MEMORANDUM AND ORDER ON DEBTOR’S MOTION TO REOPEN
Debtor James R. Dewberry (“Debtor”) filed a Chapter 7 bankruptcy case on December 29, 1999, and received a discharge April 27, 2000. Shortly before the filing of his petition, on November 2, 1999, Debtor filed a charge of discrimination with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (“EEOC”). The complaint alleged that Debtor’s termination from employment, ostensibly for cause, occurred, in fact, because of his age and seniority with the company and that the Respondent, Atlanta Gas Light Company (“AGL”), was intentionally replacing personnel occupying positions such as Debtor’s with younger people in violation of federal law.
When Debtor filed his bankruptcy case on December 29, 1999, he did not list his discrimination claim against AGL as an asset in his schedules. The only reference to AGL was in Schedule B-Personal Property, Item 11, which calls for Debtor to
On November 30, 2000, Debtor filed a complaint against the Atlanta Gas Light Company in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Georgia. He asserted that he had received a right to sue letter from the EEOC, alleged age discrimination, and sought a judgment, including back pay, injunctive relief, liquidated damages, restoration of all employment benefits, including pension, insurance, attorney’s fees, costs, and other unspecified relief. The complaint was amended on January 31, 2001. AGL filed a motion to dismiss that case on May 14, 2001, alleging that Debtor-the plaintiff in that case-lacked ' standing to assert the pre-petition claim which could be appropriately pursued, if at all, by the Chapter 7 Trustee, and alternatively that the doctrine of judicial estoppel should be interposed to prevent Debtor from pursuing the lawsuit which was not revealed to the Bankruptcy Court, the Trustee, or the creditors during the pendency of his case.
Apparently in response to this filing in the District Court, Debtor filed a Motion to Reopen on June 5, 2001, in order to amend the schedules and add the claim against AGL. AGL filed an objection to the Motion to Reopen on June 8, 2001, and the matter was set for oral argument. Debtor testified that he disclosed the nature of his claim against AGL to his bankruptcy counsel, William S. Orange, III, and assumed that it would be properly disclosed in the petition and schedules. However, at the time he executed the petition and schedules under oath, he either failed to read them or failed to question whether they were sufficient to place the Trustee or creditors on notice that a claim of potentially substantial magnitude against AGL existed. As a result of that omission, the case was administered as a “no-asset case” and closed on May 18, 2000, shortly after the expiration of the deadline for parties to object to the Debtor’s discharge.
AGL takes the position that because of the sequence of events, Debtor could not reasonably be found to have omitted scheduling this claim in good faith, but rather must have been engaged in some fraud or intentional design to conceal it from his creditors. As a result, AGL argues that the Court should deny Debtor’s Motion to Reopen.
Motions to reopen are governed by 11 U.S.C. § 350 which provides:
(a) After an estate is fully administered and the court has discharged the trustee, the court shall close the case.
(b) A case may be reopened in the court in which such case was closed to administer assets, to accord relief to the debt- or, or for other cause.
This Court has recently considered another Section 350 dispute and ruled that a debtor cannot show good faith when debt- or’s omission of a
creditor
from his or her schedules occurred because of fraud or intentional design, rather than through mere oversight, and that a motion to reopen can and should be denied.
See In re Marshall Bruce Garrett,
Ultimately the decision to reopen is vested in the discretion of the Court.
See Nintendo Co. v. Patten (In re Alpex Computer Corp.),
In
Garrett,
the Motion to Reopen was an effort to “accord relief to the debtor” to pursue a lien avoidance and a discharge-ability determination. I found, under
Samuel v. Baitcher (In re Baitcher),
I hold that a debtor’s good faith or lack of good faith is irrelevant to the question of whether to reopen a case when the purpose of the reopening is for the administration of undisclosed assets of the bankruptcy estate. This Court is unwilling to punish Debtor’s creditors based merely on the fact of Debtor’s nondisclosure.
See Travelers Indem. Co. of Ill. v. Griner (In re Griner),
I recognize that an underlying assumption on the part of Debtor and AGL is that granting the Motion to Reopen will emasculate AGL’s assertion of judicial estoppel in the United States District Court action and that denying the motion will in effect work to grant AGL’s motion on that ground in that Court. This assumption is widely held.
See Daniel,
This assumption, however, is incorrect. Judicial estoppel is a doctrine employed to protect the integrity of the judiciary.
See Daniel,
Moreover, I would view my decision to reopen of only marginal, if any, relevance to that Court’s decision. Debtor cannot un-ring the bell. Debtor omitted
In
Booker T. Brown v. Savannah Rehabilitation & Nursing Center,
Civ. No. 497-75, slip op. (S.D. Ga. filed July 16, 1997), the court focused on three factors to determine if a plaintiff was judicially estopped from bringing a suit that he failed to list as an asset in his bankruptcy schedules. The court looked to whether the claim accrued prior to the filing of the bankruptcy petition, the debtor’s justification for its omission, and whether or not the petition was amended.
Id.
at 2-3. Under this multi-layered analysis, the court viewed the debtor’s omission in his bankruptcy case as an element-but not a dispositive element-in deciding the judicial estoppel issue.
See id.; see also
A.S. Deeks, Raising the Cost of Lying: Rethinking Erie for Judicial Estoppel, 64 U. Chi. L.R. 873, 876 (1997)(“[C]ourts appear consciously to leave the doctrine’s boundaries vague, since it may be advisable not to prescribe too many rules for the application of a doctrine designed to protect the integrity of the courts.”) (quoting
In re Cassidy,
In this case, the Court in which the discrimination case is pending is fully equipped to view the Debtor’s actions, weigh his testimony as to good faith, and reach a conclusion as to whether judicial estoppel should apply. That analysis might in fact be impacted if this Court finds that Debtor’s good faith must be shown in order to grant the Motion to Reopen, as in Garrett, supra, and adjudicated his good faith or lack thereof in this order. I find, however, that when reopening of the case is sought for the purpose of administering a previously undisclosed asset, the question of debtor’s good faith is irrelevant. Good faith is relevant, if at all, as it applies to the acts of the Chapter 7 Trustee.
If, as here, there is no suggestion that the Trustee acted in bad faith, then the test for reopening to administer assets is simply whether the administrative expense and inconvenience outweighs the potential benefit to the estate. Here, it does not. At this point, creditors holding scheduled claims in excess of $270,689.00 have received nothing. A case is pending which, if successful, will recover property of the estate. While what Debtor originally revealed was an exempt asset, his retirement, AGL has not demonstrated that a recovery in this case will be exempt from creditors. As such any recovery will be paid first to creditors, with any surplus paid to the Debtor. See 11 U.S.C. § 726(a)(l)-(6). Counsel has been employed in the case pending in the District Court. After the reappointment of a Trustee, the Trustee may determine whether to intervene and prosecute that case, including defense of the judicial estoppel motion, with existing counsel or to employ separate counsel, or to abandon the claim.
Here, to administer what is potentially a valuable asset and attempt to pay creditors, I find that the Motion to Reopen should be granted. As articulated above, I make no finding as to
Debtor’s
good faith
Notes
. The issue addressed in
Griner
was whether to enjoin a debtor from prosecuting a state
