In re: Marcello Christopher Arriola ( 2016 )


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  •                                                            FILED
    APR 05 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    1                         NOT FOR PUBLICATION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 Nos.   CC-15-1092-KuFTa
    )                 CC-15-1121-KuFTa
    6   MARCELLO CHRISTOPHER ARRIOLA, )                 (Related Appeals)
    )
    7                  Debtor.        )      Bk. No.    09-23290
    ______________________________)
    8                                 )
    MARCELLO CHRISTOPHER ARRIOLA, )
    9                                 )
    Appellant,     )
    10                                 )
    v.                            )      MEMORANDUM*
    11                                 )
    KAREN S. NAYLOR, Trustee,     )
    12                                 )
    Appellee.      )
    13   ______________________________)
    14                      Submitted Without Oral Argument
    on February 19, 2016
    15
    Filed – April 5, 2016
    16
    Appeal from the United States Bankruptcy Court
    17                for the Central District of California
    18        Honorable Erithe A. Smith, Bankruptcy Judge, Presiding
    19
    Appearances:     Appellant Marcello Christopher Arriola, pro se, on
    20                    brief; appellee Karen S. Naylor, trustee, did not
    appear.
    21
    22
    Before: KURTZ, FARIS 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        In 2015, Debtor Marcello Christopher Arriola sought to
    3   reopen his 2009 chapter 71 no-asset bankruptcy case in order to
    4   correct his schedules and collaterally attack certain rulings the
    5   bankruptcy court made in his 2010 bankruptcy case.    Those rulings
    6   all concern the secured claim of Bank of America, N.A.2    The
    7   bankruptcy court permitted Arriola to amend his schedules but
    8   denied Arriola’s multiple requests seeking to re-litigate his
    9   dispute with Bank of America.    By way of these two appeals,
    10   Arriola challenges those denials.
    11        The bankruptcy court correctly denied Arriola permission to
    12   re-litigate in the 2009 bankruptcy case his dispute with Bank of
    13   America.    Arriola litigated that dispute in his 2010 bankruptcy
    14   case.    He also had a full and fair opportunity to appeal.   The
    15   bankruptcy court’s rulings against Arriola are now final and non-
    16   appealable.
    17        Accordingly, we AFFIRM.
    18                                   FACTS
    19   1.   The 2009 bankruptcy case is opened and closed.
    20        Arriola commenced two separate bankruptcy cases.     First, he
    21
    1
    22         Unless specified otherwise, all chapter and section
    references are to the Bankruptcy Code, 
    11 U.S.C. §§ 101-1532
    , and
    23   all “Rule” references are to the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy
    Procedure, Rules 1001-9037. All “Civil Rule” references are to
    24   the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
    25        2
    The proof of claim identified BAC Home Loans Servicing,
    26   L.P. as the creditor, but BAC apparently merged into Bank of
    America in 2011. For purposes of this decision, the distinction
    27   between BAC and Bank of America is irrelevant, so for ease of
    reference, both are jointly referred to herein as Bank of
    28   America.
    2
    1   filed a chapter 7 petition in November 2009.   In that case, the
    2   chapter 7 trustee filed a report in January 2010 reflecting that
    3   Arriola had no assets available for distribution to his
    4   creditors; in May 2010, he received his discharge.   There was no
    5   need for creditors to file proofs of claim, and there was no need
    6   for the court to resolve any claims disputes, because there was
    7   nothing of value available to pay anything to any of Arriola’s
    8   creditors.   In June 2010, shortly after Arriola obtained his
    9   discharge, that bankruptcy case was closed.
    10   2.   The 2010 bankruptcy case is opened, and Arriola fully and
    11        finally litigates Bank of America’s claim therein.
    12        A few months later, in September 2010, Arriola commenced his
    13   second bankruptcy case.   This time, Arriola filed a chapter 13
    14   bankruptcy petition.   In his amended chapter 13 schedules,
    15   Arriola listed Bank of America as his sole secured creditor, with
    16   a lien against his home located in Westminster, California; he
    17   identified this claim as disputed.
    18        In December 2010, Bank of America filed its proof of secured
    19   claim in the approximate amount of $450,000, and in April 2011,
    20   Bank of America filed an amended proof of claim in roughly the
    21   same amount.   Also in April 2011, Arriola filed a motion
    22   objecting to Bank of America’s claim.   The parties thereafter
    23   engaged in months of claims litigation.   After two hearings and
    24   the filing of numerous papers by both sides, the bankruptcy court
    25   entered an order on October 5, 2012, overruling Arriola’s claim
    26   objection.   Among other things, the bankruptcy court rejected
    27   Arriola’s argument that his signatures on the underlying note and
    28   deed of trust were forged.
    3
    1        On two alternate grounds, the bankruptcy court also rejected
    2   Arriola’s argument that Bank of America lacked standing and was
    3   not entitled to enforce the note and the deed of trust.    First,
    4   the bankruptcy court held that Bank of America’s entitlement to
    5   enforce the note was evidenced by an assignment of deed of trust
    6   dated November 5, 2009 and recorded on December 10, 2009, which
    7   assignment appears on its face to have transferred to Bank of
    8   America all beneficial interest in both the note and the deed of
    9   trust.
    10        And second, the bankruptcy court held that Bank of America’s
    11   entitlement to enforce the note also was evidenced by the
    12   supplemental declaration of Joe Peloso, which in relevant part
    13   stated that Bank of America had in its possession the original
    14   note, indorsed in blank.   In support of this statement, Peloso
    15   attached to his supplemental declaration what he declared to be a
    16   true copy of the original note, which was accompanied by an
    17   indorsements page – or allonge – reflecting that the note indeed
    18   had been indorsed in blank.3
    19        Arriola filed an appeal from the October 2012 order
    20   overruling his claim objection, but we dismissed that appeal
    21   based on Arriola’s failure to pay the required appeal filing and
    22   docketing fee.   The October 2012 bankruptcy court order and our
    23
    3
    24         Arriola distrusts the indorsements page because some copies
    of the note exist that do not have the indorsements page
    25   attached. But we recently held, under similar circumstances,
    26   that the absence of indorsements on some note copies does not by
    itself cast genuine doubt on the authenticity of indorsements
    27   appearing on other copies of the same note. Baroni v. Wells
    Fargo Bank, N.A (In re Baroni), 
    2015 WL 6941625
    , at *5-6 (9th
    28   Cir. BAP Nov. 10, 2015) (Mem. Dec.).
    4
    1   order dismissing the appeal therefrom are now both final and non-
    2   appealable.
    3        Undeterred, Arriola filed dozens of papers in the bankruptcy
    4   court over the course of the next year repeatedly seeking
    5   reconsideration of the bankruptcy court’s order overruling his
    6   claim objection.    On several occasions, the bankruptcy court
    7   entered orders denying Arriola’s reconsideration motions.
    8        In an August 22, 2013 order denying one of Arriola’s
    9   reconsideration motions, the bankruptcy court set forth in detail
    10   its reasoning for denying reconsideration.    Among other things,
    11   the court rejected as factually incorrect Arriola’s contention
    12   that he was not given sufficient notice of the continued claim
    13   objection hearing.    The court also rejected Arriola’s assertion
    14   that he found “newly discovered evidence” in the form of the
    15   “Affidavit of Beth Chrisman, Forensic Document Examiner,” which
    16   purportedly supported Arriola’s forged documents claim.
    17   According to the court, Arriola clearly had this “affidavit” at
    18   the time of the original claim objection proceedings, but he
    19   never filed it in his bankruptcy case.    The court therefore
    20   reasoned that the affidavit was not newly discovered evidence
    21   upon which Arriola could base a request for relief under Civil
    22   Rule 60(b)(2).
    23        Many of the other points the bankruptcy court rejected
    24   merely duplicated points Arriola had raised in his original claim
    25   objection.    The bankruptcy court also entered orders denying
    26   Arriola’s other reconsideration motions.    Arriola filed an appeal
    27   from one of the orders denying one of his reconsideration
    28   motions, but we dismissed that appeal based on Arriola’s failure
    5
    1   to pay the required appeal filing and docketing fee.   The
    2   bankruptcy court’s orders denying reconsideration, and our
    3   dismissal of Arriola’s reconsideration order appeal, are all now
    4   final and non-appealable.
    5        Meanwhile, Arriola also commenced an adversary proceeding,
    6   which in relevant part sought to determine the validity of Bank
    7   of America’s lien.   On October 16, 2012, the bankruptcy court
    8   entered an order dismissing some of Arriola’s claims for relief
    9   without leave to amend and dismissing the rest of Arriola’s
    10   claims for relief with leave to amend.
    11        Arriola never filed an amended complaint after the court
    12   entered its October 16, 2012 dismissal order, so the court
    13   ultimately dismissed the entire adversary proceeding by order
    14   entered January 4, 2013.    Arriola never appealed the bankruptcy
    15   court’s January 4, 2013 adversary proceeding dismissal order, and
    16   that order is now final and non-appealable.
    17        Finally, in the spring of 2014, when Bank of America filed a
    18   motion for relief from stay seeking authorization to proceed with
    19   nonjudicial foreclosure proceedings, Arriola used his opposition
    20   to the motion as an opportunity to revisit his contention that
    21   Bank of America did not have a valid interest in the note and the
    22   deed of trust.   For reasons that are not entirely clear, the
    23   bankruptcy court chose not to rely on its prior rulings, which
    24   overruled Arriola’s claim objection and which determined that
    25   Bank of America was entitled to enforce the note and the deed of
    26   trust secured by Arriola’s residence.    Instead, the court ordered
    27   Bank of America to file supplemental papers and to demonstrate
    28   that the bankruptcy filing of the original lender identified in
    6
    1   the note and the deed of trust – First Magnus Financial
    2   Corporation – did not render invalid the November 2009 assignment
    3   from MERS to Bank of America of the beneficial interest in the
    4   note and the deed of trust.
    5        At the continued hearing on the relief from stay motion, the
    6   bankruptcy court held that Bank of America’s supplemental
    7   response and accompanying declaration had not adequately
    8   addressed the points the bankruptcy court had asked Bank of
    9   America to address.   Consequently, the bankruptcy court denied
    10   Bank of America’s relief from stay motion on that basis.
    11   3.   The 2009 bankruptcy case is reopened, but the bankruptcy
    12        court denies Arriola’s requests seeking to re-litigate his
    13        dispute with Bank of America.
    14        Having discovered what he believed constituted new grounds
    15   for challenging the validity of Bank of America’s claimed
    16   interest in the note and deed of trust – the First Magnus
    17   Financial Corporation bankruptcy – Arriola filed motions seeking
    18   to reopen his 2009 bankruptcy case and seeking to revisit his
    19   entire dispute with Bank of America in that case.   The bankruptcy
    20   court entered orders permitting Arriola to file amended schedules
    21   in his 2009 bankruptcy case (listing Bank of America’s claim as
    22   disputed), but the bankruptcy court denied Arriola’s requests
    23   seeking to re-litigate in the 2009 bankruptcy case his dispute
    24   with Bank of America.
    25        Arriola timely filed notices of appeal from two of the
    26   bankruptcy court’s denial orders.
    27                              JURISDICTION
    28        The bankruptcy court had jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C.
    7
    1   §§ 1334 and 157(b)(2)(A) and (B).     We have jurisdiction under
    2   
    28 U.S.C. § 158
    .
    3                                   ISSUE
    4        Did the bankruptcy court commit reversible error when it
    5   denied the motions Arriola filed in the 2009 bankruptcy case
    6   seeking to re-litigate his dispute with Bank of America?
    7                            STANDARDS OF REVIEW
    8        Generally speaking, the issue of Arriola’s standing is a
    9   jurisdictional question we may raise sua sponte and review de
    10   novo.   Paine v. Dickey (In re Paine), 
    250 B.R. 99
    , 104 (9th Cir.
    11   BAP 2000).   But the question of whether Arriola qualified as a
    12   “person aggrieved” for appellate standing purposes is a factual
    13   question that requires us to consider whether the orders on
    14   appeal directly and adversely affected Arriola pecuniarily.     
    Id.
    15   (citing Duckor Spradling & Metzger v. Baum Trust (In re P.R.T.C.,
    16   Inc.), 
    177 F.3d 774
    , 777 (9th Cir. 1999)).
    17        Arriola’s motions seeking to re-litigate in his 2009
    18   bankruptcy case his dispute with Bank of America defy easy
    19   classification.    Nonetheless, for standard of review purposes,
    20   the bankruptcy court’s orders denying those motions are roughly
    21   analogous to orders denying reconsideration of claims-related
    22   orders, which are reviewed for an abuse of discretion.     United
    23   Student Funds, Inc. v. Wylie (In re Wylie), 
    349 B.R. 204
    , 208
    24   (9th Cir. BAP 2006).
    25        The bankruptcy court abused its discretion only if it
    26   applied an incorrect legal rule or if it made findings of fact
    27   that were illogical, implausible or without support in the
    28   record.   United States v. Hinkson, 
    585 F.3d 1247
    , 1262 (9th Cir.
    8
    1   2009) (en banc).
    2                               DISCUSSION
    3        Most of Arriola’s appeal brief focuses on why he thinks he
    4   should have prevailed in his claims litigation against Bank of
    5   America in the 2010 bankruptcy case.      But the correctness of the
    6   bankruptcy court’s claims rulings in the 2010 bankruptcy case is
    7   beyond the scope of this appeal.       As we mentioned earlier, those
    8   claims rulings are all now final and non-appealable.      These two
    9   appeals only concern the bankruptcy court’s orders denying
    10   Arriola’s requests seeking to re-litigate in the 2009 bankruptcy
    11   case his dispute with Bank of America.
    12        Arriola contends on appeal that the bankruptcy court denied
    13   him due process by not allowing him to file in the 2009
    14   bankruptcy case pleadings and motions against Bank of America.
    15   However, Arriola cannot prevail on his due process theory in the
    16   absence of prejudice.   Rosson v. Fitzgerald (In re Rosson),
    17   
    545 F.3d 764
    , 776-77 (9th Cir. 2008).
    18        Here, the record on appeal establishes that Arriola was not
    19   prejudiced by the bankruptcy court’s denials.      Arriola had no
    20   need for an adjudication of Bank of America’s claim in his 2009
    21   bankruptcy case.   That case was a closed, no-asset chapter 7
    22   case.   As such, there was nothing available to distribute to
    23   Arriola’s creditors, and thus no need to determine who those
    24   creditors were or to determine the validity or amount of their
    25   claims for purposes of that bankruptcy case.
    26        In addition, Arriola had more than ample opportunity to
    27   contest Bank of America’s claim in his 2010 bankruptcy case.        In
    28   fact, Arriola in that case was afforded an abundance of due
    9
    1   process.    To meet the constitutional requirement of due process,
    2   litigants only must be given notice “reasonably calculated under
    3   all of the circumstances to apprise interested parties of the
    4   pendency of the action and afford them an opportunity to present
    5   their objections.”   Mullane v. Cent. Hanover Bank & Trust Co.,
    6   
    339 U.S. 306
    , 314 (1950).
    7        In Arriola’s 2010 bankruptcy case, the bankruptcy court,
    8   over the course of more than two years, permitted Arriola to file
    9   numerous papers in which he attacked both Bank of America’s proof
    10   of claim and the validity of Bank of America’s asserted interest
    11   in the note and the deed of trust.    The bankruptcy court duly
    12   considered Arriola’s papers, held hearings and ultimately
    13   overruled Arriola’s claim objection (and his multiple requests
    14   for reconsideration), in the process holding that Bank of America
    15   qualified as a person entitled to enforce the note and the deed
    16   of trust and, hence, had standing to file a proof of claim.
    17   Moreover, the bankruptcy court’s claims adjudication should be
    18   entitled to preclusive effect in any future proceedings in which
    19   Arriola attempts to contest Bank of America’s claim or the
    20   validity of its asserted interest in the note and in the deed of
    21   trust.    See Veal v. Am. Home Mortg. Servicing, Inc. (In re Veal),
    22   
    450 B.R. 897
    , 918 (9th Cir. BAP 2011) (describing preclusive
    23   effect of claims rulings).
    24        In his appeal brief, Arriola relies heavily on the relief
    25   from stay proceedings that took place in the 2010 bankruptcy
    26   case.    According to Arriola, Bank of America admitted during the
    27   relief from stay proceedings the invalidity of the “first
    28   assignment” (the November 2009 assignment from MERS to Bank of
    10
    1   America of the beneficial interest in the note and the deed of
    2   trust) and impermissibly attempted to rely instead on a “second
    3   assignment” (Bank of America’s possession of the original note
    4   indorsed in blank).   Arriola contends that he had no opportunity
    5   to investigate or challenge the so-called second assignment and
    6   that Bank of America should be estopped from relying upon the
    7   second assignment.
    8        Arriola’s contentions are both factually and legally
    9   meritless.   Bank of America’s position that it held the original
    10   note indorsed in blank was asserted early on during the claim
    11   objection proceedings, and the bankruptcy court’s order
    12   overruling Arriola’s claim objection included a finding that Bank
    13   of America held the original note, which was indorsed in blank.
    14   As a result, any question regarding the validity of the November
    15   2009 assignment from MERS to Bank of America of the beneficial
    16   interest in the note and the deed of trust is irrelevant.    Bank
    17   of America’s status as the holder of the note is sufficient to
    18   support its claim of entitlement to enforce the note and its
    19   standing to file a proof of claim.   See In re Veal, 
    450 B.R. at
    20   920-21.   Bank of America’s noteholder status also is sufficient
    21   to support Bank of America’s interest in the deed of trust
    22   because, under California law, the right to enforce the deed of
    23   trust automatically follows the note.   See 
    Cal. Civ. Code § 2936
    ;
    24   Cockerell v. Title Ins. & Trust Co., 
    42 Cal. 2d 284
    , 291 (1954);
    25   Willis v. Farley, 
    24 Cal. 490
    , 497-98 (1864).
    26        In sum, the bankruptcy court did not violate Arriola’s due
    27   process rights by denying his motions filed in the 2009
    28   bankruptcy case seeking to re-litigate his dispute with Bank of
    11
    1   America.
    2                              CONCLUSION
    3        For the reasons set forth above, the bankruptcy court’s
    4   orders denying Arriola’s multiple requests seeking to re-litigate
    5   his dispute with Bank of America are AFFIRMED.4
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    4
    26         On March 10, 2016, Arriola filed a motion requesting that
    this Panel suspend this appeal and grant a limited remand to the
    27   bankruptcy court so that the bankruptcy court could consider a
    new motion seeking relief under Civil Rule 60. All relief
    28   requested in Arriola’s March 10, 2016 motion is denied.
    12