In re: Jose J. Hernandez ( 2014 )


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  •                                                         FILED
    APR 04 2014
    1                         NO FO PUBL A IO
    T R     IC T N
    2                                                   SUSAN M. SPRAUL, CLERK
    U.S. BKCY. APP. PANEL
    OF THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    3                  UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY APPELLATE PANEL
    4                            OF THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    5   In re:                        )      BAP No. SC-13-1301-PaJuKu
    )
    6   JOSE J. HERNANDEZ,            )      Bankr. No. 11-15921-MM7
    )
    7                   Debtor.       )
    ______________________________)
    8                                 )
    COLLECT ACCESS, LLC,          )
    9                                 )
    Appellant,    )
    10                                 )
    v.                            )      M E M O R A N D U M1
    11                                 )
    JOSE HERNANDEZ,               )
    12                                 )
    Appellee.2    )
    13   ______________________________)
    14                  Argued and Submitted on March 20, 2014
    at Pasadena, California
    15
    Filed - April 4, 2014
    16
    Appeal from the United States Bankruptcy Court
    17                for the Southern District of California
    18        Honorable Margaret M. Mann, Bankruptcy Judge, Presiding
    19
    Appearances:     Tappan Zee argued for appellant Collect Access,
    20                    LLC.
    21
    22   Before: PAPPAS, JURY, and KURTZ, Bankruptcy Judges.
    23
    24        1
    This disposition is not appropriate for publication.
    25   Although it may be cited for whatever persuasive value it may
    have (see Fed. R. App. P. 32.1), it has no precedential value.
    26   See 9th Cir. BAP Rule 8013-1.
    27        2
    Appellee Jose Hernandez did not file a brief or appear in
    28   this appeal.
    1        Appellant Collect Access, LLC (“Collect”) appeals the order
    2   of the bankruptcy court finding it in contempt for failing to pay
    3   monies due to chapter 73 debtor, Appellee Jose J. Hernandez
    4   (“Hernandez”), under the terms of a previous order.   We AFFIRM.
    5                                 FACTS4
    6        On August 30, 2002, a judgment was entered in San Diego
    7   Superior Court in favor of First Select, Inc. against Hernandez
    8   for $2,091.71; the judgment was renewed on January 22, 2008 for
    9   $3,723.19.   Collect, the successor to First Select, submitted a
    10   writ of execution to the Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department on
    11   July 12, 2011, to enforce the judgment.   On August 26, 2011, the
    12   sheriff served the writ on Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. and received
    13   $712.39 from funds in Hernandez’s bank account.
    14        On September 27, 2011, Hernandez filed a petition for relief
    15   under chapter 7.   He listed the levied funds as an asset in
    16   Schedule B and claimed them exempt in Schedule C.
    17        On November 3, 2011, Hernandez filed an ex parte motion in
    18   the bankruptcy court seeking an order requiring the sheriff to
    19   turn over the funds to him under § 542(a).   The bankruptcy court
    20   granted the turnover motion the next day.    However, the sheriff
    21
    3
    22           Unless otherwise indicated, all chapter and section
    references are to the Bankruptcy Code, 
    11 U.S.C. §§ 101
     – 1532,
    23   all Rule references are to the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy
    24   Procedure, Rules 1001–9037, and all Civil Rule references are to
    the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 1–86.
    25
    4
    As is discussed below, this is the second occasion these
    26   parties have appeared before the Panel concerning their disputes.
    27   Many of the facts recounted here are taken from the opinion of
    the Panel in the first appeal, Collect Access, LLC v. Hernandez,
    28   
    483 B.R. 713
     (9th Cir. BAP 2012).
    -2-
    1   was unable to comply with the order because, before receiving it,
    2   the funds had been transferred to Zee Law Group (“Zee Group”),
    3   the attorneys for Collect.
    4        Hernandez filed a second ex parte motion for turnover on
    5   November 21, 2011, this time directed at Zee Group.   The
    6   bankruptcy court granted that motion and entered the second
    7   turnover order on November 30, 2011.
    8        In response, on December 7, 2011, Collect filed an
    9   application to vacate the second turnover order, arguing that
    10   there was no legal basis to require it to turn over the funds to
    11   Hernandez.   Hernandez responded on December 19, 2011, alleging
    12   that turnover was proper and, that by not paying over the funds
    13   to him, Collect had violated the § 362(a) automatic stay; he
    14   sought to recover $1,100 on account of Collect’s conduct as
    15   damages under § 362(k).
    16        After conducting a hearing on Collect’s motion on
    17   January 19, 2012, the bankruptcy court entered a Memorandum of
    18   Decision on March 19, 2012.   The court explained its reasons for
    19   having granted both turnover motions and concluded that, by not
    20   paying the seized funds to Hernandez, Collect had violated the
    21   § 362(a) automatic stay:
    22        Upon receiving notice of the Debtor's September 27,
    2011 bankruptcy petition, Collect had an affirmative
    23        obligation to cease its collection procedures and
    notify the Sheriff to return the property. It failed
    24        to do so, resulting in the Sheriff's release of the
    Funds to Collect on November 7, 2011. This release
    25        violated the automatic stay and was void (citations
    omitted). Collect and its attorney, Tappan Zee, were
    26        given notice of Debtor's Chapter 7 petition on the date
    of filing, September 27, 2011. Bankruptcy Code section
    27        362(k) permits a person injured by any willful
    violation to recover actual and punitive damages, as
    28        sanctions for willful violations. . . . In the
    -3-
    1        Debtor's response to Collect's opposition, the Debtor
    asserted $1,100 in damages from Collect's violation of
    2        the automatic stay. Upon an application for fees and
    costs by the Debtor, subject to response from Collect,
    3        the Court will consider an order assessing Debtor's
    actual damages for Collect's violation of the automatic
    4        stay.
    5   In re Hernandez, 
    468 B.R. 396
    , 405-06 (Bankr. S.D. Cal. 2012),
    6   aff’d, 
    483 B.R. 713
     (9th Cir. BAP 2012).5
    7        The bankruptcy court entered an order denying Collect’s
    8   motion on April 2, 2012 (“Order Denying Vacatur”), which again
    9   directed Collect to turn over the $712.39 to Hernandez no later
    10   than seven business days after entry of the order and provided
    11   that the court would “consider an order assessing Debtor’s actual
    12   damages for Collect’s violation of the automatic stay upon an
    13   Application for Fees and Costs by [Hernandez].”
    14        On April 4, 2012, Hernandez filed a Motion for Costs,
    15   Damages and Fees Incurred for Willful Violation of the Automatic
    16   Stay (the “Damages Motion”).   The Damages Motion sought attorneys
    17   fees and costs of $3,572.06, actual damages of $100.00, and
    18   punitive damages of $7,225.00 relating to Collect’s stay
    19   violation.
    20        Collect appealed the Order Denying Vacatur on April 9, 2012.
    21   However, Collect did not seek a stay pending appeal from either
    22   the bankruptcy court or the Panel.    In addition, in its Statement
    23   of Issues on Appeal filed in the bankruptcy court, Collect did
    24   not challenge the bankruptcy court’s ruling that it had violated
    25   the automatic stay.
    26
    27        5
    For clarity, we will refer to the BAP decision as
    28   Hernandez II.
    -4-
    1        On April 27, 2012, Collect finally turned over the $712.39
    2   to counsel for Hernandez.
    3        While the appeal in Hernandez II was pending, Hernandez
    4   filed two other motions in the bankruptcy court, one to avoid
    5   Collect’s judgment lien under § 522(f) (the “Avoidance Motion”),
    6   and a second asking the bankruptcy court to find that Collect was
    7   in contempt for its failure to timely turn over the $712.39
    8   within the seven-day time period specified in the Order Denying
    9   Vacatur (the “First Contempt Motion”).
    10        The bankruptcy court conducted a hearing on the three
    11   Hernandez motions (i.e., Damages, Avoidance and First Contempt)
    12   on June 14, 2012.   At the hearing, the Avoidance Motion was
    13   granted, the First Contempt Motion was denied because Collect had
    14   by then complied with the Order Denying Vacatur, and the Damages
    15   Motion was granted.   The court awarded Hernandez his requested
    16   attorney’s fees of $3,572.06, but denied his request for any
    17   additional damages.
    18        The bankruptcy court directed Hernandez to prepare and lodge
    19   a proposed order concerning the Damages Motion.    Hernandez lodged
    20   a proposed order on June 25, 2012.    On July 2, 2012, Collect
    21   objected to the order proposed by Hernandez asserting that the
    22   bankruptcy court, at the hearing on June 14, 2012, had directed
    23   Hernandez to submit a form of "judgment," not an order.    It also
    24   lodged a proposed form of judgment for entry by the court.
    25        On July 6, 2012, the bankruptcy court entered an Order Re
    26   Further Briefing.   It acknowledged Collect's objection to the
    27   Hernandez proposed order and conceded that it may have "misspoke"
    28   at some point in the hearing.   However, the court indicated that
    -5-
    1   its intent, as reflected in the Memorandum of Decision and its
    2   tentative ruling, was that an order, not a judgment, be submitted
    3   for entry.    The court cited to case law in support of its
    4   position that an order rather than a "mere judgment" was proper
    5   in this context.6   However, the court invited Collect to submit
    6   further arguments on this point: "If Collect has case law to
    7   support its argument that the damages from the automatic stay
    8   should merely be a judgment instead of an order, it may submit
    9   further briefing by July 13, 2012.     Otherwise, the Court will
    10   enter an order for Collect to pay Debtor's attorney's fees within
    11   15 days."
    12        Collect did not respond to the bankruptcy court's invitation
    13   to submit a brief, and the bankruptcy court entered the order on
    14   the Damages Motion on July 19, 2012 (the “Attorney Fee Order”).
    15        On December 14, 2012, the BAP affirmed the Order Denying
    16   Vacatur.    Hernandez II, 483 B.R. at 726.   Collect did not appeal
    17   the BAP’s decision.
    18        On April 22, 2013, Hernandez filed a second motion for
    19   contempt against both Collect and Zee Group (the “Second Contempt
    20   Motion”).    It alleged that, while the Attorney Fee Order had been
    21   entered on July 19, 2012, directing Collect to pay $3,572.06 to
    22
    23        6
    See In re Jones, 
    2007 Bankr. LEXIS 4649
    , at *1 (noting
    that an order to show cause was entered against creditor for
    24
    failure to pay sanction as required by order); In re Seaspire,
    25   Inc., 
    63 B.R. 44
    , 45 (Bankr. M.D. Fla. 1986) (ordering creditor
    to appear to explain why she should not be held in contempt for
    26   failing to pay damages for violation of the automatic stay); see
    27   also Shuffler v. Heritage Bank, 
    720 F.2d 1141
    , 1148 (9th Cir.
    1983) (explaining that sanctions can be compensatory or
    28   coercive).
    -6-
    1   Hernandez’s attorney within fifteen days, and while Hernandez had
    2   again demanded payment from Collect within five days on
    3   January 2, 2013, no payment had been made.   The Second Contempt
    4   Motion asked the bankruptcy court to enter an Order to Show Cause
    5   (“O.C.”) why Collect should not be held in civil contempt
    6   pursuant to Rule 9020 and § 105(a).
    7        Collect responded to the Second Contempt Motion on May 6,
    8   2013.   While not denying its failure to pay Hernandez, it argued
    9   that because only Collect, and not its attorneys, was named in
    10   the Attorney Fee Order, Zee Group could not be held in contempt;
    11   that contempt was an improper procedure for enforcement of the
    12   Attorney Fee Order; and that the Second Contempt Motion was moot
    13   because it sought the same relief as the First Contempt Motion,
    14   which had been denied.   Collect did not comply with the Attorney
    15   Fee Order.
    16        Before the hearing on the Second Contempt Motion on May 23,
    17   2013, the bankruptcy court issued a tentative ruling indicating
    18   its intent to hold Collect in civil contempt if the Attorney Fee
    19   Order had not been complied with, and the funds paid to
    20   Hernandez, before the hearing.   After the hearing, the court took
    21   the issues under advisement.
    22        The bankruptcy court entered an Order re Second Motion for
    23   Contempt on June 12, 2013 (the “Contempt Order”).   First, the
    24   court agreed that contempt was not available as against Collect’s
    25   attorneys.   Second, the court ruled that the Second Contempt
    26   Motion was not moot because it addressed Collect’s failure to
    27   comply with the Attorney Fee Order, while the First Contempt
    28   Motion focused on Collect’s failure to obey the turnover orders.
    -7-
    1        The bankruptcy court then discussed Collect’s third
    2   argument, that the Attorney Fee Order was merely a judgment for
    3   damages, rather than an order to pay sanctions, such that it
    4   could not be enforced via contempt.   The court reasoned that,
    5   even if it had been an error for the court to enter an order,
    6   instead of a judgment, the Attorney Fee Order should have been
    7   obeyed.   The court noted that the context of the proceedings
    8   clearly established that the Attorney Fee Order was based on an
    9   implicit finding of contempt, rather than merely a damages award.
    10   And finally, citing to the BAP’s decision in Rosales v. Wallace
    11   (In re Wallace), 
    490 B.R. 898
     (9th Cir. BAP 2013), the court
    12   explained that an order to enforce compliance with a previous
    13   sanctions order resulting from a party’s misconduct is not an
    14   “ordinary money judgment” enforceable only through Civil Rule 69.
    15   The bankruptcy court found that clear and convincing evidence
    16   showed that Collect had knowingly violated a definite and
    17   specific court order (the Attorney Fee Order), had ignored the
    18   Court’s rejection of its judgment theory, and had refused to pay
    19   the Attorney Fee Order.
    20        The bankruptcy court ordered Collect to show cause why it
    21   should not pay $3,572.06, the amount due on the Attorney Fee
    22   Order, to Hernandez within seven days.   Collect was also ordered
    23   to pay the attorney’s fees incurred by Hernandez in seeking
    24   compliance with the Attorney Fee Order, in an amount to be
    25   determined after Hernandez filed a fee application.
    26        Collect filed a timely appeal of the Contempt Order on
    27   June 21, 2013.   Hernandez sought from the bankruptcy court, and
    28   was granted, a stay pending appeal, on condition that it provide
    -8-
    1   a bond, which it did.
    2                                JURISDICTION
    3        The bankruptcy court had jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C.
    4   §§ 1334 and 157(b)(2)(A) and (O).        We have jurisdiction under
    5   
    28 U.S.C. § 158
    .
    6                                   ISSUE
    7        Whether the bankruptcy court abused its discretion in
    8   finding Collect in contempt for violating the Attorney Fee Order.
    9                             STANDARD OF REVIEW
    10        The bankruptcy court’s civil contempt order and sanctions
    11   are reviewed for abuse of discretion.        Rediger Inves. Servs. v.
    12   H Granados Commc’ns, Inc. (In re H Granados Commc’ns, 
    503 B.R. 13
       726, 731-32 (9th Cir. BAP 2013).        The abuse of discretion
    14   standard has two parts.    First, we consider whether the
    15   bankruptcy court applied the correct legal standard; and second,
    16   we must decide whether the court's factual findings supporting
    17   the legal analysis were clearly erroneous.        Alakozai v. Citizens
    18   Equity First Credit Union (In re Alakozai), 
    499 B.R. 698
     (9th
    19   Cir. BAP 2013) (citing United States v. Hinkson, 
    585 F.3d 1247
    ,
    20   1261-62 (9th Cir. 2009) (en banc)).
    21                                 DISCUSSION
    
    22 A. 23
            To hold a party in civil contempt, the bankruptcy court must
    24   find by clear and convincing evidence that the offending party
    25   knowingly violated a definite and specific court order.        Knupfer
    26   v. Lindblad (In re Dyer), 
    322 F.3d 1178
    , 1190 (9th Cir. 2003).
    27   The burden then shifts to the offending party to show why it was
    28   unable to comply with the order.        FTC v. Affordable Media,
    -9-
    1   
    179 F.3d 1228
    , 1239 (9th Cir. 1999).
    2        In the Contempt Order, the bankruptcy court explained:
    3        Even if the court was incorrect in entering an order
    rather than a judgment for damages, which it was not,
    4        this is no defense to Collect’s noncompliance with the
    Attorney Fee Order. If Collect thought the Attorney
    5        Fee Order was in error, it was incumbent upon it to
    submit briefing before the Court ruled, or appeal the
    6        Attorney Fee Order and seek to stay the order pending
    appeal. (Citations omitted). . . . In short, the
    7        evidence is clear and convincing that Collect knowingly
    violated a definite and specific court order by
    8        ignoring the Court’s clear rejection of his judgment
    theory and refusing to pay the attorney’s fees ordered
    9        by the Attorney Fee Order.
    10   Contempt Order at 2.
    11        In its analysis, the bankruptcy court correctly invokes a
    12   long-standing rule of law:   “If a person to whom a court directs
    13   an order believes that order is incorrect the remedy is to
    14   appeal, but, absent a stay, he must comply promptly with the
    15   order pending appeal."   This principle was articulated by the
    16   U.S. Supreme Court in Maness v. Meyers, 
    419 U.S. 449
    , 458 (1975),
    17   although its origin relates back in the Court’s case law to at
    18   least 1922 with Howat v. Kansas, 
    258 U.S. 181
     (1922).   The Ninth
    19   Circuit frequently applies the rule.   See, e.g., Espinosa v.
    20   United Student Aid Funds, 
    553 F.3d 1193
    , 1205 (9th Cir. 2008)
    21   (holding that a creditor is not free to violate a bankruptcy
    22   court order because it has doubts as to the validity of the
    23   order) aff’d, 
    559 U.S. 260
    , 279 (2010); United States v. Galin,
    24   
    222 F.3d 1123
    , 1127 (9th Cir. 2000); Crystal Palace v. Mark Twain
    25   Indus., Inc. (In re Crystal Palace Gambling Hall, Inc.), 
    817 F.2d 26
       1361, 1365 (9th Cir. 1987) (cited as authority by the bankruptcy
    27   court in this appeal).
    28        The Maness rule applies even when the statute or case law
    -10-
    1   underlying the trial court’s order is later ruled
    2   unconstitutional.   United States v. Pescatore, 
    637 F.3d 128
    , 144
    3   (2d Cir. 2011).   And disregard of the requirements of the rule is
    4   punishable by contempt proceedings.    
    Id.
       However, to find
    5   contempt for violation of a court’s order, the subject court
    6   order must have been lawful.   Shilitani v. United States,
    7   
    384 U.S. 364
    , 370 (1966).   But, in this context, “lawfulness” is
    8   not a high standard, depending only on whether the court entering
    9   the order had subject matter jurisdiction over the action and
    10   personal jurisdiction over the parties affected by the order.
    11   Maness, 
    419 U.S. at 459
     (“an order issued by a court with
    12   jurisdiction over the subject matter and person must be obeyed by
    13   the parties until it is reversed by orderly and proper
    14   proceedings.").
    
    15 B. 16
            As the bankruptcy court found, Collect apparently decided
    17   that because the Attorney Fee Order was a “judgment,” and not an
    18   order, it need not voluntarily obey it but, instead, the onus was
    19   on Hernandez to use execution or some other enforcement means to
    20   collect the sums due under the Attorney Fee Order.     Collect’s
    21   decision was incorrect and had consequences.
    22        First, we note that Collect has never asserted that the
    23   bankruptcy court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over this
    24   dispute, or personal jurisdiction over Collect to enter the
    25   Attorney Fee Order.   Indeed, the Attorney Fee Order was entered
    26   by the bankruptcy court in connection with a pending bankruptcy
    27   case, to enforce the § 362(a) automatic stay, and to compel a
    28   creditor to recompense Hernandez for damages Collect caused him
    -11-
    1   by its disregard of that stay.    Clearly, the bankruptcy court had
    2   subject matter jurisdiction over the contempt proceedings.
    3   See 
    28 U.S.C. § 1334
    (b)(establishing jurisdiction in the district
    4   courts for “civil proceedings . . . arising in or related to a
    5   case under title 11.”); 
    28 U.S.C. § 157
    (a) (authorizing district
    6   courts to refer all such proceedings to the bankruptcy court);
    7   
    28 U.S.C. § 157
    (b)(1),(2)(A), (E), and (O) (authorizing
    8   bankruptcy court to enter a final judgment in core proceedings,
    9   including “matters concerning administration of the estate,”
    10   “orders to turn over property of the estate,” or in “proceedings
    11   affecting . . . the adjustment of the debtor-creditor . . .
    12   relationship”).    Collect was also subject to the personal
    13   jurisdiction of the bankruptcy court, was afforded appropriate
    14   due process, and appeared and was heard before the bankruptcy
    15   court entered its orders.    See Rules 9014 (contested matters);
    16   9020 (contempt).
    17        Moreover, as we explain below, Collect’s various arguments
    18   challenging the contempt finding in the bankruptcy court, and now
    19   on appeal, all lack merit.    But, again, even if Collect were
    20   correct, it can not dispute that the bankruptcy court issued a
    21   lawful order, the Attorney Fee Order, which required it to act
    22   and it defiantly chose not to.    If Collect believed that order
    23   was improper in some respect, its sole option was to appeal the
    24   order, and to seek a stay of its duty to perform pending that
    25   appeal.   Instead, as the bankruptcy court correctly observed,
    26   Collect consciously decided not to comply with the Attorney Fee
    27   Order, it did not appeal, and it did not seek a stay.
    28   Effectively, Collect did nothing, and doing nothing when the
    -12-
    1   Attorney Fee Order clearly and definitely compelled it to pay
    2   Hernandez for the attorneys fees and costs he incurred in
    3   prosecuting the stay violation motions amply demonstrates
    4   Collect’s contempt.
    
    5 C. 6
            Collect’s arguments in support of its legal position fall
    7   into two categories.   It first contends that the bankruptcy
    8   court’s Attorney Fee Order is a “money judgment,” and therefore,
    9   it must be enforced as a judgment, not via contempt proceedings.
    10   Second, Collect insists that the bankruptcy court erred in
    11   finding Collect in contempt for failing to pay a compensatory
    12   order.
    13        Collect’s first argument in unpersuasive.    It relies on
    14   Rules 9001(7) (“‘Judgment’ means any appealable order.”), 9002(5)
    15   (“‘Judgment’ includes any order appealable to an appellate
    16   court.”), and Civil Rule 69(a), which is applicable in contested
    17   matters via Rules 7069 and 9014(c) (“A money judgment is enforced
    18   by a writ of execution, unless the court orders otherwise.”).
    19   But Collect’s argument proves too much, because, at bottom, its
    20   “judgment theory” would treat all orders issued by a bankruptcy
    21   court as judgments.
    22        Collect cites two cases for the proposition that all of the
    23   bankruptcy court’s orders are, by virtue of these rules,
    24   equivalent to money judgments.    Collect’s Br. at 12 (citing
    25   Newland v. Super. Ct., 
    40 Cal. App. 4th 608
    , 615 (1995); SEC v.
    26   Naftalin, 
    460 F.2d 471
    , 775 (8th Cir. 1972)).    Neither case
    27   applies in this context.
    28        The Newland case deals with discovery sanctions under
    -13-
    1   California law.   In it, the California court states that
    2   “monetary sanction orders are enforceable through the execution
    3   of judgment laws. These orders have the force and effect of a
    4   money judgment and are immediately enforceable through execution,
    5   except to the extent the trial court may order a stay of the
    6   sanction.”   Newland, 40 Cal. App. 4th at 615.   Of course, Newland
    7   deals specifically with California’s procedural rules; it does
    8   not speak to whether, or which, orders entered in federal civil
    9   proceedings are money judgments that must be enforced via a writ
    10   of execution, as opposed to contempt proceedings.
    11         Collect’s second authority, Naftalin, is also of no
    12   consequence here.   Quoting the court in its brief, Collect points
    13   out that, once the finding of contempt has been made and a
    14   sanction imposed, the order acquires all the “elements of
    15   cooperativeness and consequence necessary to be possessed by any
    16   judicial order to enable it to have the status of a final
    17   decision under [28 U.S.C.] § 1291.”    Naftalin at 475.   But
    18   Collect does not correctly quote the text of the Eighth Circuit’s
    19   decision, which instead actually reads, “Until a sentence or
    20   sanction has been made to exist as to a contempt adjudication,
    21   the situation is lacking in the elements of operativeness and
    22   consequence necessary to be possessed by any judicial order to
    23   enable it to have the status of a final decision under § 1291.”
    24   Id.    Naftalin also does not seem to have any bearing on what
    25   constitutes a money judgment enforceable by execution.
    26         Collect searches unsuccessfully for reliable authority that
    27   a final order awarding monetary sanctions is a money judgment for
    28   purposes of Civil Rule 69(a).   Collect cites four cases that
    -14-
    1   simply apply Civil Rule 69(a)’s requirement that the proper means
    2   of securing compliance with a money judgment is to seek a writ of
    3   execution.   Collect’s Op. Br. at 20.      The cases do not attempt to
    4   distinguish between money judgments and a stay violation
    5   sanctions order, nor more generally, are they insightful as to
    6   whether final orders must be enforced solely through writs of
    7   execution.
    8        Of the four cases, the first is Hilao v. Est. of Marcos,
    9   
    95 F.3d 848
     (9th Cir. 1996).     This case involved an attempt to
    10   enforce a $2 billion judgment from the District Court of Hawaii
    11   in the Central District of California against the estate of
    12   former President Ferdinand Marcos of the Philippines.       The court
    13   held that the size of the judgment and difficulty of enforcing
    14   the judgment merited its treatment as a money judgment under
    15   Civil Rule 69(a).    
    Id. at 855
    .
    16        The second case is Shuffler v. Heritage Bank, 
    720 F.2d 1141
    17   (9th Cir. 1983).    The case dealt with enforcement of a money
    18   judgment, plus $500 per day in fines.       Although there is dicta in
    19   the decision about Civil Rule 69(a), the court did not base its
    20   decision on Civil Rule 69(a), but only ruled that the party was
    21   in contempt for noncompliance with the earlier judgment, and
    22   remanded to the district court for determination of the amount of
    23   fine.   
    Id. at 1148-49
    .
    24        The third case is Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co. v. Markarian,
    25   
    144 F.3d 346
    , 349 (1st Cir. 1997).        The case holds that where a
    26   “money judgment” is entered in federal court, the enforcement is
    27   by writ of execution.     Again, the size and complexity of the
    28   judgment and difficulty of enforcement made the writ of execution
    -15-
    1   under Civil Rule 69(a) the proper means of enforcement.      
    Id.
     at
    2   349.
    3          The fourth case is Combs v. Ryan’s Coal Co., 
    785 F.2d 970
    ,
    4   980 (11th Cir. 1986).    Here the issue was enforcement of a money
    5   judgment against nonparties.    The amount was substantial
    6   ($750,000), and again, the court determined it was a money
    7   judgment enforceable under Civil Rule 69(a), in part because it
    8   was a large judgment and involved nonparties.
    9          These cases can be contrasted with this appeal.   Here, the
    10   bankruptcy court found in the Attorney Fee Order that Collect had
    11   willfully violated the automatic stay by declining to release the
    12   seized funds to Hernandez, and awarded Hernandez compensatory
    13   sanctions under § 362(k).    Collect did not appeal that order.
    14   And although Collect argues that the Attorney Fee Order was not a
    15   sanction order for misconduct, this is quibbling.    The Attorney
    16   Fee Order directed Collect to pay the damages it had caused
    17   Hernandez to incur, consisting of attorneys fees and costs, in
    18   response to Collect's violation of the § 362(a) automatic stay.
    19   Simply put, Collect's conduct was inappropriate when measured
    20   against the Code, and the Attorney Fee Order cannot fairly be
    21   characterized as anything other than a sanction.    The cases cited
    22   by Collect all deal with judgments entered in business disputes,
    23   not sanctions for misconduct.
    24          As compared to the dearth of support for Collect’s position,
    25   BAP case law supports the bankruptcy court’s view that when a
    26   party’s willful failure to comply with an order constitutes
    27   misconduct it may be remedied via contempt sanctions.
    28          In Rosales v. Wallace (In re Wallace), 
    490 B.R. 898
     (9th
    -16-
    1   Cir. BAP 2013), in a first contempt order, a creditor was found
    2   by the bankruptcy court to have violated the § 524(a) discharge
    3   injunction.   The court ordered the creditor to pay sanctions to
    4   the debtor, including attorney’s fees, within sixty days.      The
    5   creditor did not pay.   The debtor filed a second contempt motion
    6   to compel payment.   The creditor argued that the first contempt
    7   order was a money judgment that could only be enforced by a writ
    8   of execution under Civil Rule 69(a).    After a hearing, the
    9   bankruptcy court found creditor in contempt and order them to pay
    10   the original sanctions order.   Creditor then appealed to the BAP.
    11   Id. at 904.
    12        The Panel first dismissed creditor’s argument that an order
    13   to pay sanctions is a “judgment” for purposes of Civil
    14   Rule 69(a), and Rules 9001(7) and 9002(5): “[T]hese Rules merely
    15   provide definitions for the word ‘Judgment’ as ‘any appealable
    16   order’ and ‘any order appealable to an appellate court.’    We fail
    17   to see how these definitions would transform what is clearly an
    18   order to pay monetary sanctions within a specified time period
    19   into a money judgment.”   Id. at 906.
    20        The Panel ultimately ruled that Civil Rule 69(a) did not
    21   apply to a bankruptcy court’s monetary sanction for violation of
    22   a previous order:
    23        Despite Civil Rule 69's mandate for the proper
    enforcement of money judgments, we are persuaded . . .
    24        that a court's monetary sanction for a contemnor's
    misconduct is not an "ordinary" money judgment, and
    25        therefore the use of the contempt power is a proper
    method to enforce a sanction for misconduct.
    26        [Cleveland Hair Clinic, Inc. v. Puig], 
    106 F.3d 165
    ,
    166 (7th Cir. 1997)("Use of the contempt power is an
    27        appropriate way to enforce a sanction for misconduct,
    which is not an ordinary money judgment.")(citing
    28        Alpern v. Lieb, 
    11 F.3d 689
    , 690 (7th Cir. 1993)). See
    -17-
    1        Loftus v. Se. Pa. Transp. Auth., 
    8 F.Supp.2d 464
    , 468
    (E.D. Pa. 1998), aff'd, 
    187 F.3d 626
     (3d Cir. 1999)
    2        (table case)(citing Cleveland Hair Clinic and holding
    that the use of the contempt power to enforce a
    3        sanction for misconduct is appropriate because a
    sanction for misconduct is not an ordinary money
    4        judgment); Eng. v. Goodcents Holdings, Inc., 
    2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 77801
    , 
    2009 WL 2835201
    , at *2 (N.D. Ga.
    5        Aug. 31, 2009)(rejecting plaintiff's argument that a
    writ of execution was exclusive remedy for violating
    6        prior sanctions order and holding that contempt
    proceeding was proper remedy for plaintiff's failure to
    7        comply with the order awarding defendant attorney's
    fees for plaintiff's unreasonable continuation of
    8        litigation); SD Prot., Inc. v. Del Rio, 
    587 F.Supp.2d 429
    , 434-36 (E.D.N.Y. 2008)(holding party in contempt
    9        for failing to comply with prior order to pay monetary
    sanction imposed for delaying litigation).
    10
    11   Id. at 907.
    12        Collect’s argument that the Attorney Fee Order is a money
    13   judgment that must be enforced through a writ of execution under
    14   Civil Rule 69(a) is inconsistent with In re Wallace.      We hold
    15   that the Attorney Fee Order was a definite and specific order
    16   that Collect knowingly elected to disregard.      Accordingly, the
    17   bankruptcy court did not abuse its discretion in finding Collect
    18   in contempt.   Id. at 908.
    
    19 D. 20
            There is one potential element of confusion in the
    21   bankruptcy court’s Contempt Order that Collect identifies:       Were
    22   the amounts that Collect was ordered to pay Hernandez in the
    23   Attorney Fee Order compensatory damages under § 362(k), or
    24   contempt damages under § 105(a)?      Earlier in the case, the
    25   bankruptcy court based the Attorney Fee Order on § 362(k).
    26   Then, in the Contempt Order, the bankruptcy court stated that
    27   “the record also supports the Court finding Collect in contempt
    28   in the Attorney Fee Order under the standards of 11 U.S.C.
    -18-
    1   § 105(a).”    Contempt Order at 5.
    2        There does not appear to be any prohibition in the case law
    3   on awarding attorneys fees to an individual debtor to remedy a
    4   stay violation under either § 105(a) or §362(k), provided the
    5   different procedural requirements for such an award are met, and
    6   the award does not include punitive damages.    Schwartz-Tallard v.
    7   Am. Servicing Co. (In re Schwartz-Tallard), 
    473 B.R. 340
    , 351
    8   (9th Cir. BAP 2012).    And, recall, as the bankruptcy court
    9   observed in its Contempt Order, “[t]he [Order re Further
    10   Briefing] clearly invited the parties to address the contempt
    11   issue to enable the Court to determine which of the two proposed
    12   orders to enter, so Collect was aware that the Court was
    13   reconsidering its tentative ruling and awarding the [Attorney Fee
    14   Order] on the basis of the First Contempt Motion rather than the
    15   Damages Motion when it entered the Attorney Fee Order as a
    16   contempt order, rather than merely a damages award.”    Contempt
    17   Order at 6.
    18        The Panel has addressed this issue, and in doing so,
    19   rejected Collect’s argument that the Ninth Circuit’s opinion in
    20   Sternberg v. Johnson, 
    595 F.3d 937
     (9th Cir. 2008), limits
    21   damages for violation of the automatic stay to those specified in
    22   § 362(k):
    23        Sternberg does not limit the recovery of fees and costs
    to § 362(k); instead, a debtor's recovery of damages is
    24        also available under § 105(a). This is confirmed in
    the decision itself, which provides that the basis for
    25        the decision was the statutory language of § 362(k),
    not the bankruptcy court's civil contempt authority
    26        under § 105(a). See [Sternberg, 595 F.3d at] 946 n.3
    ("As this opinion does not consider the civil contempt
    27        authority of the court, it does not limit the
    availability of contempt sanctions, including attorney
    28        fees, for violation of the automatic stay, where
    -19-
    1        otherwise appropriate.").
    2   Rediger Inves. Corp. v. H Granados Commc’ns, Inc. (In re
    3   H Granados Commc'ns, Inc.), 
    503 B.R. 726
    , 734 (9th Cir. BAP
    4   2013).
    5        At bottom, it is of no consequence in this case whether the
    6   Attorney Fee Order was based upon the bankruptcy court’s inherent
    7   power to punish contempts under § 105(a), as opposed to its power
    8   to compensate debtors for stay violations under § 362(k).     The
    9   Attorney Fee Order was a lawful order of the bankruptcy court
    10   that Collect defied for almost two years.     We find no abuse of
    11   discretion in the bankruptcy court’s decision to find Collect in
    12   contempt for its failure to obey the Attorney Fee Order.
    13                               CONCLUSION
    14        Collect knowingly violated a lawful, specific order of the
    15   bankruptcy court directing it to pay compensatory damages to
    16   Hernandez incurred as a result of Collect’s violation of the
    17   automatic stay.   Instead of appealing the order and requesting a
    18   stay pending appeal, Collect did nothing.     Its arguments to
    19   justify its conduct lack merit.     Even were it correct, though,
    20   Collect cannot avoid the consequences of its disregard of the
    21   basic tenet that lawful orders of a court must be obeyed, and
    22   absent compliance, as the disobedient party, it may be held in
    23   contempt.
    24        We AFFIRM the Contempt Order of the bankruptcy court.
    25
    26
    27
    28
    -20-