Suzan M. Collins v. Richard W. Collins ( 2016 )


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  • MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT                                      Reporter of Decisions
    Decision: 
    2016 ME 51
    Docket:   Sag-15-54
    Argued:   February 9, 2016
    Decided:  April 12, 2016
    Panel:       SAUFLEY, C.J., and ALEXANDER, MEAD, GORMAN, JABAR, HJELM, and
    HUMPHREY, JJ.
    SUZAN M. COLLINS
    v.
    RICHARD W. COLLINS
    HJELM, J.
    [¶1] This case calls for us to consider the extent to which a discharge in
    bankruptcy relieves one former spouse from making payments ordered in a divorce
    judgment toward debts owed to the other former spouse and toward joint debts
    owed to a third party.
    [¶2] Richard W. Collins appeals from a judgment of the District Court
    (West Bath, Dobson, J.) concluding that he failed to show cause why he should not
    be found in contempt for failing to make payments on certain debts pursuant to a
    divorce judgment. Richard contends that because he was granted a discharge in
    bankruptcy after the divorce judgment was issued, the court erred by ordering him
    to pay debts to his former spouse, Suzan M. Collins, and to a third party in
    accordance with the divorce judgment. The Bankruptcy Code, however, explicitly
    2
    excludes from discharge one spouse’s debt to the other spouse when that debt was
    incurred in the course of a divorce proceeding. Additionally, we conclude that
    pursuant to the Code, a discharge in bankruptcy does not relieve a spouse from a
    requirement created by a divorce judgment to make payments to a third party on a
    debt owed jointly by both spouses. Accordingly, we affirm.
    I. BACKGROUND
    [¶3] The facts are not in dispute. In July 2008, the parties were divorced
    through a judgment (Kidman, M.) that, among other things, required Richard to
    pay to a credit union several joint business debts as well as personal debts that
    arose from the purchase of a truck and camper. The judgment required Richard to
    hold Suzan harmless on those debts. Just over a year later, in August 2009, the
    court (Tucker, J.) issued an amended judgment that contained an order of
    enforcement. By then, the truck and camper had been repossessed, and Suzan had
    made some payments toward a deficiency even though the judgment made Richard
    responsible for the debt. The August 2009 order required Richard to reimburse
    Suzan for fifty percent of the payments she made to the credit union on the
    personal loan or to pay that amount directly to the credit union. Additionally, the
    court ordered Richard to pay a different personal loan associated with personal
    property awarded to him in the original judgment, and, as was already provided in
    the original judgment, to pay the credit union on the business loan. The court also
    3
    awarded Suzan costs of $353.44. Neither party appealed from the order, and in
    February 2010 Suzan obtained a writ of execution against Richard in the principal
    amount of $7,038.32, reflecting the amount that Richard owed her based on the
    August 2009 order.
    [¶4] On motions filed by Suzan, the court issued contempt orders against
    Richard in October 2010 and in May 2011. Suzan filed another contempt motion
    in January 2013 but was unable to serve Richard until January 2014, when he
    appeared in court for a different motion. After holding a hearing on the contempt
    motion, the court (Mulhern, J.) held Richard in contempt for failing to comply with
    the payment obligations created by the August 2009 order. The court found that
    Richard owed child support of $4,851.32 with ongoing amounts coming due; that
    he owed the credit union $3,619.87, plus interest, on the business loan; that he
    owed the credit union $10,000 for his half of the personal loan on the truck and
    camper; and that he owed Suzan a balance of $4,689.70, plus statutory interest, on
    Suzan’s writ of execution and $353.44 for costs that she incurred in bringing the
    motion for contempt. The court set a schedule for Richard to pay these amounts
    and imposed a remedial sanction of a sixty-day jail sentence, which was stayed
    conditioned on Richard making timely payments. See M.R. Civ. P. 66(d), 120(a).
    The court ordered that if Richard did not make payments as required, Suzan could
    4
    request the court to schedule a hearing, where Richard would be required to show
    cause why he should not be incarcerated. No appeals were taken from this order.
    [¶5] Two months after the court issued that contempt order, Richard filed a
    petition for Chapter 7 bankruptcy, and on October 15, 2014, the U.S. Bankruptcy
    Court issued a discharge in bankruptcy. See 
    11 U.S.C.S. § 727
     (LEXIS through
    Pub. L. No. 114-119).
    [¶6] On October 17, 2014, Suzan filed a request for a show cause hearing,
    asserting that Richard had not made payments as required by the May 2014
    contempt order. In response, Richard filed a motion to dismiss her request for the
    show cause hearing, asserting that aside from his child support debt, all of his
    financial obligations had been discharged in the bankruptcy action.1                                 In
    November 2014, the court held a show cause hearing in order to determine the
    effect of the bankruptcy discharge on his divorce-related obligations and whether
    Richard should be held in contempt for his failure to make those payments.
    1
    Richard acknowledges that his child support obligation was not discharged in the bankruptcy action.
    Pursuant to 
    11 U.S.C.S. § 523
    (a)(5) (LEXIS through Pub. L. No. 114-119), “domestic support
    obligation[s]” are not subject to a bankruptcy discharge. The Bankruptcy Code defines the term
    “domestic support obligation” in part as a debt “owed to . . . a spouse, former spouse, or child of the
    debtor . . . in the nature of alimony, maintenance, or support,” 
    11 U.S.C.S. § 101
    (14A) (LEXIS through
    Pub. L. No. 114-119), which includes child support, see In re Diaz, 
    647 F.3d 1073
    , 1089-1090 (11th Cir.
    2011).
    5
    [¶7] The court (Dobson, J.) issued an order denying Richard’s motion to
    dismiss the show cause hearing and confirming Richard’s payment obligations as
    ordered in the May 2014 contempt order. Specifically, the court concluded that
    none of Richard’s divorce judgment-connected financial obligations
    to Suzan were discharged in his bankruptcy proceeding. His
    obligations directly to the third party creditors were discharged, but
    they may attempt to collect their obligations from Suzan. He has a
    responsibility to Suzan to pay the debts and indemnify her from any
    collections efforts that [were] not discharged. He therefore failed to
    “show cause” why he should not be found in contempt for not making
    payments on the [credit union] loans as well as on the debt to Suzan
    reflected in the writ of execution.
    The court declined to issue an order of incarceration but, in light of its
    confirmation of his obligation to make payments as previously ordered, required
    Richard to begin paying the debts on February 1, 2015, subject to the same
    sanction for noncompliance that was established in the May 2014 contempt order.
    Richard appealed.
    II. DISCUSSION
    [¶8] Richard argues that the discharge granted by the Bankruptcy Court
    preempts the state court from ordering him to make the payments enumerated in
    the post-judgment order. Richard alternatively contends that with the exception of
    his child support obligation, the discharge in bankruptcy either entitles him to a full
    discharge of all court-ordered debts arising from the divorce judgment, or that the
    discharge exposes him to liability only to the extent that Suzan makes payments on
    6
    the joint debts to the credit union. In a divorce action, we review a post-judgment
    order for an abuse of discretion or error of law. Brasier v. Preble, 
    2013 ME 109
    ,
    ¶ 12, 
    82 A.3d 841
    .
    [¶9]     As a preliminary matter, Richard’s preemption argument is not
    persuasive, because state courts retain concurrent jurisdiction to determine the
    dischargeability of certain debts. See, e.g., In re Walker, 
    427 B.R. 471
    , 478 n.16
    (B.A.P. 8th Cir. 2010) (recognizing that except as to certain types of debts that are
    not relevant here, “state courts have concurrent jurisdiction to decide
    dischargeability, which is most often raised as a defense to a state court lawsuit
    brought after the discharge has been entered”); cf. 
    28 U.S.C.S. § 1334
    (b)
    (LEXIS through Pub. L. No. 114-119) (providing in pertinent part that the
    “[federal] district courts shall have original but not exclusive jurisdiction of all
    civil proceedings . . . arising in or related to cases under [the Federal Bankruptcy
    Code].”).     Here, the court merely examined the enforceability of Richard’s
    payment obligations ordered in the divorce proceedings, in light of the bankruptcy
    discharge. The court acted well within its authority by addressing the question of
    whether Richard’s court-ordered obligations survived the discharge issued by the
    Bankruptcy Court.
    [¶10]    We next examine the effect of the discharge both on debts that
    Richard owes directly to Suzan, and on debts that the divorce judgment requires
    7
    him to pay to the credit union as part of his obligation to Suzan. The analysis for
    both issues is governed by the provisions of 
    11 U.S.C.S. § 727
    (a), which
    authorizes the Bankruptcy Court to grant a discharge of debt to the debtor, and
    11 U.S.C.S. 523(a) (LEXIS through Pub. L. No. 114-119), which provides in
    pertinent part:
    A discharge under section 727 . . . of this title does not discharge an
    individual debtor from any debt[2]--
    ...
    (5) for a domestic support obligation; [or]
    ...
    (15) to a spouse, former spouse, or child of the debtor and not of the
    kind described in paragraph (5) that is incurred by the debtor in the
    course of a divorce or separation or in connection with a separation
    agreement, [or] divorce decree . . . .
    A.       Debts Owed to Suzan
    [¶11] The amended divorce judgment issued in August 2009 required that
    Richard pay money directly to Suzan as part of the adjudication of property issues
    in the course of the divorce proceeding. Richard’s obligation was subsequently
    reduced to a writ of execution in the amount of $4,869.70. This debt falls squarely
    within the exception to discharge created by section 523(a)(15) because it is a debt
    2
    The Bankruptcy Code defines the term “debt” as a “liability on a claim.” 
    11 U.S.C.S. § 101
    (12).
    The term “claim” is defined as a “right to payment, whether or not such right is reduced to judgment,
    liquidated, unliquidated, fixed, contingent, matured, unmatured, disputed, undisputed, legal,
    equitable . . . or . . . right to an equitable remedy for breach of performance if such breach gives rise to a
    right to payment.” 
    Id.
     § 101(5).
    8
    to a former spouse that was incurred in the course of a divorce proceeding, see
    
    11 U.S.C.S. § 523
    (a)(15), and it was therefore not extinguished by the discharge.
    [¶12] Additionally, before Richard obtained the bankruptcy discharge, the
    court ordered him to pay $353.44 to Suzan for the costs she incurred in bringing
    her contempt motion.      This payment obligation is also a debt described in
    section 523(a)(15) and therefore was not discharged.          See In re Prensky,
    
    416 B.R. 406
    , 411-12 (Bankr. D. N.J. 2009) (holding that a debt for attorney fees
    incurred by an ex-spouse in a post-judgment divorce contempt proceeding was
    nondischargeable).
    B.    Debts Payable Directly to Creditors
    [¶13] Having determined that Richard’s direct obligations to Suzan were
    nondischargeable pursuant to section 523(a)(15), we next consider whether the
    same statutory provision also forecloses the discharge of joint debts that, pursuant
    to orders issued in the divorce proceeding, Richard was ordered to pay directly to
    one of the parties’ creditors—an issue we have not previously addressed.
    [¶14] The debts owed to the credit union, which the court ordered Richard
    to pay, are debts on which Richard and Suzan are jointly liable. When the divorce
    court required Richard to make payments directly to the credit union, the court, in
    effect, established a parallel obligation due from Richard to Suzan, because his
    payments to the credit union would reduce and ultimately extinguish her liability
    9
    to that creditor. For that reason, in these circumstances there are “two distinct
    obligations.” Howard v. Howard, 
    336 S.W.3d 433
    , 445 (Ky. 2011) (quotation
    marks omitted). One debt, which arises from the original transaction, is owed to
    the creditor itself. The second debt is created by the divorce judgment and is owed
    to the other spouse. 
    Id.
     The existence of the latter obligation is particularly
    evident where, as here, the non-payor spouse is the beneficiary of a
    “hold harmless” provision contained in the divorce decree. See In re Schweitzer,
    
    370 B.R. 145
    , 152 (Bankr. S.D. Ohio 2007). This arrangement creates a direct
    duty that runs from the payor spouse to the non-payor spouse because, as between
    the parties to the divorce, she would become entitled to indemnification if she were
    to be held liable on the joint debt. Because section 523(a)(15) precludes the
    discharge of debt from one spouse to the other that was incurred in the divorce
    proceeding, the payor spouse’s underlying debt to the creditor necessarily survives
    a bankruptcy discharge when—as here—payment toward that debt satisfies the
    payor spouse’s obligation to the other spouse under a divorce judgment.
    [¶15] The “weight of authority,” Howard, 336 S.W.3d at 446, supports the
    conclusions that the provision of a divorce judgment requiring one spouse to pay a
    joint debt directly to a creditor creates a debt to the other spouse and that, under
    section 523(a)(15), the debt created when a divorce judgment obligates one spouse
    to pay a third-party creditor for the benefit of the other spouse is also not subject to
    10
    discharge. See, e.g., id. at 444; In re Wodark, 
    425 B.R. 834
    , 837-38 (B.A.P. 10th
    Cir. 2010) (“What matters in a § 523(a)(15) case is (1) the nature of the debt[] and
    (2) whether the debt was incurred in the course of a divorce or separation. The fact
    that the underlying obligation was payable to [a third party] does not mean that
    [the debtor] did not incur a separate obligation to [the spouse] that is, in itself, a
    nondischargeable debt.”); In re Williams, 
    398 B.R. 464
    , 469 (Bankr. N.D.
    Ohio 2008) (“Nowhere in § 523(a)(15) is it provided that a marital debt [to a
    former spouse] cannot be ‘incurred’ for purposes of the statute simply because the
    underlying debt is owed to a third party.”).
    [¶16] Richard argues that in light of the bankruptcy discharge, he can be
    held liable only to Suzan—but only after and to the extent that Suzan has made
    payments on the underlying joint debt.         This narrow view of his exposure,
    however, runs contrary to persuasive authority establishing that as the payor
    spouse under the divorce judgment, he remains responsible for making payments
    directly to the creditor under that judgment notwithstanding the bankruptcy
    discharge.
    [¶17]   Further, Richard’s argument is belied by the beneficial purpose
    underlying section 523(a)(15). Although most of the statutory exceptions to a
    bankruptcy discharge are construed strictly, Congress took a different view toward
    a bankrupt’s obligations to pay child and spousal support, and to pay debts arising
    11
    from a divorce. See In re Crosswhite, 
    148 F.3d 879
    , 881-82 (7th Cir. 1998).
    Accordingly, in 1994 Congress amended the Bankruptcy Code to protect former
    spouses by providing that those divorce-related obligations were not dischargeable
    absent specified circumstances.       See Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1994,
    Pub. L. No. 103-394, § 304(e), 
    108 Stat. 4106
    , 4133 (1994).           Then, in the
    Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005, Congress
    provided even greater protection to former spouses by eliminating altogether the
    conditions that formerly allowed those types of obligations to be discharged.
    See 11 U.S.C.S. 523(a)(15); Williams, 
    398 B.R. at 468
     (construing the
    2005 legislation and stating that “any debt falling within the scope of § 523(a)(15)
    [is] absolutely nondischargeable”).      This evolution of section 523(a)(15)
    demonstrates a greater level of protection to a former spouse in Suzan’s situation
    than Richard recognizes, and it undermines his contention that before he can
    become liable on the credit union debts, Suzan herself must make payments for
    which Richard was ordered responsible—and only then try to obtain satisfaction
    from him.
    12
    [¶18] Because as part of the divorce judgment Richard became responsible
    for paying the credit union debt on which Suzan is jointly liable, Richard’s liability
    on those debts was not discharged in bankruptcy.3
    III. CONCLUSION
    [¶19] The divorce judgment required Richard to make certain payments
    directly to Suzan, and other payments to a third-party creditor, holding Suzan
    harmless on those third-party debts. Those obligations were statutorily insulated
    from a post-judgment bankruptcy discharge, and Richard remains liable to Suzan
    and for payments to the credit union on the joint debts. The court therefore did not
    err by enforcing the contempt order that predated the discharge.
    The entry is:
    Judgment affirmed.
    On the briefs and at oral argument:
    Thaddeus V. Day, Esq., Law Offices of Thaddeus V. Day,
    P.L.L.C., Cumberland Center, for appellant Richard W. Collins
    Matthew C. Garascia, Esq., Auburn, for appellee Suzan M.
    Collins
    West Bath District Court docket number FM-2008-89
    FOR CLERK REFERENCE ONLY
    3
    In light of the narrow issue presented to us in this case, we consider only Richard’s liability to the
    credit union under the divorce judgment. We need not and do not determine here whether the credit
    union could directly enforce the debt against Richard.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: Docket Sag-15-54

Judges: Saufley, Alexander, Mead, Gorman, Jabar, Hjelm, Humphrey

Filed Date: 4/12/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/26/2024