In re: Gregory S. Tift ( 2016 )


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  •                                                             FILED
    DEC 09 2016
    1                          NOT FOR PUBLICATION
    SUSAN M. SPRAUL, CLERK
    U.S. BKCY. APP. PANEL
    2                                                         OF THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    3                  UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY APPELLATE PANEL
    4                            OF THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    5   In re:                        )       BAP No.     WW-15-1002-KuJuTa
    )
    6   GREGORY S. TIFT,              )       Bk. No.     14-17966
    )
    7                   Debtor.       )       Adv. No.    14-01432
    ______________________________)
    8                                 )
    GREGORY S. TIFT,              )
    9                                 )
    Appellant,    )
    10                                 )
    v.                            )       MEMORANDUM*
    11                                 )
    RESOURCE TRANSITION           )
    12   CONSULTANTS, LLC; JACK CULLEN;)
    SUSAN ALTERMAN,               )
    13                                 )
    Appellees.    )
    14   ______________________________)
    15                  Argued and Submitted on November 17, 2016
    at Pasadena, California
    16
    Filed – December 9, 2016
    17
    Appeal from the United States Bankruptcy Court
    18                for the Western District of Washington
    19        Honorable Timothy W. Dore, Bankruptcy Judge, Presiding
    20   Appearances:      Appellant Gregory S. Tift argued pro se; Jack
    Cullen of Foster Pepper PLLC argued for appellees.
    21
    22   Before: KURTZ, JURY and TAYLOR, Bankruptcy Judges.
    23
    24
    25
    26        *
    This disposition is not appropriate for publication.
    27   Although it may be cited for whatever persuasive value it may
    have (see Fed. R. App. P. 32.1), it has no precedential value.
    28   See 9th Cir. BAP Rule 8024-1.
    1                               INTRODUCTION
    2        Former Chapter 131 debtor Gregory S. Tift appeals from a
    3   summary judgment in favor of appellees Resource Transition
    4   Consultants LLC, Jack Cullen and Susan Alterman.        In the
    5   underlying adversary proceeding, Tift requested damages and
    6   injunctive relief for an alleged violation of the automatic stay
    7   based on the appellees’ continued participation in state court
    8   contempt proceedings against Tift, which proceedings partly took
    9   place after the commencement of Tift’s chapter 13 bankruptcy
    10   case.
    11        The bankruptcy court held, as a matter of law, that the
    12   automatic stay did not apply to the contempt proceedings against
    13   Tift.    We agree, so we AFFIRM.
    14                                      FACTS
    15        The dispute between the parties arose in state court, before
    16   Tift commenced his bankruptcy case.        As part of its efforts to
    17   enforce its rights as a secured creditor of Remian LLC, in July
    18   2014, Fannie Mae sought and obtained the appointment of a
    19   custodial receiver.    The state court appointed the receiver –
    20   appellee Resource Transition Consultants – to exercise control
    21   over Fannie Mae’s collateral: a 16-unit apartment building in
    22   Tacoma, Washington.2   In aid of the receivership, the state court
    23
    1
    24         Unless specified otherwise, all chapter and section
    references are to the Bankruptcy Code, 
    11 U.S.C. §§ 101-1532
    , and
    25   all "Rule" references are to the current version of the Federal
    Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure, Rules 1001-9037. All “Civil Rule”
    26   references are to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
    27        2
    As for the other two appellees, appellee Susan Alterman is
    28   Fannie Mae’s legal counsel in the state court litigation, and
    (continued...)
    2
    1   in August 2014 granted Resource Transition Consultants an
    2   injunction, which in relevant part enjoined Tift from interfering
    3   with the receiver’s duties, including the collection of rents
    4   from the apartment building’s tenants.     The injunction also
    5   required Tift to produce any and all documents in his possession
    6   pertaining to the receivership property.
    7        Tift claimed to be a secured creditor of Remian and, by
    8   virtue of his alleged secured creditor status, opposed the
    9   appointment of a receiver and later sought to have the receiver
    10   removed.   In contrast, the receiver asserted that Tift, in
    11   essence, was engaged in the unlicensed practice of law.
    12   According to the receiver, Tift holds himself and his company out
    13   to the community as a professional legal services company and
    14   frequently files court papers, negotiates loan workouts and
    15   provides other services normally provided by attorneys.     The
    16   receiver contends that, by way of these services, Tift seeks to
    17   delay and impede the creditors of his clients from enforcing
    18   their legal rights.
    19        After the issuance of the injunction against Tift and
    20   others, the receiver filed against Tift, first, a contempt motion
    21   and, later, a sanctions motion.   The receiver maintained that
    22   Tift had contravened the injunction by interfering with the
    23   receiver’s duties and by not producing all of the documents that
    24   Tift had been ordered to produce.     In response, Tift claimed,
    25
    26        2
    (...continued)
    27   appellee Jack Cullen, also an attorney, has represented Resource
    Transition Consultants in both the state court and the bankruptcy
    28   court.
    3
    1   among other things, that many of his prior emails pertaining to
    2   Remian had been deleted and that he could not produce what he
    3   previously deleted.
    4        The state court entered its order finding Tift in contempt
    5   on October 3, 2014.   The contempt order gave Tift an additional
    6   two weeks to comply with the production aspects of the court’s
    7   injunction.    The contempt order further specified that Tift was
    8   required to turn over to Resource Transition Consultants all of
    9   his computers, along with all password and login information
    10   necessary to give Resource Transition Consultants complete access
    11   to any and all records relating to Remian.   The contempt order
    12   also specified that Tift’s failure to comply with the injunction
    13   would result in the imposition of monetary sanctions, as well as
    14   incarceration.
    15        In response to the receiver’s sanctions motion, Tift filed a
    16   petition with the state court of appeals seeking an emergency
    17   stay.    That petition was denied on October 30, 2014 – the eve of
    18   the hearing on the receiver’s sanctions motion.   Immediately
    19   after the denial of his emergency stay motion, on October 30,
    20   2014, Tift commenced his chapter 13 bankruptcy case.3
    21
    3
    That bankruptcy case was dismissed on December 2, 2014,
    22
    based on Tift’s failure to submit most of the required case
    23   commencement documents. Subsequently, the bankruptcy court
    denied Tift’s motion to vacate the case dismissal. Among other
    24   things, the court pointed out that Tift had admitted in his
    schedules that he had over $900,000 in noncontingent, liquidated
    25   unsecured debt. This amount of unsecured debt exceeded the
    26   chapter 13 debt limits specified in § 109(e), which governs
    eligibility to be a chapter 13 debtor. Shortly after the
    27   bankruptcy court denied Tift’s motion to vacate the dismissal of
    his chapter 13 case, Tift commenced a chapter 7 bankruptcy case
    28                                                      (continued...)
    4
    1        The day after Tift commenced his chapter 13 bankruptcy case,
    2   the state court proceeded with the hearing on the receiver’s
    3   sanctions motion.   Tift did not appear.   The state court and
    4   counsel for the receiver – appellee Jack Cullen – discussed the
    5   potential applicability of the automatic stay, but Cullen
    6   persuaded the state court that the commencement of Tift’s
    7   bankruptcy case did not stay the contempt proceedings.    Based on
    8   the inapplicability of the stay and Tift’s continuing contempt of
    9   court, the state court awarded contempt sanctions of $2,000 per
    10   day and also issued a warrant for Tift’s arrest.
    11        Meanwhile, in the bankruptcy court, Tift filed his adversary
    12   complaint seeking injunctive relief and damages based on the
    13   appellees’ alleged violation of the automatic stay.    According to
    14   Tift, the continued prosecution of the state court contempt
    15   proceedings, including the October 31, 2014 sanctions hearing,
    16   violated the stay and justified the relief requested.
    17        Almost immediately, the appellees responded to the complaint
    18   by moving for summary judgment.   The appellees argued that the
    19   automatic stay did not apply to the contempt proceedings.    Tift
    20   filed a declaration in response to the summary judgment motion in
    21   which he contended that he needed more time to conduct discovery
    22   and that there were issues of fact that needed to be decided by
    23   the bankruptcy court.   But Tift’s declaration did not identify
    24   these alleged issues of fact.
    25
    26        3
    (...continued)
    27   (Case No. 14-18931), which was pending at the time the bankruptcy
    court disposed of Tift’s adversary proceeding by granting the
    28   appellees’ summary judgment motion.
    5
    1        At the hearing on the summary judgment motion, the
    2   bankruptcy court ruled in favor of the appellees and against
    3   Tift.4   The bankruptcy court held that the automatic stay did not
    4   apply to the state court contempt proceedings.   The court also
    5   held that Tift did not need additional time to conduct discovery
    6   because there were no facts Tift could uncover that would render
    7   the contempt proceedings subject to the stay.    Because no factual
    8   dispute existed and because Ninth Circuit law clearly supported
    9   the appellees’ position (that the stay did not apply), the
    10   bankruptcy court concluded that the appellees were entitled to
    11   summary judgment against Tift.
    12        The bankruptcy court entered summary judgment on
    13   December 18, 2014, and Tift timely appealed.
    14                              JURISDICTION
    15        The bankruptcy court had jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C.
    16   §§ 1334 and 157(b)(2)(O), and we have jurisdiction under
    17   
    28 U.S.C. § 158
    .
    18        The bankruptcy court’s summary judgment ruling raised the
    19   issue of whether Tift continued to have standing to pursue his
    20   stay violation action in light of the chapter 7 case he filed
    21   immediately after his chapter 13 case was dismissed.    The court
    22   queried whether those claims could be pursued only by Tift’s
    23   chapter 7 trustee.   In any event, Tift’s 2014 chapter 7 case was
    24   dismissed in early 2015 based on his failure to pay the filing
    25
    4
    26         At a prior hearing, the bankruptcy court had denied Tift’s
    request for injunctive relief. The court held that the request
    27   for injunctive relief was rendered moot by the dismissal of
    Tift’s chapter 13 case and that Tift had not established a
    28   likelihood of success on the merits.
    6
    1   fee.    In yet another chapter 7 case, Case No. 16-10530, Tift has
    2   claimed an exemption for his damages claims arising from the
    3   appellees’ alleged violation of the automatic stay.     As a result
    4   of his exemption claim, Tift continues to have a direct stake in
    5   the damage claims and in the outcome of this appeal.     Thus, Tift
    6   has standing.    See Mwangi v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A.
    7   (In re Mwangi), 
    432 B.R. 812
    , 822-23 (9th Cir. BAP 2010).
    8                                   ISSUE
    9          Did the bankruptcy court commit reversible error when it
    10   granted the appellees’ summary judgment motion and resolved all
    11   of Tift’s claims in their favor?
    12                            STANDARDS OF REVIEW
    13          We review de novo the bankruptcy court's grant of summary
    14   judgment.    Ulrich v. Schian Walker, P.L.C. (In re Boates),
    15   
    551 B.R. 428
    , 433 (9th Cir. BAP 2016) (citing Ilko v. Cal. St.
    16   Bd. of Equalization (In re Ilko), 
    651 F.3d 1049
    , 1052 (9th Cir.
    17   2011)).
    18          The summary judgment standards are the same for all federal
    19   courts.    
    Id.
     (citing Marciano v. Fahs (In re Marciano), 
    459 B.R. 20
       27, 35 (9th Cir. BAP 2011), aff'd, 
    708 F.3d 1123
     (9th Cir.
    21   2013)).    Summary judgment may be granted when there are no
    22   genuine issues of disputed material fact and when the movant is
    23   entitled to prevail as a matter of law.     Civil Rule 56 (made
    24   applicable in adversary proceedings by Rule 7056); Celotex Corp.
    25   v. Catrett, 
    477 U.S. 317
    , 322–23 (1986).
    26                                DISCUSSION
    27          Under § 362, the automatic stay arises upon the filing of
    28   the debtor’s bankruptcy petition.      Among other things, the stay
    7
    1   prohibits creditors from continuing to prosecute prepetition
    2   litigation against the debtor.   § 362(a)(1); see also Benedor
    3   Corp. v. Conejo Enters., Inc. (In re Conejo Enters., Inc.),
    4   
    96 F.3d 346
    , 351 (9th Cir. 1996).    The stay also prevents
    5   creditors from attempting to collect on prepetition debts,
    6   § 362(a)(6), and also halts almost any attempt “to obtain
    7   possession of property of the estate or of property from the
    8   estate or to exercise control over property of the estate.”
    9   § 362(a)(3).   When creditors violate the automatic stay, an
    10   individual debtor harmed by the stay violation can seek contempt
    11   sanctions under § 105(a) or can bring an action for damages under
    12   § 362(k).   See Knupfer v. Lindblade (In re Dyer), 
    322 F.3d 1178
    ,
    13   1189-90 (9th Cir. 2003); Rediger Inves. Servs. v. H Granados
    14   Commc'ns, Inc. (In re H Granados Commc'ns, Inc.), 
    503 B.R. 726
    ,
    15   734-35 (9th Cir. BAP 2013).
    16        Here, the bankruptcy court held that the appellees had not
    17   violated the automatic stay by attending and participating at the
    18   state court hearing on their motion for contempt sanctions
    19   because, according to Ninth Circuit and Bankruptcy Appellate
    20   Panel precedent, the automatic stay does not apply to contempt
    21   proceedings based on the debtor’s failure to comply with
    22   discovery orders and to pay related monetary sanctions.    The
    23   resolution of this appeal, therefore, hinges on the continued
    24   validity of the line of Ninth Circuit and Panel decisions
    25   recognizing this exception to the automatic stay.
    26        The first case in this line was David v. Hooker, Ltd.,
    27   
    560 F.2d 412
    , 417–18 (9th Cir. 1977).    In Hooker, which predates
    28   the 1978 enactment of the Bankruptcy Code, the court of appeals
    8
    1   held that a contempt order requiring obedience with prior court
    2   orders directing the debtor business entity and its managing
    3   agent to answer interrogatories, and directing the managing agent
    4   to pay $2,000 in compensatory sanctions for not previously
    5   answering the interrogatories, did not contravene the automatic
    6   stay then in effect.5   
    Id. at 418
    .   The court of appeals in
    7   relevant part explained that, so long as the contempt proceedings
    8   did not involve the determination of or attempt to collect the
    9   creditor’s underlying prepetition claim against the debtor and
    10   did not involve a mere ploy by the creditor to harass the debtor,
    11   the postpetition continuation of the contempt proceedings did not
    12   violate the bankruptcy rule 401(a) stay.    
    Id.
    13        The next case in this line was In re Dumas, 19 B.R. at 676.
    14   The alleged stay violation in Dumas arose from state court
    15   judgment enforcement proceedings, in which the judgment debtor
    16   Dumas stipulated that he was in contempt of court for failure to
    17   comply with a subpoena.   Id. at 676-77.   Instead of complying
    18   with the subpoena before the sentencing hearing on the contempt,
    19
    5
    20         At the time, the automatic stay arose from federal rule of
    bankruptcy procedure 401(a), which provided:
    21
    The filing of a petition shall operate as a stay of the
    22
    commencement or continuation of any action against the
    23        bankrupt, or the enforcement of any judgment against
    him, if the action or judgment is founded on an
    24        unsecured provable debt other than one not
    dischargeable under clause (1), (5), (6), or (7) of
    25        section 35(a) of this title.
    26
    Hooker, 
    560 F.2d at
    415 n.4. The stay provision set forth in
    27   bankruptcy rule 401(a) ultimately was subsumed within § 362(a).
    See Dumas v. Atwood (In re Dumas), 
    19 B.R. 676
    , 677 (9th Cir. BAP
    28   1982).
    9
    1   Dumas filed a bankruptcy petition and notified the judgment
    2   creditor Atwood.   
    Id. at 677
    .
    3        In spite of that notification, the state court sentencing
    4   hearing went forward, at which Atwood advocated that a contempt
    5   sentence be imposed against Dumas.     (The state court initially
    6   did impose a sentence of one week in jail, plus a $275 fine, but
    7   later vacated that sentence on Dumas’s motion.) 
    Id.
    8        Dumas then filed in the bankruptcy court a contempt motion
    9   against Atwood and his attorney for violation of the automatic
    10   stay.   The bankruptcy court “dismissed” the motion without
    11   explaining the grounds for dismissal, and Dumas appealed.     
    Id.
    12   On appeal, this Panel held that Hooker was controlling and that
    13   the state court’s contempt sentencing did not violate the
    14   automatic stay.    
    Id. at 677-78
    .     In so holding, Dumas noted that
    15   Hooker only had involved a monetary contempt sanction award
    16   against the debtor’s principal and not against the debtor itself,
    17   but Dumas opined that this distinction was immaterial, positing
    18   that, notwithstanding the automatic stay, Hooker also would have
    19   permitted monetary contempt sanctions against the debtor itself
    20   if such sanctions had been awarded: “we perceive no reluctance by
    21   the circuit court to have imposed the sanction on the corporation
    22   solely because it was the bankrupt.”      
    Id. at 678
    .
    23        Dumas also acknowledged that Hooker was interpreting the
    24   bankruptcy rule 401(a) automatic stay then in effect and not the
    25   version of the automatic stay set forth in § 362(a).     Even so,
    26   Dumas did not perceive any material distinction between the
    27   bankruptcy rule 401(a) automatic stay and the § 362(a) automatic
    28   stay: “the present statute and the former rule are essentially
    10
    1   similar.”    Id. at 677.
    2         The third and final case in this line is Yellow Express, LLC
    3   v. Dingley (In re Dingley), 
    514 B.R. 591
     (9th Cir. BAP 2014).          In
    4   Dingley, the debtor Dingley was ordered by the state court to pay
    5   roughly $4,000 in compensatory sanctions to the plaintiff Yellow
    6   Express based on Dingley’s failure to appear for a post judgment
    7   debtor's exam.   
    Id. at 593
    .    When Dingley did not pay the
    8   sanctions award, Yellow Express requested and obtained an order
    9   to show cause why Dingley should not be held in contempt.        
    Id.
    10   Before the show cause hearing was held, Dingley commenced his
    11   chapter 7 bankruptcy case.     
    Id.
        Even though Dingley notified
    12   Yellow Express of the bankruptcy filing and the automatic stay,
    13   Yellow Express advocated in the state court that the automatic
    14   stay did not apply to the contempt proceedings, citing Dumas and
    15   Hooker.   
    Id. at 593-94
    .   Dingley did not respond to the state
    16   court’s order requiring briefing on the automatic stay issue.
    17   Instead, Dingley filed a motion to enforce the automatic stay.
    18   
    Id.
    19         After considering the parties’ positions, the bankruptcy
    20   court ruled that the automatic stay prevented the state court and
    21   Yellow Express from continuing with contempt proceedings based on
    22   Dingley’s failure to pay the $4,000 prepetition discovery
    23   sanctions award.   
    Id. at 594-95
    .         The bankruptcy court
    24   essentially conceded that the automatic stay did not shield
    25   Dingley from his willful disobedience of the state court’s order.
    26   But the bankruptcy court nonetheless concluded that Yellow
    27   Express had violated the automatic stay by urging the state court
    28   to follow through with the contempt proceedings based on
    11
    1   Dingley’s nonpayment of a prepetition dischargeable debt (the
    2   $4,000 discovery sanctions award).    
    Id.
    3        On appeal, this Panel reversed and held that Hooker had
    4   established a bright-line rule excepting contempt proceedings
    5   from the automatic stay, so long as the contempt proceeding
    6   “‘does not involve a determination [or collection] of the
    7   ultimate obligation of the bankrupt nor does it represent a ploy
    8   by a creditor to harass him.’”   
    Id. at 597
     (quoting Hooker,
    9   
    560 F.2d at 418
    ).   The panel recognized that a number of courts
    10   have criticized Hooker and Dumas and also noted the “strength of
    11   the points” expressed in Judge Jury’s separate concurrence, which
    12   questioned the continuing validity of Hooker and Dumas.   
    Id.
     at
    13   599-600.   Notwithstanding these concerns, Dingley ultimately held
    14   that it was bound by Hooker’s bright-line rule “as followed post-
    15   Code by Dumas.”   Id. at 600.
    16        The case currently before us presents little in the way of
    17   facts that would permit us to depart from Hooker, Dumas and
    18   Dingley.   Tift contends that this line of cases is
    19   distinguishable because the postpetition state court contempt
    20   proceedings against him sought to enforce, in part, a state court
    21   order requiring him to turn over his computers to the state court
    22   receiver, Resource Transition Consultants.   According to Tift,
    23   because the state court order interfered with his possession of
    24   and control over property of his bankruptcy estate, its
    25   enforcement by way of contempt proceedings fell outside the
    26   exception to the automatic stay recognized in Hooker, Dumas and
    27   Dingley.
    28        At least superficially, Tift’s contention might seem to be
    12
    1   supported by Goichman v. Bloom (In re Bloom), 
    875 F.2d 224
     (9th
    2   Cir. 1989).   Bloom involved a postpetition contempt motion in
    3   federal district court arising from the debtor’s failure to
    4   attend a postjudgment deposition.      Bloom also involved the
    5   district court’s postpetition denial of an exemption claim that
    6   Bloom had asserted prepetition in response to the creditor
    7   Goichman’s garnishment efforts.    
    Id. at 225
    .    At the contempt
    8   hearing, the district court imposed a $500 monetary sanction
    9   against Bloom and directed Bloom to transfer partnership assets
    10   to Goichman to secure Goichman’s prepetition judgment.      
    Id.
    11         Bloom then filed a complaint against Goichman for violation
    12   of the automatic stay.   
    Id.
       In response, Goichman filed a motion
    13   in the district court asking the district court to withdraw the
    14   reference pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 157
    (d).      
    Id.
       Ultimately, Bloom
    15   prevailed in his stay enforcement action, and Goichman appealed.
    16   
    Id.
    17         The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the bankruptcy
    18   court’s determination that Goichman’s postpetition actions
    19   violated the automatic stay.   
    Id. at 226
    .     In so ruling, the
    20   Ninth Circuit explained that Goichman’s postpetition actions went
    21   well beyond the prosecution of a contempt motion against Bloom:
    22         Goichman's motion, however, was not merely a motion to
    hold Bloom in contempt. Among other things, Goichman
    23         moved to appoint a receiver for Bloom's estate, to
    order Bloom to comply with the prebankruptcy consent
    24         decree, to strike Bloom's claim of exemption, and to
    order transfer of certain Florida properties to
    25         himself. On its face, the motion patently violates the
    spirit and letter of section 362.
    26
    27   
    Id.
       As the Bloom court further noted, Goichman did not even
    28   attempt to defend his postpetition efforts to compel compliance
    13
    1   with the consent decree, to strike Bloom's exemption claim and
    2   to withdraw the reference.    
    Id.
        Bloom thus concluded that
    3   Goichman was not protected by Hooker because “Goichman filed the
    4   contempt motion with the purpose of securing assets protected by
    5   the stay.”    
    Id.
    6        In Dingley, this Panel interpreted Bloom as limiting the
    7   scope of Hooker.    514 B.R. at 599.     Among other things, we stated
    8   in Dingley that Bloom prevented bankruptcy courts from extending
    9   Hooker to cover contempt proceedings in which the creditor sought
    10   either to enforce the underlying judgment or to obtain a transfer
    11   of bankruptcy estate assets.    Id. (citing Bloom, 
    875 F.2d at
    12   226-27).
    13        Nonetheless, the case currently before us is distinguishable
    14   from Bloom.    Here, the state court’s order directing the turnover
    15   of Tift’s computers was for the patent and limited purpose of
    16   allowing the state court receiver – Resource Transition
    17   Consultants – to complete its discovery by enabling it to examine
    18   the computers’ memory for any information or documents concerning
    19   Remian LLC or the receivership property.      It was not an attempt
    20   to secure or otherwise utilize estate assets in the satisfaction
    21   of an underlying debt.    In short, the facts presented here are
    22   far more similar to Dingley and Dumas than they are to Bloom.6
    23        The other arguments Tift has attempted to raise on appeal
    24   are devoid of merit.    For instance, Tift argues on appeal that
    25
    6
    26         In fact, the automatic stay likely was inapplicable for a
    separate and independent reason. Generally, the automatic stay
    27   does not prohibit a litigant from seeking (or enforcing) third
    party discovery against a debtor. See Groner v. Miller
    28   (In re Miller), 
    262 B.R. 499
    , 503-05 (9th Cir. BAP 2001).
    14
    1   the bankruptcy court ignored his emotional distress claim for
    2   relief.   However, Tift’s adversary complaint reflects that all of
    3   Tift’s claims were based on the appellees’ alleged violation of
    4   the automatic stay.   In light of our ruling upholding the
    5   bankruptcy court’s determination that, as a matter law, the
    6   appellees did not violate the automatic stay, the bankruptcy
    7   court correctly resolved all of Tift’s adversary claims in the
    8   appellees’ favor.
    9                               CONCLUSION
    10        For the reasons set forth above, we AFFIRM the bankruptcy
    11   court’s summary judgment in favor of the appellees.
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