Court Opinion

ID: 5126437
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-11-16 20:01:20.075027+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:22:56.772523
License: Public Domain

USCA11 Case: 20-12240      Date Filed: 11/16/2021    Page: 1 of 12

                                                      [PUBLISH]

                             In the

         United States Court of Appeals
                  For the Eleventh Circuit
                    ____________________

                          No. 20-12240
                    ____________________
In Re: KRISTINA GAIME,

                                                          Debtor.

___________________________________________________
STATE FARM FLORIDA INSURANCE COMPANY,
STATE FARM MUTUAL AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE
COMPANY,
STATE FARM FIRE AND CASUALTY COMPANY,

                                             Plaintiffs-Appellants,

versus

DAWN CARAPELLA,
as Bankruptcy Trustee of The Estate of Kristina
Gaime, Debtor,
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2                       Opinion of the Court                 20-12240

                                                Defendant-Appellee.

                     ____________________

           Appeal from the United States District Court
                for the Middle District of Florida
               D.C. Docket No. 8:19-cv-02573-TPD,
                   Bkcy No. 8:18-bk-05198-RCT
                     ____________________
Before NEWSOM, BRANCH, and LAGOA, Circuit Judges.

NEWSOM, Circuit Judge:

          This appeal concerns the meaning and application of the
Bankruptcy Code’s “automatic stay” provision, which, in pertinent
part, prohibits any “entit[y]” from “commenc[ing] or continu[ing]
. . . a judicial, administrative, or other action or proceeding against
the debtor that was or could have been commenced before” the
bankruptcy petition was filed. 11 U.S.C. § 362(a). In this case, one
party obtained a significant wrongful-death judgment in state court
against another, the latter of whom was insured by State Farm. Af-
ter the state-court winner filed a petition for involuntary bank-
ruptcy against the state-court loser, State Farm moved to inter-
vene, post-judgment, in the wrongful-death action. This appeal re-
quires us to decide whether the automatic-stay provision precludes
State Farm’s motion to intervene. Because we hold that it does,
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20-12240               Opinion of the Court                        3

and because the bankruptcy court didn’t otherwise abuse its discre-
tion in refusing to lift the stay, we will affirm.
                                  I
                                 A
       The events that underlie this appeal are truly horrific. In
1999, Kristina Gaime drugged her two young sons, Matthew and
Adam Rotell, and put them, along with herself, in a running car in
a closed garage. Matthew died; Adam and Gaime survived. Gaime
was subsequently convicted of second-degree murder and sen-
tenced to prison, where she remained until 2016. At the time of
the underlying events, Gaime had automobile- and homeowners-
insurance policies with State Farm.
        In 2001, Matthew’s estate, Adam, and the boys’ father Ste-
phen Rotell (collectively, “the Rotells”) sued Gaime in Florida state
court for wrongful death and bodily injury. Gaime tendered her
defense to State Farm, who appointed an attorney, Bryan Reyn-
olds, to defend her. State Farm filed separate declaratory judgment
actions against the Rotells and Gaime in Florida state court seeking
determinations that Gaime’s policies didn’t cover the incident and
that it had no duty to defend or indemnify her.
        After State Farm filed the declaratory judgment actions, the
Rotells filed a fourth amended complaint in the wrongful-death
suit, and Gaime filed a motion to dismiss, on which the state court
reserved ruling until the coverage and duty-to-defend questions
were resolved. Around the same time, the Rotells discussed a
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4                      Opinion of the Court                20-12240

settlement with Gaime’s State-Farm-retained lawyer, Reynolds.
The Rotells allege that State Farm rejected the settlement offer
even though Gaime wished to accept it and that the settlement
would have allowed Gaime to avoid subsequent liability.
        After State Farm rejected the Rotells’ settlement offer, the
state court ruled in State Farm’s favor in the declaratory judgment
actions—holding that its policies didn’t cover the incident and that
it had no duty to defend Gaime—and State Farm withdrew from
the wrongful-death lawsuit. Thereafter, the Rotells filed an un-
timely fifth amended complaint in the wrongful-death action.
Gaime, still imprisoned, didn’t respond. The state court entered a
default judgment against Gaime on the issue of liability, and the
case proceeded to a jury trial on damages. The jury entered a ver-
dict in favor of the Rotells in the amount of almost $505 million.
                                 B
       Because Gaime was essentially insolvent, the Rotells peti-
tioned the bankruptcy court for involuntary Chapter 7 bankruptcy
against her for the half-billion-dollar judgment. Gaime didn’t re-
spond to the Rotells’ petition, and the bankruptcy court entered an
order subjecting Gaime’s assets to its control and appointed Dawn
Carapella as trustee. The verdict is Gaime’s only liability, and the
bankruptcy estate’s sole assets are claims against State Farm for bad
faith and malpractice. In her capacity as trustee, Carapella sued
State Farm in Florida state court, alleging that State Farm acted in
bad faith when it rejected the Rotells’ settlement offer before with-
drawing from the wrongful-death suit.
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20-12240                Opinion of the Court                          5

                                   C
        That brings us to the present dispute. After the trustee sued
it for bad faith, State Farm sought to intervene, post-judgment, in
the Rotells’ wrongful-death action against Gaime. Specifically,
State Farm filed a motion to intervene and a motion to vacate the
judgment against Gaime on the ground that the Rotells’ fifth
amended complaint was untimely and that the default judgment
against Gaime was therefore void. State Farm presumably hoped
that if it could successfully vacate the state-court judgment against
Gaime, then there would be no bad-faith claim against it and thus
nothing for the Rotells to pursue in bankruptcy court.
       Importantly, though, State Farm’s motion to intervene re-
quired it to overcome a procedural bar in the bankruptcy court. In
particular, it had to ask that court for relief from the automatic stay,
which, as already explained, prohibits any “entit[y]” from “com-
menc[ing] or continu[ing] . . . a judicial, administrative, or other ac-
tion or proceeding against the debtor that was or could have been
commenced before” the bankruptcy petition was filed. 11 U.S.C. §
362(a). State Farm sought relief from the stay, but the bankruptcy
court denied its motion. The district court affirmed that denial.
      State Farm now appeals. It argues (1) that § 362(a)’s auto-
matic-stay provision doesn’t apply to its motion to intervene in the
underlying wrongful-death suit against Gaime; (2) that if the stay
does prevent it from intervening, then it violates the Due Process
Clause; and (3) that the bankruptcy court otherwise procedurally
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6                          Opinion of the Court                       20-12240

erred in refusing to lift the stay. We disagree on all counts and
affirm.1
                                       II
                                       A
       Section 362(a) of the Bankruptcy Code provides that the fil-
ing of a bankruptcy petition—either voluntary or involuntary—
“operates as a stay, applicable to all entities,” of—
        the commencement or continuation, including the is-
        suance or employment of process, of a judicial, ad-
        ministrative, or other action or proceeding against
        the debtor that was or could have been commenced
        before the commencement of the case under this title,
        or to recover a claim against the debtor that arose be-
        fore the commencement of the case under this title.
11 U.S.C. § 362(a)(1). The question here is whether State Farm’s
motion to intervene constitutes a “continuation . . . of a judicial,
administrative, or other action or proceeding against the debtor
that was or could have been commenced before the commence-
ment of the case under this title.”

1 We review the district court and bankruptcy court’s legal conclusions de
novo and findings of fact for clear error. In re Colortex Indus., Inc., 19 F.3d
1371, 1374 (11th Cir. 1994). We review a bankruptcy court’s decision to keep
an automatic stay in place for abuse of discretion. In re Dixie Broad., Inc., 871
F.2d 1023, 1026 (11th Cir. 1989).
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20-12240               Opinion of the Court                           7

       Section 362(a)’s plain language makes clear that it does.
That is so for the following reasons.
      First, the stay applies “to all entities.” State Farm has never
contended that it isn’t an “entity” within the meaning of § 362(a).
      Second, the stay applies to any “judicial, administrative, or
other action or proceeding against that debtor.” It doesn’t matter,
as State Farm asserts, whether it is seeking relief from the stay to
act “offensive[ly]” or “defensive[ly]”—i.e., whether it wants to raid
the estate or protect it. Br. of Appellant at 17. Rather, what matters
is whether the underlying “action or proceeding” is “against the
debtor.” Here, the “action” into which State Farm wants to inter-
vene—namely, the Rotells’ state-court wrongful-death action—is
indeed “against the debtor,” Gaime.
      Third, by intervening in the wrongful-death action in order
to vacate the resulting judgment, State Farm would “continu[e]”
that action—again, without respect to whether its proposed inter-
vention was for the purpose of benefiting Gaime. It is enough, we
think, that State Farm’s intervention would add an entry to the
wrongful-death action’s docket and require an additional court or-
der. See Continuation, Oxford English Dictionary (online ed.) (last
visited August 9, 2021) (“The causing of anything to continue or go
on.”).
      Finally, the adjectival phrase “[t]hat was or could have been
commenced before the commencement of the case under this title”
modifies the nominal phrase “action or proceeding.” Accordingly,
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8                          Opinion of the Court                      20-12240

it is irrelevant, as State Farm contends, that Florida law wouldn’t
have permitted it to file its motion to intervene before the trustee
had brought a bad-faith claim. The dispositive point is that the un-
derlying “action” against the debtor—i.e., the wrongful-death
suit—“was . . . commenced” before the bankruptcy petition. Be-
cause it was, State Farm cannot—without relief from the stay—do
anything that would “continu[e]” that action.
       Accordingly, we hold that State Farm’s effort to intervene in
the Rotells’ wrongful-death action falls within the terms of
§ 362(a)’s stay provision. 2
                                       B
       State Farm further argues that if the stay provision applies
to, and thus precludes, its motion to intervene in the wrongful-
death action, it will be deprived of due process because it will have
no forum in which to litigate the underlying validity of the wrong-
ful-death judgment against Gaime. Without citing relevant legal
authority, State Farm asserts that it must be permitted to intervene
in the wrongful-death action in order to challenge the validity of

2 Separately, State Farm asserts that the district court erred by invoking
§ 362(a)(3), which stays “any act to obtain possession of property of the estate
or of property from the estate or to exercise control over property of the es-
tate.” To be sure, the district court referenced § 362(a)(3), but in rejecting
State Farm’s arguments that the stay didn’t apply, it didn’t rely on that provi-
sion. So while State Farm is correct that § 362(a)(3) wouldn’t apply to it be-
cause it isn’t seeking to obtain or exercise control over the bankruptcy prop-
erty, that provision didn’t underlie the district court’s decision.
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20-12240               Opinion of the Court                         9

the judgment against Gaime and that the bankruptcy court’s and
district court’s orders enforcing the stay prohibit it from doing so.
At oral argument, State Farm directed our attention to a December
2020 order of the Hillsborough County Circuit Court holding, in
the context of the trustee’s bad-faith lawsuit, that State Farm lacked
“standing” under Florida law to challenge the underlying default
judgment against a third party, Gaime. Dawn Carapella v. State
Farm Fla. Ins. Co., No. 18-CA-007981 (13th Fla. Cir. Ct. Dec. 28,
2020).
        We find no merit in State Farm’s due process argument.
Due process requires only the “opportunity to be heard . . . at a
meaningful time and in a meaningful manner.” Armstrong v.
Manzo, 380 U.S. 545, 552 (1965) (quotation marks omitted); see
also Grannis v. Ordean, 234 U.S. 385, 394 (1914) (“The fundamental
requisite of due process of law is the opportunity to be heard.”).
State Farm has had two such opportunities. As we will explain, at
the first, State Farm voluntarily withdrew from the wrongful-death
action, and, at the second, it made its case to the state court han-
dling the bad-faith lawsuit but lost.
       Initially, after the Rotells had sued Gaime, State Farm made
a conscious decision—for whatever reason, strategic or other-
wise—to seek declaratory judgments that Gaime’s policies didn’t
cover her wrongdoing and the Rotells’ injuries. While those cases
were pending, State Farm then advised Gaime to reject the Rotells’
settlement offer. Once it successfully obtained the declaratory
judgments, State Farm terminated its defense of Gaime in the
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10                     Opinion of the Court                 20-12240

wrongful-death lawsuit. When it advised Gaime to reject the set-
tlement offer while seeking to alleviate itself of the duty to defend,
it assumed the risk that it might later face a bad-faith lawsuit. Now,
facing that suit, State Farm seeks, in effect, to unwind those previ-
ous decisions, or at least their consequences. Being denied that
chance doesn’t constitute a deprivation of due process.
       State Farm had yet another opportunity in which to contest
the validity of the wrongful-death judgment against Gaime when
it presented its argument—that the untimeliness of the Rotells’
fifth amended complaint violated Gaime’s due process rights and
thus rendered the judgment in the Rotells’ favor void—to the Hills-
borough County Circuit Court in the bad-faith action against it.
The fact that the court held that State Farm lacked “standing” to
do so under Florida law doesn’t mean that State Farm was denied
due process. “[D]ue process requires only that a person have a
meaningful opportunity to present his claims; it does not guarantee
success.” Am. Nat’l Bank & Tr. Co. v. City of Chicago, 826 F.2d
1547, 1550 (7th Cir. 1987). And, of course, if State Farm is dissatis-
fied with the Hillsborough County court’s order—either on due-
process grounds or otherwise—it can appeal that order up the
chain in the state-court system.
                                  C
       Lastly, State Farm contends that the bankruptcy court
abused its discretion by refusing to lift the stay and that the court
procedurally erred by requiring it to prove—rather than the trustee
to disprove—that there was cause to lift it. In particular, State Farm
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20-12240                Opinion of the Court                          11

contends that § 362(g)(2) of the Bankruptcy Code places the burden
of proof on the party opposing a motion to lift the automatic stay
to disprove the existence of cause.
       State Farm is correct that the bankruptcy court placed the
burden on it to show cause, rather than on the trustee to show the
absence of cause. State Farm is also correct that the bankruptcy
court erred in doing so. See 11 U.S.C. § 362(g)(2) (“[T]he party op-
posing [the lifting of the stay] has the burden of proof on all other
issues.”); In re Allstar Bldg. Prods., Inc., 834 F.2d 898, 899 (11th Cir.
1987) (en banc) (per curiam) (holding that the party opposing a mo-
tion for relief from the stay has the burden to show the absence of
cause to lift it). We hold, though, that any error here was harmless
because the trustee demonstrated that there was no cause to lift the
stay.
        “There is no set list of circumstances that a bankruptcy court
is required to consider in evaluating whether § 362(d)(1) cause ex-
ists to lift the automatic stay.” In re Feingold, 730 F.3d 1268, 1277
(11th Cir. 2013) (quotation marks omitted). Instead, in determin-
ing whether cause exists to lift the stay, courts look to the “totality
of the circumstances.” Id. Here, the bankruptcy court identified
and weighed the benefits and burdens of lifting the stay. It con-
cluded, correctly in our view, that State Farm had decided, for its
own reasons, to withdraw from Gaime’s defense in the wrongful-
death litigation and that it now wants “a second bite at the apple”
to relitigate that judgment. The court further concluded that al-
lowing it that second bite would unduly increase the bankruptcy
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12                     Opinion of the Court                20-12240

trustee’s administrative expenses. And, for reasons already ex-
plained, there is no grave unfairness to State Farm; it had the op-
portunity to contest the wrongful-death judgment’s validity as a
defense in the bad-faith lawsuit—even if the state trial court ulti-
mately rejected that defense. We see no reversible error in the
bankruptcy court’s refusal to lift the stay.
                                 IV
       For the foregoing reasons, we hold (1) that 11 U.S.C.
§ 362(a)’s automatic stay provision applies to State Farm’s motion
to intervene in the wrongful-death suit against Gaime, (2) that State
Farm hasn’t been deprived of due process, and (3) that there other-
wise was no cause to lift the stay.
      AFFIRMED.