This appeal, involving an issue of first impression in this Circuit, concerns the applicability of the doctrine of judicial es-toppel in this employment discrimination case. The district court decided that judicial estoppel barred Plaintiff Billups’ employment discrimination claims against Defendants Pemco Aeroplex, Inc. and Precision Standard, Inc. (together referred to as “Pemco”) because of his failure to disclose the claims in his concurrent bankruptcy proceedings. Billups appeals the grant of summary judgment in favor of Pemco and, for the reasons that follow, we affirm in part and reverse in part. Specifically, Billups is judicially estopped from asserting any claims for monetary damages against Pemco, but he may continue to pursue his claims for injunctive relief.
*1284 I.Factual and Procedural Background
The facts of this case are straightforward. Billups began working for Pemco in November of 1992. On July 3, 1997, he filed for Chapter 13 relief in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Alabama. 1 Billups had a lawyer for the entirety of his bankruptcy proceedings. Pemco, his employer, did not participate in the bankruptcy. The Chapter 13 schedule of assets form specifically asked Billups to report any contingent or unliqui-dated claims of any kind. 2 Additionally, the statement of financial affairs form, filed in the Chapter 13 case, asked Billups to list all suits to which he is or was a party within one year of filing for bankruptcy. At the time that he filled out these forms, Billups was not participating in a lawsuit and indicated that on his forms. Then, on January 30, 1998 (six months later), Billups filed a charge of discrimination with the EEOC against Pemco. On December 9, 1999, Billups, along with thirty-five (35) other individuals, filed an employment discrimination suit against Pemco in the Northern District of Alabama seeking both monetary and injunctive relief. Billups never amended his Chapter 13 schedule of assets or statement of financial affairs to include his lawsuit against Pemco.
In October of 2000, Billups requested that his Chapter 13 bankruptcy petition be converted to a Chapter 7 case. As part of the conversion, the bankruptcy court ordered Billups to file amended or updated schedules to the Chapter 7 trustee reflecting any financial changes since he first filed schedules with the bankruptcy court. However, Billups did not report the pending lawsuit against Pemco. When he filed the amended schedules, he certified to the bankruptcy court that the schedules were true and accurate. On January 23, 2001, Billups received a “no asset,” complete discharge of his debts, totaling over $38,000. The parties agree that the bankruptcy court, the bankruptcy trustee, and Billups’ creditors never knew about the pending lawsuit.
Pemco moved for summary judgment on all of Billups’ claims on May 3, 2001, asserting that the doctrine of judicial estop-pel barred Billups from pursuing his claims against Pemco because he failed to disclose the claims to the bankruptcy court. Billups appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment.
II.Standard of Review
We review the granting of summary judgment
de novo,
and the district court’s findings of fact for clear error.
Levinson v. Reliance Standard Life Ins. Co.,
III.Discussion
A Application to Monetary Claims
Billups argues that the district court erred in applying the doctrine of judicial estoppel in this case because: (1) Pemco was not a party to the bankruptcy pro *1285 ceedings; (2) Pemco was not prejudiced by the omission of the claim in the bankruptcy proceedings; and (3) Billups did not have the requisite intent to manipulate the judicial system.
In this case, judicial estoppel is raised in the context of a bankruptcy proceeding and a federal employment discrimination case; therefore, federal law governs our analysis.
See Chrysler Credit Corp. v. Rebhan,
Recently, the Supreme Court observed that, “the circumstances under which judicial estoppel may appropriately be invoked are probably not reducible to any general formulation of principle;” nevertheless, the Court went on to enumerate several factors that inform a court’s decision concerning whether to apply the doctrine in a particular case.
New Hampshire,
There is no debate that Billups’ financial disclosure forms were submitted under oath to the bankruptcy court; therefore,, the issue becomes one of intent. Before turning to the question of intent, however, we first outline a debtor’s duty to disclose under the bankruptcy laws and address some of Billups’ other arguments.
A debtor seeking shelter under the bankruptcy laws must disclose all assets, or potential assets, to the bankruptcy court. 11 U.S.C. § 521(1), and 541(a)(7). The duty to disclose is a continuing one that does not end once the forms are submitted to the bankruptcy court; rather, a debtor must amend his financial statements if circumstances change.
See Coastal Plains,
Objecting to the district court’s application of judicial estoppel in this case, Billups first argues that Perneo cannot rely on the doctrine of judicial estoppel because it was not a creditor or a party to the bankruptcy proceedings. Billups is incorrect. The doctrine of judicial estoppel protects the integrity of the judicial system, not the ■ litigants; therefore, numerous courts have concluded, and we agree, that “[w]hile privity and/or detrimental reliance are often present in judicial estoppel cases, they are not required.”
Ryan,
Billups further contends that Pern-eo cannot rely on the doctrine of judicial estoppel because Pemco was not prejudiced by the omission of the claim from the bankruptcy proceeding. Again, Billups is incorrect because, similar to the reasoning concerning privity, courts have concluded that since the doctrine is intended to protect the judicial system, those asserting judicial estoppel need not demonstrate individual prejudice.
Coastal Plains,
Finally, Billups argues that he did not possess the requisite intent to mislead the bankruptcy court. Instead, he claims that inadvertent error resulted in the continued omission of his discrimination claim from his bankruptcy schedules. Billups is correct that the doctrine of judicial estop-pel applies in situations involving intentional contradictions, not simple error or inadvertence.
American Nat’l,
That being said, several circuits, in considering the particular issue of judicial estoppel and the omission of assets in a bankruptcy case, have concluded that deliberate or intentional manipulation can be inferred from the record. The Fifth Circuit concluded that, “the debtor’s failure to satisfy its statutory disclosure duty is ‘inadvertent’ only when, in general, the debt- or either lacks knowledge of the undisclosed claims or has no motive for their concealment.”
Coastal Plains,
The Third Circuit, in
Ryan,
Relying on the, analysis and reasoning in the above referenced cases, and keeping in mind that judicial estoppel is an equitable doctrine invoked at a court’s discretion, it is clear that the record in this case contains sufficient evidence from which to infer intentional manipulation' by Billups. Specifically, it is undisputed that Billups *1288 filed and pursued his employment discrimination claims during the pendency of his Chapter 13 case, but never amended his financial statements to include the lawsuit. Additionally, at the time that Billups petitioned the bankruptcy court to convert his case to Chapter 7, he had already filed, and was pursuing, the employment claims. Nevertheless, he once again failed to disclose the pending lawsuit to the bankruptcy court. These undisputed facts make it clear that Billups had knowledge of his claims during the bankruptcy proceedings.
As to motive, it is undisputed that Bill-ups stood to gain an advantage by concealing the claims from the bankruptcy court. It is unlikely he would have received the benefit of a conversion to Chapter 7 followed by a no asset, complete discharge had his creditors, the trustee, or the bankruptcy court known of a lawsuit claiming millions of dollars in damages. As discussed more fully below, Billups even acknowledges, at least implicitly, that disclosing this information would have likely changed the result of his bankruptcy because he now seeks to re-open his bankruptcy to include the undisclosed claims. Given these undisputed facts, we think the district court correctly concluded that Bill-ups possessed the requisite intent to mislead the bankruptcy court and correctly barred him from pursuing his discrimination claims, at least to the extent .that he sought money damages.
In an attempt to remedy the situation, Billups argues that he should now be allowed to re-open his bankruptcy case to amend his filings and include his lawsuit against Perneo. We disagree. The success of our bankruptcy laws requires a debtor’s full and honest disclosure. Allowing Billups to back-up, re-open the bankruptcy case, and amend his bankruptcy filings, only after his omission has been challenged by an adversary, suggests that a debtor should consider disclosing potential assets only if he is caught concealing them. This so-called remedy would only dimmish the necessary incentive to provide the bankruptcy court with a truthful disclosure of the debtors’ assets.
See Traylor v. Gene Evans Ford, LLC,
B. Application to Injunctive Claims
Finally, Billups urges us to limit the application of judicial estoppel in this case to his claims for monetary relief, and allow him to proceed with his claim for injunctive relief against Perneo. The issue, therefore, is whether judicial estoppel applies to the pursuit of an unreported claim for injunctive relief. In this instance, we conclude .that it does not.
Billups seeks injunctive relief prohibiting Perneo and its officers, -supervisors, agents, employees or successors from engaging in illegal employment practices. He also asks that the Defendants be required to adopt employment practices that are in accordance with federal employment laws. With respect to the applicability of judicial estoppel to this case, we are concerned with Billups’ failure to disclose his claim for millions of dollars in damages to the bankruptcy court, because that information would have been important to the court in determining whether his case should have been converted to Chapter 7,
*1289
or whether he qualified for a no asset discharge. The bankruptcy court must be confident that it has the full and honest disclosure of the debtor concerning any potential assets that could increase the value of the estate for the creditors.
See New Hampshire,
The federal system of bankruptcy is designed not only to distribute the property of the debtor, not by law exempted, fairly and equally among his creditors, but as a main purpose of the act, intends to aid the unfortunate debtor by giving him a fresh start in life, free from debts, except of a certain character, after the property which he owned at the time of bankruptcy has been administered for the benefit of creditors. Our decisions lay great stress upon this feature of the law — as one not only of private but of great public interest in that it secures to the unfortunate debtor, who surrenders his property for distribution, a new opportunity in life.
Stellwagen v. Clum,
In this situation, knowledge that the debtor was pursuing a discrimination claim seeking injunctive relief that offered no monetary value to the estate, would not, in all likelihood, have changed the bankruptcy court’s determination about how to proceed with the debtor’s bankruptcy. What is clear is that in order to gain the benefits of the bankruptcy laws, the debtor must first surrender his non-exempt property for the benefit of his creditors. The trustee and the creditors are interested in the debtor’s property that can add anything of value to the estate. We conclude that Billups’ undisclosed claim for injunctive relief offered nothing of value to the estate and was of no consequence to the trustee or the creditors. 3 We decide, then, that the important and necessary reasons that bar Billups’ monetary claims do not affect his efforts to change, through injunctive relief, Pemco’s employment practices. He may pursue his claims for injunctive relief.
IV. Conclusion
For the reasons set forth above, summary judgment in favor of Pemco on Bill-ups’ claims for monetary relief is AFFIRMED. However, summary judgment in favor of Pemco on Billups’ claims for injunctive relief is REVERSED and the case is REMANDED to the district court for further proceedings on those claims consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Chapter 13 allows a portion of a debtor’s future earnings to be collected by a trustee and paid to creditors. A Chapter 13 debtor does not receive a discharge of his debts; rather, the debtor is allowed to extend or reduce the balance of his debts through a plan of rehabilitation. In contrast, Chapter 7 allows a trustee to collect and liquidate a debtor’s assets, if any, in exchange for a discharge of the debtor’s debts.
. Debtors filing for bankruptcy must complete and submit several standard forms to the bankruptcy court concerning the debtor’s finances.
. In reaching this conclusion, we express no opinion about other cases of undisclosed claims for non-monetary relief to which judicial estoppel may or may not apply. The facts of a particular case will always guide a court's analysis of this issue.
