Providence Hall Associates Ltd. Partnership v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. , 816 F.3d 273 ( 2016 )


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  •                               PUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 14-2378
    PROVIDENCE HALL ASSOCIATES LIMITED PARTNERSHIP,
    Plaintiff - Appellant,
    v.
    WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A., successor in interest to Wachovia
    Bank, N.A.,
    Defendant - Appellee.
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern
    District of Virginia, at Alexandria.   Liam O’Grady, District
    Judge. (1:14−cv−00352−LO−IDD)
    Argued:   December 8, 2015                 Decided:   March 11, 2016
    Before WILKINSON, NIEMEYER, and DIAZ, Circuit Judges.
    Affirmed by published opinion. Judge Diaz wrote the opinion, in
    which Judge Wilkinson and Judge Niemeyer joined.
    ARGUED: Gary M. Bowman, Roanoke, Virginia, for Appellant.
    Jeffrey L. Tarkenton, WOMBLE CARLYLE SANDRIDGE & RICE, LLP,
    Washington, D.C., for Appellee. ON BRIEF: B. Chad Ewing, WOMBLE
    CARLYLE SANDRIDGE & RICE, LLP, Charlotte, North Carolina, for
    Appellee.
    DIAZ, Circuit Judge:
    Providence        Hall    Associates       (“PHA”)     appeals      the    district
    court’s dismissal of its lawsuit against Wells Fargo Bank.                               PHA
    contends that the district court erroneously gave res judicata
    effect to various sale orders issued during PHA’s Chapter 11
    bankruptcy.       We conclude that the elements of res judicata are
    satisfied and therefore affirm.
    I.
    PHA is a Virginia-based limited partnership that, prior to
    its bankruptcy, owned a handful of properties in several states.
    It entered three transactions with Wells Fargo’s predecessor-in-
    interest:     (1) a      $2.5    million     loan,        (2) a   $500,000       line     of
    credit,     and   (3) an       interest-rate-swap          agreement,         whereby    PHA
    exchanged a fixed interest rate for a floating one based on the
    one-month U.S. Dollar London Interbank Offered Rate (“LIBOR”).
    The   loan   and    the    line    of    credit      contained       a    cross-default
    clause—meaning      a    default    on   either       amounted      to    a    default    on
    both—and     were     secured      by    deeds       of    trust,    mortgages,          and
    assignments of rent for certain PHA real estate holdings.
    PHA subsequently defaulted on the loans and, as a result,
    filed   a    petition      for    Chapter       11   bankruptcy      in       March   2011.
    Shortly thereafter, Wells Fargo informed PHA that an event of
    2
    default     took       place     under      the      interest-rate-swap              agreement,
    triggering $317,850 in termination damages.
    Wells Fargo filed a proof of claim in the Chapter 11 case
    for   nearly      $3    million.          PHA       objected,    filing         an    adversary
    complaint, which it later amended.                      In that amended complaint,
    PHA alleged that Wells Fargo falsely represented that it “would
    forbear    collection          of   the    principal      balance          of   the    $500,000
    [line of credit],” J.A. 69, ultimately causing PHA to default
    and enter bankruptcy.
    Meanwhile, the United States Trustee had moved to convert
    the bankruptcy case to a Chapter 7 proceeding or dismiss it
    altogether     based      on    PHA’s      failure      to     file    monthly        financial
    reports.       Wells     Fargo      filed       a   memorandum        in    support     of    the
    motion, repeating the United States Trustee’s allegations and
    contending     that,       among      other          inappropriate          actions,        PHA’s
    principals        used     Wells          Fargo’s       cash     collateral            to     pay
    “distributions” to themselves.                      J.A. 123.     After reviewing the
    arguments    of    the    United      States         Trustee    and    Wells         Fargo,   the
    bankruptcy court opted to appoint Marc Albert as a Chapter 11
    trustee rather than dismiss the bankruptcy case or convert it
    into a Chapter 7 proceeding.
    Trustee Albert took a number of steps to bring PHA out of
    bankruptcy—most important here, obtaining court approval to sell
    two of the bankruptcy estate’s properties to satisfy the debts
    3
    owed to Wells Fargo.            In both of his sale motions under 11
    U.S.C. § 363(b), (f), Trustee Albert requested that the proceeds
    (minus certain expenses) be distributed to Wells Fargo.                               J.A.
    183,    231.          Additionally,     both          motions       recognized      PHA’s
    obligations to Wells Fargo under the two loans and the interest-
    rate-swap agreement.          See, e.g., J.A. 170–72, 174–75, 177, 219–
    21, 224.        The bankruptcy court granted the motions, noting in
    its orders that PHA was in debt to Wells Fargo, J.A. 376, 386–
    88,    and     that   the    balance   of       the    sale       proceeds   should    be
    distributed to Wells Fargo, J.A. 380, 388.                         In the final sale
    order, the court explicitly stated that sale proceeds should be
    paid to Wells Fargo “up to the amount of the WFB Obligations,”
    J.A.    388,    where   “WFB    Obligations”          was     a    defined   term     from
    Trustee Albert’s sale motion representing PHA’s debts arising
    out of the two loans and the swap agreement, J.A. 220.
    Around the time Trustee Albert moved to sell the bankruptcy
    estate’s properties in satisfaction of PHA’s outstanding debts
    to    Wells    Fargo,   he    also   consented        to    the     dismissal    without
    prejudice of PHA’s adversary complaint.
    By November 2012, the proceeds of the sales had satisfied
    PHA’s debts to Wells Fargo.                 Consequently, Victor Guerrero—an
    equity holder and principal of PHA—filed a motion to dismiss the
    Chapter 11 proceeding, which the bankruptcy court granted with
    Trustee Albert’s consent.
    4
    More than a year later, PHA filed suit in Virginia state
    court, which Wells Fargo removed to federal court.      Along with
    repeating the claims made in the bankruptcy adversary complaint,
    PHA alleged new theories of lender liability.      Relevant here,
    PHA claimed that the interest-rate-swap transaction was a “sham”
    because “the LIBOR rate was illegally rigged and manipulated.”
    Appellant’s Br. at 7–9; see also J.A. 12–14.
    Wells Fargo filed a motion to dismiss, which the district
    court granted on res judicata grounds, giving preclusive effect
    to the bankruptcy court’s sale orders.    The court then denied
    PHA’s motion for reconsideration.
    This appeal followed.
    II.
    We review de novo the district court’s dismissal based on
    res judicata.   Brooks v. Arthur, 
    626 F.3d 194
    , 200 (4th Cir.
    2010).
    “Under the doctrine of res judicata, or claim preclusion,
    ‘[a] final judgment on the merits of an action precludes the
    parties or their privies from relitigating issues that were or
    could have been raised in that action.’”       Pueschel v. United
    States, 
    369 F.3d 345
    , 354 (4th Cir. 2004) (quoting Federated
    Dep’t Stores, Inc. v. Moitie, 
    452 U.S. 394
    , 398 (1981)).     Three
    elements must be satisfied for res judicata to apply.     “[T]here
    5
    must be: (1) a final judgment on the merits in a prior suit;
    (2) an identity of the cause of action in both the earlier and
    the later suit; and (3) an identity of parties or their privies
    in the two suits.”          
    Id. at 354–55.
             Along with these “three
    formal elements” of res judicata, “two practical considerations
    should be taken into account.”               Grausz v. Englander, 
    321 F.3d 467
    , 473 (4th Cir. 2003).          First, we consider whether the party
    or its privy knew or should have known of its claims at the time
    of the first action.        See 
    id. at 473–74.
              Second, we ask whether
    the court that ruled in the first suit was an effective forum to
    litigate the relevant claims.           See 
    id. at 474.
    We    address   the   three    core     res   judicata    requirements   in
    turn,     followed   by    the    two   “practical        considerations”   from
    Grausz.
    A.
    The     district     court    recognized      the    first   res   judicata
    requirement—that the sale orders are final orders on the merits—
    as “the clearest hurdle for Wells Fargo to overcome.”                   J.A. 38.
    Nevertheless, the court determined that Wells Fargo prevailed,
    primarily relying on cases from the Fifth, Sixth, and Seventh
    Circuits, which concluded that bankruptcy sale orders were final
    orders on the merits.        J.A. 39 (citing Winget v. JP Morgan Chase
    Bank, N.A., 
    537 F.3d 565
    (6th Cir. 2008); Bank of Lafayette v.
    6
    Baudoin (In re Baudoin), 
    981 F.2d 736
    (5th Cir. 1993); Gekas v.
    Pipin (In re Met-L-Wood Corp.), 
    861 F.2d 1012
    (7th Cir. 1988)). 1
    While PHA concedes that the sale orders are “final,” it
    presents       a       litany   of   arguments      that    they     are   not    “on    the
    merits.”          Appellant’s Br. at 33.            We are unconvinced, concluding
    as the district court did that the first prong of res judicata
    is satisfied.
    1.
    We begin by turning to the cases from our sister circuits
    upon       which       the   district   court     relied.      We,     too,   find      them
    persuasive and reject PHA’s attempts to distinguish them.
    In Met-L-Wood, the debtor in a Chapter 11 proceeding filed
    a   motion        to    sell    bankruptcy    estate       assets,    which      the   court
    
    granted. 861 F.2d at 1015
    .        While § 363(b)(1) requires that the
    seller       of     estate      property     give    notice     to    creditors,        some
    unsecured creditors did not receive notice.                        
    Id. at 1017.
           After
    1Other cases have held or explained in dicta that
    bankruptcy sale orders can give rise to res judicata.          See,
    e.g.,   Silverman   v.   Tracar,   S.A.   (In  re  Am.    Preferred
    Prescription, Inc.), 
    255 F.3d 87
    , 92 (2d Cir. 2001) (citing two
    cases, including Met-L-Wood, that gave res judicata effect to
    sale orders to support the proposition that “some orders of
    bankruptcy courts, entered in the course of Chapter 11
    proceedings prior to confirmation . . . are entitled to res
    judicata effect”); Robertson v. Isomedix, Inc. (In re Int’l
    Nutronics,   Inc.),   
    28 F.3d 965
    ,   969–71  (9th   Cir.   1994)
    (concluding that a bankruptcy court order confirming a sale
    barred antitrust claims under res judicata principles).
    7
    the sale, the bankruptcy case was converted into a Chapter 7
    proceeding, and a trustee was appointed.                              
    Id. at 1015.
               The
    trustee      then    “investigated           the     circumstances         surrounding        the
    judicial      sale       and     eventually          decided       that    there      had    been
    skullduggery        of     two    kinds.”            
    Id. Seeking to
       remedy      said
    skullduggery on behalf of unsecured creditors, the trustee filed
    suit in federal district court against the debtor-corporation,
    its owner, and others involved in the judicial sale, alleging
    various common law and statutory claims.                          
    Id. at 1016.
    The    Seventh       Circuit      concluded           that    the     district       court
    properly dismissed the trustee’s suit.                            
    Id. at 1018.
           The court
    explained that to the extent the trustee’s claims were derived
    from   his     representation           of     the    unsecured       creditors        who   had
    notice of the judicial sale, res judicata barred the trustee’s
    lawsuit from moving forward.                        
    Id. at 1016–17.
                But, to the
    extent       the    trustee’s          claims        were     derived        from     unsecured
    creditors who had not received notice of the judicial sale, res
    judicata      proved       no     bar    because           this     subset      of    unsecured
    creditors were not parties to the sale proceeding.                               
    Id. at 1017.
    Nevertheless,        the       court    held    that        the    trustee’s     claims      were
    otherwise      barred       because       the        sale    proceeding         was    in    rem,
    “transfer[ring] property rights, and property rights are rights
    good against the world, not just against parties to a judgment
    or persons with notice of the proceeding.”                          
    Id. 8 In
    Baudoin, the plaintiffs and their wholly owned company
    filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy based on an inability to meet
    loan obligations to a particular creditor 
    bank. 981 F.2d at 737
    –38.          The      plaintiffs’            personal       bankruptcies          were
    consolidated, and a trustee was appointed.                          
    Id. at 738.
          Upon
    the trustee’s motion, two properties securing the plaintiffs’
    debt were sold at auction, leading to the plaintiffs’ discharge
    from bankruptcy.         
    Id. Three years
    later, the plaintiffs sued
    the   creditor    bank,    alleging      that      it    “forced      them    and   their
    company . . . into bankruptcy.”              
    Id. The Fifth
    Circuit concluded that res judicata precluded the
    plaintiffs’ suit.         
    Id. at 739.
               In doing so, the court looked
    to, among other considerations, “the important interest in the
    finality   of    judgments     in   a    bankruptcy          case.”         
    Id. (quoting Hendrick
    v. H.E. Avent, 
    891 F.2d 583
    , 587 n.9 (5th Cir. 1990)).
    Specifically,      the     court        explained            that     the     goals    of
    “[r]estraining litigious plaintiffs from taking more than ‘one
    bite of the apple,’” and ensuring “that bite is to be taken as
    expeditiously and economically as possible” were to be given
    great   weight,   particularly          in   light      of    “spiraling      litigation
    costs” and docket congestion.                See 
    id. at 739–40
    (quoting Sure-
    Snap Corp. v. State St. Bank & Trust Co., 
    948 F.2d 869
    , 870 (2d
    Cir. 1991)).
    9
    Finally, in Winget, the bankruptcy court ordered the sale
    of the Chapter 11 debtors’ assets, with the proceeds of the sale
    going to an outstanding balance on a credit 
    agreement. 537 F.3d at 571
    .        Winget, who owned the debtor-companies and guaranteed
    their debt, later sued various parties, asserting that those
    parties       intentionally     devalued      the        companies’   assets    through
    conduct taking place before the bankruptcy proceeding.                              
    Id. at 568–69,
    579.          The Sixth Circuit held that Winget’s claims were
    barred by res judicata.           
    Id. at 577–81.
                In concluding that the
    sale order was a final order on the merits, the court looked to
    Baudoin       and   Met-L-Wood,    as    well       as    the   policy   of   promoting
    finality that underpins res judicata.                    See 
    id. at 578–79.
    PHA’s attempts to meaningfully distinguish these cases are
    unavailing.         As for Winget, PHA argues that the Sixth Circuit
    held   that     the     sale   order    was    on    the     merits   because       Winget
    objected       (though    he   withdrew       this       objection)   with    the     same
    lender liability claim that he later brought in the district
    court.     Appellant’s Br. at 32 (citing 
    Winget, 537 F.3d at 580
    );
    
    id. at 35–36.
            But the passage of Winget that PHA cites does not
    relate to the question of whether a sale order is a final order
    on the merits.           Instead, the Sixth Circuit discussed Winget’s
    objection to show that he was not “unaware of all of the facts
    needed to bring the claims before the bankruptcy court at the
    time     of     th[e]    proceeding.”           
    Winget, 537 F.3d at 580
    .
    10
    Accordingly,          PHA’s    reliance       on    this       factual    distinction       is
    misplaced.
    With     regard         to     Baudoin,       PHA       contends     that     it     is
    distinguishable because the debtors never objected to the sale
    orders or the creditor’s claim in the bankruptcy court, unlike
    PHA, which objected to Wells Fargo’s proof of claim.                           We fail to
    see how this helps PHA.                    As the Baudoin court explained, sale
    orders     “are      final     judgments      on    the    merits    for     res    judicata
    purposes, ‘even though the order neither closes the bankruptcy
    case nor disposes of any 
    claim.’” 981 F.2d at 742
    (quoting
    
    Hendrick, 891 F.2d at 586
    ).         It    is    irrelevant    whether       an
    objection was made.
    As for Met-L-Wood, PHA argues that the court did not hold
    that    “the    trustee’s . . . claims               seeking      damages    against      the
    seller and purchaser” were barred by res judicata.                           Reply Br. at
    15.     This is arguably true because the trustee’s claims were
    derived in part from unsecured creditors who were not party to
    the sale proceeding, and therefore the court could not resolve
    the    entire     case    on    res    judicata      grounds.        But,     the    Seventh
    Circuit subsequently treated the res judicata analysis in Met-L-
    Wood as a holding.                  See Matrix IV, Inc. v. Am. Nat’l Bank &
    Trust Co. of Chi., 
    649 F.3d 539
    , 549 (7th Cir. 2011) (“We held
    in [Met-L-Wood] that a bankruptcy trustee was barred from filing
    a   RICO      suit    against        the    debtor       and    others    involved     in    a
    11
    bankruptcy asset sale after the sale had been confirmed; res
    judicata applied . . . .” (emphasis added)).                     More importantly,
    because we of course are not bound by Met-L-Wood regardless of
    what it held, it is not particularly important to this court
    whether the passage in question was dictum.                       What matters is
    whether     we     find   the    Seventh    Circuit’s      analysis       persuasive.
    Here, we do.
    PHA also argues that Met-L-Wood is distinguishable because
    PHA’s claims are unrelated to the sale proceedings themselves,
    while in Met-L-Wood, the trustee alleged fraud surrounding the
    sale.      Reply Br. at 15–16.       We grant that this is a distinction,
    but it is not a meaningful one.
    To    sell     bankruptcy    estate       assets    outside    the    ordinary
    course of business, the trustee of the estate or the debtor-in-
    possession must initiate the sale proceeding.                       See 11 U.S.C.
    §§ 363(b)(1), 1107(a).           Here, the trustee moved to sell property
    in satisfaction of specifically identified obligations arising
    out   of    PHA’s   transactions     with       Wells   Fargo.      The    bankruptcy
    court approved these sales, finding them to be “in the best
    interests of the Estate.”             E.g., J.A. 387; see also Rose v.
    Logan, No. RDB-13-3592, 
    2014 WL 1236008
    , at *7 (D. Md. Mar. 25,
    2014)      (describing     the     standard       for    approving    a     sale   of
    bankruptcy estate assets); Appellant’s Br. at 22 (“The standard
    for approving the sale is essentially a business judgment test,
    12
    or whether it is in the best interests of the estate to sell the
    property.” (citing 3 Collier on Bankruptcy ¶ 363.02[1][f]) (Alan
    N. Resnick & Henry J. Sommer eds., 15th ed. 2005)).
    The key questions thus arise: if PHA did not owe the amount
    that Wells Fargo claimed it was due, why would the trustee—the
    bankruptcy estate’s representative—move to sell estate assets in
    full satisfaction of Wells Fargo’s claimed debt, and why would
    the bankruptcy court approve the sale?                  The motions to sell in
    this case effectively conceded the validity of PHA’s obligations
    to Wells Fargo, and the proceeds of the sales satisfied those
    obligations.         It would make little sense after the sales were
    made, the debt settled, and the bankruptcy proceeding closed, to
    then allow PHA to challenge in a new judicial proceeding the
    propriety      of     the     transactions       giving    rise      to    its   now-
    extinguished        debt.     To   allow   such    a   challenge     would   achieve
    little more than upending the purpose of res judicata: promoting
    finality and judicial economy.                  Montana v. United States, 
    440 U.S. 147
    , 153–54 (1979); see also 
    Winget, 537 F.3d at 578
    –79;
    
    Baudoin, 981 F.2d at 739
    –40.
    Furthermore,           the    preclusive     effect   of      the     bankruptcy
    court’s sale orders is consistent with the “fundamental purpose”
    of   Chapter    11     bankruptcy:      “rehabilitation         of   the     debtor.”
    Phillips v. Congelton, L.L.C. (In re White Mountain Mining Co.,
    L.L.C.), 
    403 F.3d 164
    , 170 (4th Cir. 2005) (quoting NLRB v.
    13
    Bildisco & Bildisco, 
    465 U.S. 513
    , 528 (1983)).                To fulfill this
    objective, “[c]entralization of disputes concerning a debtor’s
    legal   obligations     is    especially      critical”    because     it    allows
    “reorganization        [to]    proceed        efficiently,      unimpeded         by
    uncoordinated     proceedings     in     other    arenas.”       
    Id. (quoting Shugrue
    v. Air Line Pilots Ass’n, Int’l (In re Ionosphere Clubs,
    Inc.), 
    922 F.2d 984
    , 989 (2d Cir. 1990)).                 Allowing “piecemeal
    litigation” as PHA urges, after all the debts and dust of a
    bankruptcy have settled, would invite precisely the inefficient
    decentralized proceedings that Chapter 11 bankruptcy is designed
    to avoid.    See 
    id. We conclude—in
    accord with our sister circuits as well as
    the purpose of res judicata and Chapter 11 bankruptcy—that the
    sale orders in this case are final orders on the merits.
    2.
    PHA presents a series of other arguments that we should
    break ranks with our sister circuits and hold that the sale
    orders fail to satisfy the first prong of res judicata.                          None
    are persuasive.
    First, PHA argues that because its adversary complaint was
    dismissed    without     prejudice,      its     present     lawsuit        is   not
    precluded.      The   dismissal    of   the    adversary     complaint      is   not
    relevant to our analysis, as Wells Fargo does not contend that
    14
    this dismissal gives rise to res judicata.                         Instead, the sale
    orders are what preclude the claims now before the court.
    Second, PHA contends that because a bankruptcy court sale
    order is an in rem proceeding, 
    Met-L-Wood, 861 F.2d at 1017
    , it
    does    not   have   a   res   judicata         effect   on   in    personam       lender
    liability claims.        In support, PHA points to M.W. Zack Metal Co.
    v. Int’l Navigation Corp., 
    510 F.2d 451
    (4th Cir. 1975).                            Zack
    Metal, however, does not address res judicata.                        As Wells Fargo
    correctly points out, “Zack Metal stands for the proposition
    that a party cannot file an in personam action on or otherwise
    attempt to collect on an in rem judgment by means other than the
    specific property at issue in the in rem lawsuit.”                           Appellee’s
    Br. at 23 (citing Zack 
    Metal, 510 F.2d at 452
    –53).
    Moreover, the circuit cases we discussed earlier belie the
    notion that the in rem nature of a sale order precludes the
    application of res judicata to transactionally related lender
    liability claims.        A Chapter 11 sale order can give rise to res
    judicata because the estate representative—the trustee or the
    debtor-in-possession—has         ample     opportunity        to    assert    a   lender
    liability claim before selling off estate assets in satisfaction
    of debts.      See 18 Charles Alan Wright et al., Federal Practice
    and    Procedure     § 4412    (2d   ed.    2012)    (explaining       that       because
    bankruptcy proceedings are “intended to resolve all claims in a
    15
    single    definitive       proceeding,”       in        personam      claims      that    could
    have been raised during bankruptcy should be precluded).
    Third, PHA maintains that County Fuel Co. v. Equitable Bank
    Corp., 
    832 F.2d 290
    (4th Cir. 1987), precludes the application
    of res judicata in this case.                 There, a creditor filed a proof
    of claim in a Chapter 11 proceeding for the secured balance of a
    loan, and the debtor-in-possession did not object, except with
    respect to a claim for attorneys’ fees.                        Cty. 
    Fuel, 832 F.2d at 291
    .     The creditor’s claim was therefore automatically allowed.
    
    Id. at 291–92;
    see 11 U.S.C. § 502(a).
    After filing its proof of claim, the creditor moved to lift
    the    bankruptcy        court’s    automatic           stay     so   it    could       proceed
    against    its    collateral.          Cty.       
    Fuel 832 F.2d at 291
    .     The
    bankruptcy       court    granted      the    lift-stay          motion,     the     district
    court affirmed, and the creditor eventually recovered the amount
    of its claim.         
    Id. at 291–92.
            About two years later, the debtor
    (County Fuel) sued the creditor, asserting that it breached an
    oral promise related to the loan.                        
    Id. at 292.
                The district
    court     dismissed       the   case    on        res    judicata        grounds,        giving
    preclusive effect to the automatic allowance of the creditor’s
    claim.    
    Id. We affirmed
    on waiver grounds rather than res judicata,
    commenting       in   dicta     that   “[i]t       is     doubtful         that    in    strict
    contemplation County Fuel’s . . . claim was . . . barred under
    16
    res judicata principles.”           
    Id. at 292–93.
             We gave two reasons.
    First, we looked to the Restatement (Second) of Judgments § 22,
    which reads:
    (1) Where the defendant may interpose a claim as a
    counterclaim but he fails to do so, he is not thereby
    precluded from subsequently maintaining an action on
    that claim, except as stated in Subsection (2).
    (2) A defendant who may interpose a claim as a
    counterclaim in an action but fails to do so is
    precluded, after the rendition of judgment in that
    action, from maintaining an action on the claim if:
    (a) The counterclaim is required to be interposed
    by a compulsory counterclaim statute or rule of
    court, or
    (b) The relationship between the counterclaim and
    the plaintiff’s claim is such that successful
    prosecution of the second action would nullify
    the initial judgment or would impair rights
    established in the initial action.
    
    Id. at 292
        &    n.1.       We     explained       that       under     section
    22(1), (2)(a),        “the    failure      to     interpose . . . an           available
    [permissive]        ‘counterclaim’        does    not,   as      a    matter    of   res
    judicata, bar its subsequent assertion as an independent claim
    for relief.”        
    Id. Nevertheless, we
    later applied an exception
    to    this   rule    found    in   section       22(2)(b)   of       the   Restatement,
    necessitating the barring of County Fuel’s claim, because “[t]he
    practical effect of a successful prosecution of County Fuel’s
    claim would be to require [the creditor] to make restitution of
    the amount realized upon its claim.”                
    Id. at 293–94.
    Second, we explained in dicta that “it is doubtful that the
    ‘automatic allowance’ under 11 U.S.C. § 502(a) of a claim not
    17
    objected      to      constitutes             a       ‘final       judgment’”        because
    (1) objections       could      be    made      after      automatic     allowance        of    a
    claim, (2) automatic allowance was not “final” for purposes of
    appellate     review,       and      (3) an        allowed      claim      can    later        be
    disallowed under § 502(j).              
    Id. at 292.
    2
    County Fuel does not control our decision in this case,
    most notably because its statements regarding res judicata are
    dicta.     See Siegel v. Fed. Home Loan Mortg. Corp., 
    143 F.3d 525
    ,
    530–31    (9th     Cir.    1998)      (explaining           that    County    Fuel   merely
    expressed    doubts       about      the   application         of    res     judicata,     but
    decided the case on waiver grounds).                          Additionally, while the
    County Fuel court questioned the finality of an automatic claim
    allowance in suggesting that res judicata did not apply, PHA
    concedes the finality of the sale orders.                           Appellant’s Br. at
    33.        Finally,       the        County        Fuel      court’s       discussion          of
    counterclaims       and    section      22      of    the    Restatement       (Second)        of
    Judgments    is     not    relevant        to        our    analysis    here.        As    PHA
    acknowledges,       res    judicata        bars      claims    that     could     have    been
    asserted in the bankruptcy proceeding that are “based on the
    same underlying transaction” as the sale orders.                                 Appellant’s
    2We also suggested in dicta that a lift-stay order should
    not give rise to res judicata.     Cty. 
    Fuel, 832 F.2d at 293
    .
    While PHA does not rely on this portion of County Fuel, we later
    address why lift-stay orders are distinguishable from the
    bankruptcy court’s sale orders.
    18
    Br. at 25–26 (quoting Clodfelter v. Republic of Sudan, 
    720 F.3d 199
    , 210 (4th Cir. 2013)).            Here, Trustee Albert could have
    litigated the extent of PHA’s obligations to Wells Fargo rather
    than   move   to   sell   estate   property   in   satisfaction   of    those
    obligations, and, as explained below, PHA’s present claims are
    transactionally related to the facts underlying the sale orders.
    This gives rise to the preclusion of PHA’s present claims.
    This brings us to PHA’s final argument respecting the first
    prong of res judicata.       PHA contends that an unreported district
    court decision declining to give preclusive effect to a lift-
    stay order weighs in favor of concluding that we should not give
    res judicata effect to sale orders.            Appellant’s Br. at 24–28
    (citing Canterbury v. J.P. Morgan Mortg. Acquisition Corp., No.
    10-cv-54, 
    2010 WL 5314543
    (W.D. Va. Dec. 20, 2010)).                   We are
    unconvinced.
    Not only is Canterbury not binding authority, but we do not
    find it illuminating in our analysis of whether sale orders can
    give rise to res judicata.         Here, unlike the lift-stay order in
    Canterbury, the sale orders at issue effectively recognize and
    satisfy particular debts.          It bears repeating that it would be
    counterproductive to liquidate the bankruptcy estate’s property
    to pay off debts owed to a creditor—bringing about the close of
    bankruptcy proceedings—only to later allow claims to be brought
    against that creditor regarding the now-satisfied debts.               Such a
    19
    result would be the model of inefficiency, at odds with the
    purpose of res judicata and Chapter 11 bankruptcy.
    B.
    We turn to the second prong of the res judicata analysis:
    an identity of claims between the first and second suit.                           “[W]e
    follow the ‘transactional’ approach” in analyzing this prong,
    meaning    that        “res       judicata     will    bar   a    ‘newly    articulated
    claim[]’       if    it     is    based   on   the    same   underlying     transaction
    [involved in the first suit] and could have been brought in the
    earlier action.”                 
    Clodfelter, 720 F.3d at 210
    (quoting Laurel
    Sand & Gravel, Inc. v. Wilson, 
    519 F.3d 156
    , 162 (4th Cir.
    2008)).
    Here, the sale orders arose out of the same nucleus of
    facts     as        PHA’s        claims   in    this    case:      the     circumstances
    surrounding the three agreements between PHA and Wells Fargo.
    The sale orders directed the liquidation of certain properties
    in   satisfaction            of     PHA’s      obligations       arising    from   those
    transactions.             And, in the instant lawsuit, PHA challenges the
    propriety of the transactions.                  Accordingly, the second prong is
    satisfied.           See 
    Winget, 537 F.3d at 580
    –81 (finding that the
    transactional test was met); 
    Baudoin, 981 F.2d at 743
    –44 (same).
    C.
    We next move to the final core requirement of res judicata:
    “an identity of parties or their privies in the two suits.”
    20
    
    Pueschel, 369 F.3d at 354
    –55 (emphasis added).                      PHA argues that
    this prong is not satisfied because it is not the same party as
    the trustee.     To achieve its desired result, PHA ignores the “or
    their    privies”    language    from   the     res    judicata      test,   instead
    stating the     identity-of-the-parties          element     as     requiring     that
    “the parties in the prior case were identical to the parties in
    the present case.”         Appellant’s Br. at 21 (citing 
    Pueschel, 369 F.3d at 354
    );   
    id. at 39
      (arguing    that    the    trustee      must   be
    “identical to the debtor” (emphasis in original)).                     This is not
    the law.
    Under the correct test, there is no dispute between the
    parties that this prong of res judicata is satisfied, as PHA
    says in both its opening and reply briefs that “[t]he trustee is
    in privity with the debtor as representative of the debtor’s
    bankruptcy     estate.”         Appellant’s      Br.    at     39     (emphasis     in
    original); Reply Br. at 9 (emphasis in original).
    D.
    Grausz directs courts to assess two additional res judicata
    considerations: whether the party or its privy knew or should
    have known of its claims at the time of the first action and
    whether the court that ruled in the first suit was an effective
    forum to litigate the relevant claims.                 
    See 321 F.3d at 473
    –74.
    PHA’s argument with respect to these factors turns on whether
    it, as a debtor who was no longer a debtor-in-possession, could
    21
    have effectively litigated its claims against Wells Fargo.                          See,
    e.g., Appellant’s Br. at 36–43 (contending that the bankruptcy
    court improperly barred it from participating in the bankruptcy
    in violation of 11 U.S.C. § 1109(b)).
    PHA’s argument is based on a faulty premise.                         It is not
    PHA’s actions in the bankruptcy court that now preclude it from
    asserting      claims     against    Wells      Fargo.       Instead,    it    is   the
    trustee’s actions as PHA’s privy that give rise to res judicata.
    Thus,    the       question    before      us    is    not   whether     PHA      could
    effectively litigate in the bankruptcy court in its own right,
    but whether the trustee could.                  If we concluded otherwise, we
    would effectively alter the third res judicata prong to require
    a strict identity of parties rather than an identity of the
    parties or their privies.               This we cannot do.              Because PHA
    offers   no     argument      that   the     trustee     could   not     effectively
    litigate      in    the   bankruptcy       court,     the    Grausz     factors     are
    satisfied. 3
    3 PHA says that it could not have known of certain claims
    related to the swap agreement during the bankruptcy proceeding
    because “[t]he artificiality of the LIBOR market was not
    publicly revealed until July 2012”—after the trustee was
    appointed. Appellant’s Br. at 44. Since it is the trustee, not
    PHA, whose actions in the bankruptcy court now bind PHA, the
    relevant question is whether the trustee could have known about
    the supposed “artificiality of the LIBOR market” during the
    bankruptcy. The final sale order was entered in September 2012,
    after the date upon which PHA says the artificiality of the
    LIBOR market was publicly revealed. Thus, PHA’s argument fails.
    22
    III.
    For   the   reasons   given,    we    affirm   the   judgment    of   the
    district court.
    AFFIRMED
    23
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 14-2378

Citation Numbers: 816 F.3d 273, 75 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 429, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 4555, 62 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 85, 2016 WL 930196

Judges: Wilkinson, Niemeyer, Diaz

Filed Date: 3/11/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024

Authorities (17)

In Re: American Preferred Prescription, Inc., Debtor. ... , 255 F.3d 87 ( 2001 )

Matrix IV, Inc. v. American Nat. Bank & Trust Co. , 649 F.3d 539 ( 2011 )

county-fuel-company-inc-v-equitable-bank-corporation-dba-the , 832 F.2d 290 ( 1987 )

In the Matter of Met-L-Wood Corporation, Debtor. Appeal of ... , 861 F.2d 1012 ( 1988 )

in-re-white-mountain-mining-company-llc-debtor-joseph-c-phillips , 403 F.3d 164 ( 2005 )

in-re-intl-nutronics-inc-debtor-jerome-robertson-trustee-chapter-7 , 28 F.3d 965 ( 1994 )

sure-snap-corporation-a-new-york-corporation-the-estate-of-alfred-shure , 948 F.2d 869 ( 1991 )

M. W. Zack Metal Company v. International Navigation ... , 510 F.2d 451 ( 1975 )

Rodney D. Hendrick v. H.E. Avent, an Unincorporated ... , 891 F.2d 583 ( 1990 )

in-the-matter-of-raywood-f-baudoin-louella-h-baudoin-and-raywood , 981 F.2d 736 ( 1993 )

Henry Grausz, M.D. v. Bradford F. Englander Linowes and ... , 321 F.3d 467 ( 2003 )

Winget v. JP Morgan Chase Bank, N.A. , 537 F.3d 565 ( 2008 )

in-re-ionosphere-clubs-inc-and-eastern-airlines-inc-debtors-martin-r , 922 F.2d 984 ( 1990 )

Montana v. United States , 99 S. Ct. 970 ( 1979 )

Deborah Katz Pueschel v. United States of America, Deborah ... , 369 F.3d 345 ( 2004 )

Brooks v. Arthur , 626 F.3d 194 ( 2010 )

Laurel Sand & Gravel, Inc. v. Wilson , 519 F.3d 156 ( 2008 )

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