The “automatic stay” is a statutory injunction against efforts outside of bankruptcy to collect debts from a debtor who is under the protection of the bankruptcy court. 11 U.S.C. § 362. “An individual injured by any willful violation of [the automatic stay] shall recover actual damages, including costs and attorneys’ fees, and, in appropriate circumstances, may recover punitive damages.” § 362(h). The question presented by this appeal is whether the term “actual damages” is intended to include damages for purely emotional injury. We can find only one federal appellate case that deals with the question, and that only tangentially:
Fleet Mortgage Group, Inc. v. Kaneb,
Aiello had filed a petition for Chapter 7 bankruptcy (liquidation). One of her creditors, the defendant, to whom she owed a credit-card debt of about $1,000, asked her to reaffirm the debt and threatened to charge her with fraud if she refused. She did refuse, and the defendant did not charge her with fraud. She filed this class action suit to obtain redress on behalf of herself and similarly situated victims of the defendant’s alleged harassment. We may assume that the defendant violated the stay and that the violation was willful. The bankruptcy court, seconded by the district court, so assumed but nevertheless granted summary judgment for the defendant on the ground that Aiello could not obtain an award of damages under section 362(h) when her only evidence of injury was the statement in her affidavit that upon receipt of the threatening letter from the defendant she “cried, felt nauseous and scared and the letter caused her to quarrel with her husband.... Even after her meeting with her attorney, Ms. Aiello was still frightened.” Class certification was denied. The appeal challenges that denial as well as the grant of summary judgment for the creditor.
The Bankruptcy Code authorizes a creditor to ask the debtor to reaffirm the creditor’s debt so that it will not be discharged along with the debtor’s other debts when the debtor emerges from bankruptcy. 11 U.S.C. § 524(c). The re
*879
quest is usually made by a secured creditor, and the inducement to the debtor to accede to the request is that he avoids having his property repossessed, since the order discharging the debtor’s debts that usually concludes a bankruptcy proceeding does not extinguish a creditor’s security interest.
Dewsnup v. Timm,
In the absence of a valid reaffirmation agreement, an effort to collect a debt directly from the debtor after the latter has filed for bankruptcy is barred by the automatic stay, an injunction that “issues” without court action upon the filing of the petition for bankruptcy, 11 U.S.C. § 362(a), and prevents any creditor of the debtor from attempting to collect a debt other than by prosecuting a claim within the bankruptcy proceeding itself. See
In re Vitreous Steel Products Co.,
The automatic stay is primarily for the protection of the unsecured creditors as a group. The stay prevents (without need to ask a court for an injunction) a race by the creditors to seize the debtor’s assets, a race that by thwarting the orderly liquidation of those assets would yield the creditors as a group less than if they are restrained.
In re Rimsat, Ltd.,
That protection, however, is financial in character; it is not protection of peace of mind. Bankruptcy is a harrowing experience, for the bankrupt but sometimes for the creditors as well. The Bankruptcy Code was not drafted with reference to the emotional incidents of bankruptcy, however, and bankruptcy judges are not selected with reference to
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their likely ability to evaluate claims of emotional injury. That is not to suggest that victims of tortious infliction of emotional distress in the course of a bankruptcy proceeding are orphans of the law. A creditor who resorts to extortion or intimidation exposes himself to a suit under state tort law. The automatic stay is not an obstacle, because it does not apply to suits by the debtor.
Alpern v. Lieb,
The office of section 362(h) is not to redress tort violations but to protect the rights conferred by the automatic stay. If one creditor muscled out the others in violation of the stay, the bankruptcy court would impose monetary sanctions under subsection (h). If the defendant here had intimidated the debtor into giving up her right of discharge, the bankruptcy court would have ordered under the authority of the same subsection the monetary relief necessary to restore her to the financial position she would have occupied had the defendant not resorted to intimidation. The interest in judicial economy, as embodied in the “clean-up” doctrine of equity,
Wal-Mart Stores, Incorporated Associates’ Health & Welfare Plan v. Wells,
The law has always been wary of claims of emotional distress, because they are so easy to manufacture. For a long time damages for such distress were generally limited to cases in which the plaintiff was able to prove some other injury. See
Restatement (Second) of Torts
§ 46 comment b, § 436A (1965); W. Page Keeton
et al., Prosser and Keeton on the Law of Torts
§ 54, pp. 361-65 (5th ed.1984); Archibald H. Throckmorton, “Damages for Fright,” 34
Haru. L.Rev.
260 (1921). The courts have grown more confident of their ability to sift and value claims of emotional distress, and the old limitations have largely been abandoned; but suspicion lingers, as illustrated by two recent Supreme Court decisions,
Metro-North Commuter Railroad Co. v. Buckley,
The litigating strategy of the plaintiffs law firm in this case reinforces the common law’s traditional concern with the abuses to which a right to obtain damages for emotional distress can give rise. Rather than attempt to prove that Mrs. Aiello suffered more than a transient and trivial shock from the defendant’s dunning letter, the firm wants to aggregate her claim with that of all other recipients of such letters from this defendant in order to force settlement by confronting the defendant with an avalanche of litigation and an unquantifiable potential liability. Class actions in bankruptcy are authorized, Fed. R. Bankr. Pro. 7023;
In re American Reserve Corp.,
The potential for abuse if damages for a purely emotional injury can be awarded in suits to redress violations of the automatic stay is considerable, as this case illustrates. The injury suffered by Aiello is by her own account slight, and this is probably true of most of the other members of the class. But since the injuries inflicted by the defendant’s allegedly extortionate behavior must vary very considerably across the members of the class, individual hearings would be required to quantify each class member’s generally slight damages. Those hearings would cost far more than the stakes of the average class member, which is an indication that this class action suit was brought merely to force a settlement, and is, in short, a nuisance suit. The legal system has all the nuisance suits it needs to keep life interesting.
The plaintiff and her classmates have the normal tort remedies against oppressive debt-collection tactics. See, e.g.,
Public Finance Corp. v. Davis,
Was the denial of class certification also correct? The defendant has not picked up on this court’s invitation to appellees in class action suits in which class certification is denied to
urge
class certification conditional on affirmance of the dismissal of the plaintiffs claim,
Amati v. City of Woodstock,
*882 The other questions presented by the appeal are moot in light of our disposition of the main issues.
AFFIRMED.
