Stephanie Lampe v. Kirk Kash , 735 F.3d 942 ( 2013 )


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  •                          RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
    Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b)
    File Name: 13a0328p.06
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    _________________
    X
    -
    STEPHANIE LAMPE,
    -
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    -
    -
    No. 12-4487
    v.
    ,
    >
    -
    -
    KIRK KASH,
    Defendant-Appellee. N-
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Ohio at Cincinnati.
    No. 1:03-cv-00162—S. Arthur Spiegel, District Judge.
    Decided and Filed: November 8, 2013
    Before: SUTTON and KETHLEDGE, Circuit Judges; DOW, District Judge.*
    _________________
    COUNSEL
    ON BRIEF: Susan K. Cliffel, WOOD & LAMPING LLP, Cincinnati, Ohio, for
    Appellant.
    _________________
    OPINION
    _________________
    SUTTON, Circuit Judge. Due process entitled Stephanie Lampe to notice and
    an opportunity for a hearing before a bankruptcy court extinguished her $25,000
    judgment. Does notice to a lawyer who represented her eight years earlier, but no longer
    represents her, satisfy this obligation?
    *
    The Honorable Robert M. Dow, Jr., United States District Judge for the Northern District of
    Illinois, sitting by designation.
    1
    No. 12-4487          Lampe v. Kash                                                    Page 2
    In 2004, Stephanie Lampe won a $25,000 judgment against Kirk Kash. Kash
    could not pay this debt or for that matter many of his other debts. He sought bankruptcy
    protection in 2012.
    When he submitted a list of creditors’ names and addresses to the court, as
    Bankruptcy Rule 1007(a) requires, Kash omitted Lampe’s residential address. He
    instead listed her in care of Gerhardstein & Branch, the firm that represented her in the
    lawsuit eight years earlier. But that law firm stopped working for Lampe in 2004, and
    the notice dispatched to the firm’s address never made it to Lampe. Lampe did not
    participate in the bankruptcy case, which discharged the judgment debt.
    After the discharge, Lampe returned to the district court where she filed her
    original lawsuit, seeking to revive her judgment against Kash. Holding that the
    discharge covered the judgment debt, the district court rejected her claim, prompting this
    appeal.
    At that point, the adversarial process broke down. Kash represents himself in
    this appeal, and he did not file an appellate brief. One might be tempted to think that
    Lampe should win by default at that point. But that is not the case. “If an appellant fails
    to file a brief within the time provided . . . , an appellee may move to dismiss the
    appeal.” Fed. R. App. P. 31(c) (emphasis added). But “[a]n appellee who fails to file
    a brief” faces a lighter penalty: He “will not be heard at oral argument unless the court
    grants permission.” Id. (emphasis added). All of this leads to differential treatment of
    appellants and appellees, to be sure. See Allgeier v. United States, 
    909 F.2d 869
    , 871 n.3
    (6th Cir. 1990). But with good reason: A district court’s judgments are not chattels that
    the victors may abandon at their pleasure but precedents with value “to the legal
    community as a whole.” U.S. Bancorp Mortg. Co. v. Bonner Mall P’ship, 
    513 U.S. 18
    ,
    26 (1994). A reversal of a judgment premised on the conduct of one party (the appellee)
    would undermine this principle. No such problem arises when the appellant opts to
    leave the district court’s judgment as he found it.
    That takes us to the merits. A debt is the creditor’s property, and the Due Process
    Clause entitles her to service of notice “reasonably calculated” to reach her before she
    No. 12-4487           Lampe v. Kash                                               Page 3
    is deprived of that property. Mullane v. Cent. Hanover Bank & Trust Co., 
    339 U.S. 306
    ,
    314 (1950). The surest way to follow this rule is personal service. 
    Id. at 313
    . Failing
    that, notice mailed to the owner generally will suffice. 
    Id.
     at 318–19. And if the owner
    is represented by counsel in that dispute, notice to the attorney generally will suffice.
    Cf. Irwin v. Dep’t of Veterans Affairs, 
    498 U.S. 89
    , 92 (1990); Smith v. Ayer, 
    101 U.S. 320
    , 326 (1879); Comm’r v. Stewart, 
    186 F.2d 239
    , 242 (6th Cir. 1951). What of notice
    to counsel who stopped representing the party eight years earlier? That, it seems to us,
    is a road too long.
    Instead of being “reasonably calculated” to reach the target, notification to a
    former attorney provides little assurance that the notice will make its way home.
    Lawyers have “no general continuing obligation” to pass information along to people
    they no longer represent. Restatement (Third) of the Law Governing Lawyers § 33A,
    cmt. h (2000). Sure, the canons admonish them to “use reasonable efforts to forward”
    communications meant for former clients.         Id.   But “efforts to forward,” even
    “reasonable efforts to forward,” fall short of what due process demands: a method of
    notice “reasonably certain to inform those affected.” Mullane, 
    339 U.S. at 315
    (emphasis added).
    Another way to think about it is to ask how someone “desirous of actually
    informing” the creditor would go about reaching him. Jones v. Flowers, 
    547 U.S. 220
    ,
    229 (2006). Would he choose the roundabout of notifying a law firm that worked for the
    creditor eight years ago, hoping it would forward the message? Doubtful, particularly
    when a more direct option remains untried: looking up the creditor’s address and
    sending the notice there.
    Agency law supports this conclusion. When a lawyer represents a client, his acts
    become the client’s acts, his knowledge the client’s knowledge. But we would not say
    the same of a former lawyer. “Having severed the principal-agent relationship, an
    attorney no longer acts, or fails to act, as the client’s representative. His acts or
    omissions therefore cannot fairly be attributed to the client.” Maples v. Thomas, 
    132 S. Ct. 912
    , 922–23 (2012) (citations and internal quotation marks omitted). Under agency
    No. 12-4487         Lampe v. Kash                                                     Page 4
    law, notice to the attorney counts as notice to the client, but notice to a former attorney
    does not.
    The case law points in the same direction. So far as we can tell, every federal
    court confronting today’s question—in the bankruptcy context or elsewhere—has
    answered it as we do. See, e.g., In re Najjar, Bankruptcy No. 06-10895 (AJG), 
    2007 WL 1395399
    , *5 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. May 11, 2007) (“[T]he Court finds that the [notice to the
    law firm] cannot be imputed to the plaintiff. . . . [The] representation of Plaintiff ended
    seven years ago.”); In re Gold, 
    375 B.R. 316
    , 326 (Bankr. N.D. Tex. 2007) (“Service on
    former counsel is not sufficient to give . . . notice to an individual.”); In re Martini, No.
    03-41661 (DHS), 
    2006 WL 4452974
    , at *5 (Bankr. D.N.J. Apr. 3, 2006) (“[W]hile it
    may be convenient for counsel to serve judgment creditors via their former state court
    counsel, such service, without more, does not serve to protect a creditor’s rights to due
    process . . . .”); In re O’Shaughnessy, 
    252 B.R. 722
    , 731 (Bankr. N.D. Ill. 2000)
    (“Notices to . . . former counsel . . . are not the functional equivalent of proper notice in
    this case.”); King v. United States, 
    65 Fed. Cl. 385
    , 399–400 (2005) (“[N]otice to the
    address of an attorney who had represented [the client] more than one year in the past
    . . . was inadequate as a matter of law.”).
    A different conclusion would create problems of its own. If notice sent to an
    attorney who stopped representing the creditor eight years ago suffices, what of notice
    to an attorney who ended the representation sixteen years earlier? Both scenarios seem
    equally inconsistent with due process and, more to the point, equally at odds with the
    reasonably calculated standard it requires. Service on former attorneys not only creates
    distance-in-time problems, but it also creates lack-of-knowledge problems about how
    the representation ended. What if the creditor fired the attorney for incompetence?
    What if there was a pay dispute? What if the attorney abandoned the client without
    telling him? Cf. Maples, 
    132 S. Ct. at
    922–23. There is no reason the debtor would
    know whether any of these things had occurred and thus no reason for assuming that
    such a notice would likely make its way to the creditor.
    No. 12-4487             Lampe v. Kash                                                  Page 5
    The Constitution, true enough, does not insist on notice by mail where the sender
    cannot reasonably ascertain the recipient’s whereabouts. See Mullane, 
    339 U.S. at 317
    .
    But nothing in this record suggests that the search for Lampe’s address would have
    imposed an unreasonable burden on Kash. To satisfy Bankruptcy Rule 1007, Kash had
    to identify the addresses of his other creditors anyway. Why would Lampe’s address
    have been any harder to find?
    The Constitution, it also is true, judges the adequacy of notice from the
    perspective of the sender, not the recipient. If a person in Kash’s position would have
    reasonably believed that Gerhardstein & Branch still represented Lampe at the time of
    the bankruptcy, this case might come out the other way. See Restatement (Third) of
    Agency § 5.02(1) (2006) (“A notification given to an agent is effective . . . if the agent
    has . . . apparent authority to receive the notification.”). But Lampe did not fire her
    lawyer in secret; the representation ended because the case ended. In the absence of
    further investigation, any belief that the firm still worked for Lampe in 2012 would be
    unreasonable. See Restatement (Third) of the Law Governing Lawyers § 31(2) (“[A]
    lawyer’s actual authority to represent a client ends when . . . the lawyer has completed
    the contemplated services.”); id. § 31(3) (“A lawyer’s apparent authority to act for a
    client with respect to another person ends when the other person knows or should know
    of facts from which it can be reasonably inferred that the lawyer lacks actual authority
    . . . .”).
    Because Lampe never received the notice she was due, the bankruptcy court
    could not discharge the debts she was due. The discharge does not stand in the way of
    Lampe’s motion to revive this judgment.
    For these reasons, we reverse and remand for further proceedings.