In re Shaw

Decision Date11 January 1982
Docket NumberBankruptcy No. LA 80-02494 RO,Adv. No. 80-2056 RO.,LA 80-02495 RO,BAP No. CC-81-1151-HVG
Citation16 BR 875
PartiesIn re Moses D. SHAW and Mary K. Shaw, Debtors. Jay C. MILLER, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. Moses D. SHAW and Mary K. Shaw, Defendants-Appellees.
CourtU.S. Bankruptcy Appellate Panel, Ninth Circuit

David M. Stern, Stern & Miller, Santa Monica, Cal., for plaintiff-appellant.

Richard Meehan, Los Angeles, Cal., for defendants-appellees.

Before HUGHES, VOLINN and GEORGE, Bankruptcy Judges.

OPINION

HUGHES, Bankruptcy Judge:

The question raised by this appeal is whether the bankruptcy court's equitable power may be used to set aside a post-bankruptcy foreclosure sale that was not subject to a stay. We hold on the facts of this case and the authority of Hardt v. Kirkpatrick, 91 F.2d 875 (9th Cir. 1937) cert. denied 303 U.S. 626, 58 S.Ct. 762, 82 L.Ed. 1088 (1938), that it may not.

I

Miller holds a deed of trust on several parcels of real property owned by the Shaws, Chapter 11 debtors. The trial court granted Miller's request for dissolution of the automatic stay of foreclosure imposed by 11 U.S.C. § 362(a) and the debtors appealed. (That appeal will be called Shaw I). Pending appeal, however, the trial court stayed enforcement of the dissolution order for a period of 180 days.

The 180-day period (actually, two 90-day periods) was selected by the trial court on the assumption that the appeal would be concluded within that time. This assumption proved unduly optimistic. Argument in the Shaw I appeal took place on June 17, 1981, almost a month after the 180-day period (as well as the stay pending appeal) expired.

Well before the expiration date, Miller reminded Shaw that the stay would expire on May 19, 1981 and warned that the foreclosure sale would proceed on May 22, 1981 in the absence of a stay. Shaw unsuccessfully sought hearings on two occasions prior to the sale. When the application was eventually called on May 26, 1981, Miller advised the court of the foreclosure sale four days earlier.

The court, indicating its disapproval of the sale, reinstated the stay pending appeal and ordered the foreclosure sale vacated. This appeal, Shaw II, followed.

II

Hardt v. Kirkpatrick, supra, controls our decision. In that case, the debtor filed under section 75 of the Bankruptcy Act for a composition or extension of his debts. While proceeding under section 75, he enjoyed the protection of section 75(o), which prohibited sales of the debtor's property under power of sale "at any time after the filing of the petition under this section, and prior to the confirmation or other disposition of the composition or extension proposal by the court."

Thereafter, the debtor converted his case to bankruptcy under section 75(s). Hardt, as beneficiary under a deed of trust on Kirkpatrick's property, then caused the trustee to foreclose by power of sale. Hardt was the successful bidder. Less than a week later, debtor asked that the sale be declared void, recordation of the deed be enjoined and the creditor be held in contempt of court. The district court declared the sale invalid and enjoined interference with the debtor's possession.

The question presented on appeal was "whether, while proceedings under section 75 of the Bankruptcy Act are pending, and after the debtor is adjudged a bankrupt, a creditor may foreclose by nonjudicial sale under a deed of trust without permission of the court."

The court of appeals first inquired into whether the statutory stay of section 75(o) applied. Ruling that the adjudication as a bankrupt was a "disposition" of the composition or extension proposal by the court, it held that "all proceedings thereafter are governed by subsection (s) and not by subsection (o)". It concluded that subsection (s) provided for a judicial stay, "not an automatic one," and noted that "no order was issued by the court below enjoining the appellant from proceeding with his sale."

Having found that neither section 75(a) nor a court order stayed the sale, the court of appeals turned "to the general bankruptcy law to ascertain whether we can find any such prohibition in there." Citing a number of cases, including Heffron v. Western Loan & Building Co., 84 F.2d...

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