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Household Finance Corporation v. Paul Audley Dunbar, Bankrupt, in The Matter of Paul Audley Dunbar, Bankrupt, 262 F.2d 112, 10th Cir. (1958)

This document summarizes a court case between Household Finance Corporation and Paul Audley Dunbar regarding a default judgment obtained by Household Finance after Dunbar had declared bankruptcy. The court ruled that Dunbar's discharge in bankruptcy barred Household Finance from enforcing the default judgment. While Dunbar could have raised his bankruptcy discharge as a defense in state court, pleading it is not always an adequate remedy for the bankrupt party and bankruptcy courts have jurisdiction to protect the discharge by injunction. The court found Dunbar was entitled to an injunction against Household Finance enforcing the default judgment.
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33 views7 pages

Household Finance Corporation v. Paul Audley Dunbar, Bankrupt, in The Matter of Paul Audley Dunbar, Bankrupt, 262 F.2d 112, 10th Cir. (1958)

This document summarizes a court case between Household Finance Corporation and Paul Audley Dunbar regarding a default judgment obtained by Household Finance after Dunbar had declared bankruptcy. The court ruled that Dunbar's discharge in bankruptcy barred Household Finance from enforcing the default judgment. While Dunbar could have raised his bankruptcy discharge as a defense in state court, pleading it is not always an adequate remedy for the bankrupt party and bankruptcy courts have jurisdiction to protect the discharge by injunction. The court found Dunbar was entitled to an injunction against Household Finance enforcing the default judgment.
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262 F.

2d 112

HOUSEHOLD FINANCE CORPORATION, Appellant,


v.
Paul Audley DUNBAR, Bankrupt, Appellee.
In the Matter of Paul Audley DUNBAR, Bankrupt.
No. 5948.

United States Court of Appeals Tenth Circuit.


November 28, 1958.

J. Francis Hesse and Malcolm C. Black, Wichita, Kan. (W. D. Jochems,


Wichita, Kan., was with them on the brief), for appellant.
No appearance for appellee.
Before PHILLIPS, MURRAH and LEWIS, Circuit Judges.
PHILLIPS, Circuit Judge.

Household Finance Corporation1 has appealed from a judgment of the United


States District Court for the District of Kansas permanently enjoining Finance
from attempting in any manner to enforce a judgment rendered by the Court of
Common Pleas of Sedgwick County, Kansas, in favor of Finance and against
Dunbar on December 10, 1957, requiring Finance to dismiss a garnishment
proceeding instituted on said judgment against Dunbar's employer, the Boeing
Airplane Company, and permanently enjoining Finance from instituting or
prosecuting any garnishment proceeding upon such judgment.

On October 31, 1957, Finance instituted the action in which such state court
judgment was rendered, by filing a bill of particulars in which Finance alleged
that on April 5, 1956, for a valuable consideration, Dunbar made and delivered
to Finance his promissory note, whereby he promised to pay Finance $304.94,
plus interest at 3% per month on the first $300 of the unpaid principal balance
for a period not to exceed 30 months and interest at 5/6% per month thereafter;
that Finance was the owner and holder of the note; that after allowing all
payments or other credits there was a balance due, owing and unpaid of $279,
plus interest at 3% per month from September 22, 1956, until October 5, 1958,

and at 5/6% per month thereafter; that such promissory note was a liability for
obtaining money and property by false pretenses and false representations, in
that Finance made the loan and accepted the promissory note in "reliance upon
and belief in" a representation made by Dunbar to it that he had no other debts
than those aggregating $1,301.55, described in a financial statement submitted
by Dunbar to Finance to induce the making of such loan and the acceptance of
such note, whereas in truth and in fact Dunbar was then indebted in amounts
aggregating more than $2,386.49.
3

Finance prayed for judgment for $279.39, with interest thereon at 3% per
month from September 22, 1956, until October 5, 1958, and with interest
thereon at 5/6% per month thereafter.

Summons was issued on October 31, 1957, but returned unserved on November
1, 1957. On November 18, 1957, alias summons was issued and the return
thereon shows it was served on Dunbar on November 19, 1957.

On October 18, 1956, Dunbar filed his petition in involuntary bankruptcy in the
United States District Court for the District of Kansas and was duly adjudged a
bankrupt.

In his schedules he listed as an unsecured claim the debt owing to Finance,


evidenced by such note. An order of discharge was entered in the bankruptcy
proceeding on October 1, 1957, before the state court action was instituted and
70 days before the judgment was entered in such action. Dunbar did not appear
in the state court action and the judgment above referred to was entered by
default. The judgment in part read:

"And hearing the evidence and argument of counsel the Court finds that
defendants are indebted to plaintiff in the sum of Four Hundred and no/100
____ Dollars, for promissory note * * *

"It is therefore considered, ordered and adjudged that plaintiff have and recover
of and from defendants * * * the sum of $400.00 Dollars, with interest thereon
from this date at the rate of * * * per cent per annum and costs of this suit
herein taxed at $9.38, Sub Costs $14.29 Total $23.67 Dollars, and hereon let
execution issue."

Finance instituted garnishment proceedings on the judgment against Dunbar's


employer, Boeing Airplane Company. Dunbar filed a motion in the state court
asking a stay of proceedings to enforce the judgment. His motion was overruled

on March 11, 1958. Boeing was served in the garnishment proceeding on


March 5, 1958. On March 14, 1958, the Federal court entered an order
restraining Finance from enforcing its state court judgment until the further
order of the court.
10

From the foregoing it will appear that the action in the state court was instituted
after the adjudication in bankruptcy and the order of discharge, and that a
period of 70 days intervened between the order of discharge and the default
judgment, during which Dunbar could have set up the order of discharge as a
bar to the state court action.

11

It was settled in Local Loan Co. v. Hunt, 292 U.S. 234, 54 S.Ct. 695, 78 L.Ed.
1230 that a bankruptcy court has jurisdiction in an ancillary proceeding to
protect and enforce its order of discharge by enjoining the prosecution of
actions brought against the bankrupt debtor.2

12

Pleading the discharge in the state court action as a bar or as ground for a stay
may not afford an adequate remedy to the bankrupt.3

13

In the judgment granting the permanent injunction the Federal court stated:

14

"* * * the court having heard the pleadings, the evidence, and arguments of
counsel, and upon due consideration thereof it appearing to the court that the
bankrupt debtor's state remedy would involve such a degree of trouble,
embarrassment, long and expensive course of litigation and possible loss of
employment to make it valueless and inadequate so as to constitute special and
unusual circumstances in this case, and further that decree No. 41115 entered
by the Court of Common Pleas of Sedgwick County, Kansas, on December 10,
1957, in favor of the Household Finance Corporation and against this bankrupt
debtor, is not a valid default fraud judgment as the record does not show facts
pleaded or proved with sufficient particularity, the court finds that the bankrupt
debtor should be granted the relief prayed for in his motion for a permanent
injunction against the Household Finance Corporation restraining it from
enforcing in any manner said default judgment."

15

It seems clear to us that regardless of the allegations with respect to the alleged
false financial statement in the bill of particulars filed in the state court action,
such action was brought on the note; sought judgment on the note with interest
thereon according to the terms of the note; judgment was rendered on the note
for the balance of the principal thereof, with interest thereon according to the
tenor of the note; and that neither the action brought nor the judgment rendered

was for fraud and deceit. This, we think, was clearly manifested by the
allowance of interest in accordance with the tenor of the note, rather than legal
interest for damages, if any, suffered by the alleged fraud.
16

In Remington on Bankruptcy, 6th Ed., Vol. 8, 3240, p. 70, it is stated:

17

"A discharge in bankruptcy is a defense against liability only where properly


pleaded and proved. It is a purely personal defense, therefore capable of waiver
and considered as waived unless properly set up and insisted upon."

18

The author cites many state court decisions in support of the text.

19

In Personal Industrial Loan Corporation v. Forgay, 10 Cir., 240 F.2d 18, 19, this
court said:

20

"* * * a general discharge in bankruptcy does not wipe out the debt, it only
raises a bar to actions thereon in state courts and must be pleaded and, if not
pleaded, is waived and in such a case a judgment in the state court is res
judicata and is binding on the federal court. * * *" 4

21

In the case of In re Innis, 7 Cir., 140 F.2d 479, the bankrupt filed her voluntary
petition in bankruptcy and was adjudicated a bankrupt on November 27, 1935.
She included in her schedules a debt to the Fowler Bank City Trust Company or
its liquidator for unpaid liability on 20 shares of stock at $100 per share. On
March 25, 1936, an order of discharge was duly entered.

22

Prior to the institution of the bankruptcy proceedings and on March 7, 1935, the
liquidator for the bank brought a suit in the state court against Innis and others
to enforce their liability as stockholders. The state court action against the
stockholders, including Innis, remained on the state court docket for
approximately three years and long after Innis received her discharge. Innis
filed no plea and made no defense of the state court action. Neither did she seek
to have such action stayed. On October 27, 1939, she was defaulted and
judgment was rendered against her. She took no appeal from the judgment. The
judgment in the state court was assigned to United Mercantile Agencies, Inc.

23

On January 15, 1943, Innis filed a supplemental petition in the bankruptcy


court to restrain United Agencies from selling on an execution issued on the
judgment certain property acquired by her subsequent to the bankruptcy. She
alleged no fraud, but based her ground for relief [140 F.2d 480] "solely upon

the fact that she believed that the discharge automatically worked an effectual
disposition of the cause pending in the state court and that no further action was
necessary upon her part." The bankruptcy court entered an order enjoining
United Agencies from executing the judgment by levy, sale, or otherwise.
24

The Court of Appeals of the Seventh Circuit reversed. It cited Helms v.


Holmes, supra, with approval. In its opinion, it in part said:

25

"* * * A court of equity does not interfere on the ground that injustice has been
done, that a judgment is wrong in fact or law or that its enforcement will work a
great hardship, unless the complaining party was, without his fault, deprived of
his opportunity to present his defense on the merits. Rather, the rule permitting
parties to appeal to equity against a judgment is of `great strictness and
inflexibility,' for, otherwise, the jurisdiction of that court would soon supplant
all other tribunals. Chancery will intervene, therefore, only when the
complainant was prevented from presenting a meritorious defense by the
inequitable conduct of his adversary unmixed with negligence or fault on his
own part; he must abide the consequences of his own neglect. * * *

26

"A discharge is neither a payment nor an extinguishment of a debt. When


properly pleaded, it is a bar to the enforcement of an existing debt by legal
proceedings and, thus, it amounts merely to a personal defense which is waived
if the debtor chooses not to avail himself of it. * * *

27

"* * * If judgment had been obtained prior to bankruptcy, in view of the fact
that the bankrupt scheduled it and later obtained a discharge, the court of
bankruptcy would have been justified in restraining the execution, for, in such
instance, the discharge would have put an end to the debt in the form of
judgment. Then, too, where a suit is pending, its continuation may be enjoined
by the bankruptcy court. But in the absence of any stay of the proceeding,
either by the state court on motion or by the mandatory direction of the
bankruptcy court, inasmuch as the demand is permitted to remain in existence,
in due course of litigation, the discharge of the bankrupt, being personal to him,
must necessarily be submitted to the court which is proceeding in its normal
functions to enforce a legitimate demand. This is not a factual situation
demanding the intervention of the bankruptcy court to protect its paramount
jurisdiction. It is rather a case where the bankruptcy court has proceeded to
exhaust its jurisdiction and, in due course, to grant a discharge to the debtor,
which, as a matter of congressional favor, she is permitted to file in pending
suits or in suits later instituted as a bar to their further prosecution. Thereafter
the protection of the right granted her is a matter for her care and attention."

28

The Court of Appeals distinguished Holmes v. Rowe, 9 Cir., 97 F.2d 537, in


that in that case, at the time the petition in bankruptcy was filed, the judgment
creditor falsely stated to the bankrupt that a judgment had already been entered
in the state court action, when, in fact, no such judgment had been entered and
thus deceived the bankrupt and led him not to plead his discharge in the state
court action.

29

Personal Industrial Loan Corp. v. Forgay, supra, is likewise distinguishable. In


that case the default judgment in the state court was entered before the bankrupt
obtained his discharge. The bankrupt had no opportunity to plead the discharge
prior to judgment in the state court action.5 He sought to appeal from the state
court judgment and his appeal was dismissed. He sought to have the state court
judgment vacated by a motion filed in the state court and his motion was
denied. He then sought relief against the enforcement of the judgment in the
Federal court.

30

State Finance Co. v. Morrow, supra, is likewise distinguishable. There, the


action was brought in the Federal court to stay the proceedings in the state
court, while the state court action was pending and no judgment had been
entered in the state court action. The question in that case was whether the
bankrupt was compelled to seek his remedy by setting up his discharge in the
state court action or whether he might, under the facts, invoke injunctive relief
in the Federal court.

31

Here, Dunbar had 70 days within which to set up the order of discharge as a
defense in the state court action. He failed to do so and permitted judgment to
go against him by default. We reluctantly conclude that Dunbar waived his
defense to the state court action and was not entitled to equitable relief in the
Federal court.

32

Reversed and remanded, with instructions to vacate the judgment below.

Notes:
1

Hereinafter called Finance

See also: Personal Finance Co. of Colorado v. Day, 10 Cir., 126 F.2d 281, 282;
State Finance Co. v. Morrow, 10 Cir., 216 F.2d 676, 679; Personal Industrial
Loan Corp. v. Forgay, 10 Cir., 240 F.2d 18

See State Finance Co. v. Morrow, 10 Cir., 216 F.2d 676, 680; Seaboard Small
Loan Corp. v. Ottinger, 4 Cir., 50 F.2d 856, 859, 77 A.L.R. 956; Holmes v.
Rowe, 9 Cir., 97 F.2d 537, 540

See also: Helms v. Holmes, 4 Cir., 129 F.2d 263, 266, 141 A.L.R. 1367, cited
with approval in the Forgay case, supra

Where a judgment has been entered on a provable claim, not within the
exceptions in 11 U.S.C.A. 35, prior to the order of discharge, the discharge
constitutes a ground for restraining enforcement of judgment against the
bankrupt. Jackson v. Shaw, 20 Cal.App.2d 740, 68 P.2d 310; Boynton v. Ball,
121 U.S. 457, 7 S.Ct. 981, 30 L.Ed. 985; Badger v. Jordan Marsh Co., 256
Mass. 153, 152 N.E. 92; Pratt v. Fields, 21 Cal.App.2d 723, 70 P.2d 268

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