ORDER
Anthоny Williams filed for bankruptcy without disclosing his pending civil rights suit, the subject of this appeal. Rob Hainje, the defendant in that suit, is a pоlice officer who released a police dog that mauled Williams during an arrest. Hainje moved for summary judgment on grounds that judicial estoppel prevented Williams from prosecuting a claim that he failed to disclose to his crеditors. The district court entered summary judgment in favor of Hainje. We affirm.
This suit had been pending for nearly two years when Williams filed for Chapter 13 protection in May 2008. But Williams failed to disclose the suit in his bankruptcy filings, even though in the bankruptcy court he sought relief from medical debts arising from the dog attack. Months later, without having been informed of the lawsuit, the bankruptcy court сonfirmed a reorganization plan that substantially reduced his debts. Two months after that, still in the dark about the suit, the bankruptcy court entered an order modifying the plan, which continued to offer debt relief.
The district court entered summary judgment in favor of Hainje. Having determined that Williams had intentionally concealed the lawsuit, thе court concluded that judicial estoppel precluded him from pursuing it for his own benefit. The court noted, however, that a Chapter 13 debtor has standing to sue on behalf of the bankruptcy estate. See Cable v. Ivy Tech State College,
While this case was pending on appeal, Williams defaulted on his reorganization payments and his Chapter 13 case was dismissed, a fact about which we may take judicial notice. In re Consol. Indus. Corp.,
On appeal Williams contends that the district court erred in judicially estop-ping him from pursuing the claim for himself because his omission was inadvertent and the result of bad legal advice. Although judicial estoppel is a matter of discretion, pure questions of law receive plenary review, see Commonwealth Ins. Co. v. Titan Tire Corp.,
The district court’s use of judicial estop-pel was not an abuse of discretion. Broadly speaking, judicial estoppel precludes a party from abandoning positions after they havе prevailed on them in earlier litigation. Zedner v. United States,
Williams never received a discharge because the bankruptcy court eventually dismissed his case, and in that respect his case differs from Cannon-Stokes. The difference, however, is immaterial. Williams still received significant financial benefits during his short stint in bankruptcy. His filing, for instance, triggered the automatic stay, see 11 U.S.C. § 362, holding creditors at bay for some 20 months and thereby enabling him to keep his house and car, and to avoid new interest charges on his mortgage arrearage while he pursued his undisclosed civil-rights suit. In the meantime, the bankruptcy court confirmed a reorganization plan that temporarily relieved Williams of most of his debts without further interest or penalty.
Williams’s debts may not have been permanently wiped away, but a debtor who recеives even preliminary benefits from concealing a chose in action from his creditors can still be estopрed from pursuing the suit in the future. See Krystal Cadillac-Oldsmobile GMC Truck v. General Motors, Corp.,
Williams’s argument that his omission was inadvertent is unavailing. He pleads ignorance, claiming he did not intend to conceal the lawsuit. His bankruptcy counsel, he says further, knew about the civil-rights suit, and his counsel in the civil-rights suit knew about the bankruptcy case. The Supreme Court has indeed recognized that judicial estoppel may be inappropriate where there is evidence that nondisclosure was inadvertent. New Hampshire,
Accordingly, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
