The
Third Circuit has recently held in In re Denby-Peterson, 941 F.3d 115
(3rd Cir. 2019) that creditors who refuse to relinquish an item that was seized
pre-petition are not subject to sanctions because their refusal does not violate
11 U.S.C. § 362’s automatic stay. The case further deepens a circuit split on
the issue.
The
Facts
As
the Third Circuit explained, “the center of this bankruptcy appeal is
“‘America’s first sports car’: The Chevrolet Corvette.” Joy Denby-Peterson
purchased a 2008 Corvette in July 2016, and several months later the vehicle
was repossessed when Denby Peterson failed to make all of the required loan
payments. After repossession, Denby-Peterson filed an emergency Chapter 13
Bankruptcy petition in the Bankruptcy Court for the District of New Jersey. She
then notified her creditors of the filing and demanded return of the Corvette. The
creditor refused to do so, and Denby-Peterson filed a motion for turnover
seeking an order (1) compelling the return of the Corvette, and (2) imposing
sanctions for an alleged violation of the automatic stay. After a two-day
hearing, the Bankruptcy court ordered the creditor to return the Corvette as
required by 11 U.S.C. § 542(a), but denied the request for sanctions. On the
latter point, the bankruptcy court reasoned that the creditor’s refusal to
return the Corvette was not a violation of the automatic stay absent a court
order requiring turnover. Denby-Peterson appealed to the district court (which
affirmed on similar grounds) and again to the Third Circuit.
The
Third Circuit’s Ruling: Meaning of Section 362’s Automatic Stay and the
Interplay of Section 542’s Turnover Provision
Noting
a split in authority among the federal circuits, the Third Circuit sided with
the minority of circuits by holding that a secured creditor does not violate §
362’s automatic stay by maintaining possession of collateral that it lawfully
repossessed pre-petition, even after notice of the debtor’s bankruptcy. The Court
began its analysis by considering the plain language of Section 362(a)(2),
which provides (as relevant here) that the filing of a bankruptcy petition
“operates as a stay . . . of . . . any
act to . . . exercise control over property of the
estate.” 11 U.S.C. § 362(a)(3). The
court noted that the operative terms and phrases of the Section are “stay,”
“act,” and “exercise control” and concluded, after a review of the ordinary
meaning of those terms, that “Section 362(a)(3) prohibits creditors from taking
any affirmative act to exercise control over property of the estate.” The Court
further held that this duty “is prospective in
nature . . . the exercise of control is not stayed,
but the act to exercise control is stayed.” Denby-Peterson, 941
F.3d at 126 (emphasis in original). Based
on this enunciation of the rule, the Court held that on the facts of this case,
“a post-petition affirmative act to exercise control over the Corvette is not
present,” and thus there was no violation of the automatic stay. Id.
The
Court also considered and rejected a related argument made by the debtor that
Section 362 should be read in pari materia with 542(a)’s “allegedly
self-effectuating” turnover provision. Section 542 provides that an entity in
possession, custody, or control of property of the debtor “shall deliver” the
property to the bankruptcy trustee. The Court acknowledged that Section 542
uses mandatory language – “shall deliver” – but explained that the question in
this case “is when must a creditor deliver?” The Court analyzed Section 542’s
provisions and held that “it would be illogical for us to interpret the
turnover provision as imposing an automatic duty on creditors to turn over
collateral to the debtor upon learning of a bankruptcy petition.” Id. at
130. Doing so would allow debtors to temporarily strip creditors of their
rights to assert affirmative defenses such as laches, or to claim that the
property is not property of the estate. While the Court agreed that creditors
could still make these arguments in the course of the bankruptcy proceedings if
the collateral was immediately turned over, it held that it did “not read the
turnover provision as placing the onus on creditors to surrendering the
collateral and then immediately file a motion in Bankruptcy Court asserting
their rights.” Therefore, the Court reasoned, the mandatory language in Section
542 does not lead to the conclusion that Section 362’s automatic stay is
self-effectuating.
The
Court also rejected the notion that § 362 and § 542 must be read together,
reasoning that “[e]ven assuming the turnover provision is self-executing . . .
there is still no textual link between Section 542 and Section 362. The language of the automatic stay provision
and the turnover provision do not refer to each other. The absence of an
express textual link between the two provisions indicates that they should not
be read together, so violation of the turnover provision would not warrant
sanctions for violation of the automatic stay provision.” Id. at 132.
Widening
of a Circuit Split
As
the Third Circuit noted, its decision in Denby-Peterson deepened a split
among the circuits on the meaning of Section 362’s automatic stay provision.
The Third Circuit joined the Tenth and D.C. Circuits in holding that a secured
creditor does not have an affirmative obligation to return a debtor’s
collateral immediately upon notice of the bankruptcy. On the other side of the
split, the Second, Seventh, Eighth, and Ninth Circuits have held that Section
362 requires a creditor to immediately return collateral that was repossessed
pre-petition as soon as the creditor knows of the bankruptcy filing.
This
leads to a complicated state of the law, especially for nationwide creditors. In
some circuits, a creditor is permitted to ignore a post-petition demand for the
return of collateral that was lawfully repossessed pre-petition. In other
circuits, however, that same conduct could expose the creditor to sanctions for
willful violation of Section 362’s automatic stay. And still in other circuits,
the law is wholly unclear and the creditor must make a calculated risk of
either returning the collateral thereby necessitating the expenditure of more resources
to protect its rights, or possibly be subject to sanctions.
Due
to the deep (and deepening) circuit split, the state of the law related to §
362 is obviously disuniform. In December 2019, the Supreme Court agreed to
decide the issue presented by Denby-Peterson by granting certiorari in a
Seventh Circuit case, In re Fulton, 926 F.3d 916 (7th Cir. 2019). The Fulton
court held that the Bankruptcy Code’s turnover provision requires immediate
turnover of estate property that was seized pre-petition; look for the creditor’s
attorneys in that case to rely heavily on Denby-Peterson’s reasoning in
seeking to obtain a creditor-friendly ruling at the Supreme Court.
Zachary
Dunn is an attorney practicing in Smith Debnam Narron Drake Saintsing &
Myers, LLP’s Consumer Financial Services Litigation and Compliance Group
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