IN RE: ATLAS IT EXPORT CORP., Debtor. PINPOINT IT SERVICES, LLC, Appellant, v. NOEMI LANDRAU RIVERA, CHAPTER 7 TRUSTEE OF ATLAS IT EXPORT CORP., Appellee.
No. 13-9003
United States Court of Appeals For the First Circuit
August 4, 2014
Thompson, Lipez, and Kayatta, Circuit Judges.
APPEAL FROM THE BANKRUPTCY APPELLATE PANEL FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
Rafael A. Gonzalez Valiente, with whom Latimer, Biaggi, Rachid & Godreau, LLP was on brief, for appellee.
Overview
This is a bankruptcy case, though the parties go at it like a couple of bare-knuckle brawlers, hurling a barrage of arguments (and trash talk!) at each other at every turn. We need not jump too deeply into the fray, however, because we lack jurisdiction over the appeal. We will explain our holding — which makes new law for this circuit — shortly. First, some background.
The Combatants
In one corner, we have Pinpoint IT Services, LLC. Pinpoint is a Virginia company with a principal place of business in Virginia. In the other corner, we have Noemi Landrau Rivera, the Chapter 7 bankruptcy trustee for Atlas IT Export Corp. Atlas was a Puerto Rico company with a principal place of business in Puerto Rico.
Dueling Federal-Court Lawsuits
During late 2010 and early 2011, Pinpoint and Atlas filed dueling federal-court actions based on a 2009 contract between them. Here is the CliffNotes version of what happened. Atlas sent Pinpoint a letter requesting that it preserve certain evidence in anticipation of future litigation. Pinpoint then threw what it hoped would be a knockout blow, suing Atlas in the Eastern District of Virginia (the “Virginia action“) on the theory that Atlas — and not Pinpoint — had breached the contract between them. After some
Squaring Off in the Bankruptcy Court
About two months after answering and counterclaiming Pinpoint in the Virginia action, Atlas filed for bankruptcy under
Atlas‘s filing automatically stayed the Virginia and Puerto Rico actions, naturally. See
Apparently feeling like it had been sucker punched, Pinpoint asked the bankruptcy court to modify the stay so the Virginia action could go forward too. The gist of Pinpoint‘s argument was that the stay kept the judge in the Virginia action from applying the “first-filed” rule. What that rule basically says is that if two district courts have jurisdiction over the same controversy, then the court with the “first-filed” action should typically get first dibs on deciding the case. See Codex Corp. v. Milgo Elec. Corp., 553 F.2d 735, 737 (1st Cir. 1977) (noting that,
An unhappy Pinpoint appealed to the BAP. But the BAP eventually concluded that the order did not amount to a “final” decision from which Pinpoint could appeal as a matter of right. The challenged order, the BAP reasoned, only decided that Pinpoint could not “presently proceed in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, based upon principles related
Pinpoint then asked the judge in the Virginia action to enjoin the Puerto Rico action, arguing that the trustee‘s litigation tactics in Puerto Rico‘s federal district court flew in the face of the first-filed rule. Atlas counterpunched by filing an adversary complaint in the bankruptcy case, charging Pinpoint with violating the automatic stay and asking for sanctions plus injunctive relief against its foe. Unimpressed, Pinpoint moved to dismiss the adversary proceeding: letting the trustee proceed with the Puerto Rico action offended the “first filed rule” and thus entitled Pinpoint to file “defensive pleadings” like the injunction request without running afoul of the automatic stay — or so Pinpoint argued. But given Pinpoint‘s appeal here from the denial of its stay-relief request, the judges in both actions opted to suspend all proceedings in their courts and defer ruling on the motions pending our decision.
Our Jurisdiction
The Issue
What is before us is Pinpoint‘s appeal from the BAP‘s judgment dismissing Pinpoint‘s challenge to the bankruptcy court‘s no-stay-relief order. True to form, the parties bloody each other with arguments, this time tussling over our jurisdiction to hear Pinpoint‘s appeal (we have it, Pinpoint insists; not so, says Atlas) as well as the merits of that appeal (the decisions of both the bankruptcy court and the BAP violated the first-filed rule, Pinpoint exclaims; hardly, argues Atlas). We begin — and ultimately end — with the jurisdiction issue.
Pinpoint bases our jurisdiction on
First Principles
Normally we treat a federal-court action as a “‘single judicial unit‘” from which only one appeal can be made. In re Saco Local Dev. Corp., 711 F.2d 441, 443 (1st Cir. 1983) (Breyer, J.). But because a bankruptcy case is quite often a conglomeration of separate cases that lives on for many years, we take a flexible approach to finality here, giving that requirement “a ‘practical’ rather than a ‘technical’ construction.” In re Parque Forestal, Inc., 949 F.2d 504, 508 (1st Cir. 1991) (quoting Gillespie v. U.S. Steel Corp., 379 U.S. 148, 152 (1964), overruled in part on other grounds by Hartford Underwriters Ins. Co. v. Union Planters Bank, N.A., 530 U.S. 1 (2000)) (“Parque,” from here on out); see also Bullard, 2014 WL 1910868, at *2. For example, we have stamped an order “final” where “there is no possibility [at the time of appeal] that [the] order will be changed or become moot, or that ‘piecemeal appeals’ will waste the time of this court or the parties” — indicators of finality, one and all. See Parque, 949 F.2d at 508. What this means is that in the world of bankruptcy, “final” does not just describe the last order entered at the case‘s end — you know, the one “that ultimately disposes of all the debtor‘s assets on the basis (perhaps) of the results of many individual proceedings and controversies taking place over many years within the context of the overall bankruptcy case.” Tringali v. Hathaway Mach. Co., 796 F.2d 553, 558 (1st Cir. 1986) (Breyer,
Extra-Circuit Caselaw On Orders Denying Stay Relief
Now consider orders dealing with stay-relief requests. Orders granting stay relief are orders “disposing of a discrete dispute” and so are final and appealable as of right — on this point every circuit (including this one) that has considered the question agrees.6 They are final, we have said, echoing the Third Circuit, because “‘[n]othing more need be done by the district court or the bankruptcy court on the matter of the automatic stay.‘”7 As for orders denying stay relief — which is the focus of our attention today — the vast majority of the circuits that have reviewed the matter consider all such edicts final and appealable too, regardless of circumstances.8 Judge Kayatta‘s dissent
Lots of courts reached that blanket rule primarily by way of analogy, saying things like: a “denial of relief from an automatic stay in bankruptcy is equivalent to a permanent
But not every circuit that has confronted this question has signed on to that blanket rule.11 We have in mind the Third Circuit, whose approach is of a decidedly less categorical stripe, reflecting a fact-specific, case-by-case style of analysis.12 Take West, for example. The government there moved for relief from the automatic stay so that it could try to cancel its contract with the debtor.13 The bankruptcy court denied the motion, the district
Our View
Pinpoint thinks the blanket rule should be the law in this circuit. Atlas, not so much. Until today we have found it unnecessary to take a position on the issue. See United States v. Fleet Bank of Mass. (In re Calore Express Co.), 288 F.3d 22, 34 (1st Cir. 2002) (“Calore,” for the rest of the opinion) (declining to “reach the question whether a bankruptcy court‘s refusal to lift the automatic stay may ever lack finality“). But the opening bell has sounded for us to address this issue and so we go the distance.
Calore actually helps point the way. There we highlighted the caselaw underlying the blanket rule, see id. (explaining that “[n]umerous circuits have held that a district court‘s affirmance or reversal of the bankruptcy court‘s decision whether to lift the automatic stay is final, often without qualifying that holding“) — the very caselaw Pinpoint pins its jurisdictional hopes on. But we chose not to embrace the blanket rule right then and there. Instead we found finality existed there because (a) the bankruptcy court‘s order “decide[d] the relevant
What we did in Calore jibes with our past decisions (spotlighted above), which (a) require us to keep in mind the uniqueness of bankruptcy litigation, with its multiple layers of proceedings within proceedings and its many moving parts; and which (b) command us to scout for finality indicators, like whether the disputed order conclusively decided a discrete, fully-developed issue — an order that, at the time of the appeal, will not be changed or be mooted and is not reviewable elsewhere. See, e.g., Parque, 949 F.2d at 508; Tringali, 796 F.2d at 558. And respect for the path marked by our prior cases — Tringali, Parque, and Calore, for example — requires us to reject the blanket rule that denials of stay relief are always final, no ifs, ands, or buts. As we see things, that rule clashes with our caselaw because it turns a cold shoulder to bankruptcy‘s unusual nature and makes an order‘s appealability turn on the label affixed to it (“order denying stay relief,” and the like) rather than on finality telltales.
As for what appears to be one of the blanket rule‘s animating ideas — that an automatic stay is like an injunction and
As for the other much-touted benefits of this (and frankly any other) blanket rule — uniformity and judicial economy — we are not convinced that these ends are best served by stamping
The short of this long analysis is that we reject Pinpoint‘s preferred blanket-rule approach. Like the Third Circuit, we think it possible that in some cases an order denying stay relief may lack finality. Everything depends on the circumstances, naturally: taking into account the particular
Application
When measured against the correct standard, the order denying stay relief here is not final (though it certainly is a close call). Here is why.
What prompted Pinpoint‘s stay-relief plea was a venue concern — that the first-filed rule requires the lifting of the stay so that the judge in the first-filed Virginia action can referee the contract dispute. That is the relevant discrete issue, not (to be clear) which party should win the contract suit. But in concluding that Pinpoint had not shown cause for stay relief, the bankruptcy court specifically avoided deciding the first-filed
The judge in the Puerto Rico action has not yet had a chance to weigh in on the venue-related, first-filed issue. But once he does, he could conclude that the first-filed rule applies and that he must stay his own proceedings or consolidate them with the Virginia action (thereby shipping the whole case to Virginia). And if that happens, then Pinpoint can ask the bankruptcy court for stay relief based on that turn of events. If, however, the judge in the Puerto Rico action decides that the first-filed rule does not apply and that venue is proper there, Pinpoint can again ask the bankruptcy court to lift the stay against the Virginia action, on the theory that it has no other way to stop the parallel action in Puerto Rico. Either way, the bankruptcy court will get to decide the stay-relief question again, this time on a better-developed record. And the court may very well lift the stay, depending on how the first-filed question is decided.20
Or, to look at this another way: Basically what the bankruptcy court did was specify the venue (the Puerto Rico district court) that gets first crack at deciding the first-filed issue—a decision that will reveal which federal court (Puerto Rico‘s or Virginia‘s) gets to preside over the contract case. So, as the situation now stands, Pinpoint can litigate everything—the first-filed issue and the contract imbroglio. It just has no guarantee that it will litigate in its preferred venue. Cf. generally Codex Corp. v. Milgo Elec. Corp., 553 F.2d 735, 737 (1st Cir. 1977) (holding that orders granting or denying venue transfer are customarily not appealable as of right). Ultimately this concatenation of circumstances—an order that does not decide the first-filed issue (the very issue that prompted Pinpoint‘s stay-relief effort), but instead leaves Pinpoint free to go toe-to-toe with Atlas on that issue in another forum, with a possibility that Pinpoint will get what it wants in the end—undercuts Pinpoint‘s finality claim.21 court‘s decision on the first-filed issue. See 852 F.2d at 82.Notes
The trustee herself later proffered that if the stay was lifted as requested then “the estate would be harmed because it does not have any funds right now to hire” a Virginia lawyer to litigate the Virginia action. Pinpoint‘s lawyer did not object to either proffer. “[W]ould you like to sit the trustee down [i.e., would you like her to take the stand]?” the court asked Pinpoint‘s attorney — to which he replied, “No, no.”is not enough to even start to hire somebody to litigate that. The retainer would probably be more than the five thousand dollars we have available.
We do have counsel in Puerto Rico who‘s willing to prosecute the case on a percentage basis, which . . . does not put a burden on the estate, the creditors or Pinpoint. But, in Virginia, that is not the case.
So, it would . . . probably . . . put an end to the litigation, . . . kill, in other words, the [estate‘s] major asset[].
For openers Pinpoint pounces on a passage in Calore saying that we have “jurisdiction to review an order of the bankruptcy court refusing to lift the automatic stay when the order resolves all issues between the parties.” 288 F.3d at 28. According to Pinpoint, that excerpt must mean that an order denying stay relief is final if “there are no unresolved issues between the parties pending in the bankruptcy court and only in the bankruptcy issue. Again, though, the effect of the bankruptcy court‘s combined rulings is limited to identifying the federal venue where the parties can raise certain venue-related arguments. And as we just noted in a case parenthetical above, venue-transfer orders are typically not appealable as of right. See, e.g., Codex Corp., 553 F.2d at 737. Judge Kayatta says the better analogy to what took place here is to a decision by one federal court (the bankruptcy court) to enjoin a litigant (Pinpoint) from pursuing a parallel action (the Virginia action) in another federal court (Virginia federal court). A decision like that—when entered by a federal district court—is appealable, he writes. With respect, we believe his analogy is inapt because it fails to account for the fact that it is the statutorily-imposed automatic stay—not the order of a dueling court—that actually temporarily enjoins Pinpoint‘s Virginia efforts during the pendency of the bankruptcy.
Judge Kayatta also describes this case as one where “one federal court (the bankruptcy court) has, by refusing to lift the automatic stay, left in place an injunction barring Pinpoint from continuing to pursue a lawsuit in another federal court, which has not surrendered venue, but has instead determined that it is the proper venue for the action.” And he reminds everyone that before Atlas‘s game-changing bankruptcy filing, “[t]he Virginia court in a reported decision, . . . denied Atlas‘s motion to transfer the Virginia action to Puerto Rico.” But as we have taken some pains in this opinion to explain, no court—neither the Virginia or Puerto Rico federal courts nor the bankruptcy court—has yet decided what the proper venue for the action is under the first-filed rule. Ultimately, then, Judge Kayatta‘s line of analysis does not change our thinking.
Unfortunately for Pinpoint, a large problem looms. Even assuming (for argument‘s sake only) that its reading of Calore is correct (and we intimate no view on the subject), there is an adversary action in the bankruptcy court that could resolve the first-filed issue in Pinpoint‘s favor—recall, Pinpoint put that issue front and center there in moving to dismiss Atlas‘s adversary complaint, telling the bankruptcy court things like the first-filed rule demands that “if [Atlas‘s] claim against Pinpoint is to proceed, it must proceed in the Virginia [federal] court.” And that fact knocks the legs out from under Pinpoint‘s leadoff argument.
Wait a second, exclaims Pinpoint. Atlas initiated adversary proceedings after the BAP deemed the order denying stay relief non-final and dismissed Pinpoint‘s appeal for lack of jurisdiction. So “unless the BAP was reading tea leaves” when it took that step, Pinpoint adds, “there was no pending bankruptcy court adversary proceedings” to legitimize the BAP‘s dismissal. How this chronology affects our jurisdiction Pinpoint does not say.
In something of a parting shot, Pinpoint says that it is up to the judge in the Virginia action to decide the first-filed issue, not the judge in the Puerto Rico action. To lend plausibility to its point, Pinpoint leans heavily on Cadle Co. v. Whataburger of Alice, Inc., 174 F.3d 599 (5th Cir. 1999). But even assuming that Cadle squares with our circuit‘s law (and we say nothing about whether it does or does not), that opinion holds that the “second-filed court” can decide if the issues in the two cases might substantially overlap. Id. at 605 (quoting Mann Mfg. Inc. v. Hortex, Inc., 439 F.2d 403, 407 (5th Cir. 1971)). A yes answer, Cadle says, means that the “second-filed court” must then transfer the case to the “first-filed court” to decide which case should continue. Id. at 606. The import of all this is clear: even under Pinpoint‘s caselaw, the judge in the Puerto Rico action can participate in any slugfest over the first-filed rule—which means Pinpoint‘s final argument sails wide of the mark.
Last Words
Our work complete, we dismiss Pinpoint‘s appeal for lack of jurisdiction. Costs to Atlas. So ordered.
-Dissenting Opinion Follows-
KAYATTA, Circuit Judge, dissenting. I agree with my respected colleagues that Pinpoint‘s appeal provides no basis upon which to reverse the ruling of the bankruptcy court refusing to lift the automatic stay. I nevertheless dissent from the judgment of dismissal, because this court should decide this case by ruling on the merits, rather than by creating a circuit split in order to find the challenged order of the bankruptcy court non-appealable.
Bankruptcy law is an area in which uniformity has particular value. See Daniel A. Austin, Bankruptcy and the Myth of “Uniform Laws“, 42 Seton Hall L. Rev. 1081, 1135-39 (2012); Erwin Chemerinsky, Decision-Makers: In Defense of Courts, 71 Am. Bankr. L.J. 114-15 (1997) (pointing to “expertise and uniformity” as the “two major advantages” of specialized bankruptcy courts). And as my colleagues acknowledge, seven of the eight other circuits that have ruled on the appealability of orders denying relief from the automatic stay have held that such orders are categorically appealable.22 Even the Third Circuit, which was until now the only
The majority is certainly correct that we should not join our sister circuits simply to form a herd. At the same time, though, the majority cannot dispute the notion that, at the margins (and this case is certainly there, see Majority Op., at 19), uniformity has a positive value, especially in setting federal bankruptcy law. See, e.g.,
My colleagues are also correct, of course, that relief from the automatic stay differs from a typical injunction because Congress has effectively determined that, in bankruptcy, an injunction is the default position. And I need not quibble with the conclusion that this determination represents an implicit judgment that the equities in bankruptcy are more likely to weigh in favor of an injunction, at least initially. In this manner, Congress has placed on the party opposing the automatic stay the burden of seeking and justifying a change in the status quo. So far, so good. Where the majority then errs conceptually is in finding the reallocation of the burden of changing the status quo to justify a heightened degree of stinginess in allowing an appeal from a ruling preventing such a change. This cannot be correct. History, custom, and practice make the default position in ordinary, non-bankruptcy civil cases “no injunction,” thereby placing the burden of seeking and justifying an injunction on the
Even under the majority‘s new test, the justification for refusing to hear this appeal is weak. In concluding otherwise, the majority swims even against the current in our own circuit. As the majority correctly concedes, In re Calore, 288 F.3d 22, 34 (1st Cir. 2002), did not decide whether a refusal to lift the automatic stay is or is not always appealable. Rather, it did only what it needed to do: it decided that the refusal to lift the automatic stay in that particular case was appealable. And in making that finding, the court relied simply on the fact that the bankruptcy court “clearly did decide the relevant dispute between the parties.” Id. In the race-to-the-courthouse case now before us, the relevant dispute concerns not which court hears the merits of the case, but rather, which court will decide that question. And by sending the case to Puerto Rico for a resolution of the first-filed issue, the bankruptcy court did indeed decide that dispute
Twenty-four years ago, Judge Winter observed that “the purpose of the finality rule, judicial economy, would not be served by an ad hoc, case sensitive approach to determining jurisdiction over orders denying relief from the stay.” In re Sonnax, 907 F.2d at 1285. The reasoning the majority provides today proves that warning prescient, as the court finds itself unable to decline jurisdiction without resting explicitly on an on-the-merits rejection of Pinpoint‘s argument that, as an incident of its status as first-filer, it is entitled to litigate not only the merits of its case, but also its venue challenges, in Virginia. See Majority Op, at 22 (“[E]ven under Pinpoint‘s caselaw, the judge in the Puerto Rico action can participate in any slugfest over the
Here, for example, my colleagues compare the order of the bankruptcy court to an order transferring venue, which is not appealable even if entered by a district court. See id. At first blush, this seems a reasonable point. Actually, though, an order transferring venue is an order by one federal court surrendering venue to another in a given action. What has happened in this case, by contrast, is that one federal court (the bankruptcy court) has, by refusing to lift the automatic stay, left in place an injunction barring Pinpoint from continuing to pursue a lawsuit in another federal court, which has not surrendered venue, but has instead determined that it is the proper venue for the action.26
All told, the majority‘s approach transforms what was until today a non-issue into fodder for briefing and analysis in the nascent sub-sub-specialty of Appellate Jurisdiction over Bankruptcy Court Orders Denying Relief From Stay. Unless that area draws only counsel who, unlike me, are able to confidently and accurately anticipate how the fine nuances of the majority‘s exception will apply in future cases, we will receive more briefing on losing jurisdictional objections, and no less briefing on the merits. The majority barters away simplicity in exchange for promised efficiency gains, but I fear that the deal will leave us with neither.
I would therefore proceed more directly and simply to the merits of the appeal. The bankruptcy court‘s order reasonably
