Case Law Kelly v. Cuomo

Kelly v. Cuomo

Document Cited Authorities (5) Cited in Related

ORDER DENYING MOTION FOR RELIEF FROM JUDGMENT AND ORDERING A RESPONSE TO PLAINTIFF'S APPEAL [ECF NOS. 70 74, 76]

Jennifer A. Dorsey U.S. District Judge.

This action to enforce judgment stems from a $96,000 loan that non-party Patricia Ritchie made to defendant Jody Marie Cuomo in 2006.[1] When Cuomo filed for bankruptcy in 2010 she neglected to list that loan in her schedules.[2] Ritchie later assigned her interest in the loan to plaintiff Gregory Kelly.[3] Kelly filed an adversary complaint against Cuomo in the bankruptcy court, arguing that Cuomo obtained the loan through false pretenses, a false representation, or actual fraud, thus excepting it from discharge under 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(2)(A).[4] After a trial the bankruptcy court ruled that the loan was not dischargeable in bankruptcy and entered judgment for Kelly and against Cuomo for the loan amount plus interest.[5] Kelly filed this action as part of his continued efforts to collect. Cuomo now asks this court to set aside the judgment, arguing that the bankruptcy court lacked jurisdiction to enter it because Nevada law doesn't allow the assignment of fraud claims and thus Kelly didn't have standing to bring a § 523 claim predicated on fraud.[6] But because Cuomo cannot show that the bankruptcy court lacked any arguable basis to exercise jurisdiction, I deny her motion. And I order further briefing on Kelly's objection to the magistrate judge's ruling on his motion to enforce a subpoena.

Discussion
I. Cuomo has not demonstrated that the bankruptcy court had no colorable basis to exert jurisdiction over Kelly's assigned § 523 claim.

Federal Rule of Civil Procedure (FRCP) 60(b)(4) gives courts the power to “relieve a party or its legal representative from a final judgment, order, or proceeding” if “the judgment is void.”[7] Rule 60(b)(4) “applies only in the rare instance [in which] a judgment is premised either on a certain type of jurisdictional error or on a violation of due process that deprives a party of notice or the opportunity to be heard.”[8] [J]udgments are deemed void [for lack of jurisdiction] only [if] the assertion of jurisdiction is truly unsupported”: the argument for jurisdiction “must lack even a colorable basis” to invoke Rule 60(b)(4).[9] There is no time limitation to file a 60(b)(4) motion.[10]

Bankruptcy courts look to state law to determine the scope of a debtor's or a creditor's property interests.[11] The United States Supreme Court has cautioned that, [u]nless some federal interest requires a different result, there is no reason why such interests should be analyzed differently simply because an interested party is involved in a bankruptcy proceeding.”[12] Cuomo contends that, because Nevada has long held that fraud claims are “personal to the one defrauded” and cannot be assigned, Kelly's § 523(a)(2)(A) claim alleging that Cuomo committed fraud to obtain the loan was personal to Ritchie and could not be assigned to Kelly.[13] Thus, Cuomo insists, Kelly did not have standing to assert the § 523(a)(2)(A) claim, robbing the bankruptcy court of subject-matter jurisdiction over it.[14]

A. The federal interest in assisting only honest debtors may require a result at odds with Nevada law.

Cuomo contends that state law must dictate the assignability of Kelly's fraud claim in this case, but she glosses over the Supreme Court's acknowledgement that “some federal interest” may require a different result in some cases.[15] And the Ninth Circuit has identified federal interests that may invoke a departure from Nevada law in this case. In In re Boyajian, for example, the Court analyzed the assignability of claims in bankruptcy under § 523(a)(2)(B), which exempts from discharge any debt obtained through fraudulent written statements.[16]Whether state law prohibited assignment was not at issue, but the court found that Congress intended that an assignee-creditor could step into the shoes of the assignor and assert a written-fraud claim under § 523(a)(2)(B).[17] This result, the Court concluded, is “supported by the policy goals of the [b]ankruptcy [c]ode” by “limit[ing] the opportunity for a completely unencumbered new beginning to the honest but unfortunate debtor.”[18]

The In re Boyajian decision suggests that the Ninth Circuit would hold that Congress intended for the general principle of assignment to trump state-law differences with respect to § 523(a)(2)(A) claims, too. The bankruptcy code was crafted to let honest debtors start anew, and § 523(a)(2)(A) exemplifies this policy by exempting from discharge ill-gotten debts. Allowing the assignment of debt to sever this exception would create a perverse windfall for the dishonest debtor and thus would upset the purpose of the federal bankruptcy code. So, in light of the Ninth Circuit's interpretation of Congress's intent with respect to assignment of very similar fraud claims, I cannot find that the bankruptcy court lacked any arguable basis to determine that Kelly had standing to assert his § 523(a)(2)(A) claims under an assigned loan.

B. Nevada has not prohibited assignment of fraud claims in this bankruptcy context.

Cuomo's contention that Nevada law unequivocally prohibits assignment of fraud claims like this one is tenuous.[19] It is true that Nevada has long barred assignment of fraud claims.[20]But Nevada has not extended that prohibition to the circumstances presented here: when a creditor is asserting claims to enforce repayment under an assigned loan against a debtor in bankruptcy proceedings. In Reynolds v. Tufenkjian, the case upon which Cuomo largely relies, the respondents had purchased appellant's interest in its claims for the express purpose of voluntarily dismissing the appeal against them.[21] While the Court acknowledged that the at-issue fraud claim “ha[d] already been held to be personal in nature and unassignable,” it also held that negligent-misrepresentation claims could be assigned.[22] The Court noted that “a determination of whether a cause of action is assignable should be based upon an analysis of the nature of the claim to be assigned and on an examination of the public policy consideration that would be implicated if assignment were permitted.”[23] It then reasoned that, because Nevada limits negligent-misrepresentation claims to “only those claims resulting in pecuniary loss” and doesn't permit claims arising from physical or emotional harm, “it is clear that the nature of such a claim is not to recover for a personal injury, but instead is more akin to a claim seeking recovery for a loss of property.”[24] So the Court held that negligent-misrepresentation claims can be assigned because doing so “does not implicate the same public policy concerns” that spurred the court to prohibit assignment of fraud claims.[25] So, “while claims for personal injury torts are not assignable, when a tort claim alleges purely pecuniary loss . . . the claim may be assigned.”[26]

While Cuomo seeks to reduce Kelly's § 523 action to a run-of-the-mill fraud claim that would implicate Nevada's assignment prohibition, when viewed through the lens of Reynolds's treatment of negligent-misrepresentation claims, it appears that § 523 claims may be treated differently.[27] The Nevada Supreme Court analyzes the “nature of the claim” to determine whether it can be assigned. And while § 523 requires that a creditor prove the elements of fraud to prevail, the only damages to be gained are purely economic: a finding that a debt is not dischargeable in bankruptcy and can thus be collected from the bankrupt debtor. So, under Reynolds, it's entirely possible that the Nevada Supreme Court would treat an action under § 523(a)(2)(A) differently than a fraud claim sounding in tort.[28]

In sum, because it isn't clear that Nevada's policy against assignment of fraud claims would trump the federal government's interest in granting bankruptcy relief only to honest debtors, and because it is not a foregone conclusion that Nevada would apply its anti-assignment rationale in these circumstances, I cannot find that the bankruptcy court lacked any arguable basis for exercising jurisdiction over Kelly's assigned § 523(a)(2)(A) claim. I thus deny Cuomo's motion to set aside the judgment.

II. Cuomo and Silver are directed to respond to Kelly's appeal within 14 days.

Kelly has issued various subpoenas in his attempt to enforce his judgment against Cuomo.[29] When he received inadequate responses, Kelly filed motions to enforce a subset of those subpoenas.[30] After a hearing, the magistrate judge denied all of Kelly's motions to enforce, stating: “I believe the information requested is mostly not relevant to collecting the judgment registered on the docket here. And to the extent that some of the information requested might be relevant, the discovery . . . would be either duplicative or not proportional.”[31] The magistrate judge then stayed discovery until he could resolve pending motions related to additional subpoenas issued to Frank Silver-the custodian of records for Medicavelli, Inc.-and AT&T.[32]

But when Kelly appealed the magistrate judge's order to the Ninth Circuit, the magistrate judge denied those pending motions without prejudice to their refiling once the Ninth Circuit resolved the appeal.[33] On October 14, 2021, the Ninth Circuit dismissed Kelly's appeal for lack of jurisdiction, finding that the order denying Kelly's motion to enforce the subpoena to the Custodian of Records for Medicavelli, Inc., did not finally dispose of the post-judgment discovery issues regarding the subpoena and contemplated a further order of the...

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