In
In re Crysen/Montenay Energy Co.,
I.
Maritime Asbestosis Legal Clinic (“MALC”) represents merchant seamen exposed to asbestos during their employment. LTV Steel and 66 of its affiliates (collectively “LTV”) filed a voluntary petition for relief under chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code (the “code”) on July 17, 1986. In July 1988, MALC began lawsuits in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan on behalf of 220 merchant seamen who had been exposed to asbestos. LTV was named as a defendant in three of these actions, which were dismissed soon thereafter when LTV told MALC that the suits were forbidden by the automatic stay provision of § 362(a) of the code.
In March of 1989, MALC filed amended complaints on behalf of over 1300 plaintiffs in a separate mass tort litigation in the Northern District of Ohio. LTV was
In an order dated May 18, 1989, the Honorable Burton Lifland of the Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York, applying §§ 105(a) and 362(a), permanently enjoined further prosecution of the Maritime Asbestos Actions. Judge Lifland also determined that the commencement of the Maritime Asbestos Actions constituted a “willful” violation of the automatic stay under § 362(h) and awarded LTV $7600 in compensatory damages. LTV’s request for contempt sanctions pursuant to § 105(a) and Bankruptcy Rule 9020 was “held in abeyance.” (Order at 8)
MALC appealed to the District Court from both the injunction and the damage award under § 362(h). However, the appeal relating to the propriety of the injunction was withdrawn by stipulation. The damage award was affirmed on March 17, 1990 by the District Court in an opinion and order published at
MALC then appealed to this Court on four grounds: (1) that the factual findings of the Bankruptcy Court were clearly erroneous; (2) that such facts did not warrant the conclusion that MALC committed a “willful” violation of the automatic stay; (3) that an award of compensatory damages was improper in the absence of injury or evidence of actual damages; and (4) that an award of damages to a corporation was improper. MALC has conceded the first three issues. The sole question on appeal before us is whether § 362(h) allows recovery of damages by corporate debtors.
II.
Section 362(h) of the code provides:
“An individual injured by any willful violation of a stay provided by this section shall recover actual damages, including costs and attorneys’ fees, and, in appropriate circumstances, may recover punitive damages.”
The only question is whether the word “individual” used in that section includes a corporation.
The principles of construction applicable to interpreting a complex statute such as the code, are straightforward:
[A]s long as the statutory scheme is coherent and consistent, there generally is no need for a court to inquire beyond the plain language of the statute.
The plain meaning of legislation should be conclusive, except in the “rare cases [in which] the literal application of a statute will produce a result demonstrably at odds with the intention of its drafters.” In such cases, the intention of the drafters, rather than the strict language, controls.
United States v. Ron Pair Enterprises, Inc.,
Although the code does not define “individual,” it does define “person” in § 101(35) to include “individual, partnership, and corporation.... ” Throughout the code, rights and duties are allocated in some instances to “individuals” and in others to “persons.” Section 109,
“Who may be a debtor,"
uses “person” in certain situations and “individual” in others. Chapter 13 of the code is available only to an “individual with regular income ... or an individual with regular income and such individual’s spouse_” 11 U.S.C. § 109(e). The text of other code sections demonstrates that Congress used the word “individual” rather than “person” to mean a natural person. To cite but one additional example, § 101(39) defines “relative” as an “individual related by affinity or consanguinity within the third degree as determined by the common law, or individual in
We have not located any legislative history to suggest that § 362(h) was meant to apply to “persons,” rather than being confined to “individuals.” The section was added as part of the Bankruptcy Amendments and Federal Judgeship Act of 1984, Pub.L. No. 98-353, 98 Stat. 333, 352,
1984 U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News
(98 Stat) 333, 352 (1984). There is no published legislative history suggesting the possibility of a drafting error or other inadvertence. Appellee conceded during oral argument that there is no legislative history showing that the section was meant to apply to “persons.” Therefore, this is not one of those “rare eases [in which] the literal application of a statute will produce a result demonstrably at odds with the intention of its drafters.”
Ron Pair Enterprises, Inc.,
III.
Although the plain meaning of “individual” in § 362(h) and basic rules of statutory construction would appear to prevent application of the section to benefit corporate debtors, such as LTV, there is substantial authority permitting just such application and awarding damages to corporate debtors, including decisions in the only other two circuit courts to address the issue.
In re Atlantic Business and Community Corp.,
The leading case applying § 362(h) to benefit corporate debtors is
Better Homes of Va., Inc.,
[Section] 362(h) must be read in conjunction with the rest of § 362 ... [so] that its sanctions are not limited to the relief of an “individual” in the literal sense. The Bankruptcy Code does not define the word individual.... [I]t seems unlikely that Congress meant to give a remedy only to individual debtors against those who willfully violate the automatic stay provisions of the Code as opposed to debtors which are corporations or other like entities. Such a narrow construction of the term would defeat much of the purpose of the section, and we construe the word “individual” to include a corporate debtor.
Id. at 292.
The approach of
Better Homes
has been followed by the Third Circuit,
see In re Atlantic Business and Community Corp.,
Essentially, all the courts which apply § 362(h) to corporate debtors advance the same argument relied on in
Better Homes:
Because the automatic stay under § 362(a) applies to all debtors, it is unlikely that Congress meant in § 362(h) to award damages for violating the stay only to individual debtors. Those courts point either to legislative history supporting the breadth of the stay,
see In re Tel-A-Communications Consultants,
Furthermore, a reading of § 362(h) in conformity with its plain meaning is not illogical, or inconsistent either with the automatic stay provisions of § 362(a) or with the rest of the code. After Congress in 1978 passed the automatic stay provisions of § 362 along with the rest of the code, including § 105(a) which allowed a bankruptcy court to “issue any order, process, or judgment that is necessary or appropriate to carry out the provisions of this title,” it is entirely possible that Congress then chose to expand the remedies for violations one step at a time. Congress may well have thought that individual debtors were particularly vulnerable to violations of the stay by debt-collection agencies and others who may be tempted to believe that individuals are less likely than corporations to be aware of their rights under the automatic stay. Congress may have concluded that this consideration, as well as others, warranted an explicit code provision to punish stay violations and compensate debtors, in addition to civil contempt, when the debtors are individuals. Section 362(h) expands upon the discretionary nature of contempt proceedings by stating not only that “individuals] ... shall recover actual damages,” but also that “in appropriate circumstances, [individuals] may recover punitive damages.” (emphasis added) Absent legislative history to explain the statute, there is at least reasonable conjecture to support a reading consistent with the plain meaning of the statute, and thereby to confirm our view that we should not go beyond that meaning.
IV.
In Crysen/Montenay, we noted that
Prior to the enactment in 1984 of subsection (h) [of section 362], sanctions against willful violations of automatic stays were imposed pursuant to the authority of bankruptcy courts to order parties in contempt. Accordingly, the standard that governed the imposition of sanctions was that which governed contempt proceedings: a party generally would not have sanctions imposed for its violation of an automatic stay as long as it had acted without maliciousness and had a good faith argument and belief that its actions did not violate the stay.
In Crysen/Montenay, we held that the remedial purpose of § 362(h) warranted a standard that made it easier to impose sanctions pursuant to that subsection than pursuant to contempt proceedings, 1 id., but we declined to apply such a standard there because the case was one of first impression in this Circuit. Id. at 1105. As set forth above, we also explicitly left open the question of whether § 362(h) applies at all to corporate debtors. Id.
We now hold that a bankruptcy court may impose sanctions pursuant to § 362(h), under the standard set out in
Crysen/Montenay,
only for violating a
The purposes of the code indeed might benefit from a lenient standard for punishing violations of the automatic stay and compensating for resulting damages, as regards all debtors, individuals and corporations or other artificial entities, by “encourag[ing] would-be violators to obtain declaratory judgments before seeking to vindicate their interests ..., and thereby protecting] debtors’ estates from incurring' potentially unnecessary legal expenses/ip prosecuting stay violations.”
Crysen/Montenay,
The orders below are reversed to the extent they awarded compensatory damages under § 362(h), and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. "[A]ny deliberate act taken in violation of a stay, which the violator knows to be in existence, justifies an award of actual damages. An additional finding of maliciousness or bad faith on the part of the offending creditor warrants the further imposition of punitive damages....”
