In re: DANNY S. MARTINEZ and KATHERINE F. MARTINEZ, Debtors, DANNY S. MARTINEZ; KATHERINE F. MARTINEZ, Appellants, v. LOS ALAMOS NATIONAL BANK, Appellee.
No. 04-2040
United States Court of Appeals, Tenth Circuit
MAR 22 2005
(D. N.M.) (D.Ct. No. CIV-02-1315-LH/WWD)
ORDER AND JUDGMENT*
Before TACHA, Chief Circuit Judge, and PORFILIO and BRORBY, Senior Circuit Judges.
After examining the briefs and appellate record, this panel has determined unanimously that oral argument would not materially assist the determination of
Appellants Danny S. Martinez and Katherine F. Martinez, husband and wife, represented by counsel, appeal the district court‘s decision affirming the bankruptcy court‘s summary judgment decision and judgment in an adversary bankruptcy proceeding. The Martinezes contend the bankruptcy court erred in granting summary judgment to Appellee Los Alamos National Bank (the Bank) in denying discharge of their debt, under
I. BACKGROUND
Certain facts are not in dispute. On May 23, 2001, the Martinezes filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, after being sued by the Bank over certain loans transacted by Ms. Martinez. Ms. Martinez is a former mortgage loan officer at the Bank. At the time the Martinezes filed their bankruptcy case, the Bank no
Pursuant to
On February 13, 2002, Ms. Martinez received a federal indictment for five counts of bank fraud, six counts of money laundering promotion, six counts of money laundering concealment, and two counts of money laundering under
On June 20, 2002, the Bank resumed the Martinezes’ depositions, at which time they both acknowledged they had read the bankruptcy court‘s Order to Compel and supporting opinion, and understood the Order directed them to answer certain questions which they previously refused to answer. However, Ms. Martinez reasserted her Fifth Amendment privilege and refused to answer five of the six questions the bankruptcy court ordered her to answer. Similarly, Mr. Martinez refused to answer at least four of the questions the court ordered him to answer, also invoking his Fifth Amendment privilege.
On August 2, 2002, the Bank filed a motion for summary judgment and memorandum in support thereof, requesting the bankruptcy court deny the Martinezes’ discharge as a matter of law, pursuant to
Thereafter, on August 28, 2002, the bankruptcy court held a hearing on the Bank‘s motion for summary judgment in the adversary proceeding, but neither
On October 8, 2002, the bankruptcy court granted the Bank‘s summary judgment motion, concluding the Martinezes violated
The Martinezes elected to appeal the result of the adversary proceeding to the district court, raising several issues concerning the propriety of the bankruptcy court‘s grant of summary judgment to the Bank. However, in their notice of appeal, the Martinezes did not identify the bankruptcy court‘s March 22, 2002 Order to Compel, which resolved their Fifth Amendment privilege claims, as an order which they intended to appeal.6
In their designated record on appeal to the district court, the Martinezes submitted various pleadings, which the Bank moved to strike, contending they were late-filed and contained pleadings from the main bankruptcy case, another adversary proceeding, and a criminal case which were not before the bankruptcy court in making its summary judgment decision. In an order striking items designated by the Martinezes and objected to by the Bank, the district court found
Thereafter, the Martinezes filed a motion to clarify the order, noting that the bankruptcy clerk, in response to the court‘s order, improperly removed two transcripts—one from a January 10, 2002 hearing,7 and the other from the August 19, 2002 hearing on the Bank‘s second motion to compel—neither of which the Bank previously objected to, nor were referred to in the court‘s order to strike. They requested an order restoring the transcripts of those hearings into the record. The district court issued an order summarily holding the bankruptcy clerk appropriately removed the two hearing transcripts from the record and denying the Martinezes’ request to restore them to the record on appeal.
II. DISCUSSION
The Martinezes now appeal the district court‘s decision affirming summary judgment, and its two orders concerning the record they designated on appeal. The crux of their issues concerns the bankruptcy court‘s summary judgment determination, in which they claim: 1) disputed issues of fact exist precluding summary judgment on whether their refusal to answer questions under the Fifth Amendment was wilful or intentional; 2) the bankruptcy court either erred as a matter of law or abused its discretion in granting summary judgment in violation of their constitutional rights against self-incrimination under the Fifth Amendment; and 3) the bankruptcy court erred in basing summary judgment on their failure to challenge or appeal the Order to Compel, which they claim was an unappealable discovery order. With respect to the district court, they contend it
We address each issue separately, beginning with our standard of review. We review the bankruptcy court‘s grant of summary judgment de novo, affording no deference to the district court‘s decision. Bailey v. Big Sky Motors, Ltd. (In re Ogden), 314 F.3d 1190, 1195 (10th Cir. 2002). Our summary judgment standard under
With the standard of review in mind, we proceed with the law applicable to nondischarge of debt in a bankruptcy adversary proceeding, including issues relating to noncompliance with discovery orders and invocation of the Fifth
Thus, under
In this case, the Martinezes plainly received a judicial ruling on the validity of their Fifth Amendment privilege claims when the bankruptcy court issued the Order to Compel, granting them Fifth Amendment protection in part, and denying
Not dissuaded in their efforts to contest the grant of summary judgment, the Martinezes attack the underlying Order to Compel and opinion in support thereof, in which they claim the bankruptcy court improperly concluded the Fifth Amendment privilege did not extend to their claims against the Bank and Mr. Enloe. They also claim the bankruptcy court improperly granted summary judgment based on the fact they failed to seek reconsideration or otherwise appeal its Order to Compel. In support of this contention, the Martinezes argue the bankruptcy court‘s Order to Compel was a nonappealable, interlocutory discovery order, and rely on cases discussing this court‘s limited jurisdiction, under
As to the propriety of the bankruptcy court‘s decision that the Fifth Amendment privilege did not extend to the Martinezes’ claims against the Bank and Mr. Enloe, the magistrate judge for the district court determined this issue was not before the bankruptcy court in considering the Bank‘s summary judgment motion in the adversary proceeding, and therefore it refused to address it on appeal. He explained:
The question of whether the Martinezes had a valid Fifth Amendment privilege was decided in the Bankruptcy proceeding in response to [the Bank‘s first] motion to compel. The issue before [this] Court on [the Bank‘s] motion for summary judgment was whether the Martinezes willfully and intentionally refused to respond to material questions approved by the court.
Clearly, the district court did not address the propriety of the bankruptcy court‘s determination the Fifth Amendment privilege did not extend to the Martinezes’ claims against the Bank and Mr. Enloe. Generally, we will not address issues not addressed by the district court. See Walker v. Mather (In re Walker), 959 F.2d 894, 896 (10th Cir. 1992). However, even if we addressed the issue de novo as one underlying the summary judgment decision, and considered the Martinezes’ appellate brief and the entire record designated on appeal, the Martinezes fail to satisfactorily explain how their answers to questions on their claims against the Bank and Mr. Enloe, especially for the money allegedly owed
Finally, we address the Martinezes’ contention the district court improperly struck from the record the August 19, 2002 hearing transcript on the Bank‘s second motion to compel and their attorney‘s August 29, 2002 letter.
No error in either the admission or the exclusion of evidence and no error or defect in any ruling or order or in anything done or omitted by the court ... is ground for ... vacating, modifying, or otherwise disturbing a judgment or order, unless refusal to take such action appears to the court inconsistent with substantial justice.
We begin by concluding the district court did not err in striking the August 19, 2002 hearing transcript and August 29, 2002 attorney letter, both of which deal with the Bank‘s second motion to compel. As the district court determined, neither was part of the record on which the bankruptcy court based its summary judgment decision. As the bankruptcy judge noted in the August 19, 2002 hearing on the second motion to compel, he had already ordered the Martinezes to comply and answer the certified questions, “[s]o why should I order them to do it again?” Clearly, the Martinezes had already wilfully violated the bankruptcy court‘s Order to Compel, sufficient for discharge under
Even if the district court somehow erred in striking the hearing transcript and letter, our review of those documents shows neither would change the summary judgment disposition under the harmless error standard. This is because
In addition, at no time during the second motion to compel in the main bankruptcy proceeding, or the motion for summary judgment in the adversary proceeding, or at any other time indicated in the record, did the Martinezes ask for a stay of the bankruptcy court‘s summary judgment decision. Thus, even if we considered the August 19, 2002 hearing transcript or the August 29, 2002 letter from the Martinezes’ attorney, which informally advised the court to wait for
III. CONCLUSION
Based on the foregoing grounds, we conclude neither the bankruptcy court, nor the district court on appeal, erred in denying the Martinezes discharge of their debt for wilful refusal to respond to material questions approved by the court, in reliance on
Entered by the Court:
WADE BRORBY
United States Circuit Judge
Notes
- “You show ... there are claims you and your husband have against [the Bank] and [Mr.] Enloe. Can you tell me about those?”
- “Can you tell me what you think the value of those claims are?”
- “No. 30, all documents which support your claim of a debt of [Mr.] Enloe to [you] in the amount of $60,000. That folder was empty. Do you have any documents that support that claim?”
- “No. 31, all documents which support your claims against [the Bank] and [Mr.] Enloe under Schedule B20. Do you have any documents which support that claim?”
- “Other than these documents produced in Exhibit 53, are there any other documents that you claim support your claim against [the Bank] and Mr. Enloe?”
- “On [Schedule] B17, you show an asset of this bankruptcy case, a debt of [Mr.] Enloe to Katherine Martinez for $60,000. Can you tell me what the basis of that is?”
- “[W]ith respect to Schedule B No. 20 where you tell the bankruptcy court that you have another asset, will you be answering any questions about the claims listed ... against [the Bank] and [Mr.] Enloe?”
- “My Request No. 30, I asked for all documents which support your claim of a debt of [Mr.] Enloe to Katherine Martinez in the amount of $60,000. Do you have any documents in support of that claim?”
- “In Request No. 31, I ask for all documents which support your claims against [the Bank] and [Mr.] Enloe. Do you have any documents which support that claim?”
