IFC Credit Corporation voluntarily declared bankruptcy under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code on July 27, 2009. Its bankruptcy petition was signed only by its president, however, and he is not a lawyer — a slip that precipitated this appeal— though the next day the company filed an amended petition signed by a lawyer.
Prior to the filing of the bankruptcy petition, a creditor of IFC (Northbrook Bank & Trust — actually its predecessor, First Chicago Bank & Trust, but we can ignore that detail) had sued IFC, charging fraud. Upon the filing of the original petition, all suits against the debtor were automatically stayed. 11 U.S.C. § 362(a)(1). So Northbrook refiled its fraud complaint as a claim in the bankruptcy proceeding. In response, IFC’s trustee in bankruptcy moved to rescind payments of pre-petition debts that IFC had made to Northbrook, on the ground that the payments were voidable preferences because they had been made within 90 days before the declaration of bankruptcy. See 11 U.S.C. § 547(b), (f). The parties settled the trustee’s preferences claim conditional on a determination that the bankruptcy court had had jurisdiction over it.
Northbrook’s jurisdictional argument, rejected by the bankruptcy and district judges and now pressed on us, is that the fact that the original petition for bankruptcy was not signed by a lawyer made the bankruptcy proceeding void, or as state court cases say (though the question whether a person or firm or other entity may litigate in federal court pro se is a question of federal procedural law rather than of state law,
Elustra v. Mineo,
Bankruptcy Rule 9011(a) allows the omission of a signature, including we assume the signature of a lawyer, to be “corrected promptly.” But it is unclear whether the corporation in this case was represented and its lawyer just accidentally failed to sign the pleading. For the complaint was signed, only by a person— IFC’s president — ineligible to sign because he was not a lawyer. IFC’s house counsel had, it is true, supervised the preparation of the petition and filed it with the clerk of the bankruptcy court. But we haven’t been told why she didn’t sign it. Without an answer to that question we can’t determine whether Rule 9011(a) is applicable.
We also set to one side the doctrine of “nunc pro tunc” (now for then). It is not a substitute for relation back. It can’t be used to revise history, but only to correct inaccurate records.
Central Laborers’ Pension, Welfare & Annuity Funds v. Griffee,
So we must meet Northbrook’s jurisdictional argument head on.
Corporations unlike human beings are not permitted to litigate pro se.
Rowland v. California Men’s Colony,
But there is a difference, unrelated to scale or resources, between individual self-representation and corporate representation. There is no agency problem when an individual represents himself (and remember that with just a few exceptions unless he is a lawyer he is forbidden to represent anyone other than himself), but there can be an acute agency problem when the pro se litigant is a corporation. A corporation can’t literally represent itself; it has to be represented by an individual. And like any institution a corporation is itself a collective of individuals. In this case the president was representing the corporation (initially), but in other cases there might be a question whether the designated individual’s relation to the corporation made him an appropriate representative of its owners. Confining corporate representation to lawyers mitigates the problem.
That is a reason why corporations are represented by lawyers rather than a reason why a corporation, acting through its board of directors, should be forbidden to select a nonlawyer to represent it in litigation. But a court does not permit an individual to represent another person; why should it treat corporations differently in this respect? Judges for good reason don’t like dealing with pro se litigants and have better grounds for their antipathy when the pro se litigant is a corporation, not only because corporate representation is third party rather than first party but also because corporations enjoy a number of privileges denied individuals, such as the cloak of limited liability worn by their investors (whether individuals or other corporations), which enables corporations to raise equity capital more cheaply than individuals can. Inability to litigate pro se can be thought of as part of the price for corporations’ privileges.
United States v. Hagerman, supra,
But is prohibiting corporations from litigating pro se a rule of federal subject-matter jurisdiction, as Northbrook insists, so that the only thing a federal court can do with a complaint (including a petition for bankruptcy) not signed by a lawyer is dismiss it? That might seem a question of no practical significance, since the complaint can be refiled forthwith, signed by a lawyer — as happened in this case. But the statute of limitations may have run in the interim, however brief. Moreover, preference liability in bankruptcy is limited to payments made to favored creditors within 90 days before the declaration of bankruptcy (unless the creditor is an insider, in which event the period is extended to a year, 11 U.S.C. § 547(b)(4)(B)) and so could be lost if the date of filing were delayed by even a day.
But we can’t think why the rule barring corporations from litigating without counsel should be deemed a rule of subject-matter jurisdiction. In part to spare the courts the bother of addressing issues not presented by the parties, and also in recognition of the adversary character of the American adjudicative process,
Henderson v. Shinseki,
— U.S. —,
An example of a case outside federal judicial competence is one that does not fit within the limits of the federal judicial power set forth in Article III of the Constitution, or a type of suit expressly barred by Congress, for example under its constitutional power to restrict the appellate jurisdiction of the Supreme Court (Article III, section 2, provides in part that “the Supreme Court shall have appellate Jurisdiction, both as to Law and Fact, with such Exceptions, and under such Regulations!],] as the Congress shall make”) or its implied (and exercised) power to refuse to allow federal courts to entertain diversity suits in which the stakes fall short of a dollar threshold specified by Congress.
Arbaugh v. Y & H Corp., supra,
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The primary distinction is thus between classes of case that the Constitution or legislation declares off limits to the federal courts and errors in the conduct of cases that are within limits. (The exception is for statutory limits on the time for filing an appeal. E.g.,
Bowles v. Russell,
The usual effects of establishing a jurisdictional prerequisite to suit are twofold. First, the prerequisite is not waivable,
Arbaugh v. Y & H Corp., supra,
These consequences of an absence of subject-matter jurisdiction are not appropriate punishments for pro se litigation by a corporation. Requiring a do-over of a lawsuit is costly to everyone yet can actually benefit the plaintiff — the usual author of the jurisdictional mistake — because dismissal without prejudice allows a complete do-over if the plaintiff can refile his case without running afoul of the jurisdictional obstacle that wrecked his original claim. That could be a particularly costly consequence if - the jurisdictional defect were discovered late in a protracted bankruptcy, as it was here; deeming a pro se filing by a corporation a defect of subject-matter jurisdiction would require IFC to file a new bankruptcy proceeding more than two years after the original and amended petitions.
There is no danger that litigation by unrepresented corporations will flourish unless the prohibition of lay representation of corporations is deemed jurisdictional because opponents will often prefer to litigate against a party that is not represented and so will waive any objection. Judges as we said dislike pro se litigation and will be vigorous enforcers of the rule that bars it, except in cases like this where the violation was utterly inconsequential.
We conclude that the rule is not jurisdictional — and we note that even the Illinois courts, staunch defenders of the “nullity” rule though they are, consider it discretionary rather than mandatory, see
Applebaum v. Rush University Medical Center, supra,
Dismissal would have been proper, in order to implement the rule, had the court discovered at the outset that IFC was unrepresented. But having obtained counsel, IFC could resurrect the litigation by amending its petition on the authority of Bankruptcy Rule 1009(a) (“a voluntary petition ... may be amended by the debtor as a matter of course at any time before the case is closed”) with relation back to the date of the original filing. That is what it did.
It’s true that Rule 1009(a) doesn’t mention relation back, unlike its counterpart in nonbankruptcy cases, Fed.R.Civ.P. 15(c), which allows relation back on various grounds in cases governed by the civil rules (bankruptcy proceedings have their own procedural rules). Yet relation back can be important in a bankruptcy case because without it amendments to the petition would shift the preference period.
Rule 7015 of the bankruptcy rules applies Rule 15 of the civil rules to adversary proceedings and Rule 1018 applies it to contested involuntary petitions — that is, contested declarations of bankruptcy filed by creditors rather than by debtors. See
Bixby v. First National Bank of Elwood,
Most important, Rule 15(c) doesn’t specify correction of formal defects as a ground for relation back either — yet so obviously appropriate is allowing relation back on such a ground that the courts allow it anyway.
BCS Financial Corp. v. United States,
Affirmed.
