In September 1999, appellee Dillard-Winecoff, LLC, a corporation formed to acquire and dévelop the former Winecoff Hotel property in Atlanta, filed suit against the entities who had provided the acquisition financing and their agents, appellants IBF Participating Income Fund, IBF Special Purpose Corporation II, Interbank Mortgage Corporation, and Interbank/Brener Brokerage Services (“IBF”). The lawsuit alleged fraud, intentional interference with contractual relations, wrongful foreclosure, breach of fiduciary duty, and breach of contract. Noting that Dillard-Winecoff had recently emerged from a Chapter 11 single asset real estate bankruptcy case (see 11 USC §§ 101 (51) (b) and 362 (d) (3)) in which it had not listed the claims set forth in the lawsuit as an asset, appellants filed a motion for summary judgment based on, among other things, judicial estoppel. After conducting a hearing on the motion, the trial court granted summary judgment to IBF. The Court of Appeals reversed the trial court’s judgment, holding that the doctrine of judicial estoppel did not bar Dillard-Winecoffs post-bankruptcy suit against its creditor because Dillard-Winecoff’s bankruptcy petition had been dismissed,
1
meaning that Dillard-Winecoff had not successfully asserted in the bankruptcy proceedings a position inconsistent with its lawsuit in a manner that provided an unfair advantage or benefit to Dillard-Winecoff in the bankruptcy proceeding.
Dillard-Winecoff v. IBF Participating
Income Fund,
When judicial estoppel is asserted in an action brought in a Georgia court and a bankruptcy proceeding is the earlier proceeding in which the debtor/plaintiff took a position allegedly inconsistent with that taken in the state court action, the Georgia appellate courts historically have striven to apply the “federal” doctrine of judicial estoppel, in an effort “to afford the judgment of the bankruptcy court the same effect here as would result in the court where that judgment was rendered.”
Southmark Corp. v. Trotter, Smith & Jacobs,
It appears, however, from the recent decision of the United States Supreme Court in
New Hampshire v. Maine,
In the case at bar, the Court of Appeals held that judicial estoppel is not applicable when the earlier proceeding in which the allegedly inconsistent position was taken was a bankruptcy proceeding that concluded in dismissal of the petition because no benefit or unfair advantage results from a dismissal since its effect is to return the debtor and creditors to the status quo ante, with the debtor again liable for its debts and creditors free to use all legal remedies available to collect thereon.
Dillard-Winecoff v. IBF Participating Income Fund,
supra,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
The bankruptcy court dismissed Dillard-WinecofFs bankruptcy case for cause pursuant to 11 USC § 1112 (b), on the United States Trustee’s motion to dismiss. That motion pointed out that as a result of the bankruptcy court’s earlier order lifting the automatic stay to permit the secured creditors to foreclose on the debtor’s single material asset, DillardWinecoff lacked the ability to effectuate a plan of reorganization, and cause existed for dismissal of the case pursuant to 11 USC § 1112 (b) (2).
