STATEMENT OF THE CASE
Jack J. Stallsworth appeals from the trial court's order granting summary judgment in favor of Anselmo Munoz and Fidel & Sons Swimming Pools, Inc. (collectively "Munoz"). As a result of an automobile accident with Munoz, Stallsworth sustained bodily injuries. Stallsworth subsequently filed a Chapter 7 bankruptey petition but failed to include his personal injury claim against Munoz on his bankruptcy schedules. Following his discharge in the bankruptey court, Stallsworth brought a negligence action against Munoz in the Morgan Superior Court. Munoz filed a motion for summary judgment and asserted that Stallsworth lacked standing to bring his negligence claim. Stallsworth then petitioned the bankruptcy court to reopen his bankruptcy and to order the United States Trustee to reаppoint a trustee to pursue his claim against Munoz on behalf of the estate. The bankruptcy court subsequently entered an order granting Stallsworth's petition. Thereafter, the Morgan Superior Court granted Munoz's motion for summary judgment. '
We affirm.
ISSUE
We restate the issues presented by Stalls-worth on appeal as one, dispositive issue: whether the trial court erred when it granted Munoz's motion for summary judgment.
FACTS
On April 13, 1990, Stallsworth sustained bodily injuries in an automobile accident with Anselmo Munoz, while Munoz allegedly was acting within the seope of his employment with Fidel & Sons Swimming Pools, Inc. At the time of the accident, Stallsworth was the debtor in a Chapter 18 bankruptcy proceeding in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southеrn District of Indiana. As a result of his injuries from the accident, Stallsworth was unable to work for a period of time. Because he could not meet his financial obligations, Stallsworth filed a motion with the bankruptcy court on July 30, 1990, to convert his Chapter 18 reorganization to a Chapter 7 liquidation. The bank-ruptey court granted Stallsworth's motion and he filed a Voluntary Petition for relief under Chapter 7. Stallsworth then amended his bankruptey schedules, but he did not list his personal injury сlaim against Munoz. On October 81, 1990, Stallsworth was discharged in bankruptcy and the scheduled property of the estate was abandoned after the bank-ruptey trustee reported that his was a "no asset" case. Record at 138.
On Junе 14, 1991, nearly nine months after his debts were discharged and the bankrupt cy estate was closed, Stallsworth brought a negligence action against Munoz in the Morgan Superior Court. Munoz filed a motion for summary judgment on October 28, 1992. Shortly thereafter, on November 6, 1992, Stallsworth petitioned the bankruptcy court to reopen his bankruptcy case and to reappoint a trustee to pursue Stalisworth's negligence claim against Munoz on behalf of the estate. The bankruptey court granted Stalls-worth's petition and entered an order reopening the estate on November 9, 1992. After a hearing on the motion, the trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Munoz on March 29, 1998, and entered the following conclusions of law:
*1027 This Court is guided by the case of Schlosser v. Bank of Western Indiana (1992), Ind.App.,589 N.E.2d 1176 , in which the Indiana Court has precluded bankrupts from pursuing undisclosed claims and subsequent litigation. This is barred under the theory of judicial estoppel.
THE COURT ALSO FINDS that the facts of this case are almost identical to McDonald v. Fairfield Pathologists, Inc.,580 N.E.2d 690 (Ind.App.1991) and Judge Chezem in that case denied plaintiff's right to pursue the action.
THE COURT FINDS that since the trustee was not joined as the pаrty litigant at the time the bankruptcy was pending and was not joined until after the situation was brought to plaintiff's attention by the defendant's Motion for Summary Judgment and as an afterthought in order to attempt to rectify the omission by the bankrupt in not listing this cause originally, the trustee reopened this case in order to pursue the matter. That course of conduct is not allowed by Indiana Courts pursuant to the above stated cases.
THE COURT NOW grants the defendant's Motion for Summary Judgment in thеir favor and against the plaintiff herein as a final judgment in this case.
Record at 247. Stallsworth appeals from that judgment. We will state additional facts where necessary.
DISCUSSION AND DECISION
Standard of Review
When reviewing a ruling on a motion for summary judgment, we conduct the same inquiry followed by the trial court. Selleck v. Westfield Insurance Co. (1993), Ind. App.,
Failure to Schedule Negligence Claim
Stallsworth contends that the trial court's order granting summary judgment in favor of Munoz was erroneous. Specifically, Stalls-worth asserts that because his bankruptcy estate had been reopened and the bankruptcy trustee had been reappointed to pursue his negligence claim against Munoz, the trial court should have permitted him to substitute the trustee for himself as the "real party in interest" under Trial Rule 17(A). Munoz responds that because Stallsworth laсked standing to bring his claim after being discharged in bankruptey, he is now "judicially estopped" from reopening the bankruptcy estate and from securing the reappointment of the trustee to pursue the cause of action after the statute of limitations has expired. We agree with Munoz.
Under the Bankruptey Code, upon the filing of a bankruptcy petition, "all legal or equitable interests of the debtor in property as of the commencement of the case" become part of the bankruptcy estate. 11 U.S.C. § 54l1(a)(1); Boucher v. Exide Corp. (1986), Ind.App.,
Here, Stallsworth's negligence claim against Munoz accrued before he filed his
*1028
petition for relief under Chapter 7. When Stallsworth filed for bankruptcy, this claim "passed into the bankruptcy estate and could only be pursued by the bankruptcy trustee." See Boucher,
However, Stallsworth failed to disclose the existence of his claim against Munoz on his bankruptcy schedules as required under the statute
1
and, thus, prevented abandonment by the trustee. McDonald,
Nevertheless, Stallswоrth maintains that he should be permitted to substitute the bankruptcy trustee as the "real party in interest" in his action against Munoz by reopening the bankruptcy estate and securing the reappointment of the trustee to pursue the claim on behalf of his creditors. We disagree. Stallsworth's negligence claim, although he failed to disclose its existence, became the property of the bankruptey estate when he filed his Voluntary Petition for relief under Chapter 7 on September 10, 1990. Consequently, as we have noted above, Stalisworth lacked standing to file his cause of action against Munoz when he did so on June 14, 1991. See Bradley,
Although Stallsworth is correct that Trial Rule 17(A) is intended to рrevent the dismissal of an action upon the basis that it was not brought in the name of the real party in interest, it does not apply on these facts. Rather, "Indiana substantive law ... must be held to control over the procedural liberality contained in TR. 17(A)." See (General Motors Corp. v. Arnett (1981), Ind.App.,
We decline to follow the recent opinion in Hammes v. Brumley (1994), Ind.App.,
As we have previously noted, when Stalisworth filed his Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition, he was divested of all legal and equitable interest in this cаuse of action. See Bradley,
Since Stallsworth had no cognizable claim against Munoz, his act of filing suit was of no legal consequence and did not toll the statute. The relation-back provision of Trial Rule 17(A)(2) does not apply because the rule presupposes that the original plaintiff had standing to bring suit. The provisions of Trial Rule 17(A) "cannot create a new substаntive right" for Stallsworth in place of the one he lost upon filing for bankruptcy. See Arnett,
We conclude that the trial court here granted summary judgment, not on the ground that the action was not prosecuted in the name of the rеal party in interest, but because Stallsworth had no right to bring an action and the statute had continued to run. Thus, the applicable statute of limitations expired before the bankruptcy estate was reopened and the trustеe attempted to intervene. The trial court's order granting summary judgment in favor of Munoz is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Title 11 provides that, at the commencement of a Chapter 7 bankruptcy proceeding, "[the debt- or shall file a list of creditors, and unless the court orders otherwise, a schedule of assets and liabilities." 11 U.S.C. § 521.
