John A. Cochrane, a Minnesota attorney and Chapter 7 debtor in bankruptcy, appeals from a final order entered in the United States District Court
1
for the District of Minnesota affirming a decision of the United States Bankruptcy Court
2
for the District of Minnesota (hereinafter the bankruptcy court) granting summary judgment in favor of Tudor Oaks Limited Partnership (Tudor Oaks) and holding as a matter of law that Coch-rane’s debt to Tudor Oaks, which has been reduced to a final state court judgment, is
*980
nondisehargeable in bankruptcy pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(4).
Tudor Oaks Ltd. Partnership v. Cochrane (In re Cochrane),
Civ. No. 3-95-389 (D.Minn. Feb. 6, 1996),
aff'g
Background
The judgment debt that is the subject of this litigation arose out of a Minnesota state court action (hereinafter referred to as “the underlying state court action”) which was filed in 1987 by S.B. McLaughlin & Co. (McLaughlin), a former Tudor Oaks partner. McLaughlin originally sued Cochrane, Tudor Oaks, K.S.C.S. Properties, Inc. (KSCS), and others in Minnesota state court on a theory of breach of fiduciary duties. At the time the action was commenced, Tudor Oaks was a limited partnership chartered in Ontario, Canada. The parties were subsequently realigned, and Tudor Oaks became a plaintiff while Cochrane and KSCS remained defendants. The case proceeded to trial before a jury in the summer of 1992. By that time, Tudor Oaks had dissolved, but the state trial court was not informed of the dissolution. At trial, the jury rendered a special verdict which found, among other things, that Cochrane had breached a fiduciary duty to Tudor Oaks resulting in damages of $1,628 million and that Cochrane and KSCS had conspired to breach fiduciary duties to Tudor Oaks resulting in damages of $3.52 million. The state trial court entered judgment against Cochrane awarding Tudor Oaks $1,628 million plus prejudgment interest and further entered judgment against KSCS awarding Tudor Oaks $3.52 million plus prejudgment interest. On appeal, the Minnesota Court of Appeals, among other things, affirmed the finding that Cochrane had breached his fiduciary duties, ordered a reduction in the total amount of damages awarded to Tudor Oaks from Cochrane and KSCS, and remanded the case to the state trial court with directions. 3 Accordingly, the state trial court, on remand, entered final judgment holding Cochrane and KSCS jointly and severally liable to Tudor Oaks in the amount of $1,722,025.52. 4 S.B. McLaughlin & Co. v. Cochrane, No. 87-11035 (Minn.Dist.Ct. Apr. 11, 1994) (amended order).
Cochrane then brought a separate action in Minnesota state court (hereinafter referred to as “Cochrane’s independent state court action”) seeking to have Tudor Oaks’s judgment against him and KSCS vacated on grounds that Tudor Oaks’s dissolution during the pendency of the underlying state court action deprived the trial court of subject matter jurisdiction or that the judgment was obtained by fraud. The trial court in Coch-rane’s independent state court action entered summary judgment in favor of Tudor Oaks and dismissed Cochrane’s claims.
Cochrane v. Tudor Oaks Condominium Project,
No. 93-16553 (Minn.Dist.Ct. July 6, 1994). The state trial court reasoned: Cochrane’s failure to raise a capacity-to-sue defense during the underlying state court action resulted in a waiver,
id.
at 9; the record failed as a matter of law to establish that Tudor Oaks perpetrated a fraud on the trial court in the underlying state court action or that the judgment in the underlying state court action was obtained by fraud,
id.
at 11-12; and, finally, although Tudor Oaks did not have a right to maintain the action, McLaughlin had a right to continue the action commenced before Tudor Oaks’s dissolution,
id.
at 14-15. On March 28, 1995, the Minnesota Court of Appeals affirmed the dismissal of Cochrane’s independent state court action.
Id.,
In the meantime, in December 1992, Coch-rane filed for Chapter 11 relief in bankruptcy in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Middle District of Florida. Cochrane listed Tudor Oaks among his creditors on his Schedule F. The Florida bankruptcy court transferred the case to the District of Minnesota. The bankruptcy court in Minnesota granted Tudor Oaks’s request for relief from the automatic stay under 11 U.S.C. § 362, thereby permitting the underlying state court action to proceed to final judgment. The bankruptcy court also converted Cochrane’s Chapter 11 bankruptcy ease to a Chapter 7 proceeding. On May 24, 1994, following the entry of final judgment in the underlying state court action, Tudor Oaks— by and through its former partner and so-called “liquidating trustee,” McLaughlin— brought the present adversary proceeding in Cochrane’s bankruptcy case and moved for summary judgment, claiming that Cochrane’s judgment debt to Tudor Oaks is nondisehargeable by operation of 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(4). Section 523(a)(4) provides: “A discharge [in bankruptcy] does not discharge an individual debtor from any debt ... for fraud or defalcation while acting in a fiduciary capacity, embezzlement, or larceny.” Upon review, the bankruptcy court considered final and binding certain factual findings made in the underlying state court action. In reciting “the pertinent facts that were settled by the Minnesota state courts’ decisions,”
Discussion
We review the bankruptcy court’s grant of summary judgment
de novo.
Our review is the same as that of the district court. Summary judgment was properly granted if, assuming all reasonable inferences favorable to the non-moving party, there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c);
see, e.g., Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
Standing
Cochrane first argues that the bankruptcy court erred in failing to dismiss Tudor Oaks’s adversary proceeding on the ground that Tudor Oaks, a dissolved partnership, lacked standing to bring this proceeding in bankruptcy court. As stated above, Tudor Oaks’s former partner and so-called “liquidating trustee,” McLaughlin, filed this adversary proceeding on behalf of Tudor Oaks. Nevertheless, Cochrane argues that, because Tudor Oaks was dissolved by operation of Ontario law (the law applicable to the partnership) prior to his bankruptcy filing, it is a non-existent entity and neither Tudor Oaks nor McLaughlin can engage in the present bankruptcy litigation.
In rejecting Cochrane’s standing argument, the bankruptcy court explained as follows:
[rjegardless of whether the named party-plaintiff [i.e., Tudor Oaks] is a valid, subsisting legal entity with capacity to sue or be sued, its one remaining partner has a right under Ontario law to wind up the affairs and to continue litigation under its name to do so. During the pendency of this adversary proceeding, the Hennepin County District Court held to that effect, in ruling against [Cochrane] in his independent lawsuit for relief from the original judgment in [Tudor Oaks’s] favor. [Coch-rane] is collaterally bound by this ruling, even though he apparently has an appeal from that judgment pending.
We first consider the bankruptcy court’s collateral estoppel rationale with re-speet to the standing issue. The application of collateral estoppel is an issue of law which we review
de novo. United States v. Brekke,
Upon de novo review, we apply Ontario law in determining whether Tudor Oaks had the capacity to bring the present bankruptcy litigation. The Ontario Partnership Act, § 38, provides in relevant part:
After the dissolution of a partnership, the authority of each partner to bind the firm and other rights and obligations of the partners continue despite the dissolution so far as is necessary to wind up the affairs of the partnership and to complete transactions begun but unfinished at the time of the dissolution.
Applying the above-quoted standard to the circumstances of the present ease, we agree with the bankruptcy court that McLaughlin’s efforts in bringing this adversary proceeding on behalf of Tudor Oaks constitutes a partner’s exercise of rights “necessary to wind up the affairs of the partnership and to complete transactions begun but unfinished at the time of the dissolution.” Thus, McLaughlin has standing to litigate this bankruptcy matter in the name of Tudor Oaks.
Application of collateral estoppel to factual issues
Next, Cochrane argues that the bankruptcy court erred in holding that, according to principles of collateral estoppel, he is bound by certain factual findings made in the underlying state court action. He maintains that those findings have no preclusive effect because he was denied a full and fair opportunity to litigate the pertinent issues. As to the three jury findings identified by the bankruptcy court, which involved instances where Cochrane breached fiduciary duties to his clients, Cochrane argues that there was no factual basis for the bankruptcy court’s findings. He also argues that there was never any finding as to whether the state court judgment was obtained by fraud.
We hold that the bankruptcy court did not err in applying the doctrine of collateral estoppel to the jury’s findings regarding Cochrane’s breach of fiduciary duties. To begin, it is now well settled that “the principle of collateral estoppel applies in bankruptcy court to bar the relitigation of factual or legal issues that were determined in a prior state court action.”
Johnson v. Miera (In re Miera),
To the extent Cochrane argues that there was never a finding on the issue of whether the state court judgment was obtained by fraud, he is bound by the state trial court’s findings in his independent state court action that — with reference to the underlying state court action — no fraud upon the court occurred in connection with Tudor Oaks’s dissolution and, moreover, the judgment was not obtained by fraud.
Cochrane v. Tudor Oaks Condominium Project,
No. 93-16553, slip op. at 11-15 (Minn.Dist.Ct. July 6,1994). Although the Minnesota Court of Appeals affirmed solely upon a finding of waiver, we hold that the above-noted fraud-related findings in Cochrane’s independent state court action were final for purposes of applying the doctrine of collateral estoppel because that litigation had reached such a stage that, in our view, there is “no really good reason for permitting [those issues] to be litigated again.”
Morrell,
Nondischargeability under § 523(a)(A)
Cochrane challenges the bankruptcy court’s legal conclusion that his conduct, *984 which gave rise to the judgment in the underlying state court action, constituted fraud or “defalcation” within the meaning of 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(4). Focusing primarily on the meaning of the term “defalcation,” Coch-rane argues that the bankruptcy court erred in interpreting the statute to include innocent or negligent misdeeds rather than solely intentional wrongs, such as fraud, embezzlement, or larceny. We disagree.
To begin, “[w]hether a relationship is a ‘fiduciary' one within the meaning of section 523(a)(4) is a question of federal law.”
Lewis v. Scott,
We also reject Cochrane’s argument that the bankruptcy court erroneously defined “defalcation” to include innocent or negligent misdeeds rather than solely intentional wrongs such as fraud, embezzlement, or larceny. While we doubt Cochrane could demonstrate that his acts were innocent or merely negligent, that question is, in any event, not dispositive because a finding of “defalcation” does not require evidence of intentional fraud or other intentional wrongdoing.
Defalcation is defined as the “misappropriation of trust funds or money held in any fiduciary capacity; [the] failure to properly account for such funds.” Under section 523(a)(4), defalcation “includes the innocent default of a fiduciary who fails to account fully for money received.” ... An individual may be liable for defalcation without having the intent to defraud.
Lewis v. Scott,
Conclusion
For the reasons discussed above, we affirm the order of the district court affirming the bankruptcy court’s grant' of summary judgment in favor of Tudor Oaks on its claim that Cochrane’s judgment debt is nondischargeable in bankruptcy pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(4).
Notes
. The Honorable Michael J. Davis, United States District Judge for the District of Minnesota.
. The Honorable Gregory F. Kishel, United States Bankruptcy Judge for the District of Minnesota.
. The Minnesota Court of Appeals also reversed a judgment in favor of McLaughlin.
. The total award included $1,256,666.00 in damages, $465,359.52 in prejudgment interest, and $22,542.70 in costs and disbursements.
-. Actually, at the time the bankruptcy court filed its opinion on March 30, 1995, the Minnesota Court of Appeals had, unbeknownst to the bankruptcy court, only two days earlier affirmed the state trial court’s order dismissing Cochrane’s independent state court action.
Cochrane v. Tudor Oaks Condominium Project,
