MAX O. COGBURN, JR., District Judge.
This matter is before the Court on a Motion for Bond Reduction, filed by Roger Leon and Keith Percy. (Doc. No. 64).
On July 16, 2018, this Court entered a final judgment in this case. (Doc. No. 50). That judgment included a monetary judgment in favor of Rato Power and against Roger Leon in accordance with this Court's Order issued the same day granting Rato Power's Motion to Confirm Arbitration Award and Enter Final Judgment. (Doc. No. 49). The Rato Parties filed the judgment with the Clerk of Superior Court for Lincoln County pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1962 and N.C. GEN. STAT. § 1-237, which created a judicial lien on Leon's personal residence in Lincoln County.
Defendants Roger Leon and Keith Percy appealed the final judgment and later moved to stay its enforcement pending the appeal. (Doc. Nos. 51, 61). Defendants provided a supersedeas bond for the full amount of the judgment. (Doc. No. 62). On November 13, 2018, this Court granted the motion to stay. (Doc. No. 63).
In their pending motion for bond reduction, Defendants now request that the supersedeas bond be reduced to either $0, or to $150,000. Defendants explain in their motion that the $300,000 supersedeas bond imposes an undue financial burden on Defendant Leon because Leon relied on a $150,000 personal loan to meet the bond, and the lender now seeks to have the money returned.
Rule 62 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedures governs supersedeas bonds. Since this Court granted Defendants' motion to stay enforcement of the judgment, Rule 62 has been reworded. The old Rule 62(d) provided that an appellant "may obtain a stay [of the judgment] by supersedeas bond" during the pendency of an appeal. Under the new Rule 62(b), which took effect on December 1, 2018, "a party may obtain a stay by providing a bond or other security." This rewording clarified what case law, including from this Court, had already established under the old Rule 62—courts have the discretion to stay proceedings with an alternate security other than a supersedeas bond.
Waiving the full bond requirement "is the rare case," however, and should only be allowed in "extraordinary circumstances."
This Court has recognized that a full bond may not be necessary in either of two circumstances: (i) when the judgment debtor can currently easily meet the judgment and demonstrates that it will maintain the same level of solvency during appeal, and (ii) when the judgment debtor's present financial condition is such that the posting of a full bond would impose an undue financial burden.
This Court finds that Defendants have failed to meet their burden to establish the "extraordinary circumstances" required to deviate from the standard, full supersedeas bond. As noted, Defendants first argue that the current bond "imposes an undue financial burden" because Leon borrowed $150,000 to secure the bond, and the lender now wants the loan repaid. As Plaintiffs point out in their brief, however, Defendants never disclosed this circumstance in their original motion to stay enforcement. Nor did they inform Plaintiffs that they would need to seek to reduce the bond only six months after it was issued and well before any appeal could be resolved. Plaintiffs argue in their opposition brief that, had this been disclosed, the Rato Parties would have opposed the motion to stay.
Next, as for Defendants' second argument for reducing the supersedeas bond—that Rato Power's judicial lien on Leon's home is adequate to secure enforcement of the judgment—this Court finds that reducing the bond would place Plaintiffs at risk of not being able to collect on the full judgment, or having to enforcing the judgment through foreclosing on Rato Power's judicial lien, which would be a much more complex and cumbersome process than satisfying the judgment through the supersedeas bond currently in place.
In sum, this Court finds that allowing the reduction of the supersedeas bond for the proposed alternative security would be unfair to Plaintiffs, who did nothing to create the situation Defendants find themselves in—that Leon took out a loan that required repayment within six months, when it was surely obvious to the parties and counsel that resolution of the appeal within that time period was highly unlikely. The Court will therefore require that the full supersedeas bond remain in place to continue staying enforcement of the judgment.
It is