Sсott Richardson incurred an education.al debt in 1988 but did not pay. Indiana University, the creditor, filed suit in May 1998, in state court, and а trial was scheduled for September 7, 2000. Richardson filed a bankruptcy petition on September 1 but did not tell the state court, the University, or The Koch Law Firm, P.C., its counsel. Nor did he appear for trial. The state judge entered a default judgment, which the Law Firm tried unsuccessfully to collect. Now Richardson says that the Law Firm should pay him for violating two sections of the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1692e, 1692f, by trying to enforce a judgment that had been entered in violatiоn of the automatic stay under the Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. § 362.
After learning about the bankruptcy, the Law Firm stopped trying to сollect the judgment. The bankruptcy ended in June 2001, and the Law Firm went back to work, relying on 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(8), which makes most educatiоnal debts non-dischargeable. Richardson filed a second bankruptcy proceeding in January 2002. It lasted until April 2007. Oncе again the Law Firm desisted during the bankruptcy’s duration and tried to collect after its end. Those post-2007 efforts form the bаsis of Richardson’s current claim.
The district court treated this suit as a collateral attack on the state cоurt’s judgment and dismissed it for want of jurisdiction, invoking the Rooker-Feldman doctrine.
We are skeptiсal about the wisdom of asking whether something is “intertwined” (“inextricably” or extricably) with a state court’s judgment. Lower courts in both Saudi Basic Industries and Lance v. Dennis,
Richardson asked the bankruptcy cоurt to reopen the 2000 bankruptcy proceeding and declare the state .court’s judgment “void.” The bankruptcy judge granted the motion to reopen and stated that the judgment is “invalid” (though not “void”) but did not enjoin its enforcement or awаrd damages under 11 U.S.C. § 362(k)(l). See
After the bankruptcy judge’s decision, Indiana University asked the state court to vacate its own judgment. On January 28, 2014, the'state court obliged. As a result, the basis Tor the district court’s dismissal under Rooker-Feldman no longer exists.
Demonstrating appalling judgment, neithеr side brought this development to our attention, although both sides filed then-appellate briefs after the state court vacated its judgment. Because that step affects subject-matter jurisdiction, counsel for both sides — Ruberry, Stalmаck & Garvey, LLC, representing the Law Firm, and Richardson, a member of the bar representing himself — had an ethical duty to alert the court. Yet until the judges asked pointed questions at oral argument, neither side was forthcoming. Richardson evеn professed not to know the status of the state judgment to which he was a party. That assertion is hard to credit, for the state court’s order shows that it was sent to Richardson. But apportioning blame gets us nowhere. What matters now is that the rug has been pulled out from under the district court’s decision.
In addition to relying on a state-court judgment that, by the time of briеfing, no longer existed, the Law Firm asked us to affirm on the bankruptcy judge’s ground — that any claim belongs to the estate in bankruрtcy for the benefit of Richardson’s creditors, not to Richardson personally. The Law Firm made this argument to the district court too, but the court did not reach it given its reliance on the Rooker-Feldman doctrine. A prevailing party is entitled to defend its judgmеnt on any ground preserved in the district court. See Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co. v. Ludwig,
Richardson did not pay his debt when it was due in 1988 (and still has not done so, although it has not been discharged); he
The judgment of the district court is modified to be on the merits, rather than for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction, and as modified is affirmed.
