Court Opinion

ID: 4680275
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-04-22 22:00:29.918392+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:03:53.888299
License: Public Domain

United States Court of Appeals
                        For the First Circuit

No. 20-1472

                    IN RE: DONALD C. KUPPERSTEIN,

                               Debtor,

                        DONALD C. KUPPERSTEIN,

                              Appellant,

                                  v.

   IRENE SCHALL, Personal Representative of the Estate of Fred
    Kuhn; and EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES,

                              Appellees.

          APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
               FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

              [Hon. Leo T. Sorokin, U.S. District Judge]

                                Before

                         Howard, Chief Judge,
                 Lipez and Thompson, Circuit Judges.

     David G. Baker for appellant.
     Roger Stanford, with whom Moses Smith, Markey & Walsh was on
brief, for appellee Irene B. Schall.
     Paul T. O'Neill, Assistant General Counsel, for appellee
Executive Office of Health and Human Services.
April 22, 2021
               THOMPSON, Circuit Judge.

                                      BACKGROUND

               The short story, sticking with only what is relevant

here, is that years ago, Donald C. Kupperstein, with the help of

his comrade, Thomas Sheedy, improperly entangled himself with a

piece of real property on Reservoir Street in Norton, Massachusetts

and    lined       his    pockets   with    rents   from   various    tenants   he

installed.1        In re Kupperstein, 943 F.3d 12, 15-16 (1st Cir. 2019).

That property belonged to the estate of Fred Kuhn (the estate is

now managed by Irene Schall) and that estate owed a debt to the

Massachusetts Office of Health and Human Services, better known as

"MassHealth."2           Id.   As a result of Kupperstein's disinterest in

relinquishing his claim to the property, all of these parties ended

up in Massachusetts Probate Court, Suffolk Superior Court, and

Massachusetts Land Court. Motions were filed, orders were entered,

and,       where    it    mattered,    Kupperstein     lost   on     the   merits.

Ultimately, the probate court voided the property's transfer (so

       We have previously detailed the made-for-TV movie about how
       1

Kupperstein   (who   remains   licensed   to   practice   law   in
Massachusetts) and Sheedy duped the only child of Fred Kuhn, the
property's owner, after Kuhn's death, into selling the property
for a "pittance" and both ultimately ended up owing a lot of money
to the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. See In re Kupperstein, 943
F.3d 12, 15 (1st Cir. 2019).
       2MassHealth is empowered to recover benefits from a
beneficiary's estate after death and, in this case, filed a
petition with the Massachusetts Probate Court to ensure payment.
See Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 118E, §§ 31, 32.

                                           - 3 -
that Kupperstein and Sheedy had no claim to it) and ordered the

duo to pay to MassHealth "any and all" rents collected from the

property.    Id. at 16-18.    Kupperstein and Sheedy disregarded the

probate court's order and continued to rent the property for their

own gain.   Id. at 17.   In mid-2017, Sheedy signed over his interest

in the property solely to Kupperstein, but neither the estate nor

MassHealth saw a dime.       Id.   So, on August 4, 2017, the probate

court held Kupperstein and Sheedy in contempt.

            Evidently unphased, Kupperstein rented the property to

new tenants about a month later.       Id.   The probate court did not

look kindly upon this and issued an order forbidding Kupperstein

from executing any agreements involving the property, voiding

anything he had previously executed, and banning Kupperstein,

Sheedy, and their agents from entering the property at all.       Id.

            On December 22, 2017, the probate court again found

Kupperstein and Sheedy in contempt and reiterated the order for

each to pay the rents they had been collecting to the estate or

MassHealth.3    Id.   The probate court also ordered that the pair

hand in any keys or other ways to access the property and all

     3 In the months since the last contempt order, Kupperstein
had sued the estate in Massachusetts Land Court, seeking a
declaration that he was the rightful owner of the property. He
had neglected to mention the litigation in the probate court and
the order that said otherwise. Once the land court got hip to
Kupperstein's game, it dismissed the case because it was brought
in bad faith and ordered that he pay attorneys' fees to MassHealth
and the estate for their trouble.

                                   - 4 -
documents and leases associated with the property.              Id.   Plus, the

probate court threatened to jail Kupperstein and Sheedy for thirty

days if they did not pay MassHealth $5,400.           Id.      Kupperstein and

Sheedy   turned   in   only   $3,000    and   no   keys   or    leases.     Id.

Unimpressed, the probate court set a hearing for January 12, 2018,

and directed each man to explain why he should not be jailed for

contempt for thirty days.       Id.

           On January 11, 2018, the day before his contempt hearing,

Kupperstein filed for bankruptcy in the United States Bankruptcy

Court for the District of Massachusetts.           Id. at 17-18.       To keep

things interesting, Kupperstein listed the Kuhn estate as his own

property, valued at $350,000.         Id.

           Kupperstein did show up for his January 12 court date

and explained to the probate court that it could not touch him

because his bankruptcy filing triggered an automatic stay of court

proceedings against him.        See 11 U.S.C. § 362(a).4          The probate

court was unmoved and instead put Kupperstein in a holding cell

for the day for violating the court's orders four times.                  In re

Kupperstein, 943 F.3d at 18.       The probate court yet again ordered

Kupperstein to give up the keys to the property, but he maintained

he did not have them.     Id.

     4 Generally, a bankruptcy filing causes an automatic stay that
halts other lawsuits against the debtor until a federal court lifts
the stay. 11 U.S.C. § 362(a).

                                   - 5 -
           At the next court date, Kupperstein was almost ordered

to serve his thirty-day sentence, but then produced $5,400 in cash

and the elusive keys to the property.           Id.

           Then,   he   vanished.         Id.    The    probate      court   held

Kupperstein in contempt twice more for missing three court dates

and continuing to violate its previous orders.               Id.    The probate

court ordered Kupperstein and Sheedy to pay over $50,000 in

outstanding rents and over $10,000 in attorneys' fees as sanctions

for their repeated flouting of the court's orders.                 Id.   To drive

its point home, the court warned that Kupperstein and Sheedy would

be jailed for thirty days unless they worked out a payment plan

with MassHealth.    Id.    The probate court issued warrants for his

arrest, but Kupperstein remained at large.             Id.

           Tired of waiting for Kupperstein to return from his

sojourn, Schall, in her capacity as the estate's representative,

and MassHealth each filed motions in the bankruptcy court to lift

the automatic stay as it applied to any state court actions, so

those cases could proceed.5         Id.     Kupperstein (through counsel

because he was still AWOL) opposed those motions and moved that

the   bankruptcy   court   hold   MassHealth     in    contempt      and   impose

      5For instance, Suffolk Superior Court had entered judgment
ordering that Kupperstein pay the amounts ordered by the probate
court, plus over $6,000 in costs and fees awarded by the land
court, and $575,240.37 to MassHealth, representing three times the
amount initially owed to MassHealth by the estate.          In re
Kupperstein, 943 F.3d at 18 n.6.

                                    - 6 -
monetary sanctions because MassHealth participated in the probate

court's various contempt proceedings in violation of the automatic

stay.    Id. at 18.

            In nearly identical orders, the bankruptcy court found

"good cause" to "lift[]" the stay and ordered that the state court

actions could proceed, except that Schall and MassHealth could

"not seek to enforce against . . . Kupperstein, any judgment with

respect   to     the    $191,741.79   MassHealth   reimbursement   claim    or

attempt to collect from Kupperstein all or any part thereof."              The

court lifted the automatic stay in the state court actions "[i]n

all other respects . . . including the assessment by the courts

against Kupperstein of any restitution and sanction amounts."               In

support of its decision, the bankruptcy court cited In re Dingley,

852 F.3d 1143 (9th Cir. 2017) and Alpern v. Lieb, 11 F.3d 689 (7th

Cir.    1993),    two    cases   where   appellate   courts   affirmed     the

application of the so-called "police power" exception to the

automatic stay.

            Soon after, the bankruptcy court denied Kupperstein's

motion to hold MassHealth in contempt and to impose sanctions.              In

re Kupperstein, 943 F.3d at 19.          Citing the same cases it cited in

its orders granting relief from the stay, the bankruptcy court

analyzed the police power exception in more detail and noted that

"[a] court's imposition and enforcement of a monetary sanction for

contemptuous conduct is an exercise of its police power and is

                                      - 7 -
excluded from the automatic stay by Bankruptcy Code § 362(b)(4)."

So, the state court actions that "involved the imposition and

enforcement      of    sanction   awards   against    [Kupperstein]   did   not

violate    the        automatic   stay"    and,    therefore,     neither   did

MassHealth's participation in those proceedings.

            Miffed, Kupperstein appealed those decisions to the

district court, but fared no better.6             In re Kupperstein, 943 F.3d

at 19.    The district court read all three orders "as having rested

-- at least in part, as a separate and independent ground -- on a

discretionary determination that relief from the automatic stay

was warranted 'for cause' under § 362(d)(1)."             In re Kupperstein,

Nos. 18-11772-LTS, 18-11851-LTS, 2020 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 70883, at

*11 (D. Mass. Apr. 20, 2020).         The district court then noted that

Kupperstein waived any argument on that point by failing to address

it in his briefing.          Id. at *12.     Taking a belt and suspenders

approach, the district court further concluded that the bankruptcy

court did not abuse its discretion when finding the balance of the

equities favored lifting the stay.           Id.     Turning to the denial of

Kupperstein's motion to hold MassHealth in contempt, the district

court    affirmed      the   bankruptcy    court's    decision,   echoing   the

bankruptcy court's reasoning.         Id. at *14-17.

     6 That appeal first bounced from the district court to us (to
deal with a procedural issue) and then back to the district court
with instructions to resolve the appeal on the merits. See In re
Kupperstein, 943 F.3d at 15.

                                     - 8 -
          Kupperstein now appeals, asking us to hold that the

automatic stay is still in effect and remand this case to the

bankruptcy court to sanction MassHealth for violating that stay.7

                     THE POLICE POWER EXCEPTION

          When   a   debtor   files   for   bankruptcy,    the   petition

activates an automatic stay of various judicial and administrative

proceedings against the debtor.        See 11 U.S.C. § 362(a).        The

intention is to "give the debtor breathing room by 'stop[ping] all

collection efforts, all harassment, and all foreclosure actions.'"

In re Soares, 107 F.3d 969, 975 (1st Cir. 1997) (quoting H.R. Rep.

No. 95-595, at 340 (1977)).    To that end, the stay forbids judicial

proceedings against the debtor to progress (even those that had

begun before the commencement of the bankruptcy case) until a

federal court lifts the stay or closes the case.          See id. (citing

11 U.S.C. § 362(a)).

          The filing of a bankruptcy petition does not stay a

governmental proceeding by "a governmental unit . . . to enforce

[its] police and regulatory power, including the enforcement of a

judgment other than a money judgment, obtained in an action or

     7 Without any support, Kupperstein also instructs us that we
ought to order his "release from any further incarceration." Even
if we had a stack of "Get Out of Jail Free" cards, we seriously
doubt their application to state court contempt proceedings. Plus,
we note that at the time his brief was filed, the record indicated
Kupperstein had returned, was briefly in custody, and was already
again at liberty.

                                 - 9 -
proceeding by the governmental unit to enforce such governmental

unit's or organization's police or regulatory power."            11 U.S.C.

§ 362(b)(4).

            To determine if the police power exception applies, we

evaluate whether the government's action is to effectuate a "public

policy" or to further its own "pecuniary interest."               Parkview

Adventist Med. Ctr. v. United States, 842 F.3d 757, 763 (1st Cir.

2016) (quoting In re Nortel Networks, Inc., 669 F.3d 128, 140 (3d

Cir. 2011)).    If "the governmental action 'is designed primarily

to protect the public safety and welfare,'" then it passes the

"public policy" test and is excepted from the automatic stay.           Id.

(quoting In re McMullen, 386 F.3d 320, 325 (1st Cir. 2004)).            In

contrast, if the government is attempting to proceed against the

debtor for a "pecuniary purpose," that is, "to recover property

from the estate," the police power exception offers no shelter and

the   proceeding   is   stayed.    Id.     This   exception   intends   to

discourage   debtors    from   filing   bankruptcy   petitions   "for   the

purpose of evading impending governmental efforts to invoke the

governmental police powers to enjoin or deter ongoing debtor

conduct which would seriously threaten the public safety and

welfare."    In re McMullen, 386 F.3d at 324-27 (distinguishing

proceedings to protect the public in the future from those that

"seek recompense for [] alleged financial losses").

                                  - 10 -
            Though we have not opined precisely on the question at

hand, the bankruptcy court cited in its orders two cases where

sister    circuits    applied    the   "public    policy"    or    "pecuniary

interest"    test    for   the   police   power   exception       to   contempt

proceedings.    In In re Dingley, the Ninth Circuit held that civil

contempt proceedings were excepted from a bankruptcy's automatic

stay because those "proceedings are intended to effectuate the

court's     public    policy     interest    in    deterring       litigation

misconduct."    852 F.3d at 1147-48.      In Alpern v. Lieb, the Seventh

Circuit similarly held that a proceeding to impose sanctions under

Fed. R. Civ. P. 11 was excepted from the automatic stay of

bankruptcy, even though the sanctions were monetary where the court

ordered the debtor to pay attorneys' fees for his misconduct in a

different proceeding.      11 F.3d at 690.    Dismissing the notion that

a Rule 11 proceeding is not excepted, even though the result could

be the payment of money to an individual, the court noted that the

purpose of a Rule 11 sanction is to punish "unprofessional conduct

in litigation, . . . just as an order of restitution in a criminal

case is a sanction even when it directs that payment be made to a

private person rather than to the government."              Id.    Relying on

these cases, the bankruptcy court wrote that the purpose of civil

contempt proceedings is not to line the government's pockets, but

"to uphold the dignity of the court and the judicial process, to

punish bad behavior and to educate the public in the importance of

                                   - 11 -
obeying court orders."          In re Kupperstein, 588 B.R. 279, 280-81

(Bankr. D. Mass. 2018).

                               STANDARD OF REVIEW

            Where, as here, we serve as a "second tier of appellate

review," we look through the district court's determination and

analyze the bankruptcy court's decision directly.                 In re Montreal,

Me. & Atl. Ry., Ltd., 956 F.3d 1, 5-6 (1st Cir. 2020).                  As usual,

we review the court's factual findings for clear error and accord

no deference to its legal conclusions.               Id. at 6.   When considering

the type of orders at issue here (decisions on motions for relief

from   a   stay    and   for   sanctions),      we    only   reverse    where    the

bankruptcy court abused its discretion.                  See In re Soares, 107

F.3d at 973 n.4; Hawkins v. Dep't of Health & Human Servs. for

N.H., Comm'r, 665 F.3d 25, 31 (1st Cir. 2012).                    The bankruptcy

court abuses its discretion "if it ignores 'a material factor

deserving of significant weight,' relies upon 'an improper factor'

or makes 'a serious mistake in weighing proper factors.'"                      In re

Fin. Oversight & Mgmt. Bd. for P.R., 939 F.3d 340, 346 (1st Cir.

2019) (quoting In re Whispering Pines Estates, Inc., 369 B.R. 752,

757 (B.A.P. 1st Cir. 2007)).

                                     OUR TAKE

            The core dispute is whether the probate court's contempt

proceedings       and    resultant   penalties        are    excepted   from     the

automatic stay (as the bankruptcy court held they were) and

                                     - 12 -
therefore MassHealth's participation did not merit sanctions or

whether those proceedings are not excepted, opening a can of worms

about whether the bankruptcy court likely abused its discretion in

partially lifting the stay and not sanctioning MassHealth.8      We

begin with a de novo review of the legal question of the reach of

the police power exception and then evaluate whether the bankruptcy

court abused its discretion in each of the challenged orders.

                    The Police Power Exception

          First, all agree we ought to evaluate the probate court's

orders through the overlapping lenses of "two interrelated, fact-

dominated inquiries":   the "public policy" test and the "pecuniary

purpose" test.   In re McMullen, 386 F.3d at 325.    MassHealth and

Schall argue that the probate court was merely serving a compelling

public policy of enforcing compliance with court orders.    For many

months prior to his bankruptcy filing, the probate court had been

ordering Kupperstein to follow the rules, stop masquerading like

he owned the Kuhn house and turn over the rent he illicitly

collected, and pay the attorneys' fees he forced others to expend

each time he failed to comply.    Kupperstein consistently declined.

     8 There does not appear to be any dispute that the superior
court, land court, and probate court fall within the Code's
definition of "governmental unit," defined as a "department,
agency, or instrumentality of . . . a State, a Commonwealth, a
District, a Territory, a municipality, or a foreign state." 11
U.S.C. § 101(27).    The question is more precisely whether the
contempt proceedings are excepted from the stay.

                                 - 13 -
            Kupperstein, for his part, sees this as a classic case

of the government pursuing a pecuniary interest because there is

money involved in the probate court's orders.                 But that ignores

the full range of the probate court's instructions.                   The probate

court's contempt orders included instructions to Kupperstein to

turn over keys to the property, to cease leasing the property to

tenants as the landlord and to not engage in any new leases, and

to turn over any documents he had previously executed regarding

renting the property.        These orders of the court are plainly not

an attempt to collect money and there is simply nothing in the

"pecuniary    interest"     test    or    the   Bankruptcy    Code,    generally,

forbidding a court from ordering that a debtor hand over the keys

to a house that he does not own.                 Rather, a court (or other

governmental agency) "acts in the interest of public safety and

welfare" when it ensures unscrupulous actors do not have keys to

property over which they have no ownership. See In re Spookyworld,

Inc., 346 F.3d 1, 9 (1st Cir. 2003) (holding that a town's

proceedings to enjoin a company for failing to install sprinkler

systems in its structures in violation of the building code

constituted actions undertaken for the benefit of public safety);

In   re   McMullen,   386   F.3d    at    326-27   (finding    that    a   board's

proceedings to revoke an unscrupulous real estate broker's license

constituted    actions      taken    to    benefit    the    public     welfare).

Kupperstein has no counter-argument to this (not that a strong one

                                     - 14 -
could be conjured anyway) because he entirely ignores it in his

brief, waiving any challenge to the bankruptcy court's order

lifting the stay as it applies to those provisions of the probate

court's order.   See Marek v. Rhode Island, 702 F.3d 650, 655 (1st

Cir. 2012).

          Turning to the aspects of the probate court's order

involving money, Kupperstein does expend many pages of his brief

on the argument that the police power exception does not apply to

MassHealth's attempts to collect the underlying debt in the probate

court, and he's right.     But, the record shows that no one is

currently trying to collect on that judgment. The bankruptcy court

order explicitly maintains the automatic stay for any activity

related to judgments against Kupperstein for the nearly $200,000

owed to MassHealth via the Kuhn property.   And, post-petition, no

court ordered Kupperstein to satisfy the judgment against him.   As

such, Kupperstein's extensive argument on this point is merely

fighting a straw man, and we need engage no further.

          So, finally, what about the aspects of the probate

court's contempt orders that require Kupperstein to pay sanctions

for repeated violations of court orders and disgorge the rents he

collected (in violation of court orders) from tenants (living on

a property over which Kupperstein had no legal control)? He argues

that any attempt by the probate court to force Kupperstein to hand

over so much as a dime is automatically for a "pecuniary purpose."

                              - 15 -
But this ignores the distinction between a judgment prematurely

awarding assets to creditors ahead of the process permitted by the

bankruptcy court (exactly the sort of thing the automatic stay is

intended to prevent, see In re Spookyworld, 346 F.3d at 10) and an

order commanding disgorgement of ill-gotten gains accumulated in

direct violation of a court order.             Federal courts regularly

approve the application of the police power exception to the

latter.    See United States v. LASR Clinic of Summerlin, LLC, No.

2:19-cv-00467-GMN-NJK, 2020 WL 6044550, at *2 (D. Nev. Oct. 12,

2020) (approving of police power exception to permit the government

to pursue False Claims Act case to recover improper government

payments to debtor); In re RGV Smiles by Rocky L. Salinas D.D.S.

P.A., Nos. 20-70209, 20-70210, 2021 WL 112182, at *6 (Bankr. S.D.

Tex. Jan. 6, 2021) (applying police power exception to state

Medicaid    fraud   statute   to   permit   government   to   pursue   funds

illegally claimed by debtor); Al Stewart v. Holland Acquisitions,

Inc., No. 2:15-cv-01094, 2021 WL 1037617, at *1 (W.D. Pa. Mar. 18,

2021) (permitting Fair Labor Standards Act case to proceed under

police power exception, including action for back pay, where debtor

allegedly withheld pay legally owed to employees).            The automatic

stay's "main purpose is to prevent some private creditors from

gaining priority on other creditors."        In re Spookyworld, 346 F.3d

at 10.     Neither MassHealth nor Schall would gain any priority on

Kupperstein's other creditors because the bankruptcy court order

                                   - 16 -
does not permit the probate court to command Kupperstein to pay

his debts to either party.        Any claim MassHealth or Schall has to

Kupperstein's estate remains unchanged by this order.            See Chao v.

Hosp. Staffing Servs., Inc., 270 F.3d 374, 389 (6th Cir. 2001)

(applying pecuniary purpose test to ensure government action would

not give certain creditors an "advantage" over other creditors).

             Even if the financial aspects of the probate court's

orders arguably serve a pecuniary purpose (though we hold they do

not), that still would not change the result of our analysis.

Where the application of the police power exception contains

various elements, some of which effectuate a public policy and

others of which could involve pecuniary interests, we examine the

totality of the circumstances and what "the governmental action

'is designed primarily to [do].'"           Parkview Adventist Med. Ctr.,

842 F.3d at 763 (quoting In re McMullen, 386 F.3d at 325).              Here,

the   rent   payments    and   attorneys'    fees   only   manifested   after

Kupperstein    ignored     the   probate    court's    earlier   orders   to

relinquish the keys, stop renting the house to others, and stop

pocketing the proceeds.        Even after the bankruptcy filing, some of

the probate court's contempt orders did not demand the payment of

any money and, instead, reiterated the court's primary desire to

force Kupperstein to cede control of the house.            Kupperstein's own

refusal of earlier orders that had no money at stake created this

situation and our case law is clear that we do not reward debtors

                                   - 17 -
who submit bankruptcy petitions to avoid governmental orders.                See

In re McMullen, 386 F.3d at 324-25 (noting that the police power

exception discourages the submission of bankruptcy petitions "for

the purpose of evading impending governmental efforts to invoke

the governmental police powers to enjoin and deter ongoing debtor

conduct    which   would   seriously   threaten      the   public   safety   or

welfare").    Put another way, "[a] litigant should not be allowed

to delay the imposition of sanctions indefinitely by the expedient

of declaring bankruptcy."        Alpern, 11 F.3d at 690.            Any way we

slice it, the probate court's contempt orders pass the public

policy test and are not to serve a pecuniary purpose.

            Kupperstein raises two additional arguments that merit

our discussion.      Pointing to 11 U.S.C. § 362(b)(4), he believes

that the "plain language" of the Code makes our resolution of this

case "crystal clear."      On its face, the Code's plain language does

not address this question at all.              Yet, best we can cobble

together, based on the assumptions wrapped up in Kupperstein's

contentions, he seems to be trying to tell us the following:                 the

police    power    exception   does    not   apply    to   enforcing    "money

judgement[s]" and any court action with money involved is an action

to enforce a "money judgment."          Kupperstein's argument here is

actually a repackaging of his contention that the probate court

order is for a pecuniary purpose.             On that point, we remain

unmoved.

                                  - 18 -
            Finally,   Kupperstein      explains,   we   are   bound    by   our

precedent in Parker v. United States, which he says stands for the

proposition that civil contempt proceedings are for a pecuniary

purpose and are therefore subject to the automatic stay.               153 F.2d

66 (1st Cir. 1946).         But Parker is inapplicable here.           In that

case, issued prior to the promulgation of the Bankruptcy Code, the

court considered whether a pre-bankruptcy civil contempt award was

dischargeable after the close of bankruptcy.             Id. at 67-68.       The

court did not wrestle with any of the questions at issue here.

Kupperstein   cites    to    it   for   its   lengthy    discussion     of   the

differences between civil and criminal sanctions, but there is no

dispute that the probate court orders here are civil in nature

(having been imposed to coerce Kupperstein's compliance with valid

Massachusetts court orders) and that the Code permits some civil

actions to proceed during the automatic stay.                  See 11 U.S.C.

§ 362(b).

            With no more arguments to address and considering the

totality of the circumstances, we conclude the probate court's

contempt orders are excepted from the automatic stay under the

police power exception.9

     9 Because we resolve the issues on appeal based on the police
power exception, we need not address the bankruptcy court's lifting
of the automatic stay "for cause" under 11 U.S.C. § 362(d)(1). We
note here, however, that Kupperstein's argument on appeal that he
"has carefully reviewed the appellees' motions for relief from the
automatic stay, and can find no reference to that section in the

                                   - 19 -
                  The Merits of Kupperstein's Appeals

             With the law on this issue firmly established, our

resolution on the merits of the bankruptcy court's orders becomes

simple.      The bankruptcy court did not abuse its discretion when

lifting the stay as it applied to the probate court's contempt

proceedings because those proceedings were excepted from the stay

under the police power exception.        Similarly, the bankruptcy court

did not abuse its discretion when it declined to hold MassHealth

in contempt or levy any sanctions against it for its participation

in the probate court's contempt proceedings.             Those proceedings

were   not     stayed   by   the     automatic   stay,   so   MassHealth's

participation was proper.

                                   CONCLUSION

             The bankruptcy court's decisions were correct and the

district court properly affirmed.         We affirm the district court's

order and award costs to the appellees.

motions" is unavailing and misleading, as MassHealth's memorandum
in support of its motion for stay relief, which was before the
bankruptcy court, clearly lays out an entire section of argument
premised on 11 U.S.C. § 362(d)(1). Indeed, it is Kupperstein who
should be concerned about waiver, as he doubles down in his
appellate briefing by failing to address the merits of the
§ 362(d)(1) argument, only arguing waiver and that the bankruptcy
court's use of "good cause" was boilerplate language, despite the
fact that the court was briefed on this issue.       The district
court's emphasis on the alternative grounds of § 362(d)(1) gave
Kupperstein ample notice and opportunity to address the merits of
any such argument.

                                    - 20 -