MEMORANDUM OPINION
This matter comes before the Court on the motion of the Society of Lloyd’s (“Lloyd’s”) for sanctions against Patrick J. Collins (“Collins”), a debtor under Chapter 7 of the United States Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. § 101 et seq. (hereinafter the “Bankruptcy Code”), and his attorneys Whitman H. Brisky (“Brisky”) and the firm Lindenbaum, Coffman, Kurlander & Brisky (the “Firm”). Following the dismissal of Collins’ bankruptcy petition as a bad faith filing under 11 U.S.C. § 707(a), Lloyd’s seeks an award of costs and attorneys fees, in the amount of $133,107.09, incurred by it in contesting Collins’ bankruptcy case. In addition, Lloyd’s seeks amounts equal to those paid to the Chapter 7 trustee (the “Trustee”) and the Trustee’s counsel, as well as those paid or owing to Brisky and the Firm. Lloyd’s argues that by filing for bankruptcy, Collins has depleted the assets available to pay his debt to Lloyd’s. Lloyd’s moves for sanctions under 11 U.S.C. § 105(a) and under Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure 9011. For the reasons that follow, the Court finds that sanctions should be imposed upon both Collins and his attorneys.
JURISDICTION
The Court has jurisdiction over this matter pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(1) and 28 U.S.C. § 1334. This matter arises
BACKGROUND
Collins has been a life insurance agent for the past 34 years. He owns and operates his own agency. He has been successful in his business, accumulating аssets worth more than $2.3 million.
This case arises entirely out of Collins’ relationship with Lloyd’s and his attempts to avoid the allegedly unwarranted consequences of that relationship. The many issues between Collins and Lloyd’s are not before this Court, and this Court expresses no opinion about the merits of the claims of either side in their ongoing battle. However, that battle is the raison d’etre for the bankruptcy case and the many additional months of litigation it has created.
The Relationship Between Collins and Lloyd’s
The Society of Lloyd’s operates and regulates Lloyd’s of London, the British insurance market that began as a marine insurer over 300 years ago and has now insured everything from Betty Grable’s “million dollar legs” to natural disasters and asbestos disease. Unlike traditional American insurance companies, Lloyd’s does not directly insure its customers solely with its assets, nor does it earn profits from premiums and pay claims for losses to insureds under its policies. Rather, through individuals known as Members’ Agents, Lloyd’s solicits individuals of substantial means to become Names or underwriters. Often, these Names form groups known as Syndicates to insure large risks. When an individual becomes a Lloyd’s Name, that individual agrees to put his entire net worth at risk to meet the claims that may be made against him or his Syndicate. In exchange, the Names expect to profit from the premiums paid by the policy-holders and from investment of the Syndicate’s capital. The obvious hope is that no policy holder will make a claim and that the Names will reap handsome profits from their investments.
Collins was a Lloyd’s Name for ■ the years 1988 through 1991. Collins has testified that he never made any profits on his investment in Lloyd’s and that “[a]ll [he] ever did was send them money.” (April 11, 2000 11:00 a.m. Transcript at 40:23-24) (hereinafter “Tr. 1”). Collins paid Lloyd’s approximately $275,000 in underwriting losses during the years that he was a Name.
These losses resulted from Lloyd’s reinsurance of claims such as those for asbestosis, natural disasters, and environmental damage, which may surface, in huge amounts, years after a Syndicate underwrites the policy.
See The Society of Lloyd’s v. Ashenden,
No. 98 C 5335,
Collins alleges that Lloyd’s fraudulently induced him to become a Name and has attempted to sue Lloyd’s or related entities in both the United States and England. The United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois (the “District Court”) dismissed his securities fraud suit for improper venue based on a forum selection clause in his contracts with Lloyd’s.
Ashenden et al. v. Lloyd’s of London,
No. 96 C 852,
Collins is a member of a group that litigates against Lloyd’s and related entities. He is also a member of a class action against Lloyd’s and related entities, including Citibank and the law firms LeBoeuf, Lamb, Greene & McCrae, Mendes & Mount, and Lord, Bissell & Brook. He has testified that other than the lawsuits discussed herein, he individually has no current pending litigation against Lloyd’s.
Lloyd’s has successfully sued Collins. On March 11, 1998, an English court entered a judgment against him in the amount of £271,856.76 (approximately $433,000) for amounts owed under the R & R (the “English Judgment”). Post-judgment interest has been accruing on the debt, so that it now amounts to approximately $525,000. In order to enforce its judgments, on April 22, 1999, Lloyd’s filed for Registrations of Foreign Money Judgments (the “Registrations”) in the District Court against Collins and sixteen other American Names against whom English judgments had been entered. Collins and several of his fellow Names attempted to resist the Registrations in The Society of Lloyd’s v. Berkos et al., No. 99 C 2651.
On September 16, 1999, United States District Judge Harry D. Leinenweber entered an order setting October 29, 1999 as the ruling date in the Berkos case. On October 14, 1999, Coffins filed his bankruptcy petition. On October 29, 1999, the District Court entered an order in Berkos recognizing the English judgments (the “Berkos Judgment”). Id. On November 16, 1999, the District Court entered final judgment against twelve other Berkos defendants. Those twelve filed a notice of appeal that same day. The appeal is currently pending in the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit.
The Collins Bankruptcy Filing
Collins testified that he first considered a bankruptcy filing following the April 23, 1999 decision in Ashenden II, which recognized English judgments against two other Lloyd’s Names. Brisky advised him to file the bankruptcy petition either before the District Court announced its judgment in Berkos or after any appeal in Berkos. He filed just two weeks before the District Court’s decision in Berkos because he anticipated losing and was anxious to “get it behind him” (Tr. 1 at 38:20) (hereinafter “Tr. 1”), to “end the nightmare” (Tr. 1 at 38:8), to “get finality” (Tr. 1 at 40:1-2), and to “get Lloyd’s off his back” (Tr. 1 at 40:7-8). He wanted to “end all of the struggling” (Tr. 1 at 40:2) and to “go on with [his] life” (Tr. 1 at 40:4).
Lloyd’s promptly moved to modify the automatic stay imposed by 11 U.S.C. § 362 so that the action in the District Court could proceed against Collins. Collins objected to the Lloyd’s motion. On December 21, 1999, the Court modified the stay to allow Lloyd’s to proceed in the Berkos case for a ruling on any pending motions and any appeal therefrom. The District Court entered judgment against Coffins on February 8, 2000. Coffins filed his notice of appeal on February 9, 2000.
On May 4, 2000, following the dismissal of Collins’ bankruptcy case, the District Court approved his supersedeas bond for the Berkos appeal in the amount of $300,-000.
Collins’ Debts
At the time of his bankruptcy filing, Collins had only three creditors: the Harris Bank (“Harris”), the Northern Trust Bank (the “Northern Trust”), and Lloyd’s. The debts to Harris and the Northern Trust were each secured. The debt to Harris was secured by a lien on the renewals of life insurance policies sold by Collins; the debt to the Northern Trust was secured by real property. Collins was making timely payments on those debts without difficulty and reaffirmed those debts upon filing his bankruptcy petition. Collins admitted both in his filings with the Court and in his testimony before the Court that he filed this Chapter 7 case solely to free himself of Lloyd’s.
The only debt that Lloyd’s actively seeks to collect is the English Judgment, which now amounts to approximately $525,000. This debt represents the amount that Lloyd’s paid to E quitas on Collins’ behalf, plus interest accrued to date. Collins alleges that he may be additionally liable for some unknown amounts at some unknown future time if some unknown potential claimant seeks relief beyond what Equitas can pay. However, Collins has never been asked to pay a penny on any claim of this type and there is no present indication that he will be asked to pay.
In 1992 or 1993, Collins joined the American Names Association (the “ANA”), a group of Lloyd’s Names who are also embroiled in litigation with Lloyd’s, or at least very unhappy with the outcome of their investments with Lloyd’s. The ANA’s membership is now made up only of those Names who have refused to accept the R & R. The ANA’s original purpose was to gather information about Lloyd’s and to develop tactics to defend against Lloyd’s. Now, its primary purpose is to “defend its members against attacks by Lloyd’s.” (Tr. 2 at 17:21-22). The ANA has accumulated and disseminated information on the bankruptcy process to its Names. Collins has been a director of the ANA since 1996.
Collins’Assets
At the time of filing, Collins held about $75,000 in non-exempt assets, which became part of the bankruptcy estate. Collins holds approximately $2.3 million in exempt assets such as life insurance policies, pension plans and other retirement plans. He also owns a home in joint tenancy with his wife, which he values at $490,000. This home is the security for the $400,000 debt to the Northern Trust, which Collins has reaffirmed.
Collins testified that he would he would use his exempt assets to pay the debts to Harris and the Northern Trust, stating that “[t]hose are debts I honestly owe and I would see that they are paid.” (Tr. 2 at 37:3-4). He testified that using exempt assets to pay Lloyd’s would cause him financial distress.
Collins’ Income
Collins earned net income in excess of $200,000 in the year 1999. He stated in open court that he earned substantially less in 1999 than in prior years, because he was preoccupied with his Lloyd’s litigation. He has stated that he will stop working if he does not receive Chapter 7 relief. In addition to income from his business, Collins receives monthly payments from Social Security and several pensions in the approximate total amount of $5,000 to $6,000 per month, all of which is exempt from creditors.
Collins has represented to the Court that he spends $975 per month on repairs to his home. He spends $930 per month on food and $800 per month on clothing. For recreation, clubs, and entertainment, he spends $1,780 per month. His total monthly expenses, including other scheduled items, add up to $11,525.65.
Collins pays about $7,500 per year in life insurance premiums that are gifts to his grandchildren. He pays about $30,000 per year in life insurance premiums for himself.
He annually takes his entire family, including his five children, the youngest of whom is thirtyfive, and their spouses and his twenty grandchildren, on vacation. He pays the entire bill. He takes additional vacations with his wife and sometimes includes other family members. He pays the bills for these vacations. Over the past year, these vacations have cost at least $13,000. In October 1999, the same month in which his filed his bankruptcy petition, Collins took a trip to Mexico on which he spent $5,000. Shortly thereafter, and during the pendency of his bankruptcy case, Collins took several members of his family on a ski trip to Snowmass, Colorado. He paid the bill.
Last year, Collins made $30,000 in charitable donations. He expects to make larger donations this year.
He also gives each of his children $1,000 at Christmastime every year. He has stated in his filings and in his testimony before the Court that he seeks Chapter 7 relief so that he will not have to change this lifestyle. He has stated that to him “financial distress” means having to give up these things, which he would rather not do, to pay his bills (April 11, 2000 2:00 p.m. Transcript at 70:10-13) (hereinafter “Tr. 2”). “Financial distress” to Collins also includes having to use his exempt assets to pay his bills.
Dismissal as a Bad Faith Filing 1
On April 12, 2000, following a two-day trial, this Court dismissed Collins’ bankruptcy petition as a bad faith filing under § 707(a) of the Bankruptcy Code based on the foregoing facts. Section 707(a) permits a court to dismiss a case “for cause” after notice and a hearing. 11 U.S.C. § 707(a). Bad faith can constitute cause for dismissal under § 707(a).
Huckfeldt v. Huckfeldt (In re Huckfeldt),
Although the Seventh Circuit has never addressed the issue of dismissal for cause under § 707(a), this Court concluded that the appropriate test for dismissal pursuant to § 707(a) is the “mainstream” totality of the circumstances test employed in other Circuits for dismissal under both § 707(a) and § 707(b).
See Kornfield v. Schwartz (In re Kornfield),
Section 707(b) differs from § 707(a) several respects. First, only the court or the UST may bring motions under § 707(b). Under § 707(b), the debtor’s debts must be primarily consumer debts. To dismiss a case under § 707(b), a court must find that granting Chapter 7 relief to the debt- or in question would be a substantial abuse of the provisions of Chapter 7. 11 U.S.C. § 707(b). Bad faith is merely one element of substantial abuse under § 707(b).
See, e.g., Lamanna,
The most important factor of the totality of the circumstances test is whether the debtor has the presеnt ability to pay his debts if he chooses.
Stewart,
Collins also has the ability to pay out of future income if he so chooses. Courts should consider the debtor’s future income as it relates to his debts and living expenses in determining whether the debtor is abusing the bankruptcy process.
See, e.g., Stewart,
The Court also considered whether Collins was merely seeking to gain an advantage over Lloyd’s, his only true creditor, by filing his bankruptcy petition. This is an important factor in a totality of circumstances analysis.
Lamanna,
Another factor is the absence of any attempt to pay creditors. Id. Collins has either paid or agreed to pay his other creditors. It was only Lloyd’s that he sought to “get off his back.”
Finally, the Court considered Collins’ unwillingness to make lifestyle changes, such as a cutback in vacations and gifts to his family. There is nothing inherently wrong with these gifts and vacations; on the contrary, Collins’ affection for and commitment to his family is both likable and admirable. However, Collins is a debtor in bankruptcy, where a significant factor in a totality of the circumstances analysis is whether the debtor is willing to make lifestyle changes to pay his debts.
Kornfield,
This Court ruled that it “would be an affront to equity and good conscience to allow the debtor to manipulate the system as he seeks to do here.” (April 12, 11:00 a.m. Transcript at 28:14-16) (hereinafter “Tr. 3”). The proof was “so overwhelming by the debtor’s own filings and testimony to demonstrate his bad faith whether by subjective or objective tests.” (Tr. 3 at 29:16-19). Concluding that by filing for bankruptcy, Collins was merely firing one more shot in his battle with Lloyd’s, the Court stated that if it were to rule in Collins’ favor it “wouldn’t be able to face the Chapter 13 debtors who seek to eke out a living with an additional five dollars, or the Chapter 7 debtors who must give up everything in order to continue living on a bare subsistence level.” (Tr. 3 at 29:24-25-30:3). The Court entered an order dismissing Collins’ case as a bad faith filing, but retained jurisdiction to consider motions for sanctions and trustee’s fees. At the request of Brisky and the Firm, the Court agreed to bifurcate the liability issue from the amount and nature of sanctions. Only after a determination of whether Collins, Brisky, or the Firm should be sanctioned would the hearing proceed on the appropriate nature and amounts.
The Court has already entered orders authorizing payment of fees and costs to Kirkland & Ellis, counsel for the Trustee, in the amount of $7,735.44 for fees and costs, and to the Trustee in the amount of $10,046.89 for fees and costs. The Trustee was ordered to return the balance of funds in the estate to Collins. Lloyd’s did not object to these payments. Brisky has not submitted a fee application to the Court.
DISCUSSION
Lloyd’s moves for sanctions under 11 U.S.C. § 105(a) and under Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure 9011 based on Collins’ initial bad faith filing and subsequent actions that compounded the litigation. It seeks as sanctions all attorneys fees and costs incurred by it during the pendency of Collins’ bankruptcy case, in the total amount of $133,107.09. It seeks additional sanctions equal to the amounts the estate paid to the Trustee and his counsel, plus those Collins has paid or will pay to his counsel. Under the protection of the automatic stay imposed by 11 U.S.C. § 362, Collins initiated his appeal of the
Berkos
decision without first paying the judgment or posting a bond; Lloyd’s argues that the mere dismissal of his case, without further sanctions, would therefore allow him to partially achieve the objective of his bad faith filing. Although Collins has now posted a $300,000 bond for the
Berkos
appeal, he proceeded for several months,
A dismissal for bad faith filing does not
per se
require a subsequent imposition of sanctions.
See, e.g., In re Park Place Assocs.,
Although no party effectively addresses this issue, an analysis of whether to impose sanctions under § 105(a) is different than an analysis under Rule 9011.
See, e.g., In re Rimsat, Ltd.,
“A sanctioning court should ordinarily rely on available authority conferred by statutes and procedural rules, rather than its inherent power, if the available sources of authority would be adequate to serve the court’s purposes.” Id. However, courts may resort to their inherent powers, rather than specific rules and statutes, where broad authority is necessary to ensure that all culpable parties receive an appropriate sanction. Id.
Having said this, the Court will nevertheless first discuss the applicability of both the statutory and inherent powers tо sanction granted in § 105(a). A review of Collins’ abuse of the bankruptcy process under § 105(a) sheds light on the issue of whether the petition was filed for an improper purpose under Rule 9011.
Sanctions Under § 105(a)
Section 105(a) of the Bankruptcy Code provides:
The court may issue any order, process, or judgment that is necessary or appropriate to carry out the provisions of this title. No provision of this title providing for the raising of an issue by a party in interest shall be construed to preclude the court from, sua sponte, taking any action or making any determination necessary or appropriate to enforce or implement court orders or rules, or to prevent an abuse of process.
11 U.S.C. § 105(a). “Section 105 grants broad powers to implement the provisions of Title 11 and to prevent an abuse of bankruptcy process.”
In re Volpert,
When a bankruptcy filing is motivated by a desire to delay a creditor from enforcing its rights in an ongoing dispute, the filing is an abuse of process.
Jones v. Bank of Santa Fe (In re Courtesy Inns),
Bankruptcy relief is limited to the honest but unfortunate debtor.
Grogan v. Garner,
Collins and his attorneys admittedly filed the Chapter 7 petition solely to thwart Lloyd’s. In the Jоint Pre-Trial Order, Collins’ proposed several findings of fact to this effect, including:
(42)[Collins] filed this case in order to obtain relief from, and a discharge with respect to his liability to Lloyds [sic].
(43) [Collins] also filed this case in order to attempt to obtain finality with respect to his continuing liability to Lloyds [sic] policyholders. 2
(44) [Collins] also filed this case in order to protect his exempt assets and to obtain a fresh start free of his involvement with Lloyds [sic].
(Joint Pretrial Order at p. 16). Even now that the Court has held that such purposes were a manipulation of the bankruptcy system “purely and admittedly for the purpose of frustrating Lloyd’s while honoring and respecting his other debts,” (Tr. 3 at 29:6-9), Collins, Brisky and the Firm continue to argue that Collins justifiably filed the petition to “discharge Lloyd’s ... claims against him at the cost of receiving such relief, to wit, financial disclosure, cooperation with the Trustee and surrender of his ... non-exempt assets. Morever, as [Collins] testified, he wanted to terminate his litigation with Lloyd’s rather than continue it.” (Memorandum of Debtor’s Counsel in Opposition to Lloyds’ [sic] Petition for Award of Sanctions at p. 8-9). There is no possible conclusion to draw from these arguments but that, having lost on the merits in almost every availаble forum, Collins and his attorneys resorted to bankruptcy simply to bring the ongoing litigation to a crashing halt. Because almost all of Collins’ millions of dollars are exempt assets, they knew that bankruptcy relief would cost Collins comparatively little, $75,000, as opposed to payment of the $525,000 Berkos judgment. This is not just a litigation tactic, but an inequitable attempt at litigation derailment. Collins’ bankruptcy filing was both unreasonable and vexatious.
Collins was neither insolvent nor in financial distress. Collins did not file his Chapter 7 petition to discharge debts he could not pay. He filed to stick it to
Collins filed the Chapter 7 petition because after making a losing investment, and litigating over it on two continents for several years, both as plaintiff and defendant, he wanted to take his marbles and go home before the game was over. He didn’t want to play anymore and he tried to use the bankruptcy system first to compound the proceedings and then to call the game. He made a unilateral decision to settle with Lloyd’s for $75,000 and attempted to cram it down Lloyd’s throat using the bankruptcy system.
Further, as discussed in the following section on Rule 9011, Collins, Brisky, and the Firm proceeded with the bankruptcy although they knew or should have known that the case was likely, although not certain, to be dismissed as a bad faith filing.
The Collins filing was clearly an abuse of the bankruptcy process and the judicial system. It has clogged the dockets of two federal courts and has caused Lloyd’s to expend substantial time and effort to resist it. Collins tries to characterize this motion for sanctions in the following ways: “Since he lost the case, let him also be sanctioned for ever having brought it,” or “Since he defied Lloyd’s, let him be destroyed.” (Memorandum in Support of Debtor Patrick Collins in Opposition to Lloyd’s Petition for Sanctions p. 1). It is true that Collins will be sanctioned for having brought the case, but sanctions will not be imposed because he lost. They will be imposed because he never should have brought the case in the first place. Nor will sanctions be imposed to destroy him for defying Lloyd’s. It is neither the policy nor the practice of this Court to destroy litigants for properly opposing their adversaries. Sanctions will be imposed to punish Collins and his attorneys for intentionally abusing the judicial process in an unreasonable and vexatious manner.
Standards for Measuring Sanctions Under § 105(a)
Sanctions under § 105(a) may be used to punish litigants and attorneys.
Rimsat, 212
F.3d at 1048;
Volpert,
Having determined that sanctions for abuse of process under § 105(a) should be
Sanctions Under Rule 9011
Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure 9011 requires that almost every paper presented to the court be signed by an attorney of record or pro se litigant. Fed. R. Bankr.P. 9011(a). It further provides in pertinent part:
(b) Representations to the court
By presenting to the court (whether by signing, filing, submitting, or later advocating) a petition, pleading, written motion, or other pаper, an attorney or unrepresented party is certifying that to the best of the person’s knowledge, information, and belief, formed after an inquiry reasonable under the circumstances,—
(1) it is not being presented for any improper purpose, such as to harass or to cause unnecessary delay or needless increase in the cost of litigation;
(2) the claims, defenses, and other legal contentions therein are warranted by existing law or by a nonfrivolous argument for the extension, modification, or reversal of existing law or the establishment of new law....
Fed. R. Bankr.P. 9011(b). Rule 9011(c) authorizes the bankruptcy courts to impose sanctions for violations of Rule 9011(b):
If, after notice and a reasonable opportunity to respond, the court determines that subdivision (b) has been violated, the court may, subject to the conditions stated below, impose an appropriate sanction upon the attorneys, law firms, or parties that have violated subdivision (b) or are responsible for the violation.
Fed. R. Bankr.P. 9011(c). Sanctions shall be limited to what is sufficient to deter the conduct complained of. Fed. R. Bankr.P. 9011(c)(2). Sanctions may be nonmone-tary or may include payment of some or all of the reasonable attorneys fees incurred as a result of the violation. Fed. R. Bankr.P. 9011(c)(2).
Rule 9011 is “essentially identical” to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 11.
Park Place,
Rule 9011 expressly excludes the filing of a bankruptcy petition from the safe harbor provision. Fed. R. Bankr.P. 9011(c)(1)(A). The Rule excludes the initial filing because “[t]he filing of a petition has immediate serious consequences, including the imposition of the automatic stay under § 362 of the Code, which may not be avoided by the subsequent withdrawal of the petition.” Id.
Whether the Provisions of Rule 9011 Apply to Collins
Although none of the parties has raised the question, the first issue to be determined is whether Rule 9011 applies only to Brisky and the Firm, or to Collins as well. Collins signed his bankruptcy petition; however, Rule 9011(b) plainly states that by presenting it to the court, “attorneys or unrepresented parties” certify that a paper meets the requirements of Rule 9011. Fed. R. Bankr.P. 9011(b).
Before the 1993 amendments to Rule 11, the Rule applied to represented parties.
Business Guides, Inc. v. Chromatic Communications Enterprises, Inc.,
Since the Rule requires a certification, it is a false certification that violates it. The question then becomes whether a represented party can be sanctioned if Rule 11(b) has been violated, even though a represented party does not make a certification under Rule 11(b).
Rule 11(c) provides that two groups may be sanctioned if Rule 11(b) has been violated. Fed.R.Civ.P. 11(c). The first is the attorneys, laws firms, or parties that have actually violated the Rule. Id. The second group is those attorneys, law firms, or parties who are responsible for the violation. Id.
The sanction should be imposed upon the persons-whether attorneys, law firms, or parties-who have violated the rule or who may be determined to be responsible for the violation. The person signing, filing, submitting, or advocating a document has a nondelegable responsibility to the court, and in most situations is the person to be held.responsible for the violation.
The revision permits the court to consider whether other attorneys in the firm, co-counsel, other law firms, or the party itself should be held accountable for their pаrt in causing a violation. When appropriate, the court can make an additional inquiry to determine whether the sanction should be imposed on such persons, firms, or parties either in addition to or, in unusual circumstances, instead of the person actually making the presentation to the court.
Fed.R.Civ.P. 11 advisory committee note (1993). Collins has not actually violated Rule 11(b), because according to its plain language, he has made no certification. He was not the person actually making the presentation to the court; Brisky was. Therefore, Collins is not a member of the first group. However, the petition was filed on his behalf and under his direction for the sole purpose of using the bankruptcy system to remain a wealthy man while frustrating Lloyd’s. Rule 9011, unlike Rule 11, accords special treatment to a bankruptcy petition because of the instant and substantial advantage the filer gains and the instant and substantial disadvantage his creditors suffer. Furthermore, “experience has shown that bankruptcy proceedings are subject to a degree of manipulation and abuse not typical of civil litigation.”
Marsch v. Marsch (In re Marsch),
The Purpose and Structure of Rules 11 and 9011
Rule 11 creates duties to one’s adversary and to the legal system, just as tort law creates duties to one’s client. The duty to one’s adversary is to avoid needless legal costs and delay. The duty to the legal system (that is, to litigants in other cases) is to avoid clogging the courts with paper that wastes judicial time and thus defers the disposition of other cases or, by leaving judges less time to resolve each case, increases the rate of error. Rule 11 allows judges to husband their scarce energy for the claims of litigants with serious disputes needing resolution.
Mars
Steel Corp. v. Continental Bank, N.A.,
Rule 11 has both a subjective and an objective component.
Harlyn Sales Cоrp. Profit Sharing Plan v. Kemper Financial Services, Inc.,
Brisky and the Firm claim that only an objective test is proper and cite
In re Rainbow Magazine, Inc.,
There are a few Seventh Circuit cases that place an “objective” label on the test to determine whether a paper was interposed for an improper purpose.
Pacific Dunlop Holdings, Inc. v. Barosh,
“For sanction purposes the focus is on what the party intended and what that party knew or should have known on the day the paper was filed.”
Park Place,
The Subjective Test: Improper Purpose Under Rule 9011(b)(1)
A signature on a paper presented to the court is a certification that the paper has not been presented for any improper purpose, such as harassment or delay. Fed. R. Bankr.P. 9011(b)(1). This question requires a “fact-specific” inquiry.
Park Place,
Collins has unequivocally stated that he filed the petition for the sole purpose of getting rid of Lloyd’s. Is the purpose of shedding a single creditor with whom one has been embroiled in years of litigation, in which one is presently losing, and in which one expects ultimately to lose, and whom one has the ability, if not the desire, to pay, an improper purpose? Is the purpose of delaying entry of judgment in the District Court and then appealing that judgment without posting a supersedeas bond an improper purpose?
There is no doubt that the bankruptcy created, and was intended to create, delay in the ongoing Collins-Lloyd’s litigation. One of the instant, primary effects of filing is to invoke the protections of the automatic stay. 11 U.S.C. § 362. Thus, the District Court was unable to enter judgment against Collins at the same time it entered judgment against the other Berkos defendants. Lloyd’s was forced to bring a motion in this Court seeking modification of the stay before judgment could be entered. Further, Collins was able to proceed with his appeal of that decision without giving Lloyd’s the assurance of a supersedeas bond.
On the other hand, the provisions of the automatic stay exist for, and were expressly created for, all those who file bankruptcy. The provisions exist for the sole purpose of delaying collection proceedings against those debtors. “It is axiomatic that a primary purpose of the automatic stay is to give the debtor some ‘breathing room.’ ”
Park Place,
However, Collins did not merely invoke the shield of the automatic stay; he converted it to a sword for the sole purpose of frustrating a single creditor whom he is able, but unwilling to pay. Furthermore, he attempted to use the bankruptcy system, including this Court, to delay judgment, avoid the supersedeas bond, and ultimately to force Lloyd’s to accept the amount, consisting of his relatively insignificant non-exempt assets less bankruptcy expenses, that he, and he alone, had determined should end the years of litigation. He attempted to use the bankruptcy system, backed by his threat to stop working if he did not receive a discharge, to impose his unilaterally-decided settlement amount on his objecting opponent. Such a purpose is improper under Rule 9011.
The Third Circuit Court of Appeals has found that a Chapter 11 petition filed under similar circumstances was filed for an improper purpose. The debtor and creditor had been “bickering and squabbling for years in the state courts.”
Cinema Service Corp. v. Edbee Corp.,
Thus, under the subjective test, Collins and Brisky and the Firm breached their duty to Lloyd’s, to this Court, and to the District Court. The bankruptcy filing caused needless expense and delay, not only in this Court, but in the District Court. It clogged the District Court by delaying entry of judgment against Collins together with the other Berkos defendants. It clogged this Court with a docket that includes 137 entries, accumulated between October 14, 1999 and June 13, 2000. The petition was meritless, as evidenced by the Court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law in dismissing it as a bad faith filing. Sanctions should thus be imposed on Collins and Brisky and the Firm under Rule 9011 because their actions fail the subjective test under Rule 9011.
The Collins filing also fails the objective test for improper purpose set forth in Deere and adopted by Harlyn. A focus on objectively ascertainable circumstances supports an inference that the filing harassed Lloyd’s and caused unnecessary delay. Lloyd’s was Collins’ only true creditor. Collins and Lloyd’s had been at each other’s throats for years. Collins expected an unfavorable decision in Berkos and, on the advice of counsel, filed his bankruptcy petition two weeks before judgment was entered. Collins immediately reaffirmed his two other debts while attempting to discharge the entirety of his Lloyd’s debt. Collins had nothing to reorganize; most of his assets are exempt and those that are non-exempt would have been available to pay Lloyd’s outside of bankruptcy. Collins is not in financial distress; he is a wealthy man. Collins has made no effort to pay Lloyd’s; he has done everything in his power not to pay Lloyd’s. He has threatened even to extinguish his non-exempt income stream rather than see any of it go to Lloyd’s. These, and all other facts considered in dismissing Collins’ case, are objectively ascertainable and support not only an inference, but an inescapable conclusion, that Collins’ scorched-earth filing harassed Lloyd’s and caused unnecessary delay.
The Objective Test: Warranted by Existing Law Under Rule 9011(b)(2)
An attorney or party filing papers or advocating a cause must make a reasonable investigation into the facts of the case and into the law as applied to them. Fed. R. Bankr.P. 9011. The signature on the paper is a certification that the legal contentions therein are warranted by existing law or a nonfrivolous argument for a change in the law. Fed.R.Civ.P. 9011(b)(2).
The facts, as they relate to Collins’ bankruptcy filing, are uncontested. Therefore, whether Collins, Brisky, and the Firm made a reasonable inquiry into the facts is not at issue here.
Not all unsuccessful arguments are frivolous. For an argument to be considered frivolous, “it must be clear under existing precedents that there is no chance of success and no reаsonable argument to extend, modify or reverse the law as it stands.”
Mareno v. Rowe,
Collins, Brisky, and the Firm argue that it was not clear at all. In support of their argument, they state: (1) that as noted above, the Seventh Circuit has never considered a dismissal under either § 707(b) or § 707(a) and therefore has not adopted the totality of the circumstances test; (2) that the cases holding that exempt assets should be considered in determining ability to pay have all been decided under § 707(b); and (3) that other Lloyd’s Names have successfully discharged then-debts in bankruptcy in this District.
The Court dismisses the third contention out of hand. As Collins and Brisky and the Firm have repeatedly urged in this case, the question of a debt- or’s good faith in filing must be decided on an
ad hoc
basis.
Zick,
As to the first contention, the Court concludes that Collins, Brisky, and the Firm should have been virtually certain from existing case law that the Court would apply the totality of the circumstances test. Although the Seventh Circuit has not addressed the question, the totality of the circumstances test has been widely adopted and is the law in many circuits.
See Kornfield,
Collins did not acknowledge the force of existing law. With only one exception, he failed to cite any of the cases on which the Court relied in dismissing his case. Collins grudgingly discussed Zick in his brief, but only in resistance to the reliance Lloyd’s placed on it.
Collins, Brisky, and the Firm instead tried to persuade the Court to follow the obscure, minority holdings of two bankruptcy courts that have determined no good faith filing requirement exists under § 707(a).
In re Landes,
Relying on summaries provided in
Landes,
Collins, Brisky, and the Firm additionally tried to persuade the Court to adopt what the
Landes
court characterized as the “frustrate the bankruptcy purpose” test. This test asks whether “the debtor is in bankruptсy with an intent to receive the sort of relief that Congress made available to petitioners under the chapter in question — -subject, of course, to any statutory limitations on the extent of that relief— and is willing to responsibly carry out the duties that Congress imposes on debtors as the cost of receiving such relief.”
In re Khan,
Collins’ second contention is that the cases considering the debtor’s exempt assets in determining good faith all arise under § 707(b) or under 11 U.S.C. § 1325. However, the “substantial abuse” standard of § 707(b) is more stringent than the “for cause” standard of § 707(a). The debtor’s good faith is merely one element of a substantial abuse analysis, while it may by itself constitute cause under § 707(a). Furthermore, Collins resorted once again to ostrich-like tactics and failed to discuss or even cite any of the § 707(b) or § 1325 cases.
This Court is well aware of its responsibility to carefully avoid penalizing arguments for legal evolution. Had Collins discussed any of the law unfavorable to his position; had he mentioned and refuted
Standards for Measuring Sanctions Under Rule 9011
“Rule 11 is not a fee-shifting statute in the sense that the loser pays. It is a law imposing sanctions if counsel files with improper motives or inadequate investigation.”
Id.
Rule 9011(c)(1)(A) limits the amount of sanctions to “the reasonable expenses and attorney’s fees incurred in presenting or opposing the motion,” Fed. R. Bankr.P 9011(c)(1)(A), but does not require that the court impose sanctions up to the limit. The purpose of both Rule 11 and Rule 9011 is deterrence. A sanction under Rule 11 should be the least severe that is adequate for deterrence.
Divane v. Krull Electric Co., Inc.,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, sanctions of a nature and amount yet to be determined will be imposed on Collins, Brisky and the Firm for violation of the provisions of § 105(a) and Rule 9011.
Notes
. While this section contains a discussion of the law, it is not to be read as the holding of this opinion. It is merely a recitation of the facts of the hearing on April 11-12, 2000, including the outcome of that hearing, an oral ruling dismissing Collins' case as a bad faith filing followed by the written Judgment Order docketed on April 18, 2000. Collins voluntarily dismissed his appeal of that ruling. The facts recited in this section are necessary to the holding of this opinion-that both Collins and his lawyers should be sanctioned for filing the bankruptcy petition.
. The Court found, and Collins conceded, that none of these policyholders have made any claims against Collins. The Court further found, and Collins conceded, that the only debt that Lloyd's is seeking to collect is the Berkos Judgment.
. Although Rule 11 does not permit monetary sanctions against a represented party for violation of this requirement, nonmonetary sanctions may be imposed against him.
. The Court takes judicial notice of the fact that the circumstances of the cases to which Brisky and the Firm refer are in fact different in at least one important respect: Lloyd’s did not file motions to dismiss those cases.
