JIM D. PAPPAS, Bankruptcy Judge.
In this and several other similar adversary proceedings, the Plaintiff, chapter 7
In these actions, Plaintiff has adequately demonstrated that Defendant was properly served with a summons and a copy of the complaint, and that no response, timely or otherwise, has been made to that complaint by Defendant. Dkt. No. 7; Aff. in Supp. of Summ. J. at 2, Dkt. No. 11; Fed. R. Civ. P. 4.1. A clerk's default, required under Fed. R. Civ. P. 55(a), and made applicable to this proceeding pursuant to Rule 7055, has been duly entered in this action. Dkt. No. 6. And, at the hearing concerning Plaintiff's Motion, the Court, after considering Plaintiff's evidence, together with the well-pled allegations of the complaint, tentatively decided that Plaintiff's claim for relief against Defendant was justified. Dkt. No. 17. It did so because, based on the record, the transfers were made by Debtor to Defendant during the applicable window of time before the bankruptcy case was filed, at a time that Debtor was insolvent, and that, consequently, the subject transfers are recoverable by Plaintiff by exercising his statutory avoiding powers. Dkt. No. 17; see § 544(b)(1) and Idaho Code §§ 55-913(b), 55-914.
From the Court's perspective, Plaintiff's Motion is ripe, proper and should be granted. However, in light of the several decisions of the U.S. Supreme Court and the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, the Court must determine whether it has the constitutional authority to grant Plaintiff's Motion and to enter a final default judgment against Defendant under these circumstances.
While these adversary proceedings are "core proceedings" under 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(H), even so, under Ninth Circuit case law, Plaintiff's claim against Defendant constitutes a so-called Stern claim.
The Supreme Court in Wellness, and before it, the Ninth Circuit in Bellingham, both instructed that the "consent" needed to allow the Court to enter a final judgment resolving a Stern claim need not be express, but can instead be implied from the facts and circumstances in a case. Wellness, 135 S. Ct. at 1947; Bellingham, 702 F.3d at 569. However, in those two cases, the defendant had appeared and participated in the litigation, and yet failed to request that the issues be adjudicated in an Article III court, such that the question was whether the defendants had waived the right to an Article III judge. Wellness, 135 S.Ct at 1940-1941 (noting that the defendant had filed an answer and complied with some discovery obligations imposed by the bankruptcy court); Bellingham, 702 F.3d at 568 (noting that the defendant had failed to object to the bankruptcy judge's authority, affirmatively assented to suspend its demand for a jury trial in district court so the bankruptcy judge could adjudicate the claim, and failed to raise the constitutional issue on appeal until after briefing was complete). Here, in contrast to those facts, Defendant has completely failed to respond or defend against Plaintiff's allegations.
Do these circumstances justify a finding of implied consent? Put another way, can a defendant also forfeit its right to an Article III judge.
So, should the Court enter the default judgment requested by Plaintiff in this action? Or should the Court decline to act on Plaintiff's Motion, and thereby effectively require Plaintiff to ask the Article III district court to grant his Motion, even though Defendant has not requested that relief? While it is perhaps a close question, this Court comfortably decides to do the former, that is to grant Plaintiff's Motion, and leave it to Defendant to seek relief in the district court when, and if, it is ever motivated to seek Article III involvement. Here's why.
First of all, this Court adopts the reasoning in the Oldco decision wherein the bankruptcy court decided that, indeed, bankruptcy judges have the constitutional authority to enter a default judgment under these circumstances. As in that case, here, Defendant was properly served with a summons which conspicuously admonished that:
Oldco M Corp., 484 B.R. at 601; Summons at 1, Dkt. No. 6. In the Court's opinion, whatever legal or other interests that may require an Article III judge to enter a final judgment absent the parties' consent are more than adequately served and protected by this sort of plain, bold warning to Defendant that its silence will be interpreted as consent to entry of a default judgment by the bankruptcy court.
This "scream or die" approach, which construes the lack of a party's timely objection after fair notice as implied consent, is a critical part of the procedural bedrock in America's bankruptcy courts.
The Court acknowledges the guidance provided in Wellness that, in gauging whether a party has consented to entry of a final judgment by a "non-Article III adjudicator" in bankruptcy cases, the question is whether that consent is "knowing and voluntary." However, as noted above, Wellness explored the manner in which a litigating party might waive its right to an Article III judge; the Court did not discuss how that right might be forfeited by failure to appear and defend at all. Here, this Court concludes that, in light of the notice provided in the properly-served summons, Defendant's total failure to appear and defend can be presumed to satisfy the Wellness standard.
The Court has a second reason, of more practical importance, for deciding that it can properly grant Plaintiff's Motion. If Defendant at some later time feels its legal rights have been offended by the lack of an Article III judge's approval of the default judgment, it can always seek relief from that judgment. Rule 7055, (which incorporates Fed. R. Civ. P. 55(c). Indeed, in connection with its motion for relief from the default judgment, Defendant could ask the district court to withdraw the reference in this adversary proceeding under 28 U.S.C. § 157(d) to consider its arguments. In this fashion, Defendant can access the Article III forum, and if the district court is persuaded to do so, that court can review the default judgment and act to correct any error by this Court in its entry.
To this Court, this approach is clearly preferable to requiring Plaintiff to first ask the district court if the bankruptcy court has the constitutional power to enter a default judgment in this referred action, and if this Court lacks that power, to ask the district court to enter that judgment. It makes little sense to require that Plaintiff request "advice" from the district court as to the scope of this Court's powers. In other words, why should this Court "recommend" that the district court enter a default judgment in this action, when this Court believes it has the constitutional authority to do so, and Defendant has not bothered to appear. Defendant was properly served with a summons clearly warning that, if it failed to timely appear, the bankruptcy court could enter a default judgment against it. That is exactly what should occur in this action.
Plaintiff's motion for entry of a default judgment will be granted. Plaintiff's counsel shall submit appropriate findings of fact, conclusions of law, and an appropriate form of judgment for entry by this Court.