Georges Marciano v. Steven Chapnick , 708 F.3d 1123 ( 2013 )


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  •                  FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    IN RE: GEORGES MARCIANO,                   No. 11-60070
    Debtor.
    BAP No.
    GEORGES MARCIANO,                            11-1008
    Appellant,
    v.                         OPINION
    STEVEN CHAPNICK; JOSEPH FAHS;
    ELIZABETH TAGLE,
    Appellees,
    and
    DAVID K. GOTTLIEB, Chapter 11
    Trustee,
    Intervenor.
    Appeal from the Ninth Circuit
    Bankruptcy Appellate Panel
    Kirscher, Markell, and Dunn, Bankruptcy Judges, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted
    November 7, 2012—Pasadena, California
    Filed February 27, 2013
    2                        IN RE: MARCIANO
    Before: Susan P. Graber, Sandra S. Ikuta,
    and Andrew D. Hurwitz, Circuit Judges.
    Opinion by Judge Hurwitz;
    Dissent by Judge Ikuta
    SUMMARY*
    Bankruptcy
    Affirming the bankruptcy court’s summary judgment, the
    panel held that an involuntary bankruptcy petition met the
    requirements of 
    11 U.S.C. § 303
    (b)(1) even though the
    judgments obtained by the petitioning creditors were on
    appeal when the petition was filed.
    Following the “Drexler” rule, and declining to follow the
    approach of the Fourth Circuit, the panel held that an
    unstayed state judgment on appeal is per se a “claim against
    [the debtor] that is not contingent as to liability or the subject
    of a bona fide dispute as to liability or amount,” and thus
    meets the requirements of § 303(b)(1) for the claims of
    petitioning creditors.
    The panel also held that service of the summons and
    complaint was proper, and the bankruptcy court did not err in
    entering an order precluding discovery as to the petitioning
    creditors’ alleged bad faith in filing the involuntary petition.
    *
    This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
    been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
    IN RE: MARCIANO                           3
    Dissenting, Judge Ikuta wrote that the majority’s adoption
    of a per se rule for claims arising from certain state court
    judgments created a circuit split, was contrary to In re Vortex
    Fishing Sys., Inc., 
    277 F.3d 1057
     (9th Cir. 2001), and erased
    a protection given to debtors under the Bankruptcy Code.
    COUNSEL
    Daniel J. McCarthy, Hill, Farrer & Burrill, LLP, Los Angeles,
    California; Richard C. Macias and Sanford L. Frey, Creim
    Macias Koenig & Frey LLP, Los Angeles, California, for
    Appellant/Chapter 11 Debtor.
    Bradley E. Brook, Law Offices of Bradley E. Brook, Los
    Angeles, California, for Appellees/ Petitioning Creditors.
    Jeremy V. Richards, Pachulski Stang Ziehl & Jones LLP, Los
    Angeles, California, for Chapter 11 Trustee.
    OPINION
    HURWITZ, Circuit Judge:
    This case presents a question of first impression in this
    court: Under § 303(b)(1) of the Bankruptcy Code, 
    11 U.S.C. § 303
    (b)(1), is an unstayed state judgment on appeal per se a
    “claim against [the debtor] that is not contingent as to liability
    or the subject of a bona fide dispute as to liability or
    amount?” Our answer to that question is “yes.”
    4                         IN RE: MARCIANO
    I.
    In 2007, Georges Marciano sued five of his former
    employees in California Superior Court, alleging theft. Three
    employees—Joseph Fahs, Steven Chapnick, and Elizabeth
    Tagle (the “Petitioning Creditors”)—cross-complained,
    alleging defamation and intentional infliction of emotional
    distress. As a sanction for a pattern of discovery abuses, the
    state trial court struck Marciano’s answers to the cross-
    claims. After a jury trial on damages, the trial court entered
    judgments in favor of Fahs, Chapnick, and Tagle for $55
    million, $35 million, and $15.3 million, respectively.1
    Marciano appealed the three judgments to the California
    Court of Appeal but did not post a bond to stay them during
    appeal. See 
    Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 917.1
    (1) (“Unless an
    undertaking is given, the perfecting of an appeal shall not stay
    enforcement of the judgment or order in the trial court if the
    judgment or order is for . . . [m]oney or the payment of
    money . . .”). The Superior Court and Court of Appeal denied
    Marciano’s stay requests, and the California Supreme Court
    denied his petition for review.
    In addition to the Petitioning Creditors, five others had
    obtained judgments against Marciano totaling approximately
    $190 million. While the appeals of the Petitioning Creditors’
    judgments were pending, various judgment creditors began
    collection efforts. The Petitioning Creditors then filed an
    involuntary petition, pursuant to § 303(b)(1) of the
    1
    The jury originally returned verdicts in the amount of $74,044,000 in
    favor of each Petitioning Creditor. The trial court reduced the jury awards
    so that the damages did not exceed the amount demanded in each cross-
    complaint.
    IN RE: MARCIANO                              5
    Bankruptcy Code, against Marciano in the United States
    Bankruptcy Court for the Central District of California.
    Marciano moved to dismiss the petition for defective
    service of process. The bankruptcy court denied the motion.
    The bankruptcy court subsequently rejected Marciano’s
    efforts to conduct discovery as to whether the involuntary
    petition had been filed in bad faith and granted the Petitioning
    Creditors’ motion for summary judgment. In re Marciano,
    
    446 B.R. 407
     (Bankr. C.D. Cal. 2010). The United States
    Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit (“BAP”)
    affirmed. Marciano v. Fahs (In re Marciano), 
    459 B.R. 27
    (B.A.P. 9th Cir. 2011).
    This appeal followed. We have jurisdiction pursuant to
    
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
     and 
    28 U.S.C. § 158.2
    II.
    Marciano’s first argument on appeal—that the bankruptcy
    court erred in denying his motion to dismiss for defective
    service of process—need not detain us long. Bankruptcy
    Rule 7004(b) permits service of the summons and complaint
    by first class mail “to the individual’s dwelling house or usual
    place of abode or to the place where the individual regularly
    conducts a business or profession.” Fed. R. Bankr. P.
    7004(b)(1). The petition and summons here were served at
    2
    Upon Marciano’s motion, we granted a stay pending appeal, subject to
    appropriate conditions to be established by the BAP. The BAP then
    issued an order establishing such conditions and giving Marciano thirty
    days to satisfy them. Rather than comply, Marciano filed a motion to
    vacate or modify the conditions in this court. We denied that motion and
    dissolved the stay.
    6                    IN RE: MARCIANO
    a Beverly Hills address. At the time of service, Marciano had
    listed that address with the California Secretary of State as
    the place where he could be served with process as the agent
    for four of his businesses. Marciano’s designation of the
    Beverly Hills address for service of process was a
    certification that he either lived at or regularly conducted
    business there, see 
    Cal. Corp. Code § 1502
    (b), and the
    bankruptcy court therefore did not err in denying the motion
    to dismiss.
    III.
    Marciano’s second argument, however, requires more
    extended discussion. He contends that, because the
    judgments obtained by the Petitioning Creditors were on
    appeal when the involuntary petition was filed, the
    bankruptcy court should have dismissed the petition as not
    meeting the requirements of § 303(b)(1) of the Bankruptcy
    Code.
    Under § 303(b)(1), an involuntary bankruptcy may be
    commenced against a debtor by the filing of a petition
    by three or more entities, each of which is
    either a holder of a claim against such person
    that is not contingent as to liability or the
    subject of a bona fide dispute as to liability or
    amount, or an indenture trustee representing
    such a holder, if such noncontingent,
    undisputed claims aggregate at least $14,425
    more than the value of any lien on property of
    the debtor securing such claims held by the
    holders of such claims[.]
    IN RE: MARCIANO                                7
    
    11 U.S.C. § 303
    (b)(1) (footnote omitted). The bankruptcy
    court and the BAP successively held that an unstayed non-
    default state judgment is a claim not in bona fide dispute as
    to liability or amount under § 303(b)(1). In re Marciano,
    
    446 B.R. at 422
    ; In re Marciano, 
    459 B.R. at
    54–55. Because
    the issue turns on interpretation of the Bankruptcy Code, we
    review those holdings de novo. Temecula v. LPM Corp. (In
    re LPM Corp.), 
    300 F.3d 1134
    , 1136 (9th Cir. 2002).
    Perhaps because the Bankruptcy Code does not define
    “bona fide dispute,” interpretation of § 303(b)(1) has divided
    courts. The majority view—the “Drexler” rule—is that
    unstayed non-default state judgments on appeal are not
    subject to bona fide dispute for purposes of § 303(b)(1).3 In
    re Drexler, 
    56 B.R. 960
    , 967 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 1986); accord
    In re AMC Investors, LLC, 
    406 B.R. 478
    , 487 (Bankr. D. Del.
    2009); Norris v. Johnson (In re Norris), 
    1997 WL 256808
    , at
    *5, 
    114 F.3d 1182
     (5th Cir. 1997); In re Euro-Am. Lodging
    Corp., 
    357 B.R. 700
    , 712 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 2007) (per
    curiam) (unpublished); In re Amanat, 
    321 B.R. 30
    , 37 (Bankr.
    S.D.N.Y. 2005); In re Raymark Indus., Inc., 
    99 B.R. 298
    , 300
    (Bankr. E.D. Pa. 1989); In re Caucus Distribs., Inc., 
    83 B.R. 921
    , 929 (Bankr. E.D. Va. 1988). Cases following this
    approach reason that it would be “contrary to the basic
    principles respecting, and would effect a radical alteration of,
    the long-standing enforceability of unstayed final judgments
    3
    When a claim arises from a default judgment, the bankruptcy court
    may determine whether the court entering the judgment lacked personal
    jurisdiction. See In re AMC Investors, LLC, 
    406 B.R. 478
    , 487 (Bankr. D.
    Del. 2009); see also Ins. Corp. of Ireland, Ltd. v. Compagnie des Bauxites
    de Guinee, 
    456 U.S. 694
    , 706 (1982) (“A defendant is always free to
    ignore the judicial proceedings, risk a default judgment, and then
    challenge that judgment on jurisdictional grounds in a collateral
    proceeding.”).
    8                    IN RE: MARCIANO
    to hold that the pendency of the debtor’s appeal created a
    ‘bona fide dispute.’” In re AMC Investors, 
    406 B.R. at 484
    (quoting In re Drexler, 
    56 B.R. at 967
    ).
    The minority approach—the “Byrd” rule—holds that,
    although “it will be the unusual case in which a bona fide
    dispute exists in the face of claims reduced to state court
    judgments[,] [s]uch judgments do not guarantee the lack of a
    bona fide dispute.” Platinum Fin. Servs. Corp. v. Byrd (In re
    Byrd), 
    357 F.3d 433
    , 438 (4th Cir. 2004). Under the Byrd
    rule, the petitioning creditor makes a “prima facie” case of
    compliance with § 303(b)(1) by presenting an unstayed state
    judgment, but the debtor is given the opportunity nonetheless
    to demonstrate the existence of a bona fide dispute as to
    liability or the amount of the debt. Id. at 439; accord In re
    Henry S. Miller Commercial, LLC, 
    418 B.R. 912
    , 920–21
    (Bankr. N.D. Tex. 2009); In re Graber, 
    319 B.R. 374
    , 377–78
    (Bankr. E.D. Pa. 2004); In re Prisuta, 
    121 B.R. 474
    , 476
    (Bankr. W.D. Pa. 1990); In re Tucker, No. 5:09-bk-914, 
    2010 WL 4823917
    , at *3 (Bankr. N.D. W.Va. Nov. 22, 2010); In
    re Briggs, Nos. 07-34534, 07-34533, 
    2008 WL 190463
    , at *2
    (Bankr. N.D. Tex. Jan. 18, 2008).
    With appropriate deference to our sister circuit, we
    conclude that the Drexler rule is correct as a matter of both
    statutory interpretation and federalism.
    Section 303(b)(1) requires that a petitioning creditor hold
    a “claim” against the debtor. Under § 101(5)(A) of the
    Bankruptcy Code, a “claim” is a “right to payment, whether
    or not such right is reduced to judgment.” 
    11 U.S.C. § 101
    (5)(A). Thus, a right to payment includes a “judgment.”
    Accordingly, the “claims” of the three Petitioning Creditors
    to which the “not in bona fide dispute” screen of § 303(b)(1)
    IN RE: MARCIANO                        9
    applies are the three unstayed California judgments, not the
    underlying tort claims of defamation or slander. Under
    California law, these judgments, in the absence of a stay
    pending appeal, were plainly not contingent as to liability or
    amount. Rather, the Petitioning Creditors were entitled to
    immediate payment of those claims in the amounts set by the
    superior court judgments. See 
    Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 917.1
    (a)(1). The Petitioning Creditors thus had fully vested
    property interests in these claims under California law. See
    Butner v. United States, 
    440 U.S. 48
    , 55 (1979) (noting that
    property interests in bankruptcy proceedings are typically
    defined by state law).
    Although conceding that the Petitioning Creditors were
    free under California law to collect the amounts owed under
    the judgments at the time the involuntary petition was filed,
    Marciano nonetheless claims that the bankruptcy court should
    have evaluated the merits of the pending appeals before
    determining that the claims were not in bona fide dispute.
    His argument relies heavily on Liberty Tool & Manufacturing
    v. Vortex Fishing Systems, Inc. (In re Vortex Fishing Systems,
    Inc.), which posed the relevant inquiry under § 303(b)(1) as
    “whether there is an objective basis for either a factual or
    legal dispute as to the validity of the debt.” 
    277 F.3d 1057
    ,
    1064 (9th Cir. 2001) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    The argument is not persuasive. Vortex dealt with
    contract claims not yet reduced to judgment. 
    Id.
     at 1062–63.
    Under those circumstances, § 303(b)(1) compelled an inquiry
    by the bankruptcy court as to the validity of the alleged debt
    in order to prevent the debtor from being forced into
    involuntary bankruptcy on the basis of a naked allegation of
    debt by a Petitioning Creditor. Id.; see also In re Byrd,
    
    357 F.3d at 438
     (noting that a central purpose of § 303(b)(1)
    10                    IN RE: MARCIANO
    is “to prevent creditors from using involuntary bankruptcy to
    coerce a debtor to satisfy a judgment even when substantial
    questions may remain concerning the liability of the debtor”
    (internal quotation marks omitted)). But where, as here, the
    amount and validity of the claims of the Petitioning Creditors
    have been established by non-default state judgments and the
    debtor’s immediate liability cannot be disputed under
    governing state law, there can be no such concerns. Indeed,
    it is difficult to imagine a more “objective” measure of the
    validity of a claim than an unstayed judgment entered by a
    court of competent jurisdiction.
    In these circumstances, allowing the bankruptcy court to
    inquire further as to the validity of the Petitioning Creditor’s
    claims, rather than establishing an objective basis for
    evaluating § 303(b)(1) claims, instead “turns the court into an
    odds maker on appellate decision-making.” In re AMC
    Investors, 
    406 B.R. at 485
    . Such a process, which almost
    always will turn on a judgment by an Article I federal court
    as to whether a state trial court erred as a matter of state law
    in entering the judgment or whether a state court erred in
    denying a stay pending appeal, cannot be more “objective”
    than simply honoring the unstayed state judgment. If
    required to evaluate the merits of a debtor’s appeal at the time
    an involuntary petition is filed (often before appellate briefs
    are filed), reasonable jurists might well reach differing
    decisions. But there can be no dispute as to whether a state
    court judgment on appeal has been stayed.
    Moreover, the Byrd approach runs counter to principles
    of federalism. Section 1738 of Title 28 of the United States
    Code requires a federal court to accord the judicial
    proceedings of a state court “the same full faith and credit in
    every court within the United States . . . as they have by law
    IN RE: MARCIANO                          11
    or usage in the courts of such State.” 
    28 U.S.C. § 1738
    . Such
    “full faith and credit” would be of little consequence if a
    federal court treated a non-default unstayed state judgment
    differently than it would be treated in its state of origin. If the
    creditor is entitled to have the judgment treated as valid in the
    state courts, we see no reason why a bankruptcy court should
    be allowed to question the judgment.
    Congress could, of course, have modified the historic
    recognition of state sovereignty in § 1738 (which has its roots
    in the First Congress, see 
    1 Stat. 122
     (May 26, 1790)), in
    adopting the Bankruptcy Code, but we discern no such intent
    in the current statute or its history. Section 63a of the
    Bankruptcy Act of 1898, the predecessor to § 303(b),
    required that a creditor filing an involuntary bankruptcy
    petition have a claim based upon a “fixed liability, as
    evidenced by a judgment or an instrument in writing,
    absolutely owing at the time of the filing of the petition
    against [the debtor].” In interpreting § 63a, we held almost
    a century ago:
    Where a judgment has not been paid, or
    has not been superseded on appeal by a bond
    . . . surely the judgment debtor cannot avoid
    the effect of levy and execution. And here the
    effect of the appeal . . . did not itself operate
    to stay execution or to stay proceedings or to
    make the judgment any the less an obligation
    absolutely owing by the bankrupt. . . . If the
    debt was then a fixed liability in the form of a
    judgment the right to file the claim existed.
    Moore v. Douglas (In re Berlin Dye Works & Laundry Co.),
    
    230 F. 399
    , 402 (9th Cir. 1916); see also Grafton v. Lloyd,
    12                    IN RE: MARCIANO
    
    86 F.2d 205
     (9th Cir. 1936) (per curiam) (rejecting a debtor’s
    contention that unstayed state judgments could not support an
    involuntary petition). Section 63a was replaced by § 303 in
    the Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1978, Pub. L. No. 95-598,
    
    92 Stat. 2549
    . The Reform Act was designed to lighten the
    burden for creditors seeking to file an involuntary bankruptcy
    petition. Comm’n on the Bankruptcy Laws of the United
    States, Report of the Comm’n on the Bankruptcy Laws of the
    United States, H.R. Doc. No. 137, 93d Cong., 1st Sess. 1
    (1973). Section 303(b) therefore should not be read as sub
    silentio lowering the status of unstayed state court judgments.
    See also Lawrence Ponoroff, Involuntary Bankruptcy and the
    Bona Fides of a Bona Fide Dispute, 
    65 Ind. L.J. 315
    , 322
    (1990) (noting that the Reform Act “appreciably lightened the
    burden for creditors seeking to establish entitlement to
    involuntary relief”).
    Moreover, the Drexler approach well serves a central
    purpose of the involuntary bankruptcy laws—to “protect the
    threatened depletion of assets or to prevent the unequal
    treatment of similarly situat[ed] creditors.” In re Manhattan
    Indus., Inc., 
    224 B.R. 195
    , 200 (Bankr. M.D. Fla. 1997).
    When a bankruptcy court prevents holders of unstayed state
    judgments from invoking involuntary bankruptcy, the ready
    alternative is precisely what the Code seeks to
    avoid—creditors “racing to the courthouse to dismember the
    debtor.” Danning v. Bozek (In re Bullion Reserve of N. Am.),
    
    836 F.2d 1214
    , 1217 (9th Cir. 1988).
    We thus hold that an unstayed non-default state judgment
    is not subject to bona fide dispute for purposes of § 303(b)(1).
    The bankruptcy court did not err in finding that the
    IN RE: MARCIANO                              13
    Petitioning Creditors held claims meeting the requirements of
    § 303(b)(1).4
    IV.
    Finally, Marciano contends that the bankruptcy court
    erred in entering an order precluding discovery as to the
    Petitioning Creditors’ alleged bad faith in filing the
    involuntary petition because (1) two Petitioning Creditors
    were the most aggressive of his creditors in their collection
    efforts, (2) the third Petitioning Creditor joined in the
    involuntary petition only after her settlement overtures were
    rebuffed, and (3) the Petitioning Creditors opposed
    Marciano’s various stay applications. We review the entry of
    a protective order for abuse of discretion. Foltz v. State Farm
    Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 
    331 F.3d 1122
    , 1130 (9th Cir. 2003).
    The Bankruptcy Code does not expressly provide for
    dismissal of an otherwise proper involuntary petition because
    of the subjective “bad faith” of the filers. But even assuming
    the theoretical availability of such a defense, we cannot
    perceive the benefit of discovery on the issue here, where
    each of the Petitioning Creditors held a substantial judgment
    against Marciano. The bankruptcy court did not abuse its
    discretion in concluding that further discovery would have
    been unlikely to produce any evidence material to the
    4
    Shortly before oral argument, the California Court of Appeal affirmed
    the three judgments held by the Petitioning Creditors, but reduced each to
    $10 million. Gottlieb v. Fahs, No. BC375824, 
    2012 WL 5310004
    , at *1
    (Cal. Ct. App. Oct. 29, 2012) (unreported). No timely petition for review
    was filed, and the Court of Appeal’s judgment is now final. Because the
    issue of whether the involuntary petition was appropriate is measured at
    the time of filing, In re Drexler, 
    56 B.R. at 968
    , this affirmance does not
    inform our analysis today.
    14                    IN RE: MARCIANO
    pending summary judgment motions. See Fed. R. Civ. P.
    26(b)(2)(C)(iii) (requiring a protective order if the “burden or
    expense of the proposed discovery outweighs its likely
    benefit”); Fed. R. Bankr. P. 7026 (providing that Fed. R. Civ.
    P. 26 applies in adversarial bankruptcy proceedings).
    AFFIRMED.
    IKUTA, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
    The initiation of an involuntary bankruptcy case can have
    substantial consequences for a debtor, including “loss of
    credit standing, inability to transfer assets and carry on
    business affairs, and public embarrassment.” In re Reid,
    
    773 F.2d 945
    , 946 (7th Cir. 1985). To avoid potential abuses,
    the Bankruptcy Code precludes creditors from forcing debtors
    into bankruptcy based on claims that are subject to a bona
    fide dispute, 
    11 U.S.C. § 303
    (b)(1), and we have required
    bankruptcy courts to scrutinize such claims on a case-by-case
    basis. See In re Vortex Fishing Sys., Inc. (Vortex), 
    277 F.3d 1057
    , 1064 (9th Cir. 2001). But the majority departs from
    this precedent, adopting an unsupported per se rule that
    claims arising from certain state court judgments are never
    subject to a bona fide dispute. This new rule creates a circuit
    split, see In re Byrd, 
    357 F.3d 433
    , 438 (4th Cir. 2004)
    (rejecting this per se rule), is contrary to our case law, see
    Vortex, 277 F.3d at 1064, and erases a protection given to
    debtors under the Code. I respectfully dissent.
    IN RE: MARCIANO                      15
    I
    A
    In this case, a state court awarded some $95.3 million in
    damages to three of Marciano’s former employees for
    defamation and intentional infliction of emotional distress.
    See Fahs v. Marciano, No. BC 375824 (Cal. Super. Ct. July
    29, 2009); Chapnick v. Marciano, No. BC 375824 (Cal.
    Super. Ct. July 29, 2009); Tagle v. Marciano, No. BC
    375824 (Cal. Super. Ct. July 30, 2009). The jury making this
    award did not consider Marciano’s response to the
    employees’ complaints, because the state court struck
    Marciano’s answer and entered his default as a discovery
    sanction. Marciano appealed the judgments, but did not
    obtain a stay of the judgments pending appeal. See In re
    Marciano (Marciano I), 
    446 B.R. 407
    , 416–17 (Bankr. C.D.
    Cal. 2010). While the appeal was pending, the three
    employees filed an involuntary petition against Marciano
    based on these judgments. 
    Id. at 417
    .
    Marciano argues, as he did before the bankruptcy court
    and bankruptcy appellate panel, that at the time the
    involuntary petition was filed, the claims arising from these
    judgments were “the subject of a bona fide dispute as to
    liability or amount” for purposes of § 303(b). Both
    bankruptcy courts rejected Marciano’s argument without
    undertaking the case-specific inquiry required by our
    precedent. See Marciano I, 
    446 B.R. at 424
    ; In re Marciano
    (Marciano II), 
    459 B.R. 27
    , 54–55 (9th Cir. B.A.P. 2011); but
    see Marciano II, 
    459 B.R. at
    59–62 (Markell, J., dissenting)
    (arguing that the per se rule is inconsistent with § 303(b)’s
    text and Ninth Circuit precedent). Instead of correcting this
    error, the majority today signs off on the bankruptcy courts’
    16                          IN RE: MARCIANO
    shortcut, and decides as a matter of law that there cannot be
    “an objective basis for either a factual or a legal dispute as to
    the validity,” Vortex, 277 F.3d at 1064, of a claim based on an
    unstayed state court judgment, see Maj. op. at 8. This is
    contrary to the text of the statute and our case law.
    B
    Section 303(b) of the Code specifies the circumstances in
    which creditors can place a debtor into involuntary
    bankruptcy.1 Because “[t]he filing of an [i]nvoluntary
    [p]etition should not be lightly undertaken,” Higgins v. Vortex
    Fishing Sys., Inc. (Higgins), 
    379 F.3d 701
    , 707 (9th Cir.
    2004) (quoting In re Advance Press & Litho, Inc., 
    46 B.R. 700
    , 702 (Bankr. D. Colo.1984)), Congress created
    safeguards to “discourage inappropriate and frivolous
    filings.” 
    Id.
     Among other things, at least three creditors must
    join forces to commence an involuntary case against a debtor
    1
    Subsection (b), in relevant part, states:
    (b) An involuntary case against a person is commenced
    by the filing with the bankruptcy court of a petition
    under chapter 7 or 11 of this title—
    (1) by three or more entities, each of which is
    either a holder of a claim against such person that
    is not contingent as to liability or the subject of a
    bona fide dispute as to liability or amount, or an
    indenture trustee representing such a holder, if
    such noncontingent, undisputed claims aggregate
    at least $14,425 more than the value of any lien on
    property of the debtor securing such claims held by
    the holders of such claims
    
    11 U.S.C. § 303
    (b)(1) (emphasis added).
    IN RE: MARCIANO                        17
    like Marciano, and each of them must hold a claim “that is
    not contingent as to liability or the subject of a bona fide
    dispute as to liability or amount.” § 303(b)(1).
    In Vortex, we adopted “the objective test used by the
    other circuits” for determining whether there is a “bona fide
    dispute” under § 303(b). 277 F.3d at 1062. The test requires
    courts to “determine whether there is an objective basis for
    either a factual or a legal dispute as to the validity of the
    debt.” Id. at 1064 (quoting In re Busick, 
    831 F.2d 745
    , 750
    (7th Cir. 1987)). This is a factual inquiry. 
    Id.
     “A bankruptcy
    court is not asked to evaluate the potential outcome of a
    dispute, but merely to determine whether there are facts that
    give rise to a legitimate disagreement over whether money is
    owed, or, in certain cases, how much.” 
    Id.
     By requiring a
    factual, case-by-case inquiry into the nature of each claim,
    Vortex precludes the majority’s per se rule.
    The Fourth Circuit reached the same conclusion in Byrd.
    In considering “whether an unstayed state court judgment that
    is pending appeal can constitute a ‘bona fide dispute’ for
    purposes of the Bankruptcy Code,” 
    357 F.3d at
    435–36, Byrd
    first adopted the same “objective test” for determining the
    existence of a bona fide dispute as we adopted in Vortex. See
    
    id. at 437
    . The Fourth Circuit then declined to adopt any per
    se rule that claims based on unstayed state court judgments
    can never be in “bona fide dispute.” 
    Id. at 438
    . Byrd’s
    reasoning was straightforward: even after judgment is
    rendered in a state case, “substantial questions may remain
    about a debtor’s liability, notwithstanding judgments in a
    creditor’s favor.” 
    Id.
     (quoting In re Prisuta, 
    121 B.R. 474
    ,
    476 (Bankr. W.D. Pa. 1990)). Although “it will be the
    unusual case in which a bona fide dispute exists in the face of
    claims reduced to state court judgments,” state court
    18                   IN RE: MARCIANO
    judgments hardly “guarantee the lack of a bona fide dispute,”
    particularly in the absence of an appellate ruling or “in the
    face of contrary rulings by other” state trial courts. 
    Id.
    Byrd’s reasoning is clearly applicable here. Given the
    circumstances of the $95 million judgments against
    Marciano, the bankruptcy court was at least bound to consider
    whether there were legitimate questions regarding Marciano’s
    liability and the amount of damages, as well as whether the
    trial court’s conclusion was contrary to the rulings of other
    state courts. See, e.g., 
    id.
     As later events showed,
    Marciano’s contention that the employees’ claims were
    subject to a bona fide dispute as to amount was well justified:
    the state appellate court ultimately reduced the amount of
    each award to $10 million. See Gottlieb v. Fahs, No.
    BC218087, 
    2012 WL 5310004
    , at *1 (Cal. Ct. App. Oct. 29,
    2012). Under these circumstances, the bankruptcy court erred
    in failing to apply the Vortex test to determine whether there
    was an objective basis for a dispute as to the validity of the
    creditors’ claims.
    II
    Instead of adhering to our precedent and following the
    Fourth Circuit’s well-reasoned lead, the majority adopts a
    shortcut solution that skips over the safeguard of scrutinizing
    claims carefully before placing a debtor in involuntary
    bankruptcy. None of the majority’s reasons for enunciating
    this new per se rule withstands scrutiny.
    IN RE: MARCIANO                        19
    A
    First, the majority errs in concluding that an immediately
    enforceable judgment is equivalent to an undisputed claim.
    Maj. op. at 8–9. The majority’s reasoning seems to be that
    once a claim is reduced to judgment, the judgment is a
    “claim,” and because an unstayed state court judgment is
    immediately enforceable, there can be no objective basis for
    dispute as to the “claim’s” liability or amount. 
    Id.
     Both parts
    of this analysis are wrong. First, the Code’s definition of
    “claim” does not include “judgment.” Section 101(5) of Title
    11 defines “claim” to mean a “right to payment, whether or
    not such right is reduced to judgment.” 
    Id.
     (emphasis added).
    As this language makes clear, a claim is a “right to payment,”
    not a “judgment,” and it is irrelevant whether the right to
    payment has been reduced to judgment. Reading § 101(5)
    and § 303(b) together, therefore, the bankruptcy court must
    determine whether the right to payment is subject to a bona
    fide dispute, not whether any resulting judgment is subject to
    such a dispute.
    Once this error is corrected, it is clear that the immediate
    enforceability of an unstayed judgment has no bearing on
    whether there is “an objective basis for either a factual or a
    legal dispute as to the validity of the debt.” Vortex, 277 F.3d
    at 1064. If a “judgment” is not a “claim,” then it is irrelevant
    whether the enforceability of a judgment is beyond dispute.
    See, e.g., In re Henry S. Miller Commercial, LLC , 
    418 B.R. 912
    , 920 (Bankr. N.D. Tex. 2009) (“[A]ll of the courts that
    conclude that an unstayed judgment (even if on appeal) is not
    a claim that is the subject of a bona fide dispute seem to
    conflate the concept of ‘enforceable judgment’ with the
    concept of there being a claim that is not subject to a bona
    fide dispute.”). Under California law, a creditor’s claim may
    20                    IN RE: MARCIANO
    be subject to a bona fide dispute, and the debtor may
    ultimately prevail on appeal, even if the creditor has enforced
    an unstayed judgment issued by the trial court. If the debtor
    does ultimately prevail on appeal, a court can simply unwind
    the creditor’s collection efforts. See Stockton Theatres, Inc.
    v. Palermo, 
    264 P.2d 74
    , 78 (Cal. Dist. Ct. App. 1953);
    9 Witkin, Cal. Proc. 5th, §§ 900–03 (2008). When a
    judgment is reversed, both the appellate court and the trial
    court will attempt “to place the parties in as favorable a
    position as they could have been in had the judgment[ ] not
    been enforced pending appeal.” Gunderson v. Wall, 
    126 Cal. Rptr. 3d 880
    , 883 (Cal. Ct. App. 2011) (internal quotation
    marks omitted); Cal. Code Civ. P. § 908 (“When the
    judgment or order is reversed or modified, the reviewing
    court may direct that the parties be returned so far as possible
    to the positions they occupied before the enforcement of or
    execution on the judgment or order.”).
    Because an unstayed state judgment is not a “claim,” and
    because the immediate enforceability of a judgment is
    irrelevant to the § 303(b) inquiry, neither argument justifies
    the majority’s per se rule.
    B
    The majority likewise errs in ignoring the objective test
    we enunciated in Vortex. Although the majority claims that
    Vortex is distinguishable on its facts, and should be read as
    applying only to “contract claims not yet reduced to
    judgment,” Maj. op. at 9, this purported distinction is plainly
    wrong. We first noted in Vortex that “[t]his Circuit has not
    defined a ‘bona fide dispute’ . . . nor is it defined by statute.”
    IN RE: MARCIANO                        21
    Vortex, 277 F.3d at 1064. We then considered the objective
    test enunciated by the Seventh Circuit, and noted that “all
    other circuit courts that have considered the question have
    adopted some variation” of this objective test. Id. After
    considering and rejecting the use of a subjective test, we
    stated that “[w]e join our sister circuits in adopting the
    objective test for dispute regarding liability or amount.” Id.
    Clearly, our articulation of the objective test in Vortex
    (expressly joining the other circuits that had adopted the test)
    was not dependent on the facts of that case, but rather
    provided the circuit’s construction of “subject to a bona fide
    dispute” in § 303(b).
    Alternatively, the majority asserts that its per se rule is
    consistent with Vortex, because a per se rule is even more
    “objective” than the Vortex test. Maj. op. at 10. This makes
    little sense. The Vortex test does not require courts to be
    “objective” in some unspecified manner, but rather to
    “determine whether there is an objective basis for either a
    factual or a legal dispute as to the validity of the debt.”
    Vortex, 277 F.3d at 1064 (quoting In re Busick, 
    831 F.2d 745
    ,
    750 (7th Cir. 1987)) (emphasis added). In other words,
    Vortex requires a particular objective approach, and one
    which is inconsistent with the majority’s approach.
    C
    The majority also argues that “the Byrd approach runs
    counter to principles of federalism,” Maj. op. at 10, by failing
    to give state court judgments “full faith and credit” in
    22                         IN RE: MARCIANO
    accordance with the Full Faith and Credit Act, see 
    28 U.S.C. § 1738.2
     This argument is unavailing.
    The Full Faith and Credit Act requires federal courts to
    give state court judgments the same “full faith and credit”
    they would receive in courts of that state. See Matsushita
    Elec. Indus. Co. v. Epstein, 
    516 U.S. 367
    , 373 (1996).
    Generally, this means that federal courts must “apply the
    pertinent state’s collateral estoppel principles.” In re
    Cantrell, 
    329 F.3d 1119
    , 1123 (9th Cir. 2003); see also
    Grogan v. Garner, 
    498 U.S. 279
    , 284 n.11 (1991). In this
    case, for instance, § 1738 requires us to give the California
    judgment against Marciano the same preclusive effect it
    would have in state court. Thus, under California issue
    preclusion rules, we are barred from reconsidering
    Marciano’s liability, see In re Diamond, 
    285 F.3d 822
    ,
    828–29 (9th Cir. 2002), or from adjusting the amount
    awarded to the state court plaintiffs, see In re Sasson,
    2
    
    28 U.S.C. § 1738
     states, in relevant part:
    The records and judicial proceedings of any court of
    any such State, Territory or Possession, or copies
    thereof, shall be proved or admitted in other courts
    within the United States and its Territories and
    Possessions by the attestation of the clerk and seal of
    the court annexed, if a seal exists, together with a
    certificate of a judge of the court that the said
    attestation is in proper form.
    Such Acts, records and judicial proceedings or copies
    thereof, so authenticated, shall have the same full faith
    and credit in every court within the United States and
    its Territories and Possessions as they have by law or
    usage in the courts of such State, Territory or
    Possession from which they are taken.
    IN RE: MARCIANO                        23
    
    424 F.3d 864
    , 872 (9th Cir. 2005), since these issues were
    already fully adjudicated in state court.
    But giving effect to the language of § 303(b) does not
    require federal courts to reassess liability or the amount of a
    state court judgment. As Byrd explained in rejecting a similar
    argument, the question whether the parties could relitigate
    liability or amount is not related to the question whether the
    debtor’s appeals “themselves constituted genuine disputes.”
    Byrd, 
    357 F.3d at 440
    . A bankruptcy court does not relitigate
    the debtor’s liability “by inquiring into the genuineness” of
    the debtor’s appeals for purposes of § 303(b), because in
    doing so it does not “actually resolv[e] any disputed question
    of fact or law.” Id. at 440–41. We have recognized in other
    settings that the question whether a determination is subject
    to a genuine dispute is separate from determining the merits
    of that dispute. See, e.g., 
    28 U.S.C. § 1292
    (b)(1) (2006)
    (allowing district court judges to certify interlocutory appeals
    of orders involving “a controlling question of law as to which
    there is substantial ground for difference of opinion”); Slack
    v. McDaniel, 
    529 U.S. 473
    , 484 (2000) (certificates of
    appealability may issue if “the prisoner shows, at least, that
    jurists of reason would find it debatable whether the petition
    states a valid claim of the denial of a constitutional right.”).
    In short, determining whether a claim based on a state
    court judgment is subject to a bona fide dispute does not
    require us to relitigate any issue decided in a state court
    proceeding. Therefore, the natural reading of § 303(b)(1),
    under which federal bankruptcy courts must determine
    whether such a bona fide dispute exists, is entirely consistent
    with the Full Faith and Credit Act.
    24                    IN RE: MARCIANO
    D
    The majority’s legislative history argument likewise fails.
    The majority asserts that legislative history shows that the
    Bankruptcy Reform Act “was designed to lighten the burden
    for creditors seeking to file an involuntary bankruptcy
    petition.” Thus, according to the majority, § 303(b)(1)
    “should not be read as sub silentio lowering the status of
    unstayed state court judgments.” Maj. op. at 12.
    Yet, as is so often the case, different portions of the same
    legislative history point in the other direction, and suggest
    that the “bona fide dispute” language was added to protect
    debtors from threats of involuntary bankruptcy by creditors
    holding claims of questionable validity. See 130 Cong. Rec.
    S.7,618 (daily ed. June 19, 1984) (statement of Sen. Baucus)
    (“I believe this amendment, although a simple one, is
    necessary to protect the rights of debtors and to prevent
    misuse of the bankruptcy system as a tool of coercion.”);
    148 Cong. Rec. S.11,728 (daily ed. Nov. 20, 2002) (statement
    of Sen. Baucus) (“[A]n involuntary bankruptcy action should
    not be employed by litigants seeking to gain more leverage
    than they would have if they disputed contract performance
    in the proper judicial forum.”); see also Lawrence Ponoroff,
    Involuntary Bankruptcy and the Bona Fides of a Bona Fide
    Dispute, 65 Ind. L. J. 315, 335 (1990) (noting that these
    “remarks evince a revived concern about the potentially
    ruinous consequences which the initiation of an involuntary
    proceeding can have on a debtor’s business.”). At best, the
    evidence we have about Congress’s intentions and purposes
    with respect to the “bona fide dispute” language is limited
    and ambiguous. The majority thus falls into the dangerous
    trap of “allowing ambiguous legislative history to muddy
    IN RE: MARCIANO                        25
    clear statutory language.” Milner v. Dep’t of the Navy, 
    131 S. Ct. 1259
    , 1266 (2011).
    E
    Finally, the majority turns to policy, and asserts that its
    per se “approach well serves a central purpose of the
    involuntary bankruptcy laws—to ‘protect the threatened
    depletion of assets or to prevent the unequal treatment of
    similarly situated creditors.’” Maj. op. at 12 (quoting In re
    Manhattan Indus., Inc., 
    224 B.R. 195
    , 200 (Bankr. M.D. Fla.
    1997)). But the Code does not instruct courts to pursue this
    goal at all costs. “The Bankruptcy Code does not require that
    a debtor’s assets be dissipated while frivolous or hopeless
    appeals wend their way through the courts, but neither does
    it permit debt collection by every creditor that has reduced its
    claims to judgment.” Byrd, 
    357 F.3d at 441
    . To the contrary,
    the “bona fide dispute” language in § 303(b)(1) functions as
    a safeguard against abuses of involuntary bankruptcy. After
    today’s opinion, that safeguard may now be circumvented.
    III
    Under Vortex, the majority should have examined
    whether there was an objective basis for Marciano’s
    contention. By ignoring this case-specific inquiry in favor of
    a per se rule, the majority has erroneously elevated judicial
    efficiency above Congress’s clear commands, ignored our
    own precedent, and created a circuit split. This result is
    especially worrisome in the context of bankruptcy, where
    uniformity is sufficiently important that our Constitution
    authorizes Congress to establish “uniform laws on the subject
    of bankruptcies throughout the United States.” U.S. Const.
    Art. I, § 8, cl. 4.
    26                   IN RE: MARCIANO
    We could have avoided these problems merely by
    following the language of the statute as interpreted by our
    precedent. Because we failed to do so, I respectfully dissent.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 11-60070

Citation Numbers: 708 F.3d 1123

Judges: Andrew, Graber, Hurwitz, Ikuta, Sandra, Susan

Filed Date: 2/27/2013

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/6/2023

Authorities (30)

Marciano v. Fahs (In Re Marciano) , 459 B.R. 27 ( 2011 )

In Re: Ralph T. Byrd, Debtor, Platinum Financial Services ... , 357 F.3d 433 ( 2004 )

in-re-robert-sasson-debtor-robert-sasson-v-norman-f-sokoloff-md , 424 F.3d 864 ( 2005 )

In Re Bullion Reserve of North America, a California ... , 836 F.2d 1214 ( 1988 )

In the Matter of Jane Marlene Busick, Debtor-Appellee , 831 F.2d 745 ( 1987 )

in-re-zadock-reid-debtor-appellant-dale-r-schmid-dds-ralph-f , 773 F.2d 945 ( 1985 )

In Re Marciano , 446 B.R. 407 ( 2010 )

In Re Gregory Dewitt Cantrell, Debtor , 329 F.3d 1119 ( 2003 )

Stockton Theatres, Inc. v. Palermo , 121 Cal. App. 2d 616 ( 1953 )

In Re Lpm Corporation, Debtor, Kir Temecula v. Lpm ... , 300 F.3d 1134 ( 2002 )

In Re Ronald R. Diamond and Elaine Diamond, Debtors. Ronald ... , 285 F.3d 822 ( 2002 )

debbie-foltz-consumer-action-united-policyholders-texas-watch , 331 F.3d 1122 ( 2003 )

wesley-higgins-arlene-higgins-bert-vincent-leora-vincent-and-vortex-lures , 379 F.3d 701 ( 2004 )

In Re Advance Press & Litho, Inc. , 46 B.R. 700 ( 1984 )

In Re Drexler , 56 B.R. 960 ( 1986 )

In Re Amanat , 321 B.R. 30 ( 2005 )

In Re Amc Investors, LLC , 406 B.R. 478 ( 2009 )

In Re Euro-American Lodging Corp. , 357 B.R. 700 ( 2007 )

In Re Raymark Industries, Inc. , 99 B.R. 298 ( 1989 )

In Re Manhattan Industries, Inc. , 224 B.R. 195 ( 1997 )

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