remained uncompleted when this appeal was filed.
Three adversаry proceedings were filed against Hickman in August 2007. Hana filed a nondischargeability action under 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(4) and (6). A.A. Perlmut-ter sought to except his judicially-confirmed arbitration award from discharge under § 523(a)(2). The trustee objected to Hickman’s discharge.
Hickman filed a motion to dismiss the chapter 7 case on September 20, 2007, asserting that his preference for jury trial in the Hana dispute provided “cause” to dismiss under § 707(a) so that a jury trial could be heаrd in state court.
Having been truant from the July 16 and August 23 sessions, Hickman attended a continued meeting of creditors on September 27, 2007, at which time he had not yet amended his schedules but did produce some of the requested documentation. The partial production revealed transfers of $53,000 to Hickman’s son.
Hickman amended his schedule of assets on October 5, 2007, adding interests in six entities and a counterclaim against Hana for the amount of а $2,317,539.50 judgment debt against Hickman.
At the hearing on Hickman’s motion, two creditors and the trustee opposed dismissal of the case. No creditor supported dismissal. Hickman argued his right to trial by jury in nonbankruptcy court constituted “cause” to dismiss the case, which he saw as not harming creditors. The order denying the motion was entered November 7, 2007. This timely appeal ensued.
Subject-matter jurisdiction was founded on 28 U.S.C. § 1334 over this core proceeding under 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(A) and (I). An order denying a motion to dismiss a bankruptcy case is ordinarily interlocutory.
Sherman v. SEC (In re Sherman),
ISSUES
1. Whether a voluntary chapter 7 debt- or can compel dismissal of a chapter 7 case because he dеcides he prefers his Seventh Amendment jury trial right over restructuring debtor-creditor relations under equitable bankruptcy jurisdiction.
2. Whether the bankruptcy court abused its discretion in concluding that the movant did not demonstrate “cause” sufficient to warrant dismissal of the bankruptcy case under § 707(a).
STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review the denial of debtor’s motion to dismiss his chapter 7 case for abuse of discretion.
Bartee v. Ainsworth (In re Bartee),
DISCUSSION
Hickman found bankruptcy inhospitable. The trustee asked hard questions and objected to discharge. Creditors filed non-dischargeability actions. Hickman wanted to extricate himself by having the case dismissed. The cоurt rejected his argument that a new-found Seventh Amendment preference for jury trial in a non-bankruptcy court constituted sufficient “cause” under § 707(a) to dismiss his voluntary case over opposition and was not persuaded that the balance of interests favored dismissal.
I
As Hickman relies primarily upon his Seventh Amendment right to trial by jury in the dispute with Hana as the basis to provide the “cause” warranting dismissal under § 707(a), we must resolve the embedded question of whether a chapter 7 debtor has a right to jury trial in a dispute with a creditor who files a nondischarge-ability action against him in bankruptcy court. If so, then the alternatives (in absence of consent to jury trial in bankruptcy court) would be either to have the reference under 28 U.S.C. § 157(a) withdrawn for a jury trial to occur in district court or to permit the matter to be tried in state court. If, however, there is no right to jury trial in the pertinent bankruptcy litigation, then the dilemma does not arise.
We have held that a creditor has no right to trial by jury on a § 523 nondis-chargeability issue and have suggested that the same result would apply to debtors, but we have not heretofore made a debtor-specific analysis.
Locke v. United States Tr. (In re Locke),
A
We start with the nature of bankruptcy jurisdiction. Despite lurking ques
In those situations in which there is a jury trial right, such as in
Granfinanciera,
the Seventh Amendment and bankruptcy jurisdiction coexist in the sense that there is no impediment to the conduct of a jury trial within the umbrella of bankruptcy jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1334.
Granfinanciera,
When a creditor files a claim in bankruptcy, that claim and all counterclaims are triable in equity without a jury even though such claims or counterclaims are otherwise legal in nature and entitled to trial by jury.
Langenkamp,
The rationale is that by “invoking the court’s jurisdiction to establish [one’s] right to participate in the distribution” one subjects himself to “all the consequences that attach to an appearance.”
Alexander v. Hillman,
We are presented, however, with a different question: the right of a chapter 7 debtor, not a claim-filing creditor, to trial by jury. The answer may nevertheless be drawn from the rationale of Supreme Court decisions involving creditors.
B
The precise question focuses upon the Hаna litigation because the only jury right in sight applied to the Hana dispute that was pending in the state trial court before bankruptcy.
The procedural posture before us is that Hana filed an adversary proceeding in which she sought to except a debt from discharge together with a money judgment thereon. Meanwhile, Hana’s state-court
The jurisprudential analysis of Hana’s nondischargeability action is straightforward. In
Granfinanciera,
which is the modern manifesto of the Seventh Amendment jury trial right in bankruptcy, the Court, reaffirming
Katchen
(“as
Katchen
makes clear”), explained that “by submitting a claim against the bankruptcy estate, creditors
subject themselves
to the court’s equitable power to disallow those claims.”
Granfinanciera,
Hickman does not have a jury trial right with respect to the determination and liquidation of the amounts at issue in Hana’s § 523 adversary proceeding complaint because such claims are integral to the adjustment of the debtor-creditor relationship.
Schieber v. Hooper (In re Hooper),
The Ninth Circuit, however, later extended the
Hooper
result to damages in a nondischargeability action.
Sasson v. Sokoloff (In re Sasson),
The focus shifts to whether the $2,317,539.50 counterclaim against Hana that Hickman lists in his amended schedules is so integral to the adjustment of the debtor-creditor relationship that it is subsumed within equitable bankruptcy jurisdiction. While we do not know the details of the theory of the putative cause of action and whethеr it would be a compulsory or permissive counterclaim, we do know that it arose prepetition and that it exactly equals the amount of a judgment against Hickman. Hence, it also figures into the debtor-creditor relationship.
Moreover, Hickman’s argument fallaciously assumes that he has unfettered control over the putative counterclaim. He does not. Rather the counterclaim is property of the estate that belongs to the chapter 7 trustee. At most, Hickman could assert it only to the extent of providing a basis for a defensive offset. The question, then, is whether the Seventh Amendment applies to a defensive offset that is integral to the debtor-creditor relationship.
The Supreme Court supplied the answer in
Granfinanciera
when it explained that the bankruptcy court’s equitable power extends to the resolution of counterclaims, “even though the debtor’s opposing counterclaims are legal in nature and the Seventh Amendment would have entitled creditors to a jury trial had they not tendered claims against the estate.”
Granfinanciera,
It follows that Hickman has no jury trial right in the bankruptcy adversary proceeding, even on the counterclaim to the extent that he has the ability to assert it, because he is subject to the Supremе Court’s subject-themselves-to-the-eourt’s-equitable-power analysis.
By filing a chapter 7 case, Hickman invoked the bankruptcy court’s equitable jurisdiction in a more profound manner than a mere creditor who has the Hobson’s choice either to submit to the equitable power of the court or to forego a bona fide claim. The act of filing the chapter 7 case causes the equitable bankruptcy proceeding to come into existence. All property of the debtor and property of the estate passes into the exclusive jurisdiction of the court. 28 U.S.C. § 1334(e). Hickman is a participant in the distribution scheme, which is the end product of the allowance and disallowance of claims. 11 U.S.C. § 726(a)(6). Whether to discharge debts and whether to except particular debts from discharge are questions integral to restructuring debtor-creditor relations. Indeed, the filing by the debtor of the bankruptcy case is the most basic instance of invoking the equitable jurisdiction of the bankruptcy court.
The underlying principle, then, to be drawn from the Supreme Court decisions is that the crucial event is the act of a chapter 7 debtor coming into a court of equity to seek “restructuring of the debt- or-creditor relationship through the bankruptcy court’s
equity jurisdiction.” Langenkamp,
We agree with the Sixth and Seventh Circuits that the analysis does not differ as between debtor and creditor.
Longo v. McLaren (In re McLaren),
In this instance, Hickman filed the bankruptcy case to restructure his debtor-creditor relationship with, among others, Hana. The particular relationship with Hana involves both Hana’s claim against Hickman and Hickman’s counterclaim against Hana.
To the extent that the counterclaim could lead to affirmative relief, it is, as noted, property of the estate controlled by the trustee as to which Hickman has no authority to bind the trustee. He could, however, raise it defensively in the same manner as one may be permitted to assert a time-barred claim defensively, even though he could obtain no affirmative relief. If he were to do so, however, Lan-genkamp teaches that he is not entitled to trial by jury on his counterclaim.
Nor would such a defense strategy impair the rights of the trustee to obtain an affirmative recovery in a separate action. The trustee would not be bound by an
In sum, by the act of filing the voluntary chapter 7 case, Hickman invoked the equitable jurisdiction of the bankruptcy court to restructure his relations with his creditors and thereby agreed to litigate the adversary proceeding filed by Hana in the bankruptcy court that was addressed to her claim against him, and all counterclaims, in equitable proceedings in which the Seventh Amendment does not apply. 5
II
A chapter 7 bankruptcy case may be dismissed “only for cause.” 11 U.S.C. § 707(a). In the end, the question is whether there was § 707(a) “cause” to dismiss the case.
A
The term “for cause” is defined in the Bankruptcy Code only by way of a list of three examples—unreasonable delay prejudicial to creditors, nonpayment of filing fees, and not filing schedules—that is plainly incomplete. 11 U.S.C. § 707(a)(1)-(3);
Sherman,
When the asserted “cause” for dismissal is not one of the three items listed in § 707(a), the first question is whether the asserted “cause” is contemplated by a specific Bankruptcy Code provision. If so, then there is no § 707(a) “cause.”
Sherman,
If there is no specific Bankruptcy Code provision that addresses the asserted “cause,” the question becomes whethеr the totality of circumstances amount to § 707(a) “cause.”
Sherman,
The dismissal decision rests within the sound discretion of the court and is reversible only for abuse of discretion.
Schroeder v. Int’l Airport Inn P’ship (In re Int’l Airport Inn P’ship),
A case will not be dismissed on the motion of a debtor if such dismissal would cause “some plain legal prejudice” to a creditor.
Int’l Airport Inn P’ship,
B
Hickman’s theory on his motion to dismiss runs afoul of the first step of the
The real question on the motion to dismiss, however, was whether the totality of the circumstances added up to § 707(a) “cause.”
Sherman,
Hickman, as movant, had the burden of persuasion. Hence, he had the burden to demonstrate, among other things, that there would be no legal prejudice resulting from the dismissal. He contended that his creditors would be better off outside bankruptcy by returning to state court. Two creditors did not agree and preferred to eschew the revolving door. Nor did the bankruptcy trustee agree. The bankruptcy court was not persuaded that Hickman met his burden on this or any other point.
On appeal, Hickman does not grapple with the implications of his nonperformance of his duties as debtor. He shirked his duty to disclose all assets and financial affairs. 11 U.S.C. § 521(a)(1). That duty required him to prepare the bankruptcy schedules and statements “carеfully, completely, and accurately” and bear the risk of nondisclosure.
Diamond Z Trailer, Inc. v. JZ L.L.C. (In re JZ L.L.C.),
Hickman also shirked his statutory duty to cooperate with the trustee. 11 U.S.C. § 521(a)(3). In fact, he largely ignored the trustee, perhaps trying to manipulate his way to dismissal, until the trustee objected to his discharge. This will not do.
A debtor invoking the protection of the Bankruptcy Code must shoulder the responsibilities attendant to this protection, including accounting for assets and completing schedules in good faith, and may not engage in questionable or fraudulent conduct and then expect to have the case dismissed once such conduct is discovered.
Bartee,
In Bartee, we reasoned that unexplained discrepancies and lack of cooperation with the trustee’s efforts to obtain information supported the bankruptcy court’s ruling that the debtors did not demonstrate absence of prejudice to creditors upon dismissal of the case. Id. This case is no different.
Several other considerations undermine the force of Hickman’s argument that the Seventh Amendment compels dismissal of the chapter 7 case. First, Hickman deliberately chose to invoke equitable bankruptcy jurisdiction by filing the chapter 7 case in the first instance. An analogy lies in the rules governing federal civil litigation, where a party’s failure to make a timely jury demand “constitutes a waiver by the party of trial by jury.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 38(d);
United States v. Moore,
Second, the putative $2,317,539.50 counterclaim against Hana is а cause of action that is property of the estate that Hickman is not entitled to control over the objection of the chapter 7 trustee. To the extent it has merit (we so assume purely for purposes of analysis), Hickman has already committed himself to sharing the proceeds with his creditors. Correlatively, dismissal would operate to abandon all assets, including the counterclaim, to the potential detriment of сreditors.
Finally, there is an important interest related to the integrity of the bankruptcy system. When a debtor’s choice to commence a chapter 7 case backfires, a debtor is not entitled to escape by awarding himself a dismissal either by declining to perform his statutory duties or by recanting the commitment to have debtor-creditor relations adjusted in equitable proceedings.
In short, considerations pertinent to “causе” in this instance, in addition to Hickman’s desire to extricate himself from an uncomfortable predicament, included the views of creditors, the state of Hickman’s compliance with his duties as a chapter 7 debtor, and the view of the chapter 7 trustee.
We cannot say that the bankruptcy court abused its discretion when it denied the motion to dismiss the case.
CONCLUSION
The Seventh Amendment jury trial right does not apply in litigation conducted in bankruptcy сourt to restructure the debt- or-creditor relationship if the debtor is the one who originally invoked the equitable jurisdiction of the bankruptcy court. Here, the debtor’s recantation of that choice does not provide sufficient § 707(a) “cause” to dismiss over opposition. Hence, the denial of the debtor’s motion to dismiss was not an abuse of discretion. AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Decl. of Randall M. Hickman in Support of Motion to Dismiss (9/20/07) at 3 ("Hana's attorney bеgan interrogating me at the 341a [sic] hearing and I felt that the hearing was becoming a deposition or a quasi-trial. I discussed my concerns with my counsel and decided to simply dismiss the bankruptcy and litigate the issues in state court before a jury of my peers.”).
. Arguably, the statute excepts personal injury tort and wrongful death claims that, per 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(5), "shall be tried in [a] district court” even though they implicate the debtor-creditor relation. 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(5).
. Precision warrants noting that this is not a "waiver” in the sense of not timely demanding a jury. Fed.R.Civ.P. 38(d). Rather, the actor elects to pursue a remedial scheme in which a jury trial is not available and agrees to be bound by the result.
. This appeal involves only a chapter 7 debt- or's rights in bankruptcy litigation involving adjustment of the debtor-creditor relationship. We do not address actions that do not implicate the debtor-creditor relationship. Whether a trustee, or a debtor under another chapter, may have a jury right is left to another day.
See Germain,
