ORDER
In this сase, brought by plaintiff Sharon Glanton against defendant Fred’s Stores of Tennessee, Inc. (FST) pursuant to the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 (FLSA), 29 U.S.C. §§ 201-219, the following question is presented on FST’s motions for summary judgment: Is a plaintiff who fails to amend her bankruptcy schedules to include her -FLSA claims within four months of learning of the claims’ existence judicially estopped from pursuing those claims?
Glanton opted into this lawsuit and claims that FST’s failure to pay her overtime violated her FLSA rights. Jurisdiction is proper under 29 U.S.C. § 216(b). As explained below, based on the circumstances presented here, the answer to the question posed is no, that is, the court holds that Glanton’s FLSA claims are not barred by judicial estoppel.
I. SUMMARY-JUDGMENT STANDARD
Summary judgment is appropriate “if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any materiаl fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). The court’s role at the summary-judgment stage is not to weigh the evidence or to determine the truth of the matter, but rather to determine only whether a genuine issue exists for trial.
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
II. BACKGROUND
Glanton became an assistant manager at an FST location in September 2003. She did not become aware that some of FST’s policies may have violated her FLSA rights until a customer who also happened to be a lawyer informed her of this lawsuit. 1 A few days later, on April 13, 2005, she filed a notice of consent to become a party plaintiff in this case. 2 At that time, she was a debtor in a Chapter 13 bankruptcy case, which she had commenced on September 19, 2002. 3
On May 3, 2005, FST deposed Glanton, 4 and, on June 3, 2005, it filed a motion for summary judgment (followed later by a supplemental summary-judgment motion), arguing that Glanton is judicially estopped from bringing her FLSA claims because she failed to include those putative claims on her Chapter 13 bankruptcy schedule of assets. On September 15, 2005, the bankruptcy court granted the bankruptcy trustee’s August 22, 2005, motion to amend Glanton’s bankruptcy plan to reflect the claims against FST in her schedulе of assets. 5
*1370 III. DISCUSSION
Judicial estoppel is an equitable doctrine, invoked at the court’s discretion, under which a party is precluded from asserting a claim in a legal proceeding inconsistent with a claim made in a previous proceeding.
Burnes v. Pemco Aeroplex, Inc.,
Although the Supreme Court has stated that “the circumstances under which judicial estoppel may appropriately be invoked are probably not reducible to any general formulation of principle,”
New Hampshire,
In bankruptcy, debtors have a duty to disclose all potential assеts, 11 U.S.C. § 521(1), and must amend their financial statements if, circumstances change,
Burnes,
The Eleventh Circuit has applied judicial estoppel on three occasions based on positions taken in bankruptcy proceedings. In all three cases, the plaintiff pursued employment-discrimination claims in judicial or administrative proceedings and then filed documents with the bankruptcy court under oath averring that the employment claims did not exist.
See Barger v. City of Cartersville,
Following the Eleventh Circuit’s lead, district courts have applied judicial estop-pel only where the plaintiff filed bankruptcy documents after taking steps tо pursue the employment claims at issue.
Traylor v. Gene Evans Ford, LLC,
These cases differ considerably from the case at bar. First, Glanton’s claims did not exist when she filed bankruptcy documents under oath. Second, it is undisputed that Glanton did not become aware of the claims until April 2005 and sought to amend her bankruptcy schedules at least as early as August 2005. Finally, Glanton did not file any documents with the bankruptcy court stating that the claims did not exist after she learned about the claims. Thus, applying judicial estop-pel here would represent an unprecedented extension of that doctrine. The court concludes that such an expansion is not warranted because these differences seriously call into question whether Glanton took inconsistent positions under oath and whether Glanton intended to mislead the bankruptcy court, the two key factors that the Eleventh Circuit has directed courts to consider.
A. Inconsistent Positions
The plaintiffs in Barger;
Be Leon,
and
Bumes
submitted bankruptcy schedules stating that they had no lawsuits or unliq-uidated claims
after
they had initiated suits or administrative complaints. In effect, when they told the bankruptcy court that no claims existed, they had already told another court that such claims did exist, making their statements to the bankruptcy court clearly “false.”
Barger,
This stands in sharp contrast with Glan-ton’s conduct. In September 2002, Glan-ton filed bankruptcy documents under oath in which she stated that she did not have any unliquidated claims. 7 That statement *1372 was true when she made it. In this suit, she contends that FST began violating her FLSA rights in September 2003, when she was promoted to assistant manager at FST. Simply put, both positions are correct because each is anchored to a different time period. Thus, the position she took under oath in the bankruptcy proceedings is not inconsistent with her current position.
To be sure, debtors are under a continuing duty to amend their bankruptcy schedules.
See Burnes,
Although the court is holding that mere failure to amend a bankruptcy schedule is not the same as taking inconsistent positions under oath, this result will not prevent courts from applying judicial estoppel based on a lengthy delay in amending the bankruptcy filings. Because the Supreme Court and the Eleventh Circuit have both clearly stated that courts must consider all factors in applying judicial estoppel,
see New Hampshire,
B. Intent to Mislead the Bankruptcy Court
In
Burnes,
the plaintiff contended that his failure to include the claims in his amended schedule was inadvertent.
The panels in
De Leon
and
Barger
seem to have recast and generalized the holding in
Burnes
as a bright-line test in which knowledge of the claims and motive to conceal are determinative of intent to mislead.
Barger,
In light of this language in
Barger
and
De Leon
and the Supreme Court’s admonition that courts should not adopt “inflexible prerequisites or an exhaustive formula” and should always consider “specific factual contexts” in applying judicial estoppel,
New Hampshire,
Glanton clearly had a motive to conceal her claims from the bankruptcy court.
See De Leon,
Nonetheless, from April 2005 until FST filed its motion for summary judgment in June 2005, Glanton clearly knew of the claims and had a motive to conceal them.
Burnes
and its progeny would then seem to counsel applying judicial estoppel here. However, this case differs considerably from thosе cases because Glanton did not affirmatively misrepresent that her claims did not exist after she had learned of them and had pursued them in another court. Instead, she merely failed to amend her schedule for four months after she learned about the claims. Judicial estoppel does not operate because a party did not move as quickly as she could have; it operates only against “cold manipulation,”
Johnson Service Co. v. Transamerica Ins. Co.,
Indeed, the court in
Barger
recognized the significance of this distinction when it concluded that the plaintiff intended to mislead the court because, like the plaintiff in
Burnes,
she “had already filed and was pursuing her employment discrimination claim at the time she filed her bankruptcy petition.”
Although Glanton certainly could have moved more expeditiously in amending her bankruptcy schedule aftеr April 2005, such a delay is just as easily attributable to being busy 10 as intending to mislead the bankruptcy court. In contrast to the plaintiffs in Burnes, De Leon, and Barger, whose sworn filings with the bankruptcy court contained affirmative misrepresentations, Glanton’s brief period of inaction is not conclusive proof of an intent to mislead the bankruptcy court.
The court recognizes that a delay in amending bankruptcy filings can be probative of a party’s intent, and a lengthy delаy alone could warrant a finding that the plaintiff intended to mislead the bankruptcy court. However, four months, without more evidence indicating an intent to mislead, is too short a time to be conclusive, particularly when applying such an extraordinary remedy as judicial estoppel.
See Sumner,
Nonetheless, FST argues that Bumes, De Leon, and Barger establish a bright-line rule that plaintiffs’ claims must be barred whenever defendants file a motion for summary judgment premised on judicial estoppel befоre the plaintiff amends a schedule of assets in a bankruptcy case to include the Claims. Such a bright-line rule, however, represents an unprecedented extension of judicial estoppel.
Courts have considered the relationship between a plaintiffs attempt to amend bankruptcy filings and a defendant’s motion for summary judgment only when it was clear based on other evidence that the plaintiff knew of the claims bеfore filing the contested bankruptcy documents.
See Barger,
Moreover, such a bright-line rule misаpprehends the purpose of judicial es-toppel. Judicial estoppel exists to protect
*1375
the integrity of courts, not the parties’ interests, and it is certainly not intended as an offensive weapon available to defeat plaintiffs’ claims.
See Burnes,
Finally, such an approach would lead tо perverse and absurd results. Under this rule, FST could have sought summary judgment on May 4, 2005, the day after Glanton’s deposition; indeed, had FST deposed Glanton immediately after she opted into the lawsuit or run a court records search and discovered the bankruptcy case the day she opted into the lawsuit, it could theoretically have moved for summary judgment within a day or two of her decision to opt into this lawsuit. If FST’s bright-line rule applied, Glanton’s failure to amend her bankruptcy filings less than a month (or even days) after learning of the claims in the first instance could have completely barred her from pursuing claims which would otherwise be available. Plaintiffs would effectively be barred from pursuing claims on the merits simply because the defendant won a race to the courthouse and absent any proof that the plaintiff actually intended to mislead the bankruptcy court.
Some might argue that such a result is not problematic because it would better protect creditors: Bankruptcy debtors would have to be ‘super-vigilant’ about unliquidated claims and would have to disclose any potential claims before acting on them. However, Congress, which sets the rules and procedures for bankruptcy debtors through the Bankruptcy Code, has imposed no such requirement. Indeed, it is not hard to see why: If debtors automatically forfeited all claims they did not disclose, creditors could lose access to substantial assets should a debtor inadvertently fail to disclose a claim. Simply put, such a requirement could actually harm creditors. This court would clearly overstep its role if it used judicial estoppel, an equitable doctrine created by courts to protect the integrity of the judicial system, to advance policies that Congress declined to pursue in the Bankruptcy Code. The court therefore rejects FST’s proposed bright-line rule.
Having given “due consideration to all of the circumstances of [this] case,” Burnes,
It is therefore ORDERED that defendant Fred’s Stores of Tennessee, Inc.’s motions for summary judgment (Doc. Nos. 25 & 63) are denied.
Notes
. Defendant Fred's Stores of Tennessee, Inc.'s motion for summary judgment (Doc. No. 25), Exs. E & F, Deposition of Sharon Glanton, pp. 16, 109.
. Sharon Glanton's consent to become party plaintiff (Doc. No. 23).
. Defendant Fred's Stores of Tennessee, Inc.'s motion for summary judgment (Doc. No. 25), Ex A, Voluntary Petition, p. 2.
. Id., Ex. E, Deposition of Sharon Glanton, p. 1.
. Notice of pending bankruptcy petition (Doc. No. 51).
. In
Parker v. Wendy's Int’l, Inc.,
The holding in
Parker
is inapplicable to Chapter 13 cases. In Chapter 7 cases, all pre-petition causes of action belong to the estate and generally must be prosecuted by the trustee.
In re Dur Jac Ltd., 254
B.R. 279, 288 (Bkrtcy.M.D.Ala.2000) (Sawyer, B.J.). In contrast, a Chapter 13 debtor maintains control over all assets,
see
11 U.S.C. § 1303, and therefore has standing to bring suit in his own right.
Dur Jac,
. Defendant Fred's Storеs of Tennessee, Inc.'s motion for summary judgment (Doc. No. 25), Ex A, Voluntary Petition; Ex. B, Debtor’s Schedules; Ex. C, Statement of Financial Affairs.
. The holding in Burnes actually appears to limit application of judicial estoppel to debtors who violate their 'statutory' duty to disclose. It is undisputed that Glanton fulfilled her statutory duty to disclose, that is, she disclosed all her assets when she filed her bankruptcy petition. Because the question presented here is whether she violated the 'court-created' duty to amend her bankruptcy filings when her situation changed, it could be argued that Burnes and its progeny are inap-posite. This court, however, assumes that Burnes applies and does not reach this question.
. Even if this court's reading of
De Leon
and
Barger
is incorrect and they do stand for the proposition that courts must impose judicial estoppel if those two factors are present, those cases conflict with
Burnes,
which held that courts should not consider any two factors as "exhaustive оr inflexible,” but should "always give due consideration to all of the circumstances of a particular case.”
. When Glanton learned of these claims, she was working full-time and initiating litigation against her employer. In fact, FST may have contributed to the delay, as it deposed Glan-ton within a month of her decision to opt into the suit.
. Had FST waited longer, the court might have been in a better position to discern Glan-ton'.s motive. However, FST moved so quickly in pursuing its "Gotcha!" legal strategy that it precluded any real insight into whether Glanton was actually trying to mislead the bankruptcy court by failing to amend her petition.
