American Sports Radio Network, Inc. v. Krause ( 2008 )


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  •                     FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    In the Matter of: GARRETT KELLY          
    KRAUSE,
    Debtor,               No. 07-55131
    D.C. No.
    CV-06-03779-AG
    AMERICAN SPORTS RADIO NETWORK,
    INC., a Nevada corporation; and
    SOUND MONEY INVESTORS, INC., a                    ORDER
    CERTIFYING
    Nevada corporation,                            QUESTION TO
    Appellants,            THE SUPREME
    COURT OF
    v.
    NEVADA
    GARRETT KELLY KRAUSE,
    Appellee.
    
    Filed October 10, 2008
    Before: Raymond C. Fisher and Richard A. Paez,
    Circuit Judges, and James L. Robart,* District Judge.
    COUNSEL
    Paul J. Laurin,Weiner & Laurin, 15760 Ventura Blvd., Suite
    1727, Encino, California 91436, for the appellants.
    Irv M. Gross, Robinson, Diamant & Wolkowitz, 1888 Cen-
    tury Park East, Suite 1500, Los Angeles, California 90067, for
    the appellee.
    *The Honorable James L. Robart, United States District Judge for the
    Western District of Washington, sitting by designation.
    14381
    14382               IN THE MATTER OF KRAUSE
    CERTIFICATION ORDER
    Pursuant to Rule 5 of the Nevada Rules of Appellate Proce-
    dure, and as further explained below, we respectfully certify
    the following question to the Nevada Supreme Court:
    Under Nevada law, may a domestic corporation
    whose charter has been revoked under Nevada
    Revised Statutes section 78.175(2) prosecute a law-
    suit either (a) in its own corporate name or (b)
    through its directors? If not, is the defendant entitled
    to have such a lawsuit dismissed with prejudice, or
    must the plaintiff corporation first be given a reason-
    able opportunity to reinstate its charter? Cf. Execu-
    tive Mgmt. Ltd. v. Ticor Title Ins. Co., 
    38 P.3d 872
         (Nev. 2002).
    The answer to this question will be determinative of the
    matter pending before this court, and there is no clearly con-
    trolling precedent in the decisions of the Nevada Supreme
    Court.
    Submission of this case is vacated and all further proceed-
    ings are stayed pending receipt of an answer to the certified
    question. The parties shall notify the Clerk of this court within
    one week after the Nevada Supreme Court accepts or rejects
    the certified question, and again within one week after the
    Nevada Supreme Court renders its answer.
    I.   Background
    Appellee Garrett Kelly Krause (“Krause”) filed a Chapter
    7 personal bankruptcy petition in the Central District of Cali-
    fornia in 2005. Appellants American Sports Radio Network,
    Inc. (“ASRN”) and Sound Money Investors, Inc. (“SMI”),
    both Nevada corporations, were creditors of Krause’s bank-
    ruptcy estate as the result of an unsatisfied Nevada civil judg-
    ment for several million dollars. The bankruptcy court
    IN THE MATTER OF KRAUSE                      14383
    designated a “bar date” of January 13, 2006, for asserting
    exceptions to discharge. See 11 U.S.C. § 523(c)(1); Fed. R.
    Bankr. P. 4007(c). On January 12, 2006, ASRN and SMI filed
    an adversary complaint alleging nondischargeability of the
    debt arising from their unsatisfied judgment under 11 U.S.C.
    §§ 523(a)(2), (a)(4), and/or (a)(6).1
    On March 7, 2006, Krause filed a motion to dismiss ASRN
    and SMI’s adversary complaint on the ground that ASRN and
    SMI lacked capacity to sue.2 In support of the motion, Krause
    provided documentation showing that ASRN’s corporate
    charter had been revoked by the state of Nevada on May 1,
    2002, for failure to pay annual fees and to file its annual list
    of corporate officers. See Nev. Rev. Stat. § 78.150 (2007).
    SMI’s charter had been revoked on June 1, 2002, for the same
    reasons. In opposing the motion to dismiss, ASRN and SMI
    provided documentation showing that after Krause’s motion
    was served, and before the bankruptcy court held a hearing on
    Krause’s motion, ASRN and SMI corrected their delinquent
    filing obligations and moved for reinstatement of their char-
    ters. The Nevada Secretary of State reinstated ASRN’s charter
    on March 28, 2006, and SMI’s on April 3, 2006.
    On May 16, 2006, the bankruptcy court held a hearing on
    Krause’s motion to dismiss. At the conclusion of that hear-
    ing, the bankruptcy court granted Krause’s motion and dis-
    missed the adversary proceeding with prejudice. Applying
    1
    These subsections apply to debts arising “[l]oosely speaking, . . . from
    intentional wrongdoing of various sorts (respectively, fraud, fiduciary mis-
    conduct, and the commission of malicious torts).” Beezley v. Cal. Land
    Title Co. (In re Beezley), 
    994 F.2d 1433
    , 1435 (9th Cir. 1993)
    (O’Scannlain, J., concurring).
    2
    Although the bankruptcy court referred to the question in this case as
    one of “standing” to sue, we note that it is capacity, not standing, which
    is at issue. See De Saracho v. Custom Food Mach., Inc., 
    206 F.3d 874
    , 878
    n.4 (9th Cir. 2000) (distinguishing between standing and capacity to sue);
    6A Charles Alan Wright, et al., Federal Practice and Procedure § 1559
    (2d ed. 1990) (same).
    14384                  IN THE MATTER OF KRAUSE
    Nevada law, the bankruptcy court concluded that the plain,
    unambiguous language of Nevada Revised Statutes section
    78.175(2)—stating that a corporation whose charter has been
    revoked shall not “transact business”—precluded the filing of
    a lawsuit by such a corporation. The court acknowledged the
    Nevada Supreme Court’s holding in Executive Management
    Ltd. v. Ticor Title Insurance Co., 
    38 P.3d 872
    (Nev. 2002),
    but found it inapplicable to the facts of this case because
    Executive Management dealt with a different statute (relating
    to foreign corporations) which the Nevada Supreme Court
    found to be ambiguous.3
    On appeal to the district court, the district court affirmed,
    agreeing with the bankruptcy court that section 78.175(2)’s
    prohibition on transacting business was “unambiguous” and
    “include[d] suing a debtor in an adversary proceeding.” The
    district court also found Executive Management distinguish-
    able. ASRN and SMI filed a timely appeal.4
    On appeal to this court, ASRN and SMI contend that
    Nevada law is unclear regarding the capacity of a corporation
    to continue a lawsuit when its charter has been revoked for
    failure to comply with its annual fee and filing obligations.
    They therefore request that we certify a question that
    addresses the issue to the Nevada Supreme Court. Although
    Krause states that he “does not necessarily oppose certifica-
    tion,” he argues that (1) unlike in Executive Management, the
    3
    In Executive Management, the defendant moved to dismiss a lawsuit
    by a plaintiff foreign corporation that had failed to qualify to do business
    in Nevada and was thus prohibited from “commenc[ing] or maintain[ing]
    any action” in Nevada under section 80.055(1)(b). See Executive 
    Mgmt., 38 P.3d at 874
    . Overruling prior precedent, see League to Save Lake
    Tahoe v. Tahoe Reg’l Planning Agency, 
    563 P.2d 582
    , 584 (Nev. 1977),
    however, the court held that the suit should not be dismissed, but rather
    stayed, and that, if the plaintiff corporation promptly corrected its defi-
    ciencies and qualified to do business in Nevada, the lawsuit could be
    maintained. See Executive 
    Mgmt., 38 P.3d at 876
    .
    4
    We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 158.
    IN THE MATTER OF KRAUSE                      14385
    statutory language of section 78.175(2) clearly prohibits
    ASRN and SMI from maintaining their lawsuit; and (2) even
    if section 78.175(2) is interpreted, consistent with Executive
    Management, to mean that a domestic corporation with a
    revoked charter may continue a lawsuit after promptly obtain-
    ing reinstatement of its charter, ASRN and SMI cannot bene-
    fit from such a rule because they did not pursue reinstatement
    promptly.
    II.   Discussion
    We must determine, first, whether the bankruptcy court5
    properly ruled that ASRN and SMI lacked capacity to sue
    when they filed their complaint on January 12, 2006, because
    their corporate charters had been revoked pursuant to section
    78.175(2). Second, if ASRN and SMI lacked capacity to sue
    when they filed their adversary action, we must determine
    whether the bankruptcy court erred by not allowing the subse-
    quent reinstatement of their charters to relate back to the date
    of filing of their complaint. Finally, even if ASRN and SMI
    lacked capacity to sue and the subsequent cure of that defect
    did not relate back, we must determine if the bankruptcy court
    erred by dismissing the complaint rather than granting ASRN
    and SMI leave to join their corporate directors as real parties
    in interest.
    The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and Bankruptcy Pro-
    cedure require us to apply Nevada law to determine ASRN
    and SMI’s capacity to sue. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 17(b)
    (“Capacity to sue . . . is determined . . . for a corporation, by
    the law under which it was organized . . . .”); Fed. R. Bankr.
    5
    Because our review of the district court’s judgment is de novo, Metcalf
    v. Golden (In re Adbox, Inc.), 
    488 F.3d 836
    , 839 (9th Cir. 2007), our ulti-
    mate focus is on the bankruptcy court’s ruling. We review de novo the
    bankruptcy court’s grant of a motion of dismiss. 
    Id. at 840.
    We also
    review de novo the bankruptcy court’s interpretation of the Federal Rules.
    See Brawders v. County of Ventura (In re Brawders), 
    503 F.3d 856
    (9th
    Cir. 2007).
    14386               IN THE MATTER OF KRAUSE
    P. 7017 (making Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 17 applica-
    ble to adversary proceedings in bankruptcy court). Similarly,
    in order to determine whether the directors should have been
    substituted as plaintiffs, we must determine the powers, under
    Nevada law, of directors of corporations whose charters have
    been revoked. In summary, this case requires us to determine
    the nature and extent of the powers of a Nevada corporation,
    after its charter has been revoked under Nevada Revised Stat-
    utes section 78.175(2), to institute or maintain a suit, either in
    its own name or through its directors.
    Among the subsidiary questions that confront us are these:
    May a Nevada corporation sue in its own name when its char-
    ter has been revoked pursuant to section 78.175(2)? Cf. Nev.
    Rev. Stat. § 78.060(2) (“Every corporation, by virtue of its
    existence as such, is entitled . . . [t]o sue and be sued in any
    court of law or equity.”). If not, do its directors acquire the
    powers of receivers or trustees, including the power to sue on
    the corporation’s causes of action? See 
    id. § 78.175(5)
    (“If the
    charter of a corporation is revoked . . . as provided in subsec-
    tion 2, all the property and assets of the defaulting domestic
    corporation must be held in trust by the directors of the corpo-
    ration as for insolvent corporations . . . .”); 
    id. § 78.635(2)(b)
    (providing that a trustee or receiver of an insolvent corpora-
    tion may “institute suits at law or in equity for the recovery
    of any estate, property, damages or demands existing in favor
    of the corporation”). If a corporation whose charter has been
    revoked pursuant to section 78.175(5) has filed suit in its own
    name, and an objection to its capacity to sue is made, must the
    court dismiss the case? Cf. League to Save Lake Tahoe v.
    Tahoe Reg’l Planning Agency, 
    563 P.2d 582
    , 584 (Nev. 1977)
    (applying analogous rule to foreign corporations), overruled
    by Executive Mgmt., 
    38 P.3d 872
    . If the statute of limitations
    has run in the meantime, must the dismissal be with preju-
    dice? Cf. 
    id. at 584-85.
    Or should a court confronted with an
    objection to a Nevada corporation’s capacity to sue because
    its charter has been revoked instead stay the case to allow the
    corporation to promptly obtain reinstatement of its charter and
    IN THE MATTER OF KRAUSE                14387
    to maintain the action? See Nev. Rev. Stat. § 78.180 (provid-
    ing that the Secretary of State “shall” reinstate a corporate
    charter upon cure of underlying deficiency, and that such rein-
    statement “relates back to the date on which the corporation
    forfeited its right to transact business . . . and reinstates the
    corporation’s right to transact business as if such right had at
    all times remained in full force and effect”); cf. Executive
    
    Mgmt., 38 P.3d at 876
    (applying analogous rule to foreign
    corporations).
    A. The meaning of “transact business” under section
    78.175(2)
    As a threshold matter, we are unsure whether, or to what
    extent, the revocation of a corporate charter deprives a
    Nevada corporation of its capacity to sue under Nevada law.
    Section 78.175(2) provides that, upon revocation of the char-
    ter, a corporation’s “right to transact business is forfeited.”
    Although the term “transact business” is not defined within
    section 78.175, nor in the set of general definitions applicable
    to section 78.175, see Nev. Rev. Stat. § 78.010, both the bank-
    ruptcy court and the district court interpreted this term to
    mean, among other things, that a corporation encompassed by
    the statute could not initiate or prosecute lawsuits. The district
    court explained, without citation, that section 78.175(2) “un-
    ambiguously prohibits a corporation who i[s] i[n] default on
    the requisite filing obligations from transacting any business.
    This would include suing a debtor in an adversary proceed-
    ing.” Krause similarly argues that the statutory language of
    section 78.175(2) “is unambiguous with respect to the termi-
    nation of the corporation’s right to transact business, which
    necessarily includes the right to pursue litigation” (emphasis
    added).
    We cannot agree that the “plain language” of section
    78.175(2) controls, and we are unaware of any controlling
    precedent from the Nevada courts on this question. Although
    the statute prohibits transacting business, whether or not
    14388                   IN THE MATTER OF KRAUSE
    transacting business includes pursuing litigation remains
    ambiguous. Cf. Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary
    167, 1327 (11th ed. 2005) (“Business . . . 3a: a usually com-
    mercial or mercantile activity engaged in as a means of liveli-
    hood”) (“Transact . . . 2: to carry on the operation or
    management of”). Some corporations are primarily in the
    business of collecting debts and/or filing lawsuits. But most
    corporations are primarily engaged in some other business.
    For example, ASRN and SMI were in the business of creating
    and distributing radio programming. The term “transact busi-
    ness” probably could be construed to include pursuing litiga-
    tion without doing violence to the text of section 78.175(2).
    Nevertheless, without guidance from the Nevada courts, we
    cannot conclude that it must necessarily be so construed.6
    B. The powers of corporate directors under section
    78.175(5)
    Assuming the statutory term “transact business” in section
    78.175(2) includes the filing of lawsuits, ASRN and SMI had
    forfeited their right to file lawsuits at the time they filed their
    complaint. We are unsure, however, whether the corporations’
    directors had the right to file lawsuits on behalf of the corpo-
    6
    The specific uses of the term “transact business” in related provisions
    of the Nevada Revised Statutes do not necessarily support the notion that
    pursuing litigation constitutes transacting business under section
    78.175(2). For example, with regard to foreign corporations,
    “[m]aintaining, defending or settling any proceeding” in Nevada is listed
    as one of numerous “[a]ctivities not constituting transaction of business.”
    Nev. Rev. Stat. § 80.015 (emphasis added). Cf. 
    id. § 80.055(1)(b)
    (provid-
    ing specifically that a foreign corporation which has defaulted on its quali-
    fication requirements “may not commence or maintain any action or
    proceeding” in Nevada courts). Further, a dissolved corporation which
    continues in existence only for the purpose of winding up “continues as
    a body corporate for the purpose of prosecuting and defending suits” as
    well as collecting its debts and discharging its obligations—though it may
    not “continu[e] the business for which it was established.” 
    Id. § 78.585;
    see also Clipper Air Cargo, Inc. v. Aviation Prods. Int’l, Inc., 
    981 F. Supp. 956
    , 958 (D.S.C. 1997) (citing Nev. Rev. Stat. § 78.585).
    IN THE MATTER OF KRAUSE                       14389
    rations. As noted above, section 78.175(5) specifically pro-
    vides that when a corporation’s charter is revoked—and its
    right to “transact business” thus forfeited—the corporation’s
    “property and assets” shall be “held in trust by the directors
    of the corporation as for insolvent corporations.” Nev. Rev.
    Stat. § 78.175(5). This suggests that the corporation, itself, is
    stopped dead by revocation of the charter, but that the direc-
    tors step into its shoes, at least for some purposes. Cf. Porter
    v. Tempa Mining & Milling Co., 
    93 P.2d 741
    , 745 (Nev.
    1939) (providing, under previous version of statute, that cor-
    poration was “dead for all purposes” other than those pre-
    served by statute).7 Moreover, under Nevada insolvency law,
    a receiver or trustee for an insolvent corporation specifically
    acquires the power to file suit to “recover[ ] any estate, prop-
    erty, damages or demands existing in favor of the corpora-
    tion,” Nev. Rev. Stat. § 78.634(2)(b), which would seem to
    include the outstanding judgment sued upon in this case.
    If the directors of ASRN and SMI, like trustees of insolvent
    corporations in Nevada, were empowered to sue to collect
    ASRN and SMI’s debts, then the bankruptcy court should not
    have dismissed this case, but should have granted their
    request for leave to join the directors as the real parties in
    interest. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 17(a); cf. Nev. Rev. Stat. § 78.695
    (“[U]pon application [a receiver] shall be substituted as party
    plaintiff . . . in the place and stead of the corporation in any
    suit or proceeding at law or in equity which was pending at
    the time of his appointment.”)
    7
    On similar facts, a district court in the District of South Carolina has
    relied on Porter to conclude that the powers of a Nevada corporation
    whose charter has been revoked for failure to satisfy annual filing require-
    ments should be determined by reference to the rules for dissolved corpo-
    rations. See Clipper Air Cargo, Inc. v. Aviation Prods. Int’l, Inc., 981 F.
    Supp. 956, 58-59 & nn. 2-5 (D.S.C. 1997) (holding that a corporation
    whose charter has been revoked under section 78.175(2) retains the pow-
    ers of a dissolved corporation, as provided in section 78.585). This
    approach, however, appears to conflict with the express statement in sec-
    tion 78.175(5) that the directors of the corporation must hold its property
    in trust “as for insolvent corporations.” (emphasis added).
    14390                  IN THE MATTER OF KRAUSE
    C.    The effect of reinstatement
    Assuming (1) that “transact[ing] business” under section
    78.175(2) includes pursuing litigation and (2) that the corpo-
    rations’ directors were not empowered to act in the corpora-
    tions’ stead, we are yet unsure whether the bankruptcy court
    was correct to dismiss the case due to the revocation of ASRN
    and SMI’s charters. Although we have found no controlling
    Nevada case law on this question, under the law of many
    other states, dismissal would have been improper where the
    charters had been reinstated before the court ruled on the
    motion or within the time period allowed by the court.8 Fur-
    thermore, in somewhat analogous circumstances involving
    foreign corporations, the Nevada Supreme Court recently
    changed course from a strict approach to capacity to sue,
    resulting in forfeitures, to a more tolerant regime. See Execu-
    tive 
    Mgmt. 38 P.3d at 876
    (“Henceforth, the district court
    should stay an unqualified foreign corporation’s action until
    the foreign corporation qualifies. Failure to promptly qualify,
    however, could result in dismissal.”).9
    8
    See 
    23 A.L.R. 5th 744
    § 8[a] (1994) (“The majority of courts have held
    that where the statute suspends corporate powers until compliance with the
    statutory requirements is made, compliance, after suit, is sufficient to
    remove the corporation’s disqualification to carry on the suit.”); see also
    3 Model Bus. Corp. Act Ann. (“MBCA”) § 14.21 (2008) (providing that
    an “administratively dissolved” corporation “continues its corporate exis-
    tence but may not carry on any business except that necessary to wind up
    and liquidate its business and affairs under section 14.05”); 
    id. § 14.05
    (stating that winding up specifically includes “collecting its assets,” and
    that dissolution does not “prevent commencement of a proceeding by . . .
    the corporation in its corporation name.”); cf. Executive 
    Mgmt., 38 P.3d at 875
    (noting that Nevada has adopted “parts” of the MBCA by statute). But
    see 
    23 A.L.R. 5th 744
    § 8[b] (noting that at least three states have taken
    the opposite, harsher approach adopted by the bankruptcy court in this
    case).
    9
    We note that Krause argues that, even if the rule established by Execu-
    tive Management applied to domestic corporations, ASRN and SMI can-
    not benefit from such a rule because they did not “promptly” obtain
    reinstatement of their corporate charters. Krause would measure prompt-
    IN THE MATTER OF KRAUSE                     14391
    The bankruptcy court and the district court correctly held
    that Executive Management is not controlling precedent
    because it construes a different statute, currently found at sec-
    tion 80.055, governing qualification of foreign corporations
    doing business in Nevada. Nonetheless, that does not make
    Executive Management entirely irrelevant. The district court
    further distinguished Executive Management by explaining
    that “the court . . . engaged in statutory construction of N.R.S.
    [section 80.055] [only] because the court found that the plain
    language of the statute was ambiguous.” Unlike the ambiguity
    in section 80.055, the district court found that section
    78.175(2) is “unambiguous.” As noted above, however, we
    disagree with the district court; in our view the term “transact
    business” in section 78.175(2) is ambiguous. Moreover, in
    Executive Management, the Nevada Supreme Court adopted
    a “more forgiving approach” to interpretation of an ambigu-
    ous forfeiture provision, choosing to avoid the “extraordinar-
    ily harsh” result of dismissal and providing an opportunity for
    technical defaults to be cured and cases to be decided on the
    merits. 
    See 38 P.3d at 875-76
    . In light of the Nevada Supreme
    Court’s approach in Executive Management, the court might
    apply a similar forgiving approach to the ambiguous forfeiture
    provision at issue in this case. See 
    id. at 876
    (“[T]he fact that
    the [Nevada] Secretary of State is willing to reinstate foreign
    corporations . . . and forgive the fault in every respect . . .
    [including giving complete retroactive effect to the reinstate-
    ment] indicates that failing to qualify is not so egregious that
    it warrants dismissal with prejudice, what is perhaps a court’s
    most severe civil penalty.”); cf. Nev. Rev. Stat. § 78.180(5)
    ness from either the original revocation of the charter or from the filing
    of the complaint. Under Executive Management’s discussion of prompt-
    ness, however, we would be inclined to hold that promptness is measured
    from the point where the corporation is put on notice that its capacity to
    sue is in issue, and that ASRN and SMI’s reinstatements, coming within
    one month of Krause’s motion to dismiss, were therefore prompt. We, of
    course, welcome any clarification that the Nevada Supreme Court may
    wish to provide as to the proper measure of “promptness.”
    14392                 IN THE MATTER OF KRAUSE
    (providing that reinstatement of domestic corporation’s
    revoked charter “reinstates the corporation’s right to transact
    business as if such right had at all times remained in full force
    and effect”).
    D. Assurance that questions of Nevada law are
    dispositive
    Although the issues in this appeal largely revolve around
    Nevada law, Krause raises one argument of federal law
    which, if correct, would moot the state-law inquiry. In a mem-
    orandum disposition filed simultaneously with this order,
    however, we reject that federal-law argument. Therefore, the
    Nevada Supreme Court’s interpretation of Nevada law will be
    determinative of this appeal.
    III.    Question of law
    With the above discussion as a predicate, we certify to the
    Nevada Supreme Court the following question of law:
    Under Nevada law, may a domestic corporation
    whose charter has been revoked under Nevada
    Revised Statutes section 78.175(2) prosecute a law-
    suit either (a) in its own corporate name or (b)
    through its directors? If not, is the defendant entitled
    to have such a lawsuit dismissed with prejudice, or
    must the plaintiff corporation first be given a reason-
    able opportunity to reinstate its charter? Cf. Execu-
    tive Mgmt. Ltd. v. Ticor Title Ins. Co., 
    38 P.3d 872
           (Nev. 2002).
    We recognize that the Nevada Supreme Court may rephrase
    the question as it deems necessary. Palmer v. Pioneer Inn
    Assocs. Ltd., 
    59 P.3d 1237
    , 1238 (Nev. 2002) (rephrasing and
    answering our certified question).
    IN THE MATTER OF KRAUSE                 14393
    IV.   Conclusion
    It appears to this court that there is no controlling precedent
    of the Nevada Supreme Court with regard to the determina-
    tive issues of Nevada law raised by this case. We therefore
    respectfully request that the Nevada Supreme Court accept
    and decide the certified question. We agree that “[t]he written
    opinion of the [Nevada] Supreme Court stating the law gov-
    erning the questions certified . . . shall be res judicata as to the
    parties.” Nev. R. App. P. 5(g).
    The clerk of this court shall forward a copy of this order,
    under official seal, to the Nevada Supreme Court, along with
    copies of all briefs and excerpts of record that have been filed
    with this court.
    IT IS SO ORDERED.
    Respectfully submitted, Raymond C. Fisher and Richard A.
    Paez, Circuit Judges, and James L. Robart, District Judge.
    __________________
    Raymond C. Fisher
    United States Circuit Judge, presiding
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