Federal Circuits, First Circuit (January 24, 1991)
Docket number: 90-1311,90-1312
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U.S. Supreme Court - United States v. Sioux Nation, 448 U.S. 371 (1980)
U.S. Supreme Court - Allen v. McCurry, 449 U.S. 90 (1980)
U.S. Supreme Court - Commissioner v. Sunnen, 333 U.S. 591 (1948)
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit - in the Matter of Gibraltar Resources, Inc., Doing Business as Resources International Group, Debtor. Scott Underwood Adam, Marvin Barish; Alan I. Becker; Glenn T. Bell; Stephen Bruce; O.L.Burrage; F. Herman Coleman; Robert S. Crandall; Lorraine P. Crandall: Clyde J. Dods; Robert G. Farris; Jack F. Fox; Hazel A. Green; Lewis Johnson; E. Thomas W. Nesbitt; Richard Norton; Duane Seaman; Charles Sebastian; Dale e Stocking; Gale H. Stocking; Joseph G.Ulinger; John S. Wilford, Heir: R.M. Zillig; S.M. Zillig, Appellants, v. Itech Oil Company; Frank App, Jr.,Appellees., 210 F.3d 573 (5th Cir. 2000) Inc., Doing Business as Resources International Group, Debtor. Scott Underwood Adam, Marvin Barish; Alan I. Becker; Glenn T. Bell; Stephen Bruce; O.L.Burrage; F. Herman Coleman; Robert S. Crandall; Lorraine P. Crandall: Clyde J. Dods; Robert G. Farris; Jack F. Fox; Hazel A. Green; Lewis Johnson; E. Thomas W. Nesbitt; Richard Norton; Duane Seaman; Charles Sebastian; Dale e Stocking; Gale H. Stocking; Joseph G.Ulinger; John S. Wilford, Heir: R.M. Zillig; S.M. Zillig, Appellants, v. Itech Oil Company; Frank App, Jr.,Appellees.
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit - Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P 99,009, Bankr. L. Rep. P 76,764 Dan H. Hoxworth, Named: Dan Hoxworth; Louise A. Hoxworth, Named: Louise Hoxworth, Individually and on Behalf of the Hoxworth Class, Plaintiffs/Counter-Defendants/Appellees, v. Lillian Blinder; Lillian Blinder Trust, The, Defendants/Cross-Claimants/Appellants, and Meyer Blinder; Donald L. Walford; Walford Demaret & Company, Inc.; Bradford Bolton, Clerk, United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Colorado, Defendants. Dan H. Hoxworth, Named: Dan Hoxworth; Louise A. Hoxworth, Named: Louise Hoxworth, Individually and on Behalf of the Hoxworth Class, Plaintiffs/Counter-Defendants/Appellees, v. Meyer Blinder, Defendant-Appellant, and Donald L. Walford; Walford Demaret & Company, Inc.; Bradford Bolton, Clerk, United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Colorado, Defendants, Lillian Blinder; Lillian Blinder Trust, The, Defendants/Cross-Claimants., 74 F.3d 205 (10th Cir. 1996) 009, Bankr. L. Rep. P 76,764 Dan H. Hoxworth, Named: Dan Hoxworth; Louise A. Hoxworth, Named: Louise Hoxworth, Individually and on Behalf of the Hoxworth Class, Plaintiffs/Counter-Defendants/Appellees, v. Lillian Blinder; Lillian Blinder Trust, The, Defendants/Cross-Claimants/Appellants, and Meyer Blinder; Donald L. Walford; Walford Demaret & Company, Inc.; Bradford Bolton, Clerk, United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Colorado, Defendants. Dan H. Hoxworth, Named: Dan Hoxworth; Louise A. Hoxworth, Named: Louise Hoxworth, Individually and on Behalf of the Hoxworth Class, Plaintiffs/Counter-Defendants/Appellees, v. Meyer Blinder, Defendant-Appellant, and Donald L. Walford; Walford Demaret & Company, Inc.; Bradford Bolton, Clerk, United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Colorado, Defendants, Lillian Blinder; Lillian Blinder Trust, The, Defendants/Cross-Claimants.
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit - Gould v. US (4th Cir. 2000)
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit - Holywell Corp v. US (4th Cir. 2000)
U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit - Chemlen v. Bank of Ireland (1st Cir. 1993)
Gregory W. Swope with whom Sheehan, Phinney, Bass & Green, P.A., Manchester, N.H., was on brief, for Cara Corp.
Christopher Kennedy with whom Sidney St. F. Thaxter and Curtis Thaxter Stevens Broder & Micoleau, Portland, Me., were on brief, for Acme Engineering Co.Stuart W. Tisdale, Jr., with whom Richard E. Poulos and Poulos, Campbell & Zendzian, P.A., Portland, Me., were on brief, for defendants, appellees.Before CAMPBELL and SELYA, Circuit Judges, and BOWNES, Senior Circuit Judge.LEVIN H. CAMPBELL, Circuit Judge.Appellants Acme Engineering Company ("Acme") and Cara Corporation ("Cara") appeal from an order of the district court affirming the bankruptcy court's dismissal of their cross-claim against Bayside Enterprises, Inc. ("Bayside") and Poultry Processing, Inc. ("PPI"). 111 B.R. 371. The bankruptcy court ruled that appellants' cross-claims asserting equitable subordination against appellees were barred by the doctrine of res judicata, because the Chapter 7 Trustee in bankruptcy for Medomak Canning Company ("Medomak") had earlier compromised the estate's equitable subordination claims in a court-approved settlement. We affirm.I. FACTS AND PROCEDURES BELOWMedomak is the debtor in a bankruptcy proceeding under 11 U.S.C. Chapter 7. Along with other asserted interests in Medomak's assets, Bayside and PPI held mortgages on certain of its real property. Acme possessed a mechanic's lien on the same property, but as a result of its former attorneys' failure to name Bayside and PPI as defendants in the state court action establishing the lien, Acme's mechanic's lien was junior to the mortgages of Bayside and PPI. Funds from the court-approved sale of the property were sufficient only to satisfy Bayside's and PPI's mortgage indebtedness, rendering Acme's claim unsecured.1 Cara obtained a post-judgment attachment lien on the same property in a state court action against Medomak and filed a secured proof of claim. As the lien was obtained within the 90-day preference period, however, it appears to be avoidable. 11 U.S.C. Sec . 547(b)(4)(A). Cara concedes in any event that the lien could not be satisfied from the sale proceeds of the property if Bayside's and PPI's mortgages were given effect.Central to this dispute is a compromise agreement (the "Compromise") reached between the Trustee and the appellees. This agreement was embodied in a Joint Application for Approval of Compromise that was presented to the bankruptcy court for consideration and ultimately approved by it. The Compromise agreement states: "The Trustee, Bayside and PPI claim that all of the above alleged secured claims [including the Acme mechanic's lien and the Cara attachment but excluding Bayside's and PPI's mortgages] are unsecured based on the value of the collateral securing the said claims." Pursuant to the settlement, Bayside and PPI agreed to pay a lump sum to the estate and to voluntarily subordinate their remaining claims (other than the mortgages) to all other allowed unsecured claims. In exchange, the Trustee agreed to release "any and all" of his own claims against Bayside and PPI.2The Compromise further provided that Bayside's and PPI's mortgages would be allowed as a secured claim and paid "upon entry of a final order by the bankruptcy court determining the validity, extent, priority, allowability and/or amount of all the claimed secured claims specified in Paragraphs III. E and F below." Among these were the Acme mechanic's lien and Cara attachment. Paragraph F repeats that the Trustee shall file a complaint to determine the validity, nature, extent, priority, allowability, and/or amount of claims, including those of Acme and Cara.Pursuant to Bankruptcy Rule 9019, the bankruptcy court notified Acme and Cara of the hearing seeking the court's approval of the Compromise. Cara did not appear at the hearing nor did it object to the Compromise. Acme appeared and filed a written objection stating that, to the extent the application for approval of the Compromise assumed that Bayside's and PPI's claims had priority over Acme's claims, Acme objected:on the grounds that Acme has consistently maintained and continues to maintain that its claims have priority over the claims of Bayside and PPI.Acme claims priority over Bayside and PPI in that Acme holds a mechanics lien on the real property of Medomak Canning. (See Exhibit A.) ... Because of Acme's claim of priority to the real property it is inappropriate for the bankruptcy court to approve the ... Compromise until the application is clarified to reflect that the priorities of all parties are to be determined via the Trustee's complaint.While Acme thus claimed priority over Bayside and PPI, and sought a hearing on priorities upon the Trustee's complaint, Acme did not then assert equitable subordination as the basis for its claimed senior status but rather relied solely upon its mechanic's lien. The bankruptcy court overruled Acme's objection but stated in the order approving the Compromise:... Acme Engineering Company's objection is addressed favorably by [the Compromise] in that [The Compromise] does not determine the said creditors' priority or right to proceeds of the sale of the Debtor's real and personal property; rather the validity, nature, extent, priority, allowability and amount of the claim of the various creditors shall be subsequently determined in an action to be brought by the Trustee.After the bankruptcy court so clarified the Compromise terms, Acme withdrew its objection.As provided in the Compromise, the Trustee subsequently commenced this separate adversary proceeding seeking determination of the various creditors' claims. Cara moved to add appellees Bayside and PPI as cross-claim defendants, for the purpose, Cara said, of complaining that Bayside's and PPI's claims should be equitably subordinated to Cara's claim. Appellees did not object to this motion, and it was granted. The Trustee's motion for an order authorizing establishment of escrow for the benefit of Cara's and Acme's disputed claims was also granted. Cara then filed its complaint against Bayside and PPI, stating its claim for equitable subordination. Acme similarly cross-claimed against appellees, asserting that Bayside and PPI were equitably estopped from claiming that their mortgages had priority over Acme's interest. Acme's subsequent motion to amend its cross-claim to add an equitable subordination claim was allowed to the extent it related to the establishment of a valid secured lien with priority over the valid secured claims of appellees, but was denied to the extent Acme sought to recover as an unsecured creditor.Thereafter, appellees moved for dismissal of appellants' equitable subordination claims, asserting that the bankruptcy court's order approving the Compromise was res judicata on the equitable subordination claims. The bankruptcy court considered and granted the motion to dismiss as a motion for summary judgment pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(c).3 The district court affirmed.II. THE DISTRICT COURT'S OPINIONIn upholding the bankruptcy court's determination that the Compromise and Order of Approval were res judicata as to Acme and Cara's subsequent equitable subordination cross-claims, the district court reasoned as follows: (1) The court found that the Joint Application and Compromise indicated:the Trustee had investigated potential claims of preferential transfers, fraudulent transfers, and equitable subordination against Appellees, but concluded that it would not be in the best interest of the estate to bring those claims against Appellees....(Emphasis supplied.) For this reason, and also because the Trustee released "any and all claims" he had against Bayside and PPI, the court ruled:The Joint Application, by its own terms, indicates that the Trustee released any potential claims of equitable subordination which [the Trustee] may have had against Appellees. (2) As a consequence, the court decided that "the [Compromise] agreement did not reserve in the Trustee (or parties in privity with the Trustee) the right to bring later claims of equitable subordination." Rather,... the Joint Application and subsequent order of approval entered by the Bankruptcy Court reserved for future litigation only the issue of the legal priority of all the creditors' claims to the estate.(Emphasis retained.) (3) The district court found further support for the above interpretation in the character of Acme's only filed objection to the Compromise. The objection, the court noted, rested "not on the basis of the equitable reshuffling of priorities, but on the ground that its mechanic's lien had legal priority over Appellee's secured claims." The district court went on to explain:Acme was concerned that the compromise not be construed to conclusively establish that Appellees' liens had legal priority over its own liens; it sought assurance that Appellees would be parties in the later action to determine the priority of all claims to the bankruptcy estate.... Acme now concedes that absent an equitable reordering of priorities, its mechanic's lien is junior to those of Appellees because it neglected to name Appellees in the state court action to perfect the mechanic's lien.The district court noted that in the hearing prior to the bankruptcy court's entry of its order approving the consent agreement, Acme's counsel:gave no indication that it sought to obtain a superior position through an equitable reordering. Acme specifically asked the Bankruptcy Court to clarify the clause reserving for future litigation the relative priorities of all claimants to the property of the bankruptcy estate. Acme withdrew all objections to the compromise "to the extent that our superior position is to be determined at a later date".... The Bankruptcy Court ordered that Acme review the order approving the compromise such that "wording satisfactory to [Acme] is included in the form of order allowing the compromise" ... Nowhere in the Joint Application or the order approving the compromise is there an indication that the claim of equitable subordination was reserved for future litigation. This Court finds that the claim of equitable subordination was released by the Trustee, thus precluding Appellants from reasserting it in a new action. (4) The district court then rejected Acme's and Cara's arguments that they were not bound by the consent agreement because they were not parties to it nor to the underlying litigation it purported to settle. The court suggested, first, that Acme and Cara were in privity with the Trustee, who, acting for all of the estate's creditors, "was the proper party to seek equitable subordination." Since in the Joint Application the Trustee relinquished the equitable subordination claim, and since the Trustee was Acme's and Cara's "representative," they "are barred by res judicata from reasserting any such claim against Appellees." Second, to the extent Acme's and Cara's individual interests diverged from the Trustee's, they were protected by being allowed to object to the consent agreement under Bankruptcy Rule 9019. The court recognized that Acme and Cara might not fit within the concept of preclusion by representation because there might be such a divergence of interest between the Trustee and them that the Trustee could not fairly represent them. See Restatement (Second) Judgments Sec. 42(1)(d). Even so, however, the court believed that their receipt of notice, and their opportunity to object and participate in the hearing on the Compromise, as well as their right thereafter to appeal under 28 U.S.C. Sec . 158(c) from the bankruptcy court's order approving the Compromise, sufficed to render the Trustee's action res judicata, barring Acme and Cara from later suing for equitable subordination. The district court pointed out that Cara, although notified, never objected or appeared prior to the bankruptcy court's approval of the Compromise, and did not thereafter appeal from the approval. Acme, on the other hand, did object and appear; but although its objection was expressly overruled, did not appeal. Moreover, its objection was never based upon a contention that it be allowed to reorder the priority of claims against the estate on equitable grounds, but rather was limited to the legal priority allegedly provided by its mechanic's lien.The district court concluded:In sum, this Court holds that the Bankruptcy Court correctly concluded that the Trustee released any claim he may have had against Appellees based on equitable subordination.... with the exception of an action to determine the priorities of the claims of all the creditors of the estate. The action reserved by the consent agreement does not allow the Trustee or Appellants [Acme and Cara] to bring a claim of equitable subordination. The Order approving the Joint Application of Compromise is res judicata barring appellants from reasserting a claim of equitable subordination against Appellees.III. ARGUMENTS ON APPEALAcme and Cara make three arguments on this appeal: (1) Acme and Cara were not parties nor in privity with the Trustee or any other parties to the Compromise and therefore the Compromise cannot be res judicata as to them; (2) the Compromise explicitly reserved Acme's and Cara's right to bring claims of equitable subordination against Bayside and PPI; and (3) Bayside and PPI waived their defense of res judicata. We address each in turn.Privity"Under res judicata, a final judgment on the merits of an action precludes the parties or their privies from relitigating issues that were or could have been raised in that action." Allen v. McCurry, 449 U.S. 90, 94, 101 S.Ct. 411, 414, 66 L.Ed.2d 308 (1980) (citing Cromwell v. County of Sac,Try vLex for FREE for 3 days
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