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Summary: NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 20a0470n.06 Nos. 19-3987/3990 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT FILED Aug 10, 2020 PERCY SQUIRE, ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk ) Plaintiff-Appellant, ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE v. ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT ) COURT FOR THE VICKIE STRINGER, ) SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF ) OHIO Defendant-Appellee. ) ) BEFORE: NORRIS, NALBANDIAN, and READLER, Circuit Judges. CHAD A. READLER, Circuit Judge. In a bankruptcy proceeding, the automatic stay of collection activ
Summary: NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 20a0470n.06 Nos. 19-3987/3990 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT FILED Aug 10, 2020 PERCY SQUIRE, ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk ) Plaintiff-Appellant, ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE v. ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT ) COURT FOR THE VICKIE STRINGER, ) SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF ) OHIO Defendant-Appellee. ) ) BEFORE: NORRIS, NALBANDIAN, and READLER, Circuit Judges. CHAD A. READLER, Circuit Judge. In a bankruptcy proceeding, the automatic stay of collection activi..
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NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
File Name: 20a0470n.06
Nos. 19-3987/3990
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT FILED
Aug 10, 2020
PERCY SQUIRE, ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk
)
Plaintiff-Appellant, )
)
ON APPEAL FROM THE
v. )
UNITED STATES DISTRICT
)
COURT FOR THE
VICKIE STRINGER, )
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF
)
OHIO
Defendant-Appellee. )
)
BEFORE: NORRIS, NALBANDIAN, and READLER, Circuit Judges.
CHAD A. READLER, Circuit Judge. In a bankruptcy proceeding, the automatic stay of
collection activity plays a vital role in preserving the rights of debtors and creditors alike. See
11 U.S.C. § 362. For debtors, they gain a concentrated means for organizing their financial affairs.
And for creditors, they gain a concentrated means for maximizing collection efforts. Here, the
bankruptcy court found that Sterling Williams and his counsel Percy Squire (together, “Creditors”)
violated the automatic stay by unilaterally moving in state court to collect assets held by the debtor.
Because Creditors offer no valid justification for their collection efforts, and because no other
reversible error occurred below, we AFFIRM the judgment of the bankruptcy court.
BACKGROUND
Vickie Stringer authored an urban fiction novel based upon her life experiences in the late
1990s. Simon & Schuster later agreed to publish the novel. As part of the agreement, Simon &
Schuster and Stringer agreed on a means for calculating royalty payments owed to Stringer based
Nos. 19-3987/3990, Squire v. Stringer
upon book sales. Experiencing sales success with her initial novel, Stringer continued to write,
and Simon & Schuster continued to publish her writings. Over seventeen years, Stringer authored
twelve novels under various pen names, all with Simon & Schuster. During that time, book
royalties were Stringer’s primary income.
Despite her publishing success, debt was a constant problem for Stringer. At one point,
she engaged an accountant, Sterling Williams, to help her navigate an IRS audit. Williams
eventually agreed to loan Stringer a considerable sum to settle her tax liability, a sum Stringer was
to pay back with interest. When Stringer failed to do so, Williams filed suit against her in Ohio
state court. Williams obtained a judgment against Stringer for $71,960.80, with eight percent
annual interest, an amount equivalent to roughly $130,000 today. By that time, however,
Stringer’s collective debt to her creditors (including Williams) had ballooned to nearly $5,000,000.
Lacking the means to pay back her debt, Stringer filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy protection.
In her filing, Stringer disclosed her home, valuable personal property, and other assets. She also
identified each of her publishing agreements as well as her entitlement to royalties for the books
she wrote under aliases. Stringer correctly recorded that she was owed just over $3,200 in royalties
from Simon & Schuster, including for the alias novels. Stringer, however, failed to identify those
aliases in the proper place on the bankruptcy schedule.
Following Stringer’s filing, the automatic stay was instituted under 11 U.S.C. § 362, and a
Trustee was appointed to administer the bankruptcy estate. Stringer notified the Trustee of the
royalties owed to her by Simon & Schuster. After concluding that the royalty agreements held
little equity and were burdensome to the estate, the Trustee abandoned them to Stringer.
As Stringer’s bankruptcy proceeding began to unfold, Williams engaged Percy Squire to
represent him in the proceeding. On Williams’s behalf, Squire filed in state court an affidavit and
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order of garnishment, which sought to garnish the unpaid royalties from the “Simon & Schuster
account belonging to Vickie Stringer.” Due to that filing, along with subsequent communications
from Squire threatening litigation, Simon & Schuster refused to release the royalties to Stringer.
Stringer responded by filing in state court an emergency motion to release the garnishment. Upon
learning of the pending bankruptcy proceeding, the state court promptly granted the release. The
next day, Squire removed the state court garnishment action to the bankruptcy court.
Creditors’ collection efforts prompted Stringer to file a motion in the bankruptcy court for
Creditors to show cause why they should not be held in contempt for violating the automatic stay.
At a hearing on the motion, Squire participated both as a party to the contempt motion and as
counsel for his co-party, Williams. During direct examination by Stringer’s counsel, Squire
testified that he believed he was entitled to seek garnishment in state court because Stringer had
not been entirely forthright during the bankruptcy process, most notably by excluding her pen
names from her bankruptcy filings. Squire testified that these omissions coupled with Stringer’s
“hustler” background and two-decade-old criminal convictions gave him license to take action to
protect Williams’s interests. He also suggested that Stringer’s pen names constituted separate
entities from Stringer herself, but eventually conceded that was not the case.
Following the direct examination of Squire, the bankruptcy court allowed Squire to “cross-
examine himself,” affording him the opportunity to testify freely about the events leading up to
the show-cause motion. At one point during his self-cross-examination, Squire attempted to
introduce evidence of Stringer’s decades-old convictions under Federal Rule of Evidence 609.
The district court sustained an objection from Stringer’s counsel to exclude that evidence as
irrelevant.
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Finding that Creditors had willfully violated the automatic stay, the bankruptcy court
entered judgment in favor of Stringer, awarding her the attorney’s fees she incurred in pursuing
the contempt motion as well as punitive damages equal to three times that amount—a sum totaling
over $100,000. On appeal to the district court, Creditors asserted that the bankruptcy court erred
by: (1) finding that Creditors willfully violated the stay; (2) refusing to allow Squire to introduce
evidence of Stringer’s past convictions; (3) failing to ratify or annul Creditors’ violation of the
stay; and (4) failing to recuse for judicial bias. The district court declined to reach the latter two
arguments on the ground that Creditors did not raise them below. It then rejected Creditors’
remaining arguments and affirmed the judgment of the bankruptcy court.
ANALYSIS
Creditors’ appellate arguments are identical to those asserted in the district court, with one
addition: That the bankruptcy court should have taken judicial notice of public records showing
that Stringer had an interest in certain Ohio corporate entities, which she failed to disclose on her
bankruptcy schedules. Creditors’ failure to properly preserve their arguments, however, has
dramatic ramifications for their success on appeal. Like the district court, we will not consider
Creditors’ argument regarding recusal, as it was not raised in the bankruptcy court. Grider Drugs,
LLC v. Express Scripts, Inc., 500 F. App’x 402, 406–07 (6th Cir. 2012) (citing In re Eagle-Picher
Indus., Inc.,
963 F.2d 855, 863 (6th Cir. 1992) (refusing to address an argument for recusal not
raised in the bankruptcy court)). Likewise, because Creditors failed to raise their
ratification/annulment argument in timely fashion in the bankruptcy court, we review it for plain
error only. Bowman v. Corr. Corp. of Am.,
350 F.3d 537, 548 (6th Cir. 2003). Finally, we will
not consider Creditors’ judicial notice argument, which was not raised below. See Ealy v. Comm’r
of Soc. Sec.,
594 F.3d 504, 513 (6th Cir. 2010). As to their remaining arguments, we independently
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review the bankruptcy court’s decision, examining its findings of fact for clear error and its
conclusions of law de novo. In Re Am. HomePatient, Inc.,
420 F.3d 559, 563 (6th Cir. 2005).
The Contempt Finding. The protocol surrounding the Bankruptcy Code’s automatic stay
is well defined. When a debtor files for bankruptcy, an automatic stay is immediately instituted,
preventing nearly all collection activities by creditors. Ritzen Grp., Inc. v. Jackson Masonry, LLC,
140 S. Ct. 582, 589 (2020) (citing 11 U.S.C. § 362(a)). A creditor who violates the stay may be
found in contempt. In re Nicole Gas Prod., Ltd.,
916 F.3d 566, 578 (6th Cir. 2019). And in the
case of a willful violation, the creditor may be required to pay the harmed parties actual and
punitive damages as well as attorney’s fees. 11 U.S.C. § 362(k)(1).
Upon finding that Creditors willfully violated the automatic stay in this proceeding, the
bankruptcy court entered a monetary judgment against them. Creditors concede that, despite their
knowledge of the stay, they undertook collection actions, as broadly defined under 11 U.S.C.
§ 362(a). They initially justified those efforts by arguing that a person’s trade name is separate
from that person for purposes of collections. This meant, to their mind, that pursuing the royalties
due from the books Stringer published under aliases did not violate the stay prohibiting collection
efforts against Stringer herself. But Squire later conceded this argument is wrong. And on that
point of Ohio law, he is correct. In re Nicole
Gas, 916 F.3d at 573 (applying Ohio corporate law
to resolve whether a party violated the automatic stay). “Doing business under another name does
not create an entity distinct from the person operating the business.” LexisNexis v. Moreau-Davila,
95 N.E.3d 674, 686 (Ohio Ct. App. 2017).
That leaves Creditors’ argument that the alias royalties were not entitled to the protection
of the bankruptcy stay even as Stringer’s own assets. That is so, Creditors say, because Stringer
did not disclose her aliases in her bankruptcy filing. As a general matter, Creditors are correct that
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the bankruptcy process is designed for the “honest but unfortunate debtor.” See, e.g., Grogan v.
Garner,
498 U.S. 279, 287 (1991) (quoting Local Loan Co. v. Hunt,
292 U.S. 234, 244 (1934)).
But that venerable principle did not serve as a gateway for Creditors to circumvent the automatic
stay based upon their individual determination that Stringer had been dishonest in some aspect of
the bankruptcy process. The Bankruptcy Code, in fact, provides a specific mechanism for
Creditors to request relief from a § 362 stay. Under 11 U.S.C. § 362(d), a bankruptcy court can
grant such relief so long as it provides notice and a hearing to the other parties. This mechanism
ensures both that a creditor’s request for relief is meritorious and that the interests of the other
parties are adequately protected. And to ensure that those interests are preserved, a creditor who
acts without prior approval from the bankruptcy court (like Creditors here) risks being held in
contempt of the stay. In re Webb,
472 B.R. 665 (Table), at *12 (B.A.P. 6th Cir. 2012) (“A creditor
seeking to proceed with an action prohibited by the automatic stay must seek relief from the stay
pursuant to § 362(d).”); In re Clark,
207 B.R. 559, 565 (Bankr. S.D. Ohio 1997) (“Unless a
particular proceeding is specifically designated an exception to the automatic stay, creditors must
obtain relief from the stay prior to taking any action involving property of the estate. To the extent
creditors fail to do so, they act at their own peril.”) (internal citations omitted).
Creditors respond with a request that we retroactively ratify or annul their violation of the
stay under our § 362(d) equitable authority. See Easley v. Pettibone Mich. Corp.,
990 F.2d 905,
910 (6th Cir. 1993) (“This section expressly permits the bankruptcy court to annul the stay. This
power to annul ‘permits the order to operate retroactively, thus validating actions taken by a party
at a time when he was unaware of the stay. Such actions would otherwise be void.’” (quoting 2 L.
King, Collier on Bankruptcy § 362.07 (15th ed. 1987))). We may do so, however, “only where
the debtor unreasonably withholds notice of the stay and the creditor would be prejudiced if the
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debtor is able to raise the stay as a defense, or where the debtor is attempting to use the stay unfairly
as a shield to avoid an unfavorable result.”
Id. at 911. And here, Creditors concede that Stringer
did not withhold notice of the stay. Nor do they argue that Stringer is somehow unfairly using the
stay to shield herself from an unfavorable result. All things considered, then, the district court did
not plainly err in finding that Creditors willfully violated the stay.
Honoring Creditors’ unauthorized pursuit of self-help, it bears adding, would contravene
the basic vision of the Bankruptcy Code. The automatic stay allows the debtor’s assets and debts
to be accounted for in one forum, facilitating an organized, collective plan that considers the
interests of all parties. The stay gives debtors relief from collection efforts, harassment, and
foreclosure actions, and permits them to attempt a repayment or reorganization plan. In re
Robinson,
764 F.3d 554, 559 (6th Cir. 2014). At the same time, it helps creditors “preserve what
remains of the debtor’s insolvent estate and provide a systematic equitable liquidation procedure.”
Chao v. Hosp. Staffing Servs., Inc.,
270 F.3d 374, 382–83 (6th Cir. 2001) (cleaned up). Allowing
a creditor to circumvent the automatic stay based upon his own judgments would lead to the very
“chaotic and uncontrolled scramble for the debtor’s assets” the stay was designed to prevent.
Id.
(quoting Holtkamp v. Littlefield,
669 F.2d 505, 508 (7th Cir. 1982)). Here, Creditors knew of the
§ 362 stay and pursued their state court collection action anyway, without prior approval from the
bankruptcy court, in willful violation of the stay. See Weary v. Poteat, 627 F. App’x 475, 477 (6th
Cir. 2015) (holding that a willful violation of a § 362 stay occurs when a creditor takes action to
coerce a debtor into paying the creditor despite “knowledge of the bankruptcy stay”).
Stringer’s Past Convictions. Creditors next challenge the bankruptcy court’s refusal to
allow Squire to introduce evidence of Stringer’s past convictions while Squire was “cross
examining himself” at the contempt hearing. The bankruptcy court excluded that evidence on the
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Nos. 19-3987/3990, Squire v. Stringer
grounds that Stringer’s credibility—the matter that her prior convictions could have impeached—
was irrelevant to the issue at the heart of the contempt hearing—whether Creditors willfully
violated the automatic stay. Our standard of review raises the bar for Creditors on appeal. We
review the bankruptcy court’s evidentiary rulings for abuse of discretion, meaning we will reverse
an erroneous exclusion of evidence only where it affects the substantial rights of the complaining
party. United States v. Kerley,
784 F.3d 327, 336 (6th Cir. 2015).
Creditors’ argument raises a pair of interesting questions about the mechanics of
introducing evidence of a testifying witness’s past convictions as impeachment evidence under
Federal Rule of Evidence 609. One is whether evidence of Stringer’s convictions should have
been handled under Rule 609(a), which governs recent convictions, or 609(b), which governs
convictions for which “more than 10 years have passed since the witness’s conviction or release
from confinement for it, whichever is later.” Complicating matters here is the fact that, at the time
of the contempt hearing, 10 years had passed since Stringer was released from prison, but not since
she had completed her term of supervised release. In this setting, we have noted disagreement
among courts over which event triggers Rule 609(b)’s 10-year clock. See United States v.
Peatross, 377 F. App’x 477, 489–90 (6th Cir. 2010) (collecting cases).
A second question is the acceptable point at which such evidence can be admitted during
the hearing. Historically, such evidence was admissible only during cross-examination of the
witness whose convictions were being introduced. 3 C. Mueller & L. Kirkpatrick, Federal
Evidence § 6:43 (4th ed. 2020). But a 1990 amendment to Rule 609 removed the cross-
examination limitation, allowing introduction of past-conviction evidence without precise
limitations.
Id. (“[I]n 1990 the language was amended, so that it no longer limits the attacking
party to cross-examination or any particular method of proof.”); see Fed. R. Evid. 609 (providing
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that “the following rules apply to attacking a witness’s character for truthfulness by evidence of a
criminal conviction” without specifying when and how such evidence can be introduced). Perhaps
the narrowest way to construe this amendment is a grant of permission to introduce prior
convictions on direct examination of a witness who would otherwise be impeached with that
evidence on cross-examination, ostensibly to soften the blow of prior convictions sprung during
cross-examination. Cf. Ohler v. United States,
529 U.S. 753, 756 (2000) (observing that the 1990
amendment to Rule 609 “clarif[ied] that [conviction] evidence could also be introduced on direct
examination”) (emphasis added). Today’s case, however, goes beyond that narrow ground.
Creditors sought to introduce this evidence not during Stringer’s testimony, but instead during
Squire’s “self-cross-examination.” And due to this unusual aspect of the hearing, no prior decision
appears directly on point.
Regardless of how we might answer these questions, any hypothetical error in the
bankruptcy court’s exclusion of the conviction evidence was harmless. Neither Stringer’s candor
on the witness stand nor in her bankruptcy filing was relevant to whether Creditors willfully
violated the automatic stay. Admission of the conviction evidence thus would not have moved the
needle on the bankruptcy court’s finding of contempt. See United States v. Collins,
799 F.3d 554,
571 (6th Cir. 2015) (finding that improper admission of past conviction evidence was harmless
given the overwhelming evidence of guilt presented at trial). Nor did the bankruptcy court’s
exclusion of the conviction evidence deny Creditors a fair trial, a point largely undeveloped by
Creditors.
CONCLUSION
For these reasons, we AFFIRM the judgment of the bankruptcy court.
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