Only а belief that bankruptcy is forever could produce a case such as this. When Pettibone Corporation and its affiliates (collectively Pettibone) filed for bankruptcy, some personal injury сases were pending against it. These were stayed automatically. 11 U.S.C. § 362. During the bankruptcy proceedings other personal injury suits were filed despite § 362. Courts put these new tort cases in stasis. Pettibone’s plan of reorganization lists all tort cases, including those filed in violation of the automatic stay, as claims that pass through bankruptcy. Plaintiffs who had filed during the bankruptcy had 30 days after the termination of thе stay to re-file their cases with assurance that they could not be deemed untimely. 11 U.S.C. § 108(c)(2). Three cases that had been filed in violation of the automatic stay were not re-filed within the 30 days. Pettibone asked the bankruptcy court to enjoin their prosecution. †
Now the only obstacles to the continuation of the tort suits are the statutes of limitations — Michigan’s for two cases and Louisiana’s for the third. Whеther Michigan or Louisiana would treat a case filed in violation of the automatic stay as a nonevent for limitations purposes is a question of state law. No
federal
interest is in play; the bankruptcy сourt authorized the continued prosecution of these cases when it confirmed the plan of reorganization. Federal law assured the plaintiffs 30 days in which to pick up the baton; if states want tо give plaintiffs additional time, that is their business. Some states do — e.g., Illinois, which tolls its statute of limitations during the entire bankruptcy proceeding, Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 110 ¶ 13-216. No one believes that these states are violating fеderal law.
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Anyway, even federal defenses must be presented to the courts in which the claims are pending. Cf.
Franchise Tax Board of California v. Construction Laborers Vacation Trust,
Pettibone aрproached this in a different manner. It argued that, if the automatic stay makes the filing void, then no suits are pending against it, and any future filings necessarily would be untimely under state law. If, on the other hand, the filings are voidable, then the courts with jurisdiction over the personal injury cases might excuse the plaintiffs’ blunders and allow the cases to proceed. Pettibone asked the bankruptcy judge to declare the filings void and enjoin further prosecution of the “nonexistent” suits. The bankruptcy judge, choosing sides in a debate about the effect of the automatic stay, concluded that the filings were void.
Pettibone insists that suits filed during the automatic stay are void and that thе bankruptcy judge abused his discretion in modifying the stay retroactively. The plaintiffs in the personal injury suits reply (a) that the filings are voidable, (b) that the complaints satisfied Michigan and Louisiana law by giving Pettibone actual notice of the claims even if federal law nullifies the filing of the complaints in state court, and (c) that it would be improvident for a bankruptcy court in the Seventh Circuit to block them from litigating when thе Fifth and Sixth Circuits — the courts of appeals with jurisdiction over the tort suits (all three have been removed to federal court) —deem violations of the automatic stay voidable in name or in effeсt, see Sikes and White Motor, and so would allow the personal injury cases to proceed. We do not arbitrate this dispute, for we conclude that the bankruptcy judge lacked jurisdiction. Pettibone’s arguments must be presented to the courts with jurisdiction of the tort cases.
Once the bankruptcy court confirms a plan of reorganization, the debtor may go about its business without further supervision or approval. The firm also is without the
protection of the
bankruptcy court. It may not come running to the bankruptcy judge every time something unpleasant happens.
In re Xonics, Inc.,
Bankruptcy courts have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 157(c)(1) to hear claims “related to” the reorganization.
Xonics
holds that a dispute is related to the bank
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ruptcy when “it affects the amount of property available for distribution or the allocation of property among creditors.”
At all evеnts, § 157(c)(1) does not authorize bankruptcy judges to dispatch tort suits.
Northern Pipeline Construction Co. v. Marathon Pipe Line Co.,
Section 1142(b) of the 1978 Code, 11 U.S.C. § 1142(b), is the only other potential source of jurisdiction. This statute authorizes the bankruptcy court to “direct the debtor and any other necessary pаrty ... to perform any other act ... that is necessary for the consummation of the plan.” Enjoining a tort suit expressly authorized by the plan is hardly “necessary for the consummation of the plan”, howevеr. Pet-tibone did not ask the bankruptcy judge to enforce the automatic stay, which had expired. There was nothing to enforce. If we understand § 1142(b) as vesting in the bankruptcy judge a more general power to modify its orders, cf. 11 U.S.C. § 350(b), Pettibone fares no better. Pettibone did not want the bankruptcy judge to modify any order, and it protests the bankruptcy judge’s decision to release the stay retroactively.
Like Pettibone, we are troubled by the idea that a judge can “modify” something that has expired. Even legal fictions have their limits. The stay achieved its purpose and came to a natural end. Bankruptcy рalliates creditors’ problem of collective action, forcing disputes into a single forum and preventing the dismemberment of a firm that still may be more valuable alive than dead. The automatic stay is the instrument that accomplishes the centralization of claims. See
United States v. Inslaw, Inc.,
While the stay was outstanding, the bankruptcy judge could have modified or lifted it, perhaps backdating the effect of that decision. Once the judge authorized the prosecution of the personal injury actions, however, all that remained was a debate about the consequences of filing the tort action while the stay was outstanding. Disputes about the effect of a decision in оne case on the prosecution of another are for the judge presiding in the second case. In the law of preclusion the second court normally determines the effects of the first judgе’s order. E.g.,
Pozsgay v. Southwestern Illinois Health Facilities, Inc.,
The bаnkruptcy judge lacked jurisdiction to resolve the statute of limitations defenses, which Pettibone must present to the proper courts. The judgments under review in Nos. 90-3026, 90-3027, and 90-3028 are accordingly vacated, and the cases are remanded with instructions to dismiss for want of jurisdiction. The judgment under review in No. 90-3025 is vacated, and the case is remanded with instructions to dismiss that adversary complaint as moot.
Notes
Pettibone alsо asked the court to enjoin prosecution of a fourth suit, filed by Gary Baker in Illinois. Baker has not taken any steps to reactivate his tort suit, and in the district court Baker threw in the towel, stating that he no longеr wished to prosecute the personal injury claim.
