IN RE: Jared Trenton COWEN, Debtor. WD Equipment, LLC; Aaron Williams; Bert Dring, Appellants, v. Jared Trenton Cowen, Appellee.
No. 15-1413
United States Court of Appeals, Tenth Circuit.
Filed February 27, 2017
849 F.3d 943
Second, the EEOC argues reversal is justified to the extent the district court considered privacy interests as limiting the EEOC‘s subpoena power, which is contrary to the Supreme Court‘s decision in University of Pennsylvania. Although the court exprеssed some concerns about the EEOC obtaining such “sensitive information on other employees,” App. at 107, it denied the application on relevance grounds, not on privacy grounds.
III. CONCLUSION
We affirm. Our decision should not preclude the EEOC from formulating a request for information to overcome the concerns discussed in this opinion.
C. Todd Morse of Morse Law, LLC, Denver, Colorado, for Plaintiff-Appellee.
Before KELLY, McKAY, and McHUGH, Circuit Judges.
McKAY, Circuit Judge.
Plaintiff Jared Trenton Cowen‘s 2000 Peterbilt 379, a commercial truck, was in need of repair. To cover the cost, Mr. Cowen borrowed money from Defendant WD Equipment, which is owned and managed by Defendant Aaron Williams, in exchange for a lien on the truck and the promise of repayment. After the Peterbilt broke down again only a few weeks after the repairs, it was towed to a local repair company, which estimated that fixing the truck again would cost $9,000—more than Mr. Cowen could afford.
Because his Peterbilt was in the shop, Mr. Cowen could not make installment payments to WD Equipment. So, in early August, 2013, Mr. Cowen began taking steps to refinance the loan; he met with his bank and with his parents in an attempt to secure refinancing, and he exchanged several text messages on August 1 and 2 with Mr. Williams about paying off the loan. During the course of that exchange, however, Mr. Williams gave Mr. Cowen several, contradictory responses as to how much Mr. Cowen would need to pay to settle the debt, and he accelerated the payoff date several times, before ultimately setting August 6 as the deadline.
Around the same time, Mr. Cowen defaulted on another loan secured by another one of his trucks, a 2006 Kenworth T600. This loan was owed to Defendant Bert Dring, the father-in-law of Mr. Williams, who held a purchase-money security interest in the truck. On July 29, Mr. Dring lured Mr. Cowen under false pretenses to his place of business to repossess the Kenworth. Mr. Dring asked Mr. Cowen, who had brought along his young son, to leave the keys in the ignition, engine running, аnd to step out of the truck. As Mr. Cowen exited the vehicle, Mr. Dring jumped in, grabbed the keys, and declared the truck “repossessed.” When Mr. Cowen asked what was going on, Mr. Dring told him to take his son and leave immediately. A group of five men gathered around Mr. Dring while he brandished a can of mace above his head and threatened to use it if Mr. Cowen did not leave. Mr. Cowen pushed his young son behind him to protect him, and the two left the lot on foot. Three days later, Mr. Cowen received a letter from Mr. Dring giving him ten days to pay off the Kenworth.
About a month later, Mr. Cowen moved the bankruptcy court for orders to show cause why Defendants should not be held in contempt for willful violations of the automatic stay. The bankruptcy court granted the motions and ordered Dеfendants to “immediately turn over” the trucks to Mr. Cowen; “[c]ontinuing failure to turn over the Truck[s],” the bankruptcy court warned, “may result in the imposition of monetary damages against the Creditors for willful violation of the automatic stay.” Order on Motion for Order to Show Cause and Order to Turnover Property of the Estate, Case No. 13-23461 (Bankr. Colo. Sept. 5, 2013).
When Defendants did not comply with the bankruptcy сourt‘s turnover order, Mr. Cowen filed an adversary proceeding for violations of the automatic stay. A few months later, the bankruptcy court dismissed the underlying bankruptcy case because, without the trucks, Mr. Cowen had no regular income, which rendered him ineligible for Chapter 13 relief. However, the bankruptcy court expressly retained jurisdiction over the adversary procеeding.
During the adversary proceeding, Defendants again asserted that Mr. Cowen‘s rights in the trucks had been properly terminated by Defendants before the bankruptcy petition was filed, and so they could not have violated the automatic stay. But the bankruptcy court “did not find the Defendants’ testimony that they had transferred title before the petition date to be credible.” (App. Vоl. II at 248.) It went on to “find[] that they manufactured the paperwork ... after the bankruptcy filing.” (Id.) “Defendants likely forged documents and gave perjured testimony” and “coached their witnesses on what to testify to during [] breaks” in an “attempt to convince the Court that [Mr. Cowen‘s] rights in the Trucks had been terminated prebankruptcy.” (Id. at 258.) Additionally, the bankruptcy court held that “even if they had taken the actions they claim to have taken before the bankruptcy filing,” (id. at 269), such actions contravened Colorado law, and therefore did not effectively terminate Mr. Cowen‘s “ownership interest in the Trucks,” (id. at 252). And so, the bankruptcy court concluded, “[f]ailing to return the Trucks violated
Defendants timely appealed this decision to the district court, which reversed on the calculatiоn of damages but otherwise affirmed the bankruptcy court‘s order. Defendants then appealed to this Court, arguing, among other things, that the bankruptcy court exceeded its jurisdiction, that it lacked constitutional authority to enter a final judgment in this adversary proceeding, and that the bankruptcy court misinterpreted
We address first the bankruptcy court‘s jurisdiction. “The jurisdiction of the bankruptcy courts, like that of other federal courts, is grounded in, and limited by, statute.” Celotex Corp. v. Edwards, 514 U.S. 300, 307 (1995). By statute, bankruptcy courts have jurisdiction to “enter final judgments in ‘all core proceedings arising under titlе 11, or arising in a case under title 11.‘” Stern v. Marshall, 564 U.S. 462, 474 (2011) (quoting
Defendants contend, however, that the bankruptcy court erred in retaining jurisdiction over the
Defendants’ attempts to distinguish Johnson are unavailing. They argue that, unlike in Johnson, this
Defendants also seem to suggest that Johnson is distinguishable beсause there the bankruptcy court decided the automatic stay violation first, which was appealed (which, in turn, resulted in a remand), and then dismissed the underlying bankruptcy while the automatic stay violation appeal was pending. (See Appellant‘s Br. at 34 (citing Johnson, 575 F.3d at 1081, where we summarized the procedural history of the case)). But Defendants do not argue,
Defendants also contend that the bankruptcy court lacked constitutional authority under Stern v. Marshall to enter final judgment. But Stern dealt with claims that did not “stem[] from the bankruptcy itself” and would not “necessarily be resolved in the claims allowance process.” Stern, 564 U.S. at 499. A claim under
A claim for violating an automatic stay is not the “stuff of the traditional actions at common law tried by the courts at Westminster in 1789.” Stern, 564 U.S. at 484 (quoting N. Pipeline Constr. Co. v. Marathon Pipe Line Co., 458 U.S. 50, 90 (1982) (Rehnquist, J., concurring in the judgment)). To the contrary, “we are concerned here with the adjudication of a right created by federal statute, rather than a private, state-created right, like that of concern in Marathon.” Mountain America Credit Union v. Skinner (In re Skinner), 917 F.2d 444, 449 (10th Cir. 1990) (holding that a bankruptcy court did not exceed its constitutional authority when it entered sanctions pursuant to
To the merits. Mr. Cоwen filed the adversary proceeding against Defendants for violating “section 362, which establishes the automatic stay.” Johnson, 575 F.3d at 1083. “When a debtor files for bankruptcy,
Below, the bankruptcy court held that “[t]he failure to return the Trucks to [Mr. Cowen] post-petition constituted a continuing violation of the stay“; specifically, Defendants “violated
The majority rule seems driven more by “practical considerations,”
Here again is
The majority rule reads too much into the section‘s legislative history. Prior to the Bankruptcy Amendments and Federal Judgeship Act of 1984, “the Code‘s stay provision only prohibited any act to obtain possession of property belonging to a bankruptcy estate.” Thompson, 566 F.3d at 702. The 1984 Amendments “broadened the already sweeping provisions of the automatic stay even further to prohibit expressly not only ‘acts to obtain possession’ of property of the estate, but also ‘any act ... to exercise control over the property of the estate.‘” Weber, 719 F.3d at 80 (quoting Pub. L. No. 98-353, 98 Stat. 333, 371). Notwithstanding that “Congress did not provide an explanation of that amendment,” the majority reads from “the mere fact that Congress expanded the provision to prohibit conduct above and beyond obtaining possession of an asset,” that Congress “intended to prevent creditors from retaining property of the debtor.” Weber, 719 F.3d at 80. “This significant textual enlargement is consonant with [the majority rule].” Id.
But Congress does not “hide elephants in mouseholes.” Whitman v. Am. Trucking Ass‘ns, 531 U.S. 457, 468 (2001). The amendments аre equally “consonant” with another, less sweeping conclusion. “Since an act designed to change control of property could be tantamount to obtaining possession and have the same effect, it appears that
In the end, the best argument for the majority rule is that
But this policy argument, too, is simply not supported by the statute‘s text or its legislative history. Even if thе turnover provision were “self-executing” (which we do not decide), there is still no textual link between
We REVERSE the judgement of the district court and REMAND to the district court, which may remand the case to the bankruptcy court, for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. We GRANT the renewed motion to seal volume five of the apрendix.
MONROE G. MCKAY
UNITED STATES CIRCUIT JUDGE
