S. MARTIN TEEL, Jr., Bankruptcy Judge.
On April 21, 2017, the debtor filed three documents:
Because the Motion to Reopen concerns an alleged violation of the discharge injunction, no fee is owed for filing the Motion to Reopen, and the request for a waiver is unnecessary. By the Motion to Reopen, the debtor seeks to have the court reopen the case in order to pursue her Motion for Contempt, which seeks to hold in contempt three entities ("the respondents").
The Motion for Contempt rests principally on the respondents' filing of a complaint for judicial foreclosure relating to the debtor's real property located at 4101 Albemarle Street, NW, #317, Washington, D.C. The Motion for Contempt points to alleged violations of the automatic stay of 11 U.S.C. § 362(a) and the discharge injunction of 11 U.S.C. § 524(a)(2).
The allegations plainly fail to state a violation of the automatic stay. Under 11 U.S.C. §§ 362(c)(1) and 554(c), the automatic stay of § 362(a) terminated with respect to acts against this property, as property of the estate, upon the closing of the case on March 12, 2010. The automatic stay with respect to acts other than acts against property of the estate terminated upon entry of the debtor's discharge on February 23, 2010. Accordingly, because the acts at issue occurred after March 12, 2010, it is only the discharge injunction that can serve as a basis for a contempt violation.
A discharge "extinguishes only `the personal liability of the debtor' . . . [while] a creditor's right to foreclose on the mortgage survives or passes through the bankruptcy." Johnson v. Home State Bank, 501 U.S. 78, 83 (1991). The debtor points to various things as evidencing that the discharge injunction was violated, none of which support a finding of contempt.
That the civil action was against not only the property but also against the debtor as the owner of the property does not alter the fact that the action was one to enforce the lien.
The complaint's statement that "[t]his is an attempt to collect a debt and any information obtained may be used for that purpose" does not mean that the complaint was something other than an attempt to collect the debt via judicial foreclosure.
The invocation of "personal jurisdiction" over the debtor in order to obtain judicial foreclosure did not mean that the debt was being enforced as a personal obligation.
The debtor does not dispute that the action was brought to enforce a promissory note and a deed of trust that were in existence when the bankruptcy case was filed. The debtor views a post-discharge assignment and an appointment of a substitute trustee, and the recording of those documents, as constituting acts in violation of the discharge injunction, but such acts do not amount to violations of the discharge injunction: they do not constitute acts to collect the debt as a personal obligation of the debtor.
The debtor also asserts that the respondents lacked standing under nonbankruptcy law to enforce the debt via foreclosure, questioning, for example, whether the assignments of the note and deed of trust were properly executed. However, the debtor was free in the civil action to raise that defense, and the action, regardless, remained an action to enforce a deed of trust, not an action to collect the debt as a personal obligation.
The debtor also alleges that:
Motion for Contempt at 10, ¶ 46. The debtor's Declaration elaborates:
(Underscoring in original.) If these allegations against the respondents are true, some of these acts may amount to a tort under state law. This court, however, lacks subject matter jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1334(b) to try a tort claim, arising from postpetition acts, a claim that has no impact on the administration of a case that was closed years ago. Moreover, a secured creditor's efforts to inspect the condition of its collateral, even if conducted in an improper manner, do not, without more, amount to an act to collect the debt as a personal obligation of the debtor.
The court has discretion not to reopen a case to consider a debtor's motion for contempt when the allegations of that motion fail to establish a violation of the discharge injunction. Pennington-Thurman v. Bank of Am. N.A. (In re Pennington-Thurman), 499 B.R. 329, 332 (B.A.P. 8th Cir. 2013); In re Gill, 529 B.R. 31, 36-37 (Bankr. W.D.N.Y. 2015). An order follows denying the motion to reopen.
Motion for Contempt, Exhibit 2. Whatever these entries may mean, they hardly establish an act to collect the debt as a personal obligation of the debtor.