Mary Beth Mantiply v. Patricia Nelson Horne ( 2015 )


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  •             Case: 14-12047   Date Filed: 10/28/2015   Page: 1 of 12
    [DO NOT PUBLISH]
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
    ________________________
    No. 14-12047
    Non-Argument Calendar
    ________________________
    D.C. Docket No. 1:13-cv-00258-CB-B,
    Bkcy No. 11-bkc-00096-WWS
    In Re:   RICHARD D. HORNE,
    PATRICIA NELSON HORNE,
    Debtors.
    _________________________________________________________
    MARY BETH MANTIPLY,
    Plaintiff–Appellant
    Cross-Appellee,
    versus
    PATRICIA NELSON HORNE, as personal representative
    of the Estate of Richard D. Horne, and individually,
    Defendant–Appellee
    Cross-Appellant.
    ________________________
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Alabama
    ________________________
    (October 28, 2015)
    Case: 14-12047       Date Filed: 10/28/2015       Page: 2 of 12
    Before HULL, ROSENBAUM and JULIE CARNES, Circuit Judges.
    PER CURIAM:
    A bankruptcy court denied Plaintiff Mary Beth Mantiply’s motion for
    recusal. The district court affirmed, and Plaintiff now appeals. Defendants
    Patricia Nelson Horne and Richard D. Horne1 cross appeal the district court’s order
    denying them appellate attorney’s fees. Defendants also filed a motion with this
    Court seeking attorney’s fees for the present appeal.
    I.    BACKGROUND
    Defendants filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy on January 10, 2011. This
    triggered an automatic stay of any litigation against Defendants under 11 U.S.C.
    § 362.2 Notwithstanding the automatic stay, Plaintiff filed a civil action against
    Mr. Horne in state court. Defendants were discharged from bankruptcy on May
    10, 2011. Plaintiff ignored requests to voluntarily dismiss the civil suit against Mr.
    Horne and maintained the action until it was dismissed in November 2011, more
    than 200 days after she initially filed her complaint.
    Defendants filed a motion in bankruptcy court seeking damages from
    Plaintiff for violating the automatic stay provision of the bankruptcy code,
    1
    Richard Horne died during the pendency of this lawsuit. Although Patricia Nelson Horne was
    substituted as his personal representative, this order uses “Defendants” for ease of exposition.
    2
    Section 362 states that a bankruptcy petition operates as a stay of, among other things, “the
    commencement or continuation . . . of a judicial, administrative, or other action or proceeding
    against the debtor . . . .” 11 U.S.C. § 362(a)(1).
    2
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    11 U.S.C. § 362. They later amended their motion to add a request for damages
    for Plaintiff’s violation of the discharge injunction provision of the bankruptcy
    code, 11 U.S.C. § 524. 3 The bankruptcy court granted Defendants’ amended
    motion and awarded them $81,714.31 in damages, including $41,714.31 in
    attorney’s fees.
    Plaintiff appealed the bankruptcy court’s damages award, but the district
    court affirmed that award. The district court subsequently denied Plaintiff’s
    motion for rehearing and awarded Defendants $34,551.28 in attorney’s fees for
    defending the appeal. Plaintiff then filed two identical motions for recusal of the
    bankruptcy court judge: one in district court and one in bankruptcy court. Plaintiff
    sought recusal on the basis of “newly discovered evidence” that the bankruptcy
    judge was biased. Specifically, the judge’s courtroom deputy is the sister of a
    paralegal for Defendants’ bankruptcy counsel. The paralegal had offered affidavit
    testimony during the trial that contradicted Plaintiff’s testimony. According to
    Plaintiff, the judge credited the paralegal’s testimony over Plaintiff’s. Plaintiff
    alleged that the connection between the courtroom deputy and the paralegal-
    witness at least gave the appearance of partiality and therefore warranted recusal
    and vacatur.
    3
    Section 524 states that a discharge from bankruptcy “operates as an injunction against the
    commencement or continuation of an action . . . to collect, recover, or offset any [discharged]
    debt as a personal liability of the debtor.” 11 U.S.C. § 524(a)(2).
    3
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    The bankruptcy court denied Plaintiff’s motion for recusal. Plaintiff
    appealed that ruling and moved to consolidate it with her appeal of the bankruptcy
    court’s damages award. 4 The district court granted Plaintiff’s motion to
    consolidate and affirmed the bankruptcy judge’s ruling on Plaintiff’s motion for
    recusal.
    Plaintiff then appealed various district court orders to this Court. We
    considered our jurisdiction to review the orders sua sponte and held that Plaintiff
    could appeal only the district court’s order concerning recusal. Defendants cross
    appealed a second district court order that denied them appellate attorney’s fees for
    defending against Plaintiff’s appeal of the bankruptcy court’s recusal order.
    II.    RECUSAL
    The district court first concluded that recusal was not necessary under the
    federal judge recusal statute, 28 U.S.C. § 455(a). The district court then
    determined that, even assuming for the sake of argument the need for recusal under
    § 455(a), reversal for failure to recuse would not have been required under
    Liljeberg v. Health Servs. Acquisition Corp., 
    486 U.S. 847
    (1988). We review the
    district court’s order concerning recusal for abuse of discretion. In re Walker, 
    532 F.3d 1304
    , 1308 (11th Cir. 2008).
    4
    A final judgment had not been entered on Plaintiff’s earlier appeal of the damages award.
    4
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    A.      Recusal was not required under §455(a).
    Under § 455(a), a federal judge “shall disqualify himself in any proceeding
    in which his impartiality might reasonably be questioned.” 5 28 U.S.C. § 455(a).
    The purpose of § 455(a) is “to promote confidence in the judiciary by avoiding
    even the appearance of impropriety whenever possible.” 
    Liljeberg, 486 U.S. at 865
    . Recusal is thus warranted “only if an objective, disinterested, lay observer
    fully informed of the facts underlying the grounds on which recusal was sought
    would entertain a significant doubt about the judge’s impartiality.” United States
    v. Amedeo, 
    487 F.3d 823
    , 828 (11th Cir. 2007) (internal quotation marks and
    citation omitted). We do not consider the perceptions of idiosyncratic,
    hypersensitive, and cynical observers. See Sensley v. Albritton, 
    385 F.3d 591
    , 599
    (5th Cir. 2004).
    We agree with the district court that recusal is unwarranted. 6 To begin with,
    there is no evidence of a direct connection between the bankruptcy judge and the
    courtroom deputy’s sister. And like the district court, we are unable to locate any
    5
    Plaintiff sought recusal on the basis of § 455(a) alone. Section 455(b) sets forth several other
    grounds for recusal. Because Plaintiff relied exclusively on § 455(a), we do not consider other
    possible bases for recusal under § 455(b).
    6
    Plaintiff’s main argument for recusal is that the bankruptcy judge had an undisclosed
    connection to a witness. We address this argument below. Plaintiff also cites numerous adverse
    rulings by the bankruptcy court judge that allegedly evidence his bias. As the district court
    noted, “judicial rulings alone almost never constitute a valid basis for a bias or partiality
    motion.” Liteky v. United States, 
    510 U.S. 540
    , 555 (1994). The district court was correct, and
    we readily reject Plaintiff’s argument that the bankruptcy judge’s adverse rulings warrant
    recusal.
    5
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    cases suggesting that a judge’s administrative employee’s relationship with a
    witness is grounds for the judge’s recusal. To the contrary, recusal is warranted on
    the basis of a judicial employee’s relationships only when the employee has (or
    appears to have) a role in the substantive decision-making process. See Byrne v.
    Nezhat, 
    261 F.3d 1075
    , 1100–02 (11th Cir. 2001) (explaining that the district court
    did not abuse its discretion by determining that a law clerk’s prior employment
    with a law firm representing a party in the case did not call into question the
    judge’s impartiality and thus did not warrant recusal), abrogated on other grounds
    as recognized by Nurse v. Sheraton Atlanta Hotel, ___ Fed. App’x ___, 
    2015 WL 4153677
    , at *3 (11th Cir. July 10, 2015); Parker v. Connors Steel Co., 
    855 F.2d 1510
    , 1523–25 (11th Cir. 1988) (concluding that an appearance of impropriety
    existed because a law clerk’s father was a partner in the law firm that represented
    the defendant, the law clerk held a hearing in the judge’s absence, and the judge
    credited the law clerk in a footnote of the opinion); Hunt v. Am. Bank & Trust Co.
    of Baton Rouge, 
    783 F.2d 1011
    , 1015–16 (11th Cir. 1986) (per curiam) (holding
    that recusal was not required when two of the judge’s law clerks had accepted
    employment offers from the law firm representing the defendants while the case
    was pending, or because the case had been assigned to one of those law clerks as a
    “ministerial” matter before the law clerk was screened from it). The record does
    not indicate that the courtroom deputy had a role in the bankruptcy judge’s
    6
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    decision-making process. Consequently, recusal was not required.
    In addition to our own Court’s authority concerning recusal, we find a recent
    case from the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals particularly relevant and persuasive.
    See Mathis v. Huff & Puff Trucking, Inc., 
    787 F.3d 1297
    (10th Cir. 2015). In that
    case, the husband of the trial judge’s law clerk had been hired by the defendant’s
    insurer to monitor the trial. 
    Id. at 1304.
    The Tenth Circuit held that the judge did
    not err in declining to recuse himself because the law clerk did not have continuing
    substantial participation in the case, the insurer was not the defendant, the law
    clerk performed only ministerial acts at trial, and she did not participate in drafting
    post-trial findings and conclusions. 
    Id. at 1312–13.
    As mentioned above, the
    record here is devoid of evidence that the courtroom deputy had any substantive
    role in the bankruptcy judge’s decision. Moreover, the deputy’s sister was merely
    an affiant, not the defendant. These facts lead us to agree with the district court
    that recusal was not warranted and indeed would have been inappropriate. See
    United States v. Greenough, 
    782 F.2d 1556
    , 1558 (11th Cir. 1986) (“[A] judge,
    having been assigned to a case, should not recuse himself on unsupported,
    irrational, or highly tenuous speculation.”).
    In sum, recusal is not required merely because the movant can “draw[ ] a
    line . . . connecting a person within chambers to a person or firm related, no matter
    how remotely, to a party in the case.” 
    Mathis, 787 F.3d at 1312
    ) (internal
    7
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    quotation marks omitted) (citing Hamid v. Price Waterhouse, 
    51 F.3d 1411
    , 1417
    (9th Cir. 1995). Because Plaintiff has done no more than identify a relationship
    between the courtroom deputy and a witness in the case, we affirm the district
    court’s holding that recusal was not required.
    B.      The absence of a § 455(a) violation ends our inquiry.
    The district court was not required to go further in its analysis once it
    concluded that recusal was unnecessary under § 455(a). Nevertheless, the court
    considered whether, assuming arguendo that recusal had been warranted under
    § 455(a), reversal would have been appropriate under Liljeberg. Because the
    district court did not abuse its discretion in making its recusal determination, we do
    not analyze whether, in a counter-factual world in which a § 455(a) violation had
    occurred, vacatur would be appropriate under Liljeberg.
    III.    APPELLATE ATTORNEY’S FEES
    Defendants cross appeal the district court’s order denying them appellate
    attorney’s fees incurred during Plaintiff’s unsuccessful appeal of the bankruptcy
    court’s recusal order.7 The district court’s order states that because the underlying
    appeal “involve[d] violation of the discharge injunction,” attorney’s fees are “not
    authorized.” By that statement, the court was perhaps explaining that attorney’s
    7
    Defendants seek a total of $14,918.60 in fees associated with the district court proceedings
    concerning recusal.
    8
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    fees for litigation dealing with violations of the discharge injunction are
    discretionary. See 11 U.S.C. § 105; In re Hardy, 
    97 F.3d 1384
    , 1389–91 (11th
    Cir. 1996). If so, the court was presumably exercising its discretion not to award
    attorney’s fees for Defendants’ expenses during the appeal.
    A problem with that analysis arises, however, due to the fact that the district
    court cites 11 U.S.C. § 362(k), which provides that “an individual injured by any
    willful violation of a stay . . . shall recover actual damages, including costs and
    attorneys’ fees” (emphasis added), which presumably means that an award of
    attorney’s fees is mandatory for a stay violation, albeit only discretionary for a
    discharge violation. The district court declined to explain why Plaintiff’s recusal
    motion did not involve the litigation over her stay violation, as well as her
    discharge violation. Instead, the court cites its order that ruled on the merits of the
    recusal appeal. But that order provides no help here. It says only that “[Plaintiff]
    admits that she violated the automatic stay and seeks reversal only as to the
    violation of the discharge injunction.”
    The district court does not provide a citation or other support for the above
    statement. We have combed the more than 3,000 page record and are no more
    enlightened. Plaintiff’s various motions and briefs suggest that she seeks a new
    trial for all issues litigated before the bankruptcy court, including the stay
    violation. For example, Plaintiff’s motion for recusal alleges that as a result of the
    9
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    bankruptcy judge’s alleged bias, Plaintiff’s “credibility as to all other issues and
    areas of her testimony was damaged.” Her reply brief in defense of her recusal
    appeal at the district court states that “[i]t is obvious that [Plaintiff] is entitled both
    to a new trial and vacatur” and “reversal and vacatur of [the bankruptcy judge’s]
    prior decisions is mandated, recusal ordered, and a new bankruptcy judge
    appointed.” In sum, Plaintiff does not appear to have limited her motion for
    recusal and vacatur to the discharge injunction litigation.8
    At times even the district court seems not to construe Plaintiff’s motion for
    recusal so narrowly. In its order addressing Plaintiff’s appeal of the bankruptcy
    court’s denial of her motion for recusal, the district court writes: “[Plaintiff] argues
    that . . . application of the correct legal standard [for recusal] should result in [the
    bankruptcy judge’s] disqualification and vacatur of the sanctions award.” Notably,
    Defendants’ sanctions award included damages for Plaintiff’s violation of both the
    stay and the discharge injunction.
    8
    However, during the course of her appeal to this Court, Plaintiff has changed her tune,
    ultimately adopting the district court’s conclusion. Plaintiff’s first brief argues that “[Plaintiff]
    has substantial grounds for remand for a new trial and to vacate the tainted judgments based on
    the appearance of impropriety under Section 455(a).” Plaintiff does not focus on the judgment
    for the discharge injunction violation but on the entire damages award, including the award
    based on her stay violation. Even in her brief in response to Defendants’ brief, Plaintiff suggests
    that she was originally seeking “vacatur of the entire sanctions judgment affirmed in the first
    appeal,” including both “the discharge injunction and the automatic stay” decisions. But in her
    response to Defendants’ amended motion for attorney’s fees, Plaintiff writes that “Appellees
    have cross-appealed the district court’s denial of attorneys fees as they relate to the violation of
    the discharge injunction only.” Nevertheless, as far as we can tell, when the issue of attorney’s
    fees for Plaintiff’s appeal of the recusal order was before the district court, Plaintiff did not
    construe her appeal as concerning only the trial of the discharge injunction.
    10
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    Perhaps the district court judge’s thought process was as follows: Plaintiff is
    alleging bias because the bankruptcy judge credited the courtroom deputy’s
    sister’s testimony over Plaintiff’s. That testimony was relevant to the discharge
    injunction. Therefore, Plaintiff seeks recusal only with respect to the discharge
    injunction judgment.
    But even if Plaintiff is challenging the bankruptcy judge’s impartiality based
    on his treatment of her testimony concerning the discharge injunction, Plaintiff has
    not so limited her recusal motion, as amply demonstrated in the foregoing
    paragraphs.9 She apparently seeks to have the entire damages award vacated and
    retried. In any event, we cannot ascertain a basis in the record for the district
    court’s conclusion that the recusal appeal involved only the discharge violation and
    not the stay violation. We therefore remand this cross appeal to the district court
    with instructions to reconsider the Defendants’ motion for appellate attorney’s fees
    in light of a substantiated recitation of the facts and application of the law to those
    facts.
    9
    As noted, Plaintiff has, in her latest brief, suggested that the recusal order pertained only to the
    discharge injunction violation and not the stay violation. This after-the-fact adoption of the
    district court’s framing of the issue does not control whether Plaintiff’s recusal appeal concerned
    the stay violation. Plaintiff’s and the district court’s contemporaneous statements are relevant
    and telling.
    11
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    IV.    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s ruling on
    Plaintiff’s motion for recusal and REMAND Defendants’ cross appeal of the
    district court’s order denying appellate attorney’s fees for Plaintiff’s appeal of the
    bankruptcy court’s recusal decision. Having remanded Defendants’ motion for
    appellate attorney’s fees incurred in the district court, we DENY without prejudice
    Defendants’ amended motion for appellate attorney’s fees incurred in the present
    appeal before our Court.
    12