Brandon James Maxfield v. Janice K. Jennings , 670 F.3d 1329 ( 2012 )


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  •                                                                               [PUBLISH]
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT           FILED
    ________________________ U.S. COURT OF APPEALS
    ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
    No. 11-11422              FEB 22, 2012
    ________________________         JOHN LEY
    CLERK
    D.C. Docket No. 6:10-cv-00265-MSS
    Bkcy. No. 3:03-bk-04837-JAF
    In Re: JANICE K. JENNINGS,
    llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll      Debtor,
    __________________________________________________________
    BRANDON JAMES MAXFIELD,
    llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll                         Plaintiff - Appellee,
    versus
    JANICE K. JENNINGS,
    llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll                         Defendant - Appellant.
    ________________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Middle District of Florida
    ________________________
    (February 22, 2012)
    Before BARKETT, PRYOR and KRAVITCH, Circuit Judges.
    PER CURIAM:
    Janice K. Jennings appeals from a district court order ruling that her debt
    from a fraudulent transfer judgment was nondischargeable in bankruptcy under 
    11 U.S.C. § 523
    (a)(6). That section excepts from discharge any debt “for willful and
    malicious injury by the debtor to another entity or to the property of another
    entity.” 
    Id.
     We are asked to determine whether a fraudulent transfer of property
    by a co-conspirator constituted a willful and malicious injury under § 523(a)(6).
    After a review of the record, and with the benefit of oral argument, we affirm.
    I.
    When Appellee Brandon James Maxfield was seven years old, he was
    rendered permanently quadriplegic after being shot by the accidental discharge of
    a handgun. The handgun was manufactured by Bryco Arms, Inc., and distributed
    by B.L. Jennings, Inc., companies controlled by Appellant Janice Jennings’s
    former husband, Bruce Jennings. In May 2001, Maxfield sued Bruce Jennings and
    the two companies for personal injury in California state court.
    In December 2001, Maxfield filed an amended complaint to add Janice
    (Bruce’s second ex-wife), Anna Leah Jennings (his third ex-wife), and RKB
    Investments as defendants in the personal-injury action, seeking to hold them
    liable under joint venture/enterprise, partnership, and alter-ego theories. RKB is a
    2
    partnership created by Bruce and Janice, who acted as co-trustees of three
    California trusts that were the three partners in RKB. RKB held title to a parcel of
    property, called Shoreview, which is relevant to the instant proceedings.
    In February 2002, Bruce directed Janice to execute a deed on behalf of RKB
    transfering Shoreview to Anna Leah Jennings. When Janice completed the
    transfer, Bruce recorded the deed. Maxfield became aware of the transfer through
    Bruce’s responses to interrogatories in the personal-injury action. In response,
    Maxfield filed a complaint in California state court against Janice, RKB, and the
    trusts forming RKB’s partnership, alleging fraud, conspiracy, and fraudulent
    transfer.
    On May 13, 2003, a jury found Bruce, Bryco Arms, Inc., and B.L. Jennings,
    Inc. liable for Maxfield’s injury, and awarded Maxfield $24,774,146.53 in
    damages. At that time, there had been no determination as to Maxfield’s joint
    venture/enterprise, partnership, and alter-ego claims against Janice, Anna Leah,
    and RKB. The next day, Janice, Bruce, Bryco Arms, Inc., B.L. Jennings, Inc., and
    RKB filed Chapter 11 bankruptcy petitions. Janice’s petition was later converted
    to a Chapter 7 petition. Janice and RKB filed declaratory actions seeking to
    determine which of their assets creditors, including Maxfield, may reach.
    Shortly thereafter, Maxfield’s state cases were transferred to the bankruptcy
    3
    court and joined with the declaratory actions. Then, in June 2007, the court
    concluded that Janice participated in a joint venture with Bruce, Bryco Arms, Inc.,
    and B.L. Jennings, Inc., and was therefore jointly and severally liable with those
    parties for damages awarded to Maxfield in his personal injury suit. The court
    also found that Janice was a conspirator with Bruce and RKB in the fraudulent
    transfer of Shoreview and was therefore jointly and severally liable for the
    damages to Bruce’s creditors in the amount of $3,900,000, the value of Shoreview.
    In reaching these conclusions, the bankruptcy court made several findings.
    Although Janice testified that the deed she signed to Shoreview was a replacement
    deed for one executed in 1995 as part of Bruce’s divorce settlement with Anna
    Leah, the court found this testimony incredible in light of earlier testimony in an
    unrelated case that Bruce had no outstanding obligation to Anna Leah resulting
    from their divorce. Instead, the court found that Janice “knew that RKB was a
    defendant in the Maxfield case, in which Maxfield was claiming millions of
    dollars in damages.” And she knew that Shoreview, a multi-million dollar
    property, was unencumbered. Thus, the bankruptcy court concluded that Janice
    was liable to Bruce’s creditors for the value of Shoreview because she “knew that
    RKB, through Bruce Jennings, intended to transfer the Shoreview Property to
    Anna Leah Jennings to keep it out of the hands of creditors.”
    4
    Janice never challenged the bankruptcy court’s ruling. And in December
    2007, Maxfield filed an adversary complaint in bankruptcy court against Janice,
    seeking an exception under 
    11 U.S.C. § 523
    (a)(6) to Janice’s Chapter 7 debt
    discharge, in the amount of Shoreview’s value. Under § 523(a)(6), any debt “for
    willful and malicious injury by the debtor to another entity or to the property of
    another entity” is excepted from discharge in bankruptcy. 
    11 U.S.C. § 523
    (a)(6).
    Janice responded by filing a motion to dismiss. The bankruptcy court granted that
    motion, concluding that a conspiracy claim, such as the one here against Janice,
    was not the sort of intentional tort that § 523(a)(6) required for discharge. On
    appeal, the district court reversed and remanded, finding “that in certain
    circumstances willful and malicious injury may be inflicted by a co-conspirator.”
    On remand, the bankruptcy court granted Janice’s motion for summary
    judgment, finding that the debt owed—which the court said resulted from the
    personal injury suit—did not result from willful and malicious injury by the
    debtor. Furthermore, the bankruptcy court found that, even though Janice aided in
    the Shoreview transfer with knowledge of the Maxfield suit and of Bruce’s desire
    to keep Shoreview out of his creditors’ hands, her conduct and knowledge were
    “insufficient as a matter of law to establish the intent to harm or cause injury to
    [Maxfield] as required by § 523(a)(6).” And the court stated that, even if Janice
    5
    acted with intent to harm Maxfield under that section, her participation in the
    conspiracy “was not substantially certain to cause injury to” Maxfield because the
    Shoreview transfer occurred over a year before Maxfield obtained a judgment in
    his personal injury action.
    Maxfield again appealed to the district court, arguing that Janice’s active
    participation in the fraudulent transfer satisfied the “willful and malicious”
    standard in § 523(a)(6), and that he possessed a cognizable interest in Shoreview
    at the time of its transfer sufficient to establish that Janice’s actions were
    substantially certain to cause him injury. The district court agreed. The court
    emphasized that evidence in the record showed that Janice knew that: (1) the
    Shoreview deed was not a replacement deed that was part of the 1995 divorce
    between Bruce and Anna Leah; (2) Bruce had no outstanding obligations to Anna
    Leah from their 1995 divorce; (3) RKB, Janice, and Anna Leah were defendants in
    Maxfield’s personal injury action, which involved millions of dollars in damages;
    (4) Bruce invested millions of dollars in Shoreview, which was unencumbered;
    and (5) RKB, through Bruce, intended to transfer Shoreview to keep it out of the
    hands of creditors. And the district court pointed out that the bankruptcy court
    had discredited Janice’s self-serving testimony that she did not know the nature of
    the Shoreview transfer.
    6
    The district court concluded that this evidence, which was sufficient to
    establish a fraudulent transfer, also satisfied the requirements of § 523(a)(6).
    Specifically, the court found that Janice’s “undisputed conduct constitute[d] a
    willful and malicious attempt to injure Maxfield’s interests, as a matter of law on
    this record.” The court made clear that the fact that Maxfield’s personal injury
    claim had not been reduced to a judgment before he initiated his fraudulent
    transfer claim did not affect the § 523(a)(6) analysis because, under California
    law, a tort claimant is a “creditor” who may attack a fraudulent transfer. The
    court therefore reversed the bankruptcy court’s ruling, concluding that, as a matter
    of law, Janice’s adjudicated debt of $3,900,000 was nondischargeable under
    § 523(a)(6). The district court directed the bankruptcy court to enter judgment in
    favor of Maxfield. This appeal followed.
    II.
    “The bankruptcy court’s findings of fact are reviewed ‘under the clearly
    erroneous standard.’” In re Builders Transp., Inc., 
    471 F.3d 1178
    , 1184 (11th Cir.
    2006) (quoting In re Fretz, 
    244 F.3d 1323
    , 1326 (11th Cir. 2001)). “‘Conclusions
    of law, whether from the bankruptcy court or the district court, are reviewed de
    novo.’” 
    Id.
     (quoting In re Fretz, 244 F.3d at 1326). Summary judgment is
    appropriate “if the movant shows that there is no genuine issue as to any material
    7
    fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P.
    56(a). Thus, we review de novo the bankruptcy and district courts’ judgments as a
    matter of law. In re Builders Transp., 
    471 F.3d at 1184
    .
    III.
    This appeal presents the issue of whether Janice Jennings willfully and
    maliciously injured Maxfield or his property under 
    11 U.S.C. § 523
    (a)(6). Janice
    Jennings argues that (1) neither Maxfield nor his property suffered an injury; and
    (2) even if an injury occurred, the injury was not inflicted willfully or maliciously.
    Each of these is addressed in turn.1
    A.      Injury to Maxfield or his property
    Section 523(a)(6) excepts from discharge in bankruptcy any debt that results
    from “willful and malicious injury by the debtor to another entity or to the
    property of another entity.” 
    11 U.S.C. § 523
    (a)(6). Janice contends that, because
    her obligation to Maxfield via the personal injury judgment arose after the
    1
    Janice argues, in the alternative, that the district court erred in directing judgment in
    favor of Maxfield because it did not address her affirmative defense for setoff based on an
    alleged $3 million payment Maxfield received in a settlement agreement. But Janice never
    mentioned this defense in response to Maxfield’s brief before the district court, as required by
    Rule 56 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. See Int’l Stamp Art, Inc. v. U.S. Postal Serv.,
    
    456 F.3d 1270
    , 1274 (11th Cir. 2006) (“If the movant bears the burden of proof on an issue
    because, as a defendant, it is asserting an affirmative defense, it must establish that there is no
    genuine issue of material fact as to any element of that defense.”). Because she failed to argue
    the issue before the district court, it is waived here. Latimer v. Roaring Toyz, Inc., 
    601 F.3d 1224
    , 1240 (11th Cir. 2010).
    8
    fraudulent transfer, she could not have injured Maxfield or his property by
    transferring Shoreview.
    In support of this argument, Janice urges us to follow the decision of the
    Ninth Circuit in In re Saylor, 
    108 F.3d 219
     (9th Cir. 1997), which also involved an
    alleged fraudulent transfer under California law.2 In that case, the Ninth Circuit
    affirmed the bankruptcy and district courts’ findings that a debt incurred through a
    state court breach-of-contract judgment did not give a creditor an actual property
    interest in property that the debtors had transferred fraudulently during the
    pendency of the breach-of-contract action. 
    Id. at 220-21
    . Because the creditor had
    no security interest in the property transferred and no judgment on the fraudulent
    transfer claim at the time he brought the nondischargeability complaint, the
    creditor lacked standing to seek exception from discharge under § 523(a)(6). Id. at
    221.
    We are not persuaded to apply In re Saylor here because this case presents a
    critical distinction: Maxfield had obtained a judgment on his fraudulent transfer
    claim at the time he initiated a nondischargeability claim under § 523(a)(6). Thus,
    unlike in Saylor, Maxfield had a judgment that established a right to payment
    2
    Although not binding, the reasoning employed by the Ninth Circuit is persuasive.
    Bonner v. City of Prichard, 
    661 F.2d 1206
    , 1209 (11th Cir. 1981).
    9
    based on the damage Janice did to his property interest in collecting on his
    personal injury judgment by transferring Shoreview.
    In this way, Maxfield’s nondischargeability claim is more like that in a
    subsequent en banc case from the Ninth Circuit, In re Bammer, 
    131 F.3d 788
     (9th
    Cir. 1997) (en banc). In that case, Alta Bammer faced an order of restitution to
    compensate several embezzlement victims, including James Murray. 
    Id. at 790
    .
    Bammer fraudulently transferred a mortgage on her home to her son, Steven, to
    avoid paying Murray. 
    Id.
     Murray sued in California state court for fraudulent
    transfer and obtained a judgment against Alta and Steven Bammer. 
    Id. at 790-91
    .
    In its order, the state court emphasized that the two had actual intent to defraud
    creditors, including Murray. 
    Id.
    When Steven Bammer filed a bankruptcy petition, Murray sought to have
    the fraudulent transfer debt excepted from discharge under § 523(a)(6). Id. The
    bankruptcy court found that the debt was dischargeable, but the en banc Ninth
    Circuit reversed. Id. at 790, 793. The court emphasized that Murray had already
    obtained a fraudulent transfer judgment. Further, “[j]ust as important . . . as this
    [fraudulent transfer] judgment, however, [were] the findings of the Superior Court
    in Murray’s civil case against Steven on which the judgment was based.” Id. at
    791. The findings of actual intent, without just cause, to injure Murray’s property
    10
    (his right to restitution), in conjunction with the fraudulent transfer judgment, led
    the Ninth Circuit to conclude that the transfer was a willful and malicious injury to
    Murray’s property. Id. at 791-93.
    Here too, the bankruptcy court found that Janice Jennings knowingly
    conspired with Bruce to transfer Shoreview with the intent to keep its value from
    Maxfield’s reach. Based on this finding, just as the state court did in Bammer, the
    bankruptcy court awarded judgment in favor of Maxfield for Janice’s fraudulent
    transfer. We find the court’s reasoning in Bammer persuasive. And because here
    Maxfield obtained a fraudulent transfer judgment, complete with a finding that
    Janice intended to prevent Maxfield from satisfying his personal injury claim, we
    conclude that Janice’s transfer was an injury to Maxfield’s property.
    B.     Willful and malicious injury
    Janice argues, in the alternative, that any injury to Maxfield or his property
    was not willful and malicious.
    We have held that proof of “willfulness” requires “‘a showing of an
    intentional or deliberate act, which is not done merely in reckless disregard of the
    rights of another.’” In re Walker, 
    48 F.3d 1161
    , 1163 (11th Cir. 1995) (quoting In
    re Ikner, 
    883 F.2d 986
    , 991 (11th Cir. 1989)). “[A] debtor is responsible for a
    ‘willful’ injury when he or she commits an intentional act the purpose of which is
    11
    to cause injury or which is substantially certain to cause injury.” Id. at 1165; see
    also Kawaauhau v. Geiger, 
    523 U.S. 57
    , 61-62 (1998) (holding that § 523(a)(6)
    requires the actor to intend the injury, not just the act that leads to the injury).
    Recklessly or negligently inflicted injuries are not excepted from discharge under
    § 523(a)(6). Kawaauhau, 
    523 U.S. at 64
    .
    “Malicious” means “‘wrongful and without just cause or excessive even in
    the absence of personal hatred, spite or ill-will.’” In re Walker, 
    48 F.3d at 1164
    (quoting In re Ikner, 
    883 F.2d at 991
    ). To establish malice, “a showing of specific
    intent to harm another is not necessary.” In re Ikner, 
    883 F.2d at 991
    .
    Here, the evidence in the record showed that Janice transferred Shoreview
    willfully and with malice. She knew that the purpose of the transfer was to keep
    Shoreview out of the reach of creditors. She was acutely aware of Maxfield’s
    personal injury claim, because she, Bruce, and their trust, RKB, were named as
    defendants in the suit just three months before the transfer. Janice admitted these
    facts, despite her later testimony to the contrary. This evidence illustrates that
    Janice acted willfully in preventing Maxfield from reaching Shoreview to satisfy
    part of his personal injury judgment. And she had no just cause to effect the
    transfer: she knew Anna Leah had no claim to Shoreview, and she knew Bruce
    had no legitimate reason to transfer it to her. She effected the transfer without just
    12
    cause, and therefore did so with malice.
    IV.
    Because Maxfield satisfied the elements of § 523(a)(6) by showing that
    Janice willfully and maliciously injured his property, the district court properly
    concluded that the fraudulent transfer was not dischargeable as part of the
    bankruptcy proceeding.
    AFFIRMED.
    13