Bаy Area Factors, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b), appeals the District Court’s order affirming the bankruptcy court’s denial of its motion for summary judgment in this action to determine the dischargeability of a debt under 11 U.S.C. § 523(a). On appeal, we are asked to determine whether a default judgment obtained in state court,' where the defendant did not defend the suit, has collateral estoppel effect against the debtor in a subsequent bankruptcy proceeding where the dis-chargeability of the debt is аt issue. For the reasons that follow, we conclude that it does.
I.
On December 11, 1991, Bay Area Factors (“BAF”) filed a complaint against Dennis Amiel Calvert, and numerous other defendants, in the Municipal Court of the State of California located in Santa Clara County. In its complaint, BAF sought to recover against Calvert for, inter alia, intentional misrepresentation, ‘ fraud and deceit, and breach of fiduciary duty in connection with the sale of food products to Frontier Sales, Inc. Because Calvert failed to respond to the complaint, the California state court entered a default judgment, on March 11,1992, against Calvert in the amount of $26,829.59. In an attempt to enforce the judgment in Tennessee, the default judgment was enrolled in the State of Tennessee on October 13, 1992, by order of the Shelby County, Tennessee Circuit Court for the Thirtieth Judicial District at Memphis. Calvert also failed to appear in or defend this action to enforce the California state court judgment.
On January 4, 1994, Calvert moved to join in his wife’s Chapter Seven petition in bankruptcy proceedings pending in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Western District of Tennessee. The motion was granted by the bankruptcy court on March 9, 1994. On June 20,1994, BAF filed an adversary proceeding in the bankruptcy court against Calvert seeking a nondischargeable judgment 1 against Calvert for $26,829.59, the amount of the state court judgment. The bankruptcy court, on July 25, 1994, discharged Calvert from all dischargeable debts but rеserved the question of the discharge-ability of the debt owed to BAF. On September 27, 1994, BAF filed a motion for summary judgment arguing that, pursuant to the doctrine of collateral estoppel, the California state court judgment of default precluded Calvert from relitigating the issues of intentional misrepresentation, fraud and deceit, and breach of fiduciary duty in the bankruptcy proceedings.
On February 13, 1995, the bankruptcy court denied BAF’s motion for summary judgment, refusing to apply the doctrine of collateral estoppel to the dischargeability issue in this bankruptcy proceeding. In the bankruptcy court’s view, the prior default judgment did not satisfy the “actually litigated” requirement for application of the doctrine of collateral estoppel. Recognizing the split of authority among district and bankruptcy courts and noting that the question was, as yet, unresolved by this Court, the court elected to adopt an equitable approach in view of the fact that neither party entered any evidence into the record in the California state court proceedings and in light of the policy that bankruptcy proceedings allow a debtor an opportunity for a “fresh start.”
On March 15, 1995, BAF moved for an interlocutory appeal to the District Court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 158(a). The United States District Court for the Western District of Tennessee granted BAF’s motion for leave to file an interlocutory appeal and affirmed the bankruptcy court’s decision denying BAF’s motion for summary judgment. The District Court was persuaded that the policy reasons cited by the bankruptcy court warranted an exception to the doctrine of collateral estoppel in bankruptcy cases. The
II.
The question we are asked to determine is whether a default judgment obtained in state court, where the defendant did not defend the suit, has collateral estoppel effect against the debtor in a subsequent bankruptcy proceeding where the dischargeability of the debt is at issue. Because this is a question of law, we review the District Court’s conclusion
de novo. In re Bursack,
Our determination of the collateral estop-pel effect of a state court default judgment in bankruptcy dischargeability proceedings begins with the Full Faith and Credit Statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1738, which requires the federal courts to give full faith and credit to the judicial proceedings of state courts.
See Migra v. Warren City Sch. Dist. Bd. of Ed.,
The ... judicial proceedings of any court of any ... State ... shall have the same full faith and credit in every court within the United States ... as they hаve by law or usage in the courts of such State ... from which they are taken.
28 U.S.C. § 1738 (1994). As the United States Supreme Court has noted in the context of issue and claim preclusion:
This statute directs a federal court to refer to the preclusion law of the State in which judgment was rendered. “It has long been established that § 1738 does not allow federal courts to employ their own rules ... in determining the effect of state judgments. Rather, it goes beyond the common law and commands a federal сourt to accept the rules chosen by the State from which the judgment is taken.”
Marrese v. American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons,
In
Marrese,
the Supreme Court, in accordance with the Full Faith and Credit Statute, instructed lower federal courts faced with the question of whether to give full faith and credit to a state court default judgment to “consider first the law of the State in which the judgment was rendered to determine its preclusive effect.”
Marrese
at 375,
Accordingly, this Court must first determine whether California law gives preclusive effect to default judgments. Instead of looking to California law to determine whether California would give a defаult judgment preclusive effect as
Marrese
instructs, the bankruptcy court applied the federal common law elements of collateral estoppel, as articulated by this Court in decisions issued before
Marrese,
and determined that the “actually litigated” prong of collateral estoppel was not satisfied.
2
In doing so, the bankruptcy court erred. Instead of analyzing whether the “actually litigated” element of collateral estoppel was satisfied, the bankruptcy court should have looked to California state law and then
California courts have held that collateral estoppel bars relitigation of an issue on which a party has obtained a default judgment. According to California law, “a party who permits a default to be entered confesses the truth of all the material allegations in the complaint. A default judgment is as conclusive upon the issues tended by the complaint as if rendered after an answer is filed and а trial is held on the allegations.”
In re Naemi,
Because the state in which the judgment was rendered would give the default judgment preclusive effect,
Marrese
instructs that the federal court must then determine whether an exception exists to § 1738. First, we note that in
Marrese
the Court held that the fact that a claim, such as the one in the case at hand, is within the exclusive jurisdiction of the federal courts does not suggest that an 'exception exists to § 1738.
3
Marrese
at 380,
The Supreme Court has not spoken on the issue of whether a default judgment should be exceрted from the application of § 1738 in bankruptcy discharge proceedings. The Court has decided a somewhat related issue in holding that the bankruptcy court may find a debt nondischargeable even though the debt has been reduced to a consent judgment in state court without any reference to fraud.
See Brown v. Felsen,
concedes that the prior decree is binding. That is the сornerstone of his claim. He does not assert a new ground for recovery nor does he attack the validity of the prior judgment. Rather, what he is attempting to meet here is the new defense of bankruptcy which respondent has interposed between petitioner and the sum determined to be due him.
Brown v. Felsen,
The Court has also held that generally “collateral estoppel principles ... apply in discharge exception proceedings pursuant to § 523(a).”
Grogan v. Garner,
If the important issues were not actually litigated in the prior proceeding, as is the case with a default judgment, then collateral estoppel does not bar relitigation in the bankruptcy court.
Id. at 228 (emphasis added). This Court is not bound by this language in Spilman for two reasons. First, the precise issue of the collateral estoppel effect of default judgments was not before the Court in Spilman. In Spilman, an Ohio state court awarded plaintiff $207,748.95 for personal injuries caused by the defendant’s intoxicated driving but the state court found that defendant did not act willfully or wantonly. Subsequent to the judgment, the debtor filed bankruptcy and the defendant in the state court suit sought to have the debt deemed dischargea-ble relying on the doctrine of collateral estop-pel. 5 Id. at 225. Although the record was unclear regarding the basis upon which the state court made the finding of the absence of willful or wanton misconduct, it was clear that a default judgment was not at issue in Spilman.
Second, Spilman was decided before the Supreme Court in Marrese instructed federal courts to use the preclusion principles of the state where the judgment was entered and not to employ their own rules of preclusion. Without the benefit of direction from the Supreme Court, the Court in Spilman applied principles of collateral estoppel as articulated by federal courts instead of looking to whether Ohio would have given preclusive effect to the state court judgment. Id. at 227. Thus, without regard to whether the State of Ohio would give preclusive effect to a default judgment in bankruptcy proceedings, the Court assumed that a default judgment would not have preclusive effect because the issues in the suit resulting in the default judgment would not have been actually litigated.
The bankruptcy court below suggested that this Court, in
Wheeler v. Laudani,
Recognizing the approach taken in
Spil-man
and the subsequent Supreme Court decisions on the subject, our Court in
In re Bursack,
Following the dictates of M car ese, the Bursack Court, unlike the Court in Spilman and Wheeler, looked to Tennessee law to determine whether, despite Bursack’s failure to appear at trial, the state court judgment would have preclusive effect in the bankruptcy proceedings. Because default judgments in Tennessee have preclusive effect, the Court concluded that Tennessee would allow the use of collateral estoppel under the facts in Bursack. Bursack then noted that “[wjhether or not any fеderal policy requires an exception to the normal operation of § 1738 in the case of a trae default judgment, no provision of federal law requires an exception in circumstances such as those present here” where the debtor “retained an attorney, filed an answer, asserted cross-claims, and participated in discovery.” Id. at 54-55. Thus, the Sixth Circuit has not yet faced a case involving a true default judgment such as in the case at hand.
Because California gives preclusive effect to default judgments, we must determine, as a matter of first impression, whether an exception exists that would exempt a default judgment from the application of § 1738 in bankruptcy dischargeability proceedings. To determine whether an exception exists, the Supreme Court instructs, “Resolution of this question will depend on the particular federal statute as well as the nature of the claim or issue involved in the subsequent federal aсtion. Our previous decisions indicate that the primary consideration must be the intent of Congress.”
Marrese
at 386,
The United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit recently addressed the precise issue before this Court. In
In re Nourbakhsh,
Numerous bankruptcy courts have faced the issue of whether an exception to § 1738 exists in the case of a default judgment and the results have differed. Two of the more extensively reasoned opinions with opposing holdings are
In re Byard,
This Court’s review of the Bankruptcy Code and the extensive amount of legislative history of the Code confirms the court’s conclusion in
In re Byard
that neither reveal anything that would suggest that Congress intended to exclude default judgments obtained in state court from the applicability of the Full Faith and Credit Statute in dis-
In contrast, the bankruptcy court in In re Hall concluded that the reasoning used by Brown v. Felsen to except res judicata from § 1738 applies equally to collateral estoppel. But as we have noted, Brown gave effect to the state court judgment. That judgment simply had not raised the issue of fraud. The judgment here did.
Brown forbade the application of res judi-cata in bankruptcy dischargeability proceedings on behalf of the debtor in part because the Court was of the view that allowing a debtor in a dischargeability proceeding in bankruptcy court to employ res judicata would force creditors to try dischargeability issues in state court “to the hilt” in the event that the debtor might some day file bankruptcy. In the context of collateral estoppel, the In re Hall court was persuaded by the argument that a defendant who is sued in state court will be forced to
defend the suit to the hilt in the state court in order to preserve the dischargeability of the debt even though no bankruptcy case is pending and there may never be a bankruptcy case. Otherwise, the creditor can make the debt nondischargeable simply by obtaining a default judgment which recites that it is based on fraud, false pretenses, embezzlement, larceny, or some other ground of nondischargeability. An individual could not forego defending a state court lawsuit and still have the right to a determination of the dischargeability by the appropriate court if or when he files bankruptcy.
In re Hall at 556. This reasoning in In re Hall is unconvincing. Unlike the valid argument presented in Brown, this argument presumes that we do not have a system of law which expects, and in fact demands, that individuals sued respond to the suit and which subjects to liability those who do not. Thus, this rеason for not applying res judica-ta to the discharge of debts created through fraud does not apply equally to collateral estoppel.
The court in In re Hall was also concerned with the “problem of premature litigation of dischargeability issues.” Id. at 556. Specifically, the court was concerned that the defendant would be forced to litigate “in state court not to disprove the plaintiffs claim on the merits but specifically to preserve the question of dischargeability in bankruptcy.” Id. at 557. Requiring the debtor to do this, the court said, would be contrary to the policy of bankruptcy laws which favors litigation of discharge issues in bankruptcy courts. Id. We find this argument unpersuasive. The debtor is required to litigate the fraud issue when he litigates other issues in state court or he will be bound by the judgment despite the policy. Nor does this result add to litigation in the state court. The fraud issue is already there. The issues in state court fraud suits and bankruptcy court discharge proceedings are frequently the same; the debtor is not forced to litigate any claim or any issue that he would not otherwise have to in state court simply for fear that he might file bankruptcy one day and seek to have debts declared dischargeable.
There are additional considerations, not raised by In re Nourbakhsh, In re Byard, or In re Hall, which lead us to the conclusion that a creditor may utilize collateral estoppel to prevent litigation of the dischargeability of a debt after obtaining a default judgment on claims of fraud in state court. First, it is already accepted by our Court that, when the defendant in the state court suit has defended the suit, at least in part, collateral estoppel will apply. See In re Bursack, supra. If this Court were to hold that where the defendant does nothing to defend the suit collateral estoppel will not apply, an unacceptable incentive may result. A defendant contemplating bankruptcy may permit a default judgment to be entered- to avoid a jury determination of fraud damages, or in hopes that, by postponing the time when the fraud.issue will be tried, memories may fade and evidence may become unavailable.
Second, there is the possibility that a defendant who has had a default judgment entered against him and who later files bankruptcy may not have had the incentive to fully litigate his ease because he was unable to pay a judgment. This concern, however, applies whether the defendant defends a suit in part or not at all. In both scenarios, thеre is the potential 'that a defendant with limited financial resources will, not fully defend a
In the absence of any indication in the Bankruptсy Code or legislative history suggesting that Congress intended an exception to § 1738 apply to true default judgments and with no principled distinction between cases where a defendant participates in part in defense of the state court suit and cases where the defendant does not respond at all, we conclude that collateral estoppel applies to true default judgments in bankruptcy dis-chargeability proceedings in those states which would give such judgments that effect.
III.
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the District Court is REVERSED and the case is REMANDED to the District Court to conduct proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. A debt is nondischargeable in bankruptcy when the debt is for property received by false pretenses, a false representation, actual fraud, fraud while acting in a fiduciary capacity, or willful and malicious injurious conduct of the debtor. 11 U.S.C. §§ 523(a)(2), (4), (6) (1993).
. As stated in
Spilman v. Harley,
. The issue of nondischargeability of a debt under §§ 532(a)(2), (4), ánd (6) is, as a matter of federal law, governed by the terms of the Bankruptcy Code and is within the exclusive jurisdiction of the bankruptcy courts.
See Brown v. Felsen,
.
Grogan
clarified Supreme Court decisions only suggesting that collateral estoppel principles apply in bankruptcy proceedings. For example, in
Brown v. Felsen,
. Debts incurred by causing wanton, wilful injuty to another's person or property are nondis-chargeable in bankruptcy. See 11 U.S.C. §-523(a)(6).
. The state court did, however, include a specific finding of fraud in the judgment. The state court did not make any specific findings in the judgment in the case at hand.
