Neal v. Behind the Gates, Inc. ( 2020 )


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  •                                       678
    Submitted November 1, 2019, reversed December 2, 2020
    Natalia NEAL,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    BEHIND THE GATES, INC., et al.,
    Defendants,
    and
    Sharon Elizabeth NEAL,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Clackamas County Circuit Court
    18LT15587; A169747
    477 P3d 1213
    Defendant Sharon Neal appeals a default judgment of eviction awarding
    plaintiff restitution of the premises. She contends that the trial court erred in
    holding a hearing and entering the judgment against her after the filing of an
    involuntary bankruptcy proceeding in which she was the named debtor. Under
    that circumstance, she contends that the Bankruptcy Code required the proceed-
    ing to be stayed. Held: The automatic stay under the Bankruptcy Code required
    that the proceeding seeking defendant’s eviction be stayed, and the trial court
    erred in holding a hearing and entering judgment on plaintiff’s complaint.
    Reversed.
    Susie L. Norby, Judge.
    Sharon Neal filed the brief for appellant pro se.
    No appearance for respondent.
    Before Armstrong, Presiding Judge, and Tookey, Judge,
    and Aoyagi, Judge.
    ARMSTRONG, P. J.
    Reversed.
    Cite as 
    307 Or App 678
     (2020)                                           679
    ARMSTRONG, P. J.
    In this action for forcible entry and detainer (FED),
    defendant Sharon Neal appeals a default judgment of evic-
    tion awarding plaintiff restitution of the premises.1 She con-
    tends that the trial court erred in holding a hearing and
    entering the judgment against her, because an involun-
    tary bankruptcy proceeding in which she was the named
    debtor was pending that required the FED proceeding to be
    stayed. We agree with defendant that the trial court erred
    in holding a hearing and entering judgment on plaintiff’s
    complaint despite the automatic bankruptcy stay, and we
    therefore reverse.
    A detailed description of the underlying facts and
    the long and contentious litigation between these parties
    would not assist the bench or bar. We describe the facts nec-
    essary to our analysis. Plaintiff and defendant, who was
    plaintiff’s former mother-in-law, resided on separate floors of
    the same house, and they were in conflict. Plaintiff held title
    to the property. Plaintiff and defendant had been required
    by court order to share the electric utility bill. The account
    with Portland General Electric (PGE), the utility company
    serving the residence, was in plaintiff’s name, and the par-
    ties became delinquent in their payments. PGE turned off
    the power.
    In order to restore power to the premises, defendant
    used her maiden name to form a corporation, Behind the
    Gates, Inc., and then opened a new utility account in the
    corporation’s name.
    Apparently, the property went into foreclosure, at
    least in part because of the corporation’s utility account.
    Plaintiff filed her FED complaint to evict the corporation
    and defendant. On the day before the scheduled trial, defen-
    dant was named as the debtor in a petition for involuntary
    bankruptcy.
    The trial proceeded the next day. The court had
    notice of the bankruptcy petition. Under the United States
    1
    Plaintiff brought this action against defendants Sharon Neal and Behind
    the Gates, Inc., an entity incorporated by Sharon Neal. Only Sharon Neal is an
    appellant, and references in this opinion to “defendant” are to Sharon Neal.
    680                                      Neal v. Behind the Gates, Inc.
    Bankruptcy Code, 
    11 USC § 362
    , a bankruptcy petition oper-
    ates as a stay of “the commencement or continuation * * *
    of a judicial, administrative, or other action or proceeding
    against the debtor that was or could have been commenced
    before the commencement of the case under this title.”
    
    11 USC § 362
    (a)(1). However, because one of the defendants
    was a corporation, the court was persuaded that the auto-
    matic stay was subject to an exception for eviction pro-
    ceedings relating to nonresidential tenancies. See 
    11 USC § 362
    (b)(10).2
    Defendant had not answered the complaint, and the
    court found her to be in default.3 The parties put on their
    evidence,4 and the trial court found that the elements for an
    eviction had been established. The court entered a default
    judgment of eviction and restitution against defendant and
    a judgment of eviction and restitution against Behind the
    Gates, Inc. The court included in the judgment a finding
    that “Behind the Gates, Inc., is a sham corporation created
    to defraud PGE, and used only for that purpose.” Defendant
    has appealed, asserting that the judgment was issued in
    violation of the bankruptcy stay.5
    It is undisputed that the time has expired for execu-
    tion of the judgment of restitution. ORS 105.159(3) provides:
    2
    
    11 USC § 362
    (b)(10) states an exception to the bankruptcy stay for
    “any act by a lessor to the debtor under a lease of nonresidential real property
    that has terminated by the expiration of the stated term of the lease before
    the commencement of or during a case under this title to obtain possession
    of such property.”
    3
    Sharon Neal had filed an answer on behalf of the corporation but not on her
    own behalf.
    4
    Although she was in default because she had not filed an answer, defendant
    was in the courtroom and testified.
    5
    Under ORS 19.245(2),
    “A party to a judgment given by confession or for want of an answer may
    not appeal from the judgment except as follows:
    “* * * * *
    “(b) A defendant may appeal from the judgment if the trial court has
    entered a default judgment against the defendant as a sanction or has denied
    a motion to set aside a default order or judgment.
    “(c) A defendant may appeal from the judgment if it is void.”
    A judgment taken in violation of an automatic bankruptcy stay is void. Cam and
    Cam, 
    216 Or App 358
    , 363, 174 P3d 1018 (2007).
    Cite as 
    307 Or App 678
     (2020)                                 681
    “Unless the judgment otherwise provides, the clerk may
    not issue a notice of restitution or a writ of execution of
    judgment of restitution more than 60 days after the judg-
    ment is entered or after any date for possession as specified
    in the judgment, whichever is later.”
    The judgment is no longer enforceable through a notice of
    restitution or writ of execution. But the judgment’s find-
    ing—that defendant created Beyond the Gates, Inc., for the
    purpose of defrauding PGE—constitutes a judicial deter-
    mination that defendant committed an act of fraud against
    the power company. Even though the judgment is no longer
    enforceable through a notice of restitution, the court’s find-
    ing could give rise to an adverse consequence for defendant,
    and we conclude for that reason that the appeal is not moot.
    See State v. Hauskins, 
    251 Or App 34
    , 36, 281 P3d 669 (2012)
    (“A collateral consequence for the purposes of mootness is a
    probable adverse consequence to the defendant as a result of
    the challenged action.”). We therefore address the merits of
    defendant’s appeal.
    We agree with defendant that the trial court erred
    in determining that there was an exception to the bank-
    ruptcy stay. It is undisputed that the subject premises were
    defendant’s residence; the house was not a “nonresidential
    real property,” as required by 
    11 USC § 362
    (b)(10). Thus, the
    trial court was required to stay the FED proceedings pend-
    ing release of the stay by the bankruptcy trustee. See Cam
    and Cam, 
    216 Or App 358
    , 362, 174 P3d 1018 (2007) (“The
    automatic stay is ‘the lynchpin of the Bankruptcy Code,’ In
    re Nelson, 
    335 BR 740
    , 748 (Bankr D Kan 2004), and a state
    court should be particularly careful to honor it.”). Because
    the FED proceeding was required to be stayed, the trial
    court erred in holding a hearing and entering the judgment
    of eviction.
    Reversed.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A169747

Judges: Armstrong

Filed Date: 12/2/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/10/2024