GREGORY F. KISHEL, Chief Judge.
This adversary proceeding was commenced by the trustee who serves in the bankruptcy cases of Debtors Polaroid Corporation, Polaroid Consumer Electronics, LLC ("PCE"), and the others named in the case caption above.
Via a three-count amended complaint, the Trustee seeks money judgments against Defendant PNY Technologies, Inc. ("PNY") in a total of nearly $550,000.00 plus interest. He also seeks the disallowance of PNY's claim(s) in the underlying cases pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 502(d), i.e., until PNY has satisfied any adjudged liability to the estates.
Count One of the complaint sounds under 11 U.S.C. § 547(b); the Trustee seeks the avoidance of pre-petition transfers from Debtor PCE to PNY that he characterizes as preferential, and a money judgment of $215,179.30 plus interest against PNY to effectuate the avoidance. In Count Two, the Trustee alleges that PNY breached a contract with Debtor Polaroid Corporation, by failing to pay amounts due under a "Brand License Agreement." He seeks a money judgment against PNY on this count, in the amount of $332,287.59 plus interest. The specifics of Count Three are not directly relevant to the issue at bar, or to the motion as a whole. It is worth noting that PNY filed two proofs of claim in the underlying cases: an original one on February 20, 2009, assigned number 34 by the clerk, and another on October 5, 2009 (post-conversion), assigned number 188. Both proofs of claim recite an amount of $686,837.57; and both designate the estate of the Polaroid Corporation as the one against which the claims are asserted.
PNY's first response to the service of the Trustee's complaint was a motion for dismissal, later withdrawn by stipulation. PNY then filed an answer. After that, counsel coordinated cross-motions for partial summary judgment on Count Two.
Before those motions came on for hearing on June 22, 2011, there was a flurry of late-filed submissions that somewhat changed the parties' theories as to both procedure and law. Further complications emerged at the hearing, with PNY's counsel insisting on a continuance for the taking of discovery on limited fact issues before the motions were fully submitted.
That last track had not been previously requested in a sufficiently-articulated fashion, and the other new perspectives on the substance of the motions had emerged late. So, the motions were taken under advisement to address the procedural posture of the litigation and the merits as appropriate. In passing, the Court drew counsel's attention to the Supreme Court's pending consideration of the appeal from In re Marshall, 600 F.3d 1037 (9th Cir. 2010). That case was one of the last left
As it turned out, the Supreme Court issued its opinion, Stern v. Marshall, 564 U.S. ___, 131 S.Ct. 2594, ___ L.Ed.2d ____ (2011), on the following morning.
When these motions were first brought, they did not float at the abstract height of Stern v. Marshall. But now, if the substantive merits are properly addressed at this stage of the litigation, the issue is there—i.e., the judicial authority to direct entry of judgment under the statutory "division of labor"
Since the Bankruptcy Amendments and Federal Judgeship Act of 1984, the statutory tracking of judicial authority in a bankruptcy case is twofold.
28 U.S.C. § 157(c)(1); Stern v. Marshall, 564 U.S. at ___, 131 S.Ct. 2594.
As it turned out, the holding in Stern v. Marshall directly applies to this adversary proceeding, given the posture of claims against the bankruptcy estate and the claims and counterclaims in the present litigation. The Trustee now seeks a grant of summary judgment on the estate's breach of contract claim against PNY. The estate's claim was put into suit here, after PNY filed its claim in the underlying case(s). By invalidating the grant of final judicial authority under 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(C), Stern v. Marshall puts the styling and tracking of an outcome on the Trustee's motion squarely at issue.
Unfortunately, the status of that consent is quite unclear. This is particularly unfortunate, because prior attention to reasonably-clear rules would have made this whole exercise unnecessary. NOTE the following aspects of the record:
This all made for a tangle, complicated over time by the subsequent entry of decision in Stern v. Marshall.
In the first instance, the Trustee formally complied with the requirement of Fed. R. Bankr.P. 7008(a),
After that, PNY was oddly and completely derelict in its pleading duty under Fed. R. Bankr.P. 7012(b). Its later statements-in-briefing reflect a certain attitude on the issue of judicial authority over Count II, but they wrongly categorize the issue itself as one of "jurisdiction." And PNY misses the boat entirely, were the issue one of the exercise of the bankruptcy jurisdiction by the federal courts; even the breach of contract action in Marathon Pipe Line would fall within related-proceeding jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1334(b). See authorities cited in n.7 supra
Then, of course, the rule enunciated in Stern v. Marshall validated the complaint's categorization of Count II, at least on the plane of constitutionally-founded judicial authority. Count II is obviously to be treated as a related proceeding, the outcome of which "could conceivably have [an] effect on the estate being administered in bankruptcy," Celotex Corp. v. Edwards, 514 U.S. 300, 308, 115 S.Ct. 1493, 131 L.Ed.2d 403 (1995), when it is submitted for decision to the judge(s) empowered to order a final judgment under the district court's bankruptcy jurisdiction. But the class of judicial officer to order judgment, under the allocation of authority within the federal courts, is still indeterminate due to the paucity and inconsistency of the parties' input on the issue.
None of this goes to the merits. However, it must be settled at some point in this litigation, and the steps toward that should be started now. If PNY does consent
In any event, judgment will not be entered on Count II before the other two counts are ripe for entry of judgment, after the submission of their issues and the rendering of decision on them. See In re Lumbar, 446 B.R. 316, 332 (Bankr.D.Minn. 2011), and Eighth Circuit precedent construing Fed.R.Civ.P. 54(b) cited therein. Counts I and III have not been submitted to the Court for decision as yet, so any discrete adjudication on Count II made on motion would only result in an interim memorialization of a rationale for an outcome. Formal entry of judgment would be reserved pending the making of decision on the other two. And, yes, if PNY does not consent to submit Count II to a bankruptcy judge, the two-forked and unavoidable assignment of judicial authority presents other conundra as to the mechanics for entry of a single, consolidated judgment at that point. Those are not ripe at this point, and are reserved to another day.
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED:
1. Counsel for the Plaintiff-Trustee and for Defendant PNY shall file express written statements as to whether their clients consent to entry of a final judgment on Count II on order of a bankruptcy judge, by July 21, 2011.
2. After that, the Court will take under advisement the parties' cross-motions for summary judgment and all associated requests for relief.