Court Opinion

ID: 805990
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2012-08-06 14:13:06+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T18:00:18.072403
License: Public Domain

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
File Name; 123084011.06 |.'. l |_ E D

NO. 11-1848  6 

UNITED s'rATEs C0URT 01= APPEALS l
FoR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT LEONARD GREEN. clerk

ln re: EDGAR ILILIAN DIE`,TR_ICH,

EDGAR .TULIAN D]ETR_ICH,
ON APPEA]_, FROM TI-]E
UNITED STATES DISTRICT
COURT FOR THE EASTERN
DISTRICT OF MICH]GAN

Appellant,
v.

PETER K. TIERNAN, M.D.,

\-_/\.,/\_/\_/\_/_\_/\_/\_/\.»/\¢-¢’\@/\@/\J\_/

Appellee.

BEFORE: ROGERS, KETHLEDGE, Circuit .Tudges, and MARBLEY, District Judge.`
ROGERS, Circuit Judge. This appeal involves two separate bankruptcy court proceedings:
(1) Edgar Dietrich’s main bankruptcy case, and (2) a separate adversary proceeding brought by Peter
Tiernan, one of Dietrich’s creditors. The bankruptcy court entered an order to compromise in
Dietrich’s main bankruptcy case, his appeal from which was dismissed by the district court. Later,
the district court dismissed an appeal from the adversary proceeding, because the district court
refused to reach the same order to compromise from the main bankruptcy case in that appeal.

Dietn'ch appeals h'om the dismissal from the adversary proceeding, again attacking the compromise

°The Honorable Algenon L. Marbley, United States District Judge for the Southern District
of Ohio, sitting by designation

No. l l -l 848
In re: Ea'gar Dietrich

order. The scope of this appeal does not encompass the compromise order, since it was issued and
appealed in the main bankruptcy case, and Dietrich presents no reason to overturn those orders that
are subject to the instant appeal.

Tieman obtained a $2,193,314.89 judgment against Dietrich in state court on a legal
malpractice claim. Dietrich then filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, which the bankruptcy court
converted to a Chapter 7 bankruptcy on january 12, 2009. This main bankruptcy proceeding is
labeled Case Number 08-68294 in the bankruptcy docket.

On February 10, 2010, the bankruptcy court issued an order approving a compromise of claim
in the main bankruptcy case. The order sought to effect a compromise between Tieman and the
trustee of the bankruptcy estate. Among other things, the district court ordered that Dietrich’s
interest in the state court appeal of the legal malpractice suit be transferred to 'I`iernan, so that
Tieman could dismiss the appeal. Dietrich filed a notice of appeal regarding the order in the district
court. However, Dietrich failed to file the record on appeal, the statement of issues presented, or a
brief within the requisite time. The district court dismissed the case on November 9, 2010, for
failing to comply with the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure. Dietrich did not appeal that
decision.

The adversary proceeding began on ]uly 24, 2009, when Tieman filed an adversary case in
bankruptcy court against Dietrich, alleging that Dietrich was using alter-ego companies and
fraudulent property transfers to conceal his assets. This adversary proceeding is labeled Case

Number 09-05540 in the bankruptcy docket. Tieman’s complaint contained four counts, but the

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No. I I -I 848
fn re: Edgar Dietrich

bankruptcy court granted summary judgment in Dietrich’s favor on one of the counts on February
4, 2010, leaving three remaining counts for trial in the adversary proceeding.

On March 25, 2010, Tieman filed a motion for default judgment in the adversary case.
Tieman alleged that Dietrich and his family had demonstrated an unwillingness to comply with
discovery requests, including repeatedly failing to appear for depositions. Tieman requested
sanctions that included a default judgment in his favor on the remaining claims in his complaint,
pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. Proc. 37(b). The bankruptcy court entered a default judgment in Tieman’s
favor on those three counts on June 3, 2010. Dietrich did not appeal the judgment at that point, and
instead filed a motion to vacate, which the bankruptcy court denied on November 23, 2010 because
"Dietrich has not presented any arguments not already ruled upon.”

Dietrich appealed the denial of the motion to vacate in the adversary case to the district court,
which dismissed the appeal on June 20, 2011. The district court noted that though the appeal
purported to challenge the denial of the motion to vacate, "the majority of Dietrich’s brief is spent
challenging the February 10, 2010 order [to compromise]” in the main bankruptcy case, which had
already been appealed. Since Dietrich offered "no basis for reversing the decision reached in the
prior appeal," the district court did not consider the February 10 order further. As for the November
23 order in the adversary case, the district court held that Dietrich’s appeal lacked merit. It pointed
out that his brief "makes no argument as to how the Bankruptcy Court erred in denying the Motion

to Vacate," and so there was no basis for reversal. Dietrich appeals.

No. 11-1848
In re: Edgar Dietrich

As in the district court, Dietrich spends the entirety of his brief on appeal arguing that the
February 10 order in the main bankruptcy case was inappropriate. But this appeal does not include
that order in its purview for a number of reasons. First, the February 10 order appeared in the main
bankruptcy case, not the adversary proceeding from which this appeal arises. Inthese circumstances,
the main bankruptcy case and adversary proceeding must be treated as distinct for the purpose of
appeal. They have separate docket numbers, separate issues, and separate parties. Dietrich argues
that "bankruptcy law is well settled that a bankruptcy case and related adversary proceedings
comprise one single case," but offers almost no caselaw from our circuit to support his assertion.
In the only case he does cite, In re McLaren, 990 F.2d 850 (6th Cir. 1993), the issue was whether
the bankruptcy court had jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 157 to adjudicate a suit by a third-party
creditor in a Chapter 11 case. The court declared that it did, because such proceedings fit into the
statute’s defmition of "core proceedings." McLaren, 990 F.2d at 853. Dietrich asks us to take the
McLaren court’ s conclusion that an adversary proceeding may be a “core proceeding" for purposes
of district court jurisdiction, and interpret it to mean that an adversary proceeding is part of the
“core” of a bankruptcy case for purposes of appeal. This is a tortured reading of the case law that
makes no sense, and the cases Dietrich brings f`rom other circuits are similarly not on point.

Second, Dietrich argues that though the November 23 order appears only on the adversary
proceeding docket, it is a final order in the main bankruptcy case, and so its appeal includes all
underlying issues. lt is generally true that an appeal nom a f`mal judgment brings into its purview

previous interlocutory orders, but the rule applies to orders in the same case. Moreover, appeals

_4_

No. 1 1 -] 848
In re.' Ea'gar Dietrich

from rulings on motions for relief from judgment under Fed. R. Civ. Proc. Rule 60(b) "do[] not bring
up the underlying judgment for review." Br'owder' v. Dr`r., Dept. of Corr. of Illinoz's, 434 U.S. 257,
263 11.7 (1978); see also Jr'nks' v. Alliedsignal, Inc., 250 F.3d 381, 385 (6th Cir. 2001). Since the
November 23 order is such a ruling, even the June 3 order should not be examined in the appeal,
much less the totally unrelated February 10 order, Dietrich’s argument is further weakened by the
fact that, as already explained, the November 23 order from which he appeals does not appear on the
main bankruptcy case docket, but only on the adversary proceeding docket.

Finally, since Dietrich has already appealed the February 10 order in the main bankruptcy
proceeding, he is not entitled to another chance to do so. He offers no argument as to why the
district court’s dismissal of his appeal in the main bankruptcy case should be set aside, nor why he
should be allowed to argue regarding issues already dismissed. The district court was right not to
consider the February 10 order in its discussion.

As for the November 23 order that is in fact the subject of this appeal, Dietrich offers no
briefing regarding its appropriateness, nor does he allege any clear error on the part of the bankruptcy
court in issuing it. Dietrich has waived any arguments regarding the order from which he actually
appeals.

We affirm the judgment of the district court.