ORDER
The Pulaskis filed this adversary proceeding in hopes of avoiding the defendant’s mortgage on their homestead. The claims asserted in their adversary complaint primarily arise under Wisconsin law rather than the bankruptcy code, and include attacks on the validity of the mortgage due to unconscionability, lack of consideration, mistake, misrepresentation, unjust enrichment, breach of contract, and breach of the duty of good faith and fair dealing. In response, in the joint pretrial statement and at the initial pretrial conference, the defendant raised the
James Pulaski became an independent over-the-road truck driver after losing his previous employment in the spring of 2009. He purchased a semi-tractor and trailer from the defendant. The purchase was financed through an equipment lease. After executing the lease, the defendant presented the Pulaskis with a mortgage on their home, which they also signed. They voluntarily surrendered the tractor and trailer to the defendant in April of 2011. This chapter 13 ease was filed the following June. The defendant filed a proof of claim in which it asserted a secured claim in the amount of $57,684.98, ostensibly representing the balance due on the equipment lease and secured by the mortgage on their home. The Pulaskis objected to the claim and filed this adversary proceeding to avoid the mortgage. Both the objection and the adversary proceeding are intended to achieve a single purpose: namely, to have the bank’s claim treated as an unsecured claim rather than a secured one.
At this point, anyone with even a passing familiarity with recent developments in bankruptcy law has probably memorized the salient facts of Stern v. Marshall, Suffice it to say that Vickie Lynn Marshall (otherwise known as former Playboy Playmate Anna Nicole Smith) filed bankruptcy in California during a heated dispute over the estate of her deceased husband, J. Howard Marshall. Marshall’s son Pierce filed a defamation claim in the bankruptcy proceeding and also filed a complaint to determine dischargeability. Vicki filed a counterclaim alleging that Pierce had tor-tiously interfered with her expectation of an inheritance. Rather than abstain in favor of the pending Texas probate proceeding (where both the defamation and tortious interference claims had been initially raised), the bankruptcy court proceeded to rule in Vickie’s favor on both issues. In a subsequent series of developments truly worthy of the many comparisons to the byzantine legal proceedings at the heart of Charles Dickens’ Bleak House, both litigants died during the ensuing decade while the case went to the Supreme Court not once, but twice.
On the second trip, the Supreme Court ruled that while the bankruptcy court had the statutory authority to consider Vickie’s counterclaim under 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(C) (which considers “counterclaims by the estate against persons filing claims against the estate” to be “core proceedings” which may be adjudicated to final judgment by bankruptcy judges), the court lacked the constitutional authority to do so under Article III of the U.S. Constitution. As the Court observed:
*683 When a suit is made of “the stuff of the traditional actions at common law tried by the courts at Westminister in 1789,” and is brought within the bounds of federal jurisdiction, the responsibility for deciding that suit rests with Article III judges in Article III courts.
In Ortiz v. Aurora Health Care, Inc.,
In doing so, the Seventh Circuit synthesized the holding in Stem this way: “The Court held that Article III prohibited Congress from giving bankruptcy courts authority to adjudicate claims that went beyond the claims allowance process.” Id. at 911.
Were there a pending state court action between the parties, this Court’s historical practice in a case such as this would have been to entertain (or invite) a motion for abstention under 28 U.S.C. § 1334(b).
In responding to this question, many decisions have tracked the evolution of bankruptcy jurisdiction, the constitutional authority of Article I courts, and the nature of “public rights” as opposed to
While the defendant suggests that the debtors hope to “augment” their bankruptcy estate by raising the state law claims at issue, this is not a situation in which a debtor brings an unrelated (but nonetheless “compulsory”) counterclaim against a creditor, essentially seeking an offset against the creditor’s claim. In this case, the creditor’s proof of claim asserts that its claim is secured by certain assets (namely, the Pulaskis’ home). The debtors deny this. Under 11 U.S.C. § 502(a), a proof of claim is “deemed allowed, unless a party in interest ... objects.” If an objection is made, the Court is required to determine the amount of the claim and allow it in that amount except to the extent that “such claim is unenforceable against the debtor and property of the debtor, under any agreement or applicable law.” See 11 U.S.C. § 502(b)(1).
As the debtors note in their brief, they have not asked for monetary relief. They have asked only that the creditor’s mortgage be found invalid for the reasons raised in their objection to the claim and their adversary complaint. Those reasons — which are based upon the “applicable law” of the forum state in which the real property is situated — happen to be state law claims, but they are also an attack on the very nature of the creditor’s claim. Put another way, the Pulaskis contend that under applicable state law, the creditor has only an unsecured claim, and they want the claim allowed only to that extent. Resolving their objection requires consideration of the validity of the mortgage, and the issues raised by the Pulaskis are all reasons why they feel the mortgage is invalid. Clearly this is part of the claims process, as the Pulaskis’ claims will be resolved at exactly the same time that there is a final determination as to whether the creditor is secured or not.
One of the challenges in a post-Stem world is the reality that state law is often inexorably intertwined with bankruptcy law. After all, property rights in bankruptcy are typically determined by reference to state law, a principle the Supreme Court has never suggested holds any level of constitutional infirmity. In fact, the Court specifically reaffirmed that notion in Stem, observing that property interests “are created and defined by state
The problem with the creditor’s argument is illustrated by the following hypothetical. Presume for a moment that a creditor files a proof of claim in which it claims to hold a mortgage. Let us further say that the bankruptcy trustee discovers that no mortgage was ever executed. Under state law, the creditor would not, in fact, hold a secured claim at all. Should the trustee object to the claim, it would be because the claim is unenforceable “against property of the debtor” under “applicable law.” The essence of the claims allowance process is the determination of the claim’s validity — i.e., its conformity to the requirements of applicable law. Whether a secured claim is defective because it fails to satisfy the state’s statute of frauds, the recording statute, or rules regarding unconscionability, fair dealing, or mistake, it is all the same on a fundamental level. The claim itself is being attacked, not offset. Any augmentation of the estate arises not by addition (i.e., through a separate state law claim that increases the estate irrespective of the resolution of the creditor’s claim) but rather through negation — or modification — of the creditor’s claim itself. Accepting the creditor’s argument would essentially be to conclude that bankruptcy courts may no longer enter final judgments as to the allowance of claims, and nothing in Stem justifies such a radical interpretation.
The allowance (or disallowance) of claims is a subject within the exclusive purview of the bankruptcy courts. Black, Davis and Shue,
In contrast, the counterclaim in Stem was a state tort action that existed “without regard to any bankruptcy proceeding” and was “in no way derived from or dependent upon bankruptcy law.”
Until their objection (and this adversary proceeding) are resolved, the defendant’s claim essentially sits in limbo. The question is whether under “applicable law” the defendant’s mortgage is unenforceable against “property of the debtor” for the reasons asserted in the complaint. See 11 U.S.C. § 502(b)(1). Because the defendant seeks to have the claim treated as a secured claim and paid through the debtors’ plan, the issues raised by the debtors are now “integral to the restructuring of the debtor-creditor relationship.” Ortiz,
In examining this issue recently, one court observed that if the debtor’s claim can be resolved without considering the creditor’s claim, then the bankruptcy court lacks the constitutional authority to hear the debtor’s claim. Black, Davis and Shue,
The Court is quite mindful of the fact that Congress may “no more lawfully chip away at the authority of the Judicial Branch than it may eliminate it entirely.” Stern,
Accordingly,
IT IS ORDERED that this case shall proceed to trial. An adjourned pretrial conference has been scheduled for September 20, 2012, at 11:00 a.m.
Notes
. This Court has always adhered to the notion that a debtor seeking to avoid a mortgage for whatever reason (for example, to "strip off” an unsecured junior mortgage or the like) must file an adversary proceeding under Fed. R. Bankr.P. 7001(2) (to determine the validity, priority, or extent of a lien) in order to do so. Essentially, the adversary process is the vehicle for resolution of the objection to the claim in such cases.
. See
. This appears to be a reference to the Supreme Court’s admonition that:
Congress may not bypass Article III simply because a proceeding may have some bearing on a bankruptcy case; the question is whether the action at issue stems from the*685 bankruptcy itself or would necessarily be resolved in the claims allowance process.
. As a practical matter, abstention — out of respect for and in comity with the Texas probate court — likely would have prevented much of the Stern miasma, because there would have been no debate over which court had issued the "first” final order. See 28 U.S.C. § 1334(c)(1) (setting forth the standard for abstention "in the interest of justice, or in the interest of comity with State courts or respect for State law”).
. There are certainly commentators who question the logic of both Stem and its predecessor in carving away at the authority of bankruptcy courts, the 1982 Northern Pipeline decision. See Eric G. Behrens, Stem v. Marshall: The Supreme Court’s Continuing Erosion of Bankruptcy Court Jurisdiction and Article I Courts, 85 Am. Bankr. L.J. 387, 405 (2011) (“Legal scholars have eviscerated the plurality decision [in Northern Pipeline ], in particular the plurality’s arbitrary exceptions and shallow attempts to distinguish the Court's prior Article I and III decisions.”). And the irony of the significant weight given to the accoutrements of Article III status (such as the lifetime appointment or the salary that cannot be adjusted downward by Congress) to deny a range of judicial authority to Article I bankruptcy judges is that state court judges routinely lack such protections but are fully capable of entering final judgments— even on matters that might involve federal bankruptcy law. See Eden v. Robert A. Chapski, Ltd.,
. See, e.g., Turner v. First Cmty. Credit Union (In re Turner),
. As the debtors have objected to the creditor’s claim, it has not been allowed. See 11 U.S.C. § 502(a). When will the creditor’s claim be "allowed” as a secured claim under § 502(b)(1)? Only once there is a determination that the creditor is not guilty of unjust enrichment, mistake, unconscionability, or the like — and not a moment before.
. Put another way: In Ortiz, the creditor filed proofs of claim on open medical accounts. The complaint filed by the debtors had nothing to do with the claims themselves (for example, an allegation that the creditor had miscalculated the balance due or even engaged in more egregious conduct such as bad faith, misrepresentation, or the like). Instead, the debtors wanted a determination that what the creditor had done in the bankruptcy court violated the state disclosure law. Resolution of that issue does not implicate the claims adjudication process, which would contemplate the determination as to whether the creditor’s claims were "unenforceable against the debtor and property of the debtor.” See 11 U.S.C. § 502(b)(1).
. The court in that case also concluded that the debtor's counterclaims for breach of contract, negligence, breach of fiduciary duty, unjust enrichment, promissory estoppel, and breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing would all be necessarily resolved in the process of deciding the validity of the creditor's claims. See
. Of course, in an abundance of caution, any judgment the Court renders may be framed in the alternative so as to allow the district court to accept the findings and conclusions as proposed, rather than final, in the event the district court disagrees with this Court's conclusions as to the extent of its constitutional authority. See Ortiz v. Aurora Health Care, Inc. (In re Ortiz),
