Based on these findings, the Court (1) is reducing the combined sanction from $225,000 to $175,000 in the Gravel case, reducing the combined sanction from $125,000 to $100,000 in the Beaulieu case, and leaving intact the sanction of $25,000 in the Knisley case; and (2) directing PHH to pay the portion of the sanctions allocable to PHH's violation of the Rule 3002.1 in each of the three cases, i.e., $25,000 per case, to the Trustee, and directing PHH to pay the portion of the sanctions allocable to PHH's violation of the Debtor Current Orders, i.e., $150,000 in the Gravel case and $75,000 in the Beaulieu case, to Legal Services Vermont (f/k/a Legal Services Law Line of Vermont).
I. JURISDICTION
The Court has jurisdiction over these contested matters pursuant to
II. PROCEDURAL HISTORY AND DIRECTION FROM THE DISTRICT COURT
On September 12, 2016, this Court entered an Order granting the Trustee's motions to sanction PHH, disallowing PHH's post-petition charges, and directing PHH to pay sanctions of $275,000, $175,000 and $25,000, respectively, in the Gravel, Beaulieu, and Knisley cases, to Legal Services Law Line of Vermont (Gravel, docs. ## 82, 83; Beaulieu, docs. ## 99, 100;
[*879] Knisley, docs. ## 55, 56) (the "Sanctions Decision").[1] On September 21, 2016, PHH filed a notice of appeal (doc. # 87). On December 18, 2017, the U.S. District Court (Crawford, J.) issued its decision vacating this Court's decision and remanding the matter to this Court (doc. # 104, the "Remand Decision"). Thereafter, the Debtors and Trustee filed an appeal of the District Court's Remand Decision, in the Second Circuit Court of Appeals. That Court dismissed the appeal, finding the Remand Decision was not a final order (doc. # 109). Thus, this matter was once again before this Court.
In the Remand Decision, the District Court observes that "[t]he basis for the sanctions was the admitted violation of Bankruptcy Rule 3002.1" (doc. # 104, p. 1), and PHH's violation of Debtor Current Orders in two of the three cases (doc. # 104, pp. 4, 5). The District Court described the scope of the appeal as limited: PHH's challenge to this Court's imposition of sanctions (in the amount of $225,000 in the Gravel case, $125,000 in the Beaulieu case, and $25,000 in the Knisley case[2] ). The District Court remanded the matter with instructions that this Court reconsider the amount of sanctions, focusing on this Court's authority to only impose sanctions that are "short of punitive sanctions of the scope and type [this Court previously] imposed in these cases" (doc. # 104, p. 17).
III. LEGAL ISSUES ON REMAND
The District Court remanded this matter to this Court to make a single determination: In light of PHH's violations of Rule 3002.1 and the Debtor Current Orders in these three cases, and consistent with the caselaw it highlighted, what sanctions are less than serious and, as such, within this Court's authority to impose?[3]
To fulfill that remand, and determine the appropriate amount of sanctions to impose on PHH for its misconduct in these cases, the Court analyzes six component legal issues: First, does this Court have the authority to impose punitive sanctions on PHH for its violations of Bankruptcy Rule 3002.1 and, if so, what is the source of that authority? Second, does this Court have the authority to impose sanctions on PHH for its violations of Debtor Current Orders and, if so, what is the source of that authority? Third, what guidance can be drawn from the decisions favorably cited by the District Court in its Remand Decision, as well as any pertinent Second Circuit or Supreme Court caselaw, as to the scope and size of punitive sanctions this Court is authorized to impose? Fourth, what weight should this Court assign to[*880] factors such as PHH's corporate status, its substantial financial resources, and its prior violations of the same duties, in deciding what punitive sanctions are warranted here? Fifth, is there authority to adjust the caselaw-established caps defining what is a serious sanction, and what is less than a serious sanction, to reflect the passage of time and the present value of those dollar amount caps? Sixth, in the context of the particular facts presented in these cases, and the interest of justice, to whom should PHH pay the sanctions this Court imposes in each of these cases?
IV. FINDINGS OF FACT ESSENTIAL TO REMAND
Since, as the District Court observed, "[t]he facts giving rise to [the instant] appeal were not in dispute before the Bankruptcy Court and are not challenged on appeal" (doc. # 104, p. 2), the Court recites only those findings of fact that are essential to fulfilling the remand.
In the Gravel case, this Court had entered an order on May 20, 2016, determining Mr. and Mrs. Gravel had cured all prepetition mortgage defaults and were current on all postpetition mortgage payments to PHH (a "Debtor Current Order"). That order declared
the debtors, by their payments through the Office of the Chapter 13 Trustee, have made all payments due during the pendency of this case through April 1, 2016, including all monthly payments and any other charges or amounts due under their mortgage with PHH Mortgage Corporation.
(doc. # 74) (emphasis added). On May 25, 2016, five days after entry of the Debtor Current Order, PHH sent the Debtors a mortgage statement for the month of May 2016 which, contrary to the recently entered Debtor Current Order, asserted the Debtors owed PHH property inspection fees of $258.75. The Trustee filed a motion seeking an order finding PHH to be in contempt and imposing sanctions on PHH (doc. # 75). PHH opposed that relief, arguing, inter alia, that this was a one-time error (doc. # 77). The Trustee vigorously disputed that assertion, pointing out that (i) PHH had sent out at least fifteen other mortgage statements that included postpetition fees and expenses without filing a single Rule 3002.1(c) notice, (ii) PHH had been chastised by another bankruptcy court for violating Rule 3002.1(c), see In re Owens, 2014 Bankr. LEXIS 163 (Bankr. W.D.N.C. 2014), (iii) PHH had assessed improper charges in other cases in this District, and (iv) this Court had previously imposed a consensual sanction of $9,000 on PHH, in this case, based on PHH's repeated misapplication of mortgage payments and issuance of dozens of erroneous monthly mortgage statements to Mr. and Mrs. Gravel for over two years (see doc. # 49). The Trustee claimed sanctions were warranted and necessary based on PHH's flagrant violation of both Rule 3002.1 and the Debtor Current Order in this case.
The factual and procedural posture of the Beaulieu case is substantially similar to that of the Gravel case: On May 5, 2016, the Court entered a Debtor Current Order, determining Mr. and Mrs. Beaulieu had cured all prepetition mortgage defaults and were current on all postpetition mortgage payments due to PHH (case # 11-10281, doc. # 82). Notwithstanding entry of that Order, less than three weeks later, on May 25, 2016, PHH sent out a monthly statement that included old charges (an NSF fee of $30 and a property inspection fee of $56.25) - charges for which it had never sent a Rule 3002.1(c) notice. On June 14, 2016, the Trustee filed a motion for contempt and sanctions (doc. # 90, the "Beaulieu Sanctions Motion"), essentially articulating the same arguments[*881] and seeking the same relief as in the Gravel Sanctions Motion, with regard to both PHH's failure to comply with Rule 3002.1 and PHH's violation of the Debtor Current Order. PHH filed opposition to the Beaulieu Sanctions Motion (doc. # 95), and the Trustee filed a response to that opposition (doc. # 96), both of which contained the same arguments they had made in the Gravel case. The facts of the Beaulieu case differ materially from the Gravel case in only three respects: (i) PHH charged postpetition fees to the Beaulieus' account on dates, and in amounts, that differed from the Gravels; (ii) PHH did not respond to the Trustee's motion for final determination before the Debtor Current Order was entered in Beaulieu; and (iii) PHH was not previously sanctioned in the Beaulieu case.
PHH issued incorrect mortgage statements in the Knisley case, as well, but there was no Debtor Current Order yet in this case. Therefore, the Trustee's motion for contempt and sanctions in Knisley was limited to PHH's failure to comply with Rule 3002.1 (doc. # 50, the "Knisley Sanctions Motion"). The Trustee alleged in this case that PHH issued a monthly mortgage statement on May 25, 2016 that included charges more than 180 days old ($246.50 in property inspection fees and $124.50 in late charges), without having filed the required and corresponding Rule 3002.1(c) notices. PHH opposed the Knisley Sanctions Motion (doc. # 51), and the Trustee responded to that opposition (doc. # 52), both of which set forth the same arguments made in the other two cases, with respect to PHH's Rule 3002.1 violation.
This Court found below, and the District Court left undisturbed, that PHH was in consistent violation of Rule 3002.1 for 25 months in each of the three cases, and sent 25 incorrect statements to each of the Debtors.[4] That is to say, on 75 separate occasions, PHH failed to detect that its borrower was current, or erroneously determined its borrower was in default, and issued a notice that contradicted the information its representative had filed with this Court, under penalty of perjury, and upon which the Court relied in issuing the two Debtor Current Orders in the borrowers' bankruptcy cases. As a direct result of PHH's inaccurate filings, on 25 occasions, each of the three Debtors received a notice that erroneously stated the Debtors were behind on their mortgage payments and likely caused those Debtors to worry that, notwithstanding their belief that they had made all required payments, their mortgage loan was in default and they were at risk of losing their home.[5]
The District Court also left undisturbed this Court's finding that PHH's conduct, in sending notices that incorrectly stated the Debtors were in default, violated the Debtor[*882] Current Orders that had been entered in the Gravel and Beaulieu cases.
Likewise, the District Court left undisturbed this Court's determination of the factors to be considered when determining the amount of the sanctions, and this Court's findings with respect to each factor (doc. # 82, p. 14-16). In that regard, this Court had found (1) PHH had adequate notice of the Debtor Current Orders, (2) PHH had engaged in a pattern of the offending conduct, (3) PHH had previously been admonished twice and sanctioned once (in this Court) for sending incorrect statements, and (4) PHH's level of sophistication and available financial resources mandated a higher sanction than might be imposed on another party.[6] As this Court indicated in its prior ruling, it is "mindful of the need to limit the magnitude of the sanction to the amount necessary to deter future misconduct," and to fix the sanctions in amounts that is "warranted, reasonable, and necessary to communicate to PHH the gravity of its violation of this Court's Debtor Current Order in this case, to punish the violation, and to deter PHH from violating court orders in the future" (doc. # 82, p. 16). On remand, the task of this Court is to reformulate the sanctions, articulate the source of the Court's authority for the sanctions, and explain the basis for characterizing them as "less than serious."
V. DISCUSSION
A. THIS COURT'S AUTHORITY TO IMPOSE SANCTIONS FOR VIOLATIONS OF RULE 3002.1 AND VIOLATIONS OF THE DEBTOR CURRENT ORDERS
In the Remand Decision, the District Court examined the three sources of authority upon which this Court had relied in imposing sanctions on PHH, namely, Bankruptcy Rule 3002.1, this Court's inherent powers, and
1. Authority to Impose Punitive Sanctions for Violations of Rule 3002.1
With respect to Rule 3002.1, the District Court pointed out there is no precedent for the imposition of punitive sanctions under this Rule and held "[t]he authority conferred by Rule 3002.1(i) cannot exceed the scope of the substantive powers of the Bankruptcy Court" and "the Bankruptcy Court's order imposing sanctions pursuant to Rule 3002.1(i) exceeded the scope of the Bankruptcy Court's powers as delineated by statute and precedent" (doc. # 104, p. 9). Based on these premises, it concluded the imposition of the $25,000 sanction in each case, for violating the Bankruptcy Rule requirements, "exceeded the scope of [the Court's authority under] Rule 3002.1(i)" (doc. # 104, p. 9).
While the District Court observed that "[t]he question of whether Rule 3002.1(i) authorizes the imposition of punitive sanctions appears to be a question of first impression, not just in the Second Circuit, but across the nation" (doc. # 104, p. 8), it did not rule that Rule 3002.1(i) precludes the awarding of a punitive sanction as a form of "other appropriate relief." This Court must determine the outer limits of bankruptcy courts' substantive, statutory,[*883] and precedential authority to ensure that the sanctions it imposes under Rule 3002.1(i) do not exceed those limits.
Bankruptcy Rule 3002.1 went into effect in 2011, in order to protect the fresh starts of chapter 13 debtors by requiring the holders of claims secured by a debtor's principal residence to timely file a detailed notice setting forth all postpetition fees, expenses, and charges it seeks to recover from the debtor. See FED. R. BANKR. P. 3002.1(c). As noted by the Advisory Committee on Bankruptcy Rules, " Rule 3002.1 ... assists in the implementation of § 1322(b)(5) of the Bankruptcy Code."[8] The requirements of Rule 3002.1, in combination with the requirements imposed by Rule 3001(c), "are designed to allow bankruptcy court determination of any questions regarding the status of a debtor's home mortgage during a Chapter 13 case, eliminating the possibility of unexpected deficiencies at the time the case closes." Eugene R. Wedoff, Proposed New Bankruptcy Rules on Creditor Disclosure and Court Enforcement of the Disclosures - Open for Comment, 83 AM. BANKR. L.J. 579, 584 (2009).
Subparagraph (i) of Rule 3002.1 was added as an enforcement mechanism and may be invoked when a creditor fails to comply with the requirements of the rule, in language modeled after Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37. This subparagraph identifies the penalty for failure to comply as follows:
(i) FAILURE TO NOTIFY . If the holder of a claim fails to provide any information as required by subdivision (b), (c), or (g) of this rule, the court may, after notice and hearing, take either or both of the following actions:
(1) preclude the holder from presenting the omitted information, in any form, as evidence in any contested matter or adversary proceeding in the case, unless the court determines that the failure was substantially justified or is harmless; or
(2) award other appropriate relief, including reasonable expenses and attorney's fees caused by the failure.
FED. R. BANKR. P. 3002.1(i) (emphasis added). Rules 3001(c) and 3002.1 were introduced, developed, and enacted concurrently; "they employ the same enforcement mechanism for required disclosure," and "are modeled after those for failure to make ordered discovery" under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Wedoff, supra, at 584. Indeed, "the proposed sanctions most closely resemble the sanction available under Civil Rule 37(c)(1) for the failure to provide information required under the disclosure provisions of Rule 26(a)(3)."[9]
PHH alleges that "[n]one of the Committee reports or minutes contained any discussion concerning broad monetary sanctions intended to penalize creditors or act as a warning of the importance of complying with disclosure provisions" (doc. # 127, p. 15). Citing this, and pointing to the modeling of Rule 3002.1 on the language of Federal Civil Rule 37, PHH argues[*884] that any sanctions under Rule 3002.1(i) are limited to evidentiary exclusion of any improperly noticed fees or charges in any proceeding before the court, and attorney's fees incurred to enforce that exclusion (doc. # 127, p. 15). The same "legislative history"[10] upon which PHH relies, however, indicates first, the evidentiary exclusion to which PHH refers was already in Rule 3001 before the adoption of Rules 3001(c) and 3002.1 and, second, the addition of specifically enumerated sanctions in Rule 3001(c)(2)(D) and Rule 3002.1(i) were added with the intention of bolstering that preexisting exclusion remedy. See 2010 Committee Memo, supra note 9, at 12 ("Currently, loss of the evidentiary effect of prima facie validity is the only sanction included in Rule 3001 for the failure to execute and file a [proof of claim] in accordance with the rules. The proposed addition of Rule 3001(c)(2)(D) was based on the Advisory Committee's belief that stronger sanctions are required to ensure greater compliance with the rule's requirements.") (emphasis added).
PHH also misconstrues the significance of the discretion afforded to courts pursuant to their authority to impose "other appropriate relief." See FED. R. BANKR. P. 3002.1(i)(2). The Committee's notes indicate the members of the Advisory Committee supported a broad reading of "other appropriate relief." See 2010 Committee Memo, supra note 9, at 13 ("[The court] may impose a sanction other than the preclusion of the introduction of evidence."). Judge Wedoff, an influential member of the Advisory Committee on Bankruptcy Rules at the time Rule 3002.1 was drafted and future chair of that Committee, described the import of a bankruptcy court's ability to award "other appropriate relief" as an additional measure beyond the specifically enumerated relief of evidentiary preclusion and attorney's fees and costs:
[ Rule 3001(c)(2)(D) and 3002.1(i) ] employ the same enforcement mechanism for
required disclosure - generally, the potential for a creditor being barred from introducing at a later hearing the information that was not timely provided, as well as reimbursing the debtor for reasonable expenses and attorneys' fees, with other relief in the court's discretion.
Wedoff, supra, at 584 (emphasis added). Moreover, the caselaw construing former Bankruptcy § 304(b), which employed the same language as Rule 3002.1(i), also supports a broader reading of "other appropriate relief."[11] See, e.g., In re Gee,
[*885] In the Remand Decision, the District Court referred to the absence of caselaw concerning Rule 3002.1 sanctions, remarking, "[t]he parties have not cited and the court has not found any case from any American jurisdiction in which a bankruptcy court has imposed sanctions on this basis and in this manner" (doc. # 104, p. 8-9). The scarcity of decisions discussing the subject of Rule 3002.1 sanctions is not surprising in light of the fairly recent implementation of that Rule. Despite the lack of controlling precedent, however, and based on the District Court's observation, this Court may be guided by caselaw that is pertinent to the scope of Rule 3002.1(i) sanctions, and properly classified as persuasive authority for a determination of the issue at bar. See Detroit Edison Co. v. Michigan Dep't of Envtl. Quality,
On this issue, persuasive authority can be found in caselaw interpreting the rules on which the language of Rule 3002.1 was modeled: Bankruptcy Rule 3002(c) and Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37.[12] See, e.g., Smith v. City of Jackson, Miss.,
There are many instances in which the evidentiary exclusion remedy provides little, if any, relief in the context of Rule 3001(c) and Rule 3002.1 sanctions motions. See In re Davenport,
There are also many instances in which awarding attorney's fees and costs may prove insufficient "to deter those who might be tempted to such conduct in the absence of such a deterrent." Roadway Express, Inc v. Piper,
Those remedies specifically allow for the exclusion of the evidence at trial. The rule also provides that the Court 'may impose other appropriate sanctions,' and that in addition to awarding attorney's fees and costs, the Court may also issue sanctions authorized under Rule 37(b)(2)(A), (B), and (C).
Id. at *16,
This flexibility-infused interpretation of the phrase, "other appropriate relief," allows a court to tailor the punitive sanction to be imposed when a party violates a particular rule according to the specific circumstances of the party's conduct. This approach has also been followed with respect to Federal Rules 16(f) and 37(b), which contain a similarly broad provision that allows the court to "issue any just orders" or "issue further just orders."[13] In[*887] J.M. Cleminshaw Co. v. Norwich,
There is no indication in Rule 37 that this list of sanctions was intended to be exhaustive. Indeed, the fact that Rule 37 also provides for the entry of such orders "as are just" suggests that, under that rule, a court possesses the authority to fashion any of a range of appropriate orders to enforce compliance with the requirements of pre-trial discovery.
In In re Prudential Ins. Co. of Am. Sales Practices Litig.,
These cases, interpreting language that is analogous, similar, or identical to that of Rule 3002.1(i) are persuasive authority and create a solid basis for this court to interpret Rule 3002.1(i) as authorizing a broad panoply of "other appropriate relief" that includes punitive sanctions. In the absence of caselaw construing punitive sanctions under Rule 3002.1, this Court relies on the persuasive authority described above, to determine the parameters of its authority to impose "other appropriate relief" as a[*888] sanction against PHH, for its Rule 3002.1 violations.
2. Authority to Impose Punitive Sanctions for Violations of the Debtor Current Orders
This Court imposed punitive sanctions on PHH for its violations of Debtor Current Orders pursuant to its statutory and inherent authority, and the District Court remanded on this point, based on the lack of Second Circuit caselaw on point and its endorsement of the appellate decisions which espoused a more limited view of bankruptcy courts' authority to impose punitive sanctions. The District Court concluded, "the statutory and inherent powers of the Bankruptcy Court are not sufficient to support the Bankruptcy Court's imposition upon PHH of $300,000 in punitive sanctions [for violation of court orders]" (doc. # 104, p. 16).
With regard to a bankruptcy court's statutory authority to impose punitive sanctions for violations of court orders pursuant to § 105(a), the District Court stated its preference for the approach of the Sixth and Ninth Circuits. See In re John Richards Homes Bldg. Co.,
In the opening paragraph of Taggart, the Supreme Court describes the purpose of a discharge order in a bankruptcy case and the restrictions a discharge order imposes on creditors, to introduce the issue of whether a bankruptcy court has the authority to punish creditors who violate these orders:
At the conclusion of a bankruptcy proceeding, a bankruptcy court typically enters an order releasing the debtor from liability for most prebankruptcy debts. This order, known as a discharge order, bars creditors from attempting to collect any debt covered by the order. See11 U.S.C. § 524 (a)(2). The question presented here concerns the criteria for determining when a court may hold a creditor in civil contempt for attempting to collect a debt that a discharge order has immunized from collection.
Taggart,
A Debtor Current Order, entered by the court "on motion of the debtor or trustee[,]" after notice and hearing, determines whether a debtor has (i) made all payments necessary to cure any default on a claim secured by the debtor's principal residence, and (ii) paid all required postpetition amounts. See FED. R. BANKR. P. 3002.1(h). Once entered by a bankruptcy court, a Debtor Current Order is a limited injunction in that it prohibits the mortgage creditor from attempting to collect (i) any prepetition mortgage arrearage that the Order declared to be cured, (ii) any postpetition amounts that the Order declared to be paid, or any (iii) fees or expenses that were not properly noticed pursuant to Rule 3002.1(b) and (c). See, e.g., In re Ferrell,
In Taggart, the Supreme Court held that a bankruptcy court may hold a creditor in contempt for violating a discharge order "if there is no fair ground of doubt as to whether the order barred the creditor's conduct." Taggart v. Lorenzen, --- U.S. ----,
The Debtor Current Orders in these cases declared the respective Debtors "cured any mortgage arrearage or default existing on the date that this bankruptcy case was filed[,] ... made all payments due during the pendency of this case ... including all monthly payments and any other charges or amounts due under the mortgage with PHH Mortgage Corporation[,]" and "precluded [PHH] from disputing that the Debtors are current ... in any other proceeding." See Gravel, no. 11-10112, doc. # 74; Beaulieu, no. 11-10281, doc. # 82. The Debtor Current Orders in each of these cases put PHH on notice it was enjoined from seeking to collect any fees or expenses allegedly incurred during the period encompassed by each Order, if not specified in the Order. Moreover, any inquiry into whether PHH was aware of its obligations under the Debtor Current Orders, and what fees and expenses it was enjoined from collecting, must take into account the fact that PHH had been sanctioned once before, in the same Gravel case, for an identical violation of Rule 3002.1 (doc. # 49). See Taggart v. Lorenzen, --- U.S. ----,
Based on the findings and conclusions in the Remand Decision, as well as the Supreme Court's recent holding in Taggart, this Court finds it has authority, under its inherent powers and § 105(a), to impose punitive sanctions on PHH for its breach of the Debtor Current Orders and reviews these sanctions anew to ensure the sanction in each case is less than serious and does not exceed the limits of this Court's inherent and statutory authority.
B. THE SCOPE OF NON-"SERIOUS" PUNITIVE SANCTIONS
The Court addresses next the lack of Second Circuit caselaw directly on point, and the Sixth and Ninth Circuits' position that bankruptcy courts may only impose mild or modest punitive sanctions (doc. # 104, p. 11).
A central issue in the rationale of the Remand Decision is the circuit split with respect to bankruptcy courts' power to impose punitive sanctions. The District Court rejected the First and Eighth Circuits' conclusion that bankruptcy courts possess the broad authority to impose punitive sanctions for violation of a court order. See In re Charbono,
In effect, the District Court remanded to this Court the question of whether there are punitive sanctions that are (a) an appropriate punishment for PHH's violations, (b) within this Court's authority to impose, and (c) "short of [the] punitive sanctions of the scope and type [it previously] imposed in these cases" (doc. # 104, p. 17). Since the District Court pointed to the lack of Second Circuit authority directly on point, and signaled its support for the conclusions reached in Dyer and Richards, this Court looks to the Dyer and Richards decisions, their progeny, and the most applicable Second Circuit decisions construing the meaning of "serious sanctions," for guidance in reformulating the sanctions to be imposed on PHH.[16]
The Dyer and Richards holdings, which the District Court endorsed, do not categorically prohibit bankruptcy courts from imposing punitive sanctions under § 105(a), but rather bar them from imposing "serious" punitive sanctions (doc. # 104, p. 13-14) (citing In re Dyer,
[*892] Similarly, the Remand Decision does not define "serious" punitive sanctions nor specify whether the amount of serious sanctions is determined by application of an absolute cap or on a case-by-case basis.
The Richards and Dyer decisions describe the limits of a bankruptcy court's authority to impose punitive, non-compensatory sanctions by reference to "serious" versus "mild" punitive sanctions, essentially setting the two end points of a sanctions continuum.[18] Both decisions conclude that bankruptcy courts lack the general statutory authority to impose "serious non-compensatory punitive damages," In re John Richards Homes Bldg. Co.,
Similarly, the Second Circuit has recognized but not answered the question of the extent of a bankruptcy court's authority to impose punitive sanctions under either its inherent power or § 105(a) of the Bankruptcy Code. In the Guariglia case, for example, the Second Circuit identified, and then deferred addressing that crucial subject: "We note also that there is a serious question as to whether the bankruptcy court would have had the authority to punish Guariglia for criminal contempt of its Order had the government first sought a determination by the bankruptcy court. We need not resolve this issue ..." United States v. Guariglia,
To begin with, the Second Circuit has decided several cases focused on the notice requirements and enunciated the due process prerequisite for imposing punitive sanctions. It held the same notice is required whether the sanction to be imposed arises from a rule violation or a finding of[*893] contempt. See Satcorp Int'l Group v. China Nat'l Silk Import & Export Corp.,
Building on those notice requirements, the Second Circuit has held that while punitive damages are not inextricably linked to criminal contempt, a party facing substantial punitive sanctions is entitled to the same protections as a party threatened with criminal contempt:
... the consequences of an adjudication of criminal contempt are different from those flowing from the imposition of sanctions. The person found guilty of criminal contempt, unlike a person on whom sanctions have been imposed, now carries a criminal conviction on his record. Furthermore, possible punishments for contempt, unlike sanctions, include imprisonment.
Nevertheless, sanctions and contempt raise certain similar concerns. Whether or not a finding of contempt is involved, unfairness and abuse are possible, especially if courts were to operate without any framework of rules or cap on their power to punish. In either case, the individual bears the risk of substantial punishment by reason of obstructive or disobedient conduct, as well as of vindictive pursuit by an offended judge. We conclude, notwithstanding the differences mentioned above, that the imposition of a sufficiently substantial punitive sanction requires that the person sanctioned receive the procedural protections appropriate to a criminal case.
We conclude that the imposition of a $10,000 punitive sanction on an individual (as opposed to a corporation or collective entity) requires such protections.
Mackler Prods., Inc. v. Cohen,
[*894] Taken together, the Satcorp and Mackler cases erect guideposts one could reasonably expect the Second Circuit to follow when determining whether a particular punitive sanction on a corporation is serious or modest. This Court will follow these guideposts in reformulating the sanctions against PHH, to ensure the sanctions do not fall into the "serious" category. Mackler I,
C. THE SCOPE OF "NON-SERIOUS" OR "MODEST" SANCTIONS ON A CORPORATION
In 1993, the Supreme Court considered and declined to answer "the difficult question where the line between petty and serious contempt fines should be drawn." Int'l Union v. Bagwell,
While the Mackler cases, described above, are quite helpful in describing the contours of a "substantial punitive sanction" against an individual, Mackler II,
1. Second Circuit Guidance re the Scope of "Modest" and "Serious" Sanctions on a Corporation
a) Second Circuit Guidance on "Modest" Sanctions
While not controlling, the Mackler decisions offer valuable insight into the Second Circuit's approach to discerning the scope and definition of "modest" punitive sanctions. Following the remand in Mackler I, the district court lowered the punitive component of the sanction from $10,000 to $2,000.[22] The sanctioned individual appealed and, in Mackler II, the Second Circuit[*895] determined that, "when viewed in light of the other relevant factors, the $2,000 'punitive' sanction at issue in this case could not be imposed without [the protections of criminal procedure]" and therefore was not a "modest" punitive sanction.[23] Mackler Prods. v. Cohen,
whether the sanction is intended to be compensatory or punitive; whether it is payable to the court or to the injured party; whether it is based on past wrongful conduct or is intended to coerce future compliance; and whether any opportunity to purge the sanction is provided.
Of most significance, the party being sanctioned in Mackler was "a 78-year-old lawyer with an apparently unblemished record" until the sanctionable conduct at issue.
In contrast to the attorney sanctioned in the Mackler cases, who had no history of misconduct in the courts, PHH has been sanctioned for the same conduct at least once before and continued to transgress the rules and orders in question. This Court imposed a punitive sanction of $9,000 on PHH in 2014, in the
Gravel case (doc. # 49).[26] Additionally, PHH was admonished by another bankruptcy court for identical violations, see In re Owens, 2014 Bankr. LEXIS 163 (Bankr. W.D.N.C. 2014), prior to its documented transgressions in this Court. Hence, sanctions in an amount larger than $9,000 are necessary to "coerce future compliance"
[*896] with this Court's Debtor Current Orders and federal and local bankruptcy rules. Mackler Prods. v. Cohen,
Based on this analysis of Mackler, and taking into account the different nature of the sanctioned party (multi-billion dollar corporation rather than individual attorney), and PHH's status as a repeat offender (having already been sanctioned by this Court in the amount of $9,000), this Court imposes herein sanctions it anticipates the Second Circuit would label as "modest," and the District Court would find to be "less than serious."
b) Second Circuit Guidance on "Serious" Sanctions
At the other end of the spectrum, the Second Circuit has drawn a bright-line rule for an "absolute dollar amount of fines above which, it holds, the Sixth Amendment entitles a corporation to a jury trial for criminal contempts, regardless of the contemnor's financial resources," thus demarcating what constitutes a serious sanction. United States v. Twentieth Century Fox Film Corp.,
[*897] The establishment of a triggering amount of a sanction or fine in Twentieth Century Fox, when imposed on a corporation and upon which a jury trial is required, is a critical factor in determining what constitutes a "serious" punitive sanction in the Second Circuit. The Ninth Circuit employs a similar analytical approach by analogizing the amount at which a fine or sanction triggers an individual's right to a jury trial to the amount at which a punitive sanction is "serious." Knupfer v. Lindblade (In re Dyer),
With the pronouncement from the Second Circuit in the Twentieth Century Fox case, that $100,000 (in 1989 dollars) is the cap where criminal protections are required for a sanctioned corporation, combined with its explanation in Mackler that the definition of a serious sanction for an individual is different from that applicable to a corporation, this Court concludes the cap that would justify characterizing a civil punitive sanction as "serious" would likewise apply to set the line above which criminal protections are required. That persuades this Court that a sanction of less than $205,531.30 i.e., the same sanction imposed in Twentieth Century Fox, in 1989, translated into 2019 dollars, would be less than a "serious" punitive sanction, against a corporation, in the Second Circuit.
2. Richards & Dyer Guidance re the Scope of "Modest" and "Serious" Sanctions on a Corporation
Since the District Court cited favorably the rationale set forth in the Richards and Dyer cases in explaining its views on the bankruptcy court's authority to impose punitive sanctions (doc. # 104, p. 16, citing In re John Richards Homes Bldg. Co.,
a) Guidance from Richards and its Progeny
The Sixth Circuit issued Richards in late 2013, as an unpublished decision, to review a bankruptcy court's imposition of a $2.8 million sanction on an individual.
[*898] In re John Richards Homes Bldg. Co., L.L.C.,
Since Richards, only one decision has been issued in the Sixth Circuit that attempts to define categories of sanctions. See In Cook v. Franklin Credit Mgmt. Corp. (In re Cook),
b) Guidance from Dyer and its Progeny
The Ninth Circuit's decision in Dyer considered the appropriateness of the bankruptcy court's imposition of punitive sanctions, under § 105(a) and, as in Richards, reviewed the propriety of that sanction against an individual. Knupfer v. Lindblade (In re Dyer),
Since the Ninth Circuit issued Dyer in 2003, courts within the Ninth Circuit appear to have applied its definition of "mild" noncompensatory sanctions with some trepidation. See, e.g., In re Vanamann,
In 2015, the Ninth Circuit Bankruptcy Appellate Panel ("BAP") applied the Dyer and Hanshaw criteria to determine whether a particular sanction was "serious" by analyzing the amount of the sanction in light of the financial condition of the sanctioned party. Faden v. Segal (In re Segal),
These interpretations of, and extrapolations from, the Dyer and Richards cases persuade this Court that while these Ninth and Sixth Circuit cases do limit the sanctioning authority of bankruptcy courts to "mild" sanctions, they, first, allow bankruptcy courts to exercise discretion and consider the financial resources of the offending party in computing what would be a mild sanction against a corporation and, second, permit the bankruptcy court imposing the sanction to convert the applicable dollar amount cap to its present value.
3. The Offending Party's Wealth and Ability to Pay as a Factor in Determining if a Sanction on a Corporation is "Serious"
Deterrence is a key purpose sanctions are intended to serve. See Roadway Express Inc., v. Piper,
Many courts have recognized that sanctioning a large corporation may require a more substantial sanction than one imposed on an individual, to achieve a meaningful degree of deterrence. "It is not uncommon for large corporations with vast resources to impede the discovery process ... Courts must be vigilant to prevent that type of conduct when it occurs and must impose meaningful sanctions to protect the integrity of the proceedings before it." In re Prudential Ins. Co. of Am. Sales Practices Litig.,
Some courts have imposed a sanction in excess of $10,000 against a corporation and characterized the sanction as "modest." For example, in Kamatani, after two prior sanctions against the offending corporation did not end the punished conduct, the district court imposed an inherent power monetary sanction of $500,000, in addition to the attorney's fees and costs it imposed for Rule 37 violations. Kamatani v. BenQ Corp.,
There are indications the Second Circuit shares the Ninth Circuit's perspective that a sanctioned party's wealth and ability to pay should play some role in a court's determination of an appropriate sanction. In Shangold v. Walt Disney Co.,
In the Mackler cases, the Second Circuit implicitly endorsed the same principle by limiting its finding on the seriousness of the punitive sanction at issue there (first a $10,000 sanction and then a $2,000 sanction) to cases in which the sanctioned party was an individual, and not a corporation. Mackler Prods., Inc. v. Cohen,
More recently, the Second Circuit has adjusted the size of a sanction based on the financial resources of a sanctioned corporation. See, e.g., CBS Broad. Inc. v. FilmOn.com, Inc.,
Based on this body of fairly well-developed, sanctions-focused jurisprudence from the Second Circuit, this Court finds it is appropriate and fair to consider PHH's financial resources in revisiting the question of what sanctions to impose on PHH.
D. THE NEW SANCTION ON PHH IN EACH OF THESE CASES
As directed in the Remand Decision, this Court issues this decision to impose sanctions on PHH that "are short of punitive sanctions of the scope and type [it] imposed[*903] [in its original Sanctions Decision] in these cases" (doc. # 104, p. 17).
The first step is confirmation of the authority of a bankruptcy court to impose punitive sanctions on parties who violate court orders, under either its inherent powers or § 105 of the Bankruptcy Code. This authority is confirmed in the Supreme Court's recent decision on that point. Taggart v. Lorenzen, --- U.S. ----,
Next, the Court looks to the financial markers associated with PHH's violations to assess the gravity of its misconduct and discern the proper amount of sanctions. The District Court concluded the original sanctions were "serious" punitive sanctions based, in part, on two financial markers: the total amount of the sanctions imposed on PHH for its misconduct in all three cases ($375,000), and the small amount of the fees and charges PHH erroneously claimed due from the each of the Debtor-borrowers on the inaccurate statements PHH sent in violation of the Debtor Current Orders and Rule 3002.1 (ranging from $30.00 to $258.75) (doc. # 104, p. 2). The Remand Decision did not, however, limit this Court's discretion in reassessing the sanctions, and reformulating new, non-serious sanctions, to amounts that correlated directly to the amount of the charges on each incorrect statement. Based on the pertinent caselaw, this Court concludes the appropriate measure of the gravity of PHH's misconduct is not the sum of the amounts PHH claimed due on each statement, but rather the number of incorrect statements PHH sent, in violation of both Rule 3002.1 and the Debtor Current Orders.
In further response to the financial markers identified in the Remand Decision, the Court must determine whether to focus on the sum of the sanctions imposed in all three cases, or the sanctions imposed in each case individually, when assessing whether the sanctions it is now imposing are less than "serious." None of the cases this Court has found addressing either the maximum amount of a non-serious sanction, or the appropriate sanction warranted for an analogous violation of Rule 37, indicate any basis for gauging the seriousness of a sanction by reference to sanctions imposed across multiple cases. To limit the sanction imposed on PHH in any one of the three cases, based on the fact that the sum of the sanctions imposed in the three cases crosses over into the zone of a "serious sanction," would constitute[*904] a windfall for PHH. The three cases are before the Court in a consolidated fashion solely as a result of the Court's decision to address the Trustee's motions in these cases simultaneously, in the interest of judicial economy, and for no reason that bears on the nature or gravity of PHH's malfeasance in each of these three distinct cases.[36] Therefore, the Court evaluates the seriousness of each sanction it imposes in this decision on a case-by-case basis, independent of the size of any other sanction it imposes in this decision.
Against that backdrop, the Court is charged with detecting where the line is that distinguishes a serious sanction from a non-serious sanction. It fulfills this charge, in accord with the Remand Decision, by following the guidance of the Sixth, Ninth, and Second Circuits.
The Sixth Circuit, as expressed in the Richards case to which the Remand Decision points, makes clear that bankruptcy courts may impose "mild" punitive sanctions under § 105, and may not impose serious punitive sanctions, but makes this pronouncement without articulating the criteria that characterize a sanction as either "mild" or "serious." In re John Richards Homes Bldg. Co.,
The Ninth Circuit caselaw also limits bankruptcy courts' authority to impose sanctions, holding they may impose only modest punitive sanctions. It, however, is rather vague about how to parse what distinguishes a modest sanction from a serious sanction. See Knupfer v. Lindblade (In re Dyer),
Finally, and most importantly, this Court draws on the guidance of the Second Circuit to ascertain what it identifies as the dollar amount floor of a "serious sanction," how that floor may fluctuate depending on whether the party to be sanctioned is a corporation or an individual, and whether this Court may adjust the dollar limit on the floor that Court has set to reflect the dollar amount's present value. Although the Second Circuit has not enunciated the scope of a bankruptcy court's authority to impose punitive sanctions,[38] as this Court described above,[39] the Second Circuit has, in the context of other areas of the law, established solid guideposts as to what constitutes a "serious sanction" both with regard to individuals and corporations. See Mackler II,
Starting with the premise that the District Court did not disturb any of this Court's factual findings it made with respect to PHH's violations of Rule 3002.1 and the Debtor Current Orders, and relying on the pertinent case law from the Sixth, Ninth and Second Circuits with respect to the scope of bankruptcy courts' authority to impose punitive sanctions, and the decisions from within this Circuit that broadly construe the arsenal of sanctions courts may impose for Rule 37-type violations, as well as the general guidance from the Supreme Court granting bankruptcy courts the authority to impose sanctions for injunction violations, this Court concludes that, based on the circumstances of, and violations by, this multi-billion dollar financial institution, the following sanctions each fall within the scope of a non-serious sanction and, therefore, are within this Court's authority to impose.
In the Gravel case, the Court previously imposed a sanction of $200,000, based, in[*906] large measure on the fact that it was PHH's second violation of an Order of this Court. The previous Order, entered in March of 2014 (doc. # 49), not only sanctioned PHH for sending the Debtors inaccurate mortgage statements, but also unambiguously declared the debtors were current as of that date:
[The Trustee] having filed a Motion to Compel [PHH Mortgage] to correct misapplied mortgage payments disbursed to it by the trustee in this case and for sanctions arising from its failure during this case to correctly apply such payments, the trustee and PHH, by filing their consent to this order, have stipulated and agreed to the following:
(1) Subsequent to the filing of the motion, PHH has taken steps to re-apply the misapplied mortgage payments, paid to it by the trustee, and is now showing the debtor's mortgage payments, post-petition, as current [.]
Sanctions Decision, doc. # 82, pp. 14-15 (quoting doc. # 49). PHH violated that Order and violated the Debtor Current Order entered thereafter (doc. # 74). Taking into account PHH's repeated contemptuous conduct, its substantial financial resources, and the limitations on this Court's sanctioning authority, it imposes a sanction of $150,000 on PHH for PHH's violations of this Court's Orders in the Gravel case. See Shangold v. Walt Disney Co.,
In the Beaulieu case, the previously imposed $100,000 sanction for PHH's violation of the Debtor Current Order is reduced to $75,000. This sanction amount reflects the fact that this was PHH's first violation of an Order in this case and is one-half of the corresponding sanction for violation of the Debtor Current Order in the Gravel case. The Court reimposes the $25,000 sanction, as the appropriate sanction for the 25 incorrect notices PHH issued in violation of Rule 3002.1. This total sanction of $125,000 is not "serious" or beyond this Court's authority to impose because it is below the Second Circuit's $100,000 cap (in 1989 dollars), adjusted for present value. See Twentieth Century Fox,
In the Knisley case, this Court imposes the same $25,000 sanction it previously imposed for PHH's 25 incorrect notices issued in violation of Rule 3002.1(c). There is nothing in the Remand Decision or the caselaw that convinces this Court that this sanction, in and of itself, is "serious" or beyond the authority of this Court to impose. Rather, it reflects the Court's broad authority under Rule 3002.1, as shown in the caselaw sanctioning violations of[*907] Rule 37 (upon which Rule 3002.1 was modeled), to impose such other appropriate relief as is warranted under the circumstances. See, e.g., Nycomed US, Inc. v. Glenmark Generics Ltd.,
E. TO WHOM PHH MUST PAY THE SANCTIONS
The District Court did not disturb this Court's decision that PHH pay all of the sanctions imposed in the Sanctions Decision to the non-profit organization now known as Legal Services Vermont[41] (doc. # 82, p. 17). This Court designated that payee in recognition of the crucial need for vigilant advocacy on behalf of individuals who seek bankruptcy relief in this District.
The Debtors in these cases might well have found themselves confronted with unexpected charges and possible suit by PHH, after their bankruptcy cases were concluded, if the Trustee had not been zealous in his efforts to compel PHH to remove the incorrect charges from the Debtors' monthly mortgage statements. Without the Trustee's vigilance and his filing of the Sanctions Motions, the Debtors' fresh start might have been jeopardized - just as the drafters of Rule 3002.1 had warned.
Doc. # 82, p. 17. Because the Debtors did not present any evidence showing they suffered financial harm, and to avoid unjustly enriching the Trustee or the Debtors, the Court awarded the sanctions to "Vermont's lead provider of pro bono legal services in bankruptcy cases" (doc. # 82, p. 17).
In the Trustee's Motion, the Trustee asks this Court, inter alia, to order payment of the full amount of the original sanctions to him, in four annual installments (doc. # 119, p. 1). While the Court has denied the Trustee's Motion, in most respects, see doc. # 133, the Court finds the Trustee's request to "conduct a new windfall analysis," in light of the entire record in these cases, and direct PHH to pay a portion of the sanctions to his office, rather than to pay it entirely to Legal Services Vermont (doc. # 119, p. 9), is within the Court's discretion on remand. The Trustee's arguments are compelling and, in light of the efforts the Trustee has made since entry of the Court's Sanctions Decision, justify a modification to the Court's original designation of payee.
1. PHH to Pay the Sanctions for Its Violations of Rule 3002.1 to the Trustee
The Court finds it appropriate and just to direct PHH to pay the Rule 3002.1 sanctions, of $25,000 in each of the three cases, to the Trustee, for several reasons. Although the caselaw on the question of awarding a chapter 13 trustee sanctions under Rule 3002.1(i) is undeveloped, at least one court considered the question. See In re Gutierrez, 2012 Bankr. LEXIS 5110 (Bankr. D.N.M. 2012). In Gutierrez, the court declined the trustee's request for an award of reasonable expenses and attorney's fees under 3002.1(i)(2), but that was because it granted the creditor additional time to comply with its Rule 3002.1 obligations and ultimately declined to impose sanctions. Id. at **10-12. While acknowledging the dearth of caselaw awarding[*908] 3002.1 sanctions to a trustee, the Court is guided by other sources of authority for this relief.
First, the language of Rule 3002.1(i), and its contemporaneously enacted counterpart Rule 3001(c)(2)(D), do not contain the restrictive language found in § 362(k) that allows the award to be paid only to the injured individual debtor. See § 362(k)(1) ("...an individual injured by any willful violation of a stay provided by this section shall recover actual damages, including costs and attorney's fees, and, in appropriate circumstances, may recover punitive damages."). Several courts, including this Court, have found that a trustee "is not eligible to sue for damages pursuant to § 362(k)(1)." Sensenich v. Ledyard Nat'l Bank (In re Campbell),
Second, there is an established body of caselaw demonstrating a court's authority to award sanctions to a chapter 13 trustee under Rule 3001(c)(2)(D), the companion sanction provision to Rule 3002.1(i). See Advisory Committee Minutes from Spring 2010 Meeting (in which the Reporter noted the sanctions provision under Rule 3002.1 "was intended to parallel the sanctions provisions the Committee just reviewed and modified in Rule 3001(c)(2)(D), and said the changes to both provisions should be the same").[42] In two instances, the Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Michigan has awarded the chapter 13 trustee sanctions under Rule 3001(c)(2)(D) for the costs and expenses incurred when creditors failed to submit the supporting information to a proof of claim, as required by Rule 3001(c). See In re Ball, 2019 Bankr. LEXIS 179 (Bankr. E.D. Mich. 2019); In re Simerson, 2018 Bankr. LEXIS 3711 (Bankr. E.D. Mich. 2018). The bankruptcy court found that "unexplained deficiencies and delays in filing a full and complete proof of claim did cause the Trustee to devote more attention than was usual to solve a rather straightforward issue of payment of real estate taxes." Simerson, 2018 Bankr. LEXIS 3711, at *8. The court awarded sanctions based on the fees that were incurred, and could have been avoided, had the creditors complied with their Rule 3001(c) requirements. Id. at **8-9 (awarding $400 to the chapter 13 trustee); Ball, 2019 Bankr. LEXIS 179, at **6-7 (awarding $200 to the chapter 13 trustee). While these cases involved relatively minor, one-time infractions by creditors that were quickly resolved and thus did not merit large sanctions awards, the decisions establish a well-reasoned basis for awarding sanctions to a chapter 13 trustee for work performed in addressing Rule 3001(c) and Rule 3002.1 violations. This is in addition to those cases in which courts have awarded sanctions to trustees under Rule 37, on which 3002.1 was modeled, and under § 105 and their inherent powers. See, e.g., In re Haynes,
Third, some courts, while not characterizing such measures as punitive in nature, have awarded sanctions to trustees in a flat amount, without reference to specific fees or expenses. In In re Nettles, 2008 Bankr. LEXIS 1293 (Bankr. D.S.C. 2008), the bankruptcy court awarded the chapter 7 trustee $8,976.40 for attorney's fees and costs. Id. at *14. The Nettles court, however, went further and awarded an additional $2,500 under its inherent powers "in reimbursement of the expenses incurred for Trustee's law firm[,]" without tying that amount to timesheets or other evidence to certify the fees or costs earned. Id. at *22. In In re Parker,
Finally, awarding the sanctions which are attributable to PHH's Rule 3002.1 violations to the Trustee accords with and advances the underlying deterrent purpose of these sanctions (doc. # 82, p. 17).[43]
The Trustee "wear[s] many hats and perform[s] several functions,"
[*910] In re Harwood,
2. PHH to Pay the Sanctions for Its Violation of Debtor Current Orders to Legal Services Vermont
As with the federal discovery rules on which it was modeled, one purpose of Rule 3002.1 "is to provide a level playing field, to the extent possible, in confronting the opposing party's evidence." Kuhlman v. Louisville Ladder, Inc.,
In a broader sense, Rule 3002.1 was designed to protect debtors' fresh starts after emerging successfully from a chapter 13 bankruptcy. See Wedoff, supra at 584. The provisions of Rule 3002.1 allow for either the chapter 13 trustee, or the debtors themselves, to file the notice of final cure payment or a motion to determine final cure and payment, and thereby obtain the assurance of a Debtor Current Order. See FED. R. BANKR. P. 3002.1(f), (h). Subparagraph (i) provides the mechanism to protect debtors' fresh starts in the face of creditor violations of Rule 3002.1 and Debtor Current Orders, after a case has concluded:
If, after the chapter 13 debtor has completed payments under the plan and the case has been closed, the holder of a claim secured by the debtor's principal residence seeks to recover amounts that should have been but were not disclosed under this rule, the debtor may move to have the case reopened in order to seek sanctions against the holder of the claim under subdivision (i).
FED. R. BANKR. P. 3002.1 Advisory Committee's 2011 note.
This places enormous pressure on debtors to monitor the statements issued by creditors following their discharges, and to[*911] take measures to protect themselves from efforts to collect unauthorized fees and expenses, and to protect their homes from possible foreclosure. This underscores the critical debtor-protector role debtors' attorneys must play. Many homeowners facing foreclosure are in financial crisis and lack effective legal representation. See Melanca Clark & Maggie Barron, Foreclosures: A Crisis in Legal Representation, BRENNAN CENTER FOR JUSTICE , p. 12 (2009) (finding many homeowners possess legal defenses that could bar foreclosure, but cannot effectively raise them absent the assistance of counsel). Access to a competent attorney, who will recognize creditor violations and advocate zealously on a debtor's behalf, is one of the most essential tools for protecting debtors' fresh starts and accomplishing the goals of Rule 3002.1 and Debtor Current Orders. See In re Miller, 2015 Bankr. LEXIS 4530 (Bankr. D. Vt. 2015). As the Brennan Center concluded,
The loan servicers and lenders invariably have counsel whenever they take action against a homeowner for alleged default of the mortgage terms. Providing lawyers for low- and moderate- income homeowners would level the playing field, and help to ensure that banks and other institutions that operate in economically distressed communities do so according to the rule of law.
Clark & Barron, supra, at 16-17.
Mindful of the distress many homeowners experience in trying to defend against actions commenced by mortgage creditors with experienced counsel, this Court reiterates its belief, as originally stated in the Sanctions Decision, that "the best way to protect consumer debtors who cannot afford to dispute and litigate the assessment of improper post-petition charges - and thus are at risk of having their fresh starts diluted[,]" is to direct PHH to pay sanctions to a pro bono legal service provider (doc. # 82, p. 17). The Court remains convinced it is equitable, and serves the interests of justice, to direct PHH to pay the sanctions flowing from PHH's violations of the Debtor Current Orders, i.e., the $150,000 sanction in the Gravel case and the $75,000 sanction in the Beaulieu case, to Legal Services Vermont.
VI. CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, the Court reaches the following conclusions with respect to the six interlocking legal issues presented. First, this Court has the authority to issue punitive sanctions against PHH for its violations of Bankruptcy Rule 3002.1, in all three of these cases, based on the detailed explanations of the Rule's purpose and the intent of its drafters, as set out in the records of the Advisory Committee that formulated the Rule, and the court decisions which constitute persuasive authority regarding this question, in their analysis of analogous or similar language in Bankruptcy Rule 3001(c) and Federal Civil Rule 37. Second, this Court has authority to sanction PHH for its breach of the Debtor Current Orders in the Gravel and Beaulieu cases, pursuant to § 105(a) and its inherent powers. Third, the sanctions this Court imposes on PHH herein fall within the caselaw definitions of "modest" and "less than serious" sanctions, from the Second, Sixth and Ninth Circuits, i.e., the Circuits to which the Remand Decision directed this Court's attention. Fourth, that same caselaw provides a sound basis for this Court to take into account PHH's corporate status, the repetitive nature of its violations, and its relative wealth and ability to pay in setting the amount of the sanctions. Fifth, based on the well-established jurisprudence that assigns upper monetary limits to the various categories of sanctions germane to this[*912] decision, as well as the more recent trial and appellate level decisions that adjust those dollar amounts to reflect present dollar value, this Court concludes it is proper to apply the monetary caps, adjusted to reflect their value in 2019 dollars. Sixth, the Court finds that although the chapter 13 Trustee has not documented the number of hours he or his pro bono attorney have spent in addressing the myriad issues raised in these cases, it is clear that (a) their efforts shielded the Debtors from having to pay improper charges and from incurring the cost of legal actions that might have flowed from a failure to pay them, and (b) it was - and will continue to be - within the scope of the Trustee's duties to vigilantly monitor mortgage creditors' compliance with Rule 3002.1, and as such, it is fair to direct that portion of the sanctions allocable to PHH's violation of Rule 3002.1 ($75,000) to the chapter 13 Trustee. Analogously, the fact that the Debtors did not suffer financial harm when PHH violated the Debtor Current Orders in the Gravel and Beaulieu cases does not diminish the need to impose sanctions on PHH for punitive and deterrent purposes. It is most appropriate that PHH pay these sanctions ($225,000) to Legal Services Vermont, the premier provider of pro bono legal services to the individuals who are most vulnerable to harm when a creditor fails to adhere to the injunctions in Debtor Current Orders, and most in need of protection from mortgagors who do not play by the rules.
Accordingly, and pursuant to its mandate on remand, the Court (1) reduces the combined sanction from $225,000 to $175,000 in the Gravel case, reduces the combined sanction from $125,000 to $100,000 in the Beaulieu case, and leaves intact the $25,000 sanction in the Knisley case; (2) directs PHH to pay the sanctions for violations of court orders, i.e., $150,000 in the Gravel case and $75,000 in the Beaulieu case, to Legal Services Vermont; and (3) directs PHH to pay the sanctions for violations of Rule 3002.1, i.e., $25,000 in each of the three cases, to the chapter 13 Trustee, as more fully described in the accompanying Order.
This memorandum of decision constitutes the Court's findings of fact and conclusions of law, and implementation of the Remand Decision.
ORDER
ON REMAND FROM U.S. DISTRICT COURT, IMPOSING SANCTIONS ON PHH MORTGAGE CORPORATION
For the reasons set forth in the memorandum of decision of even date, the Court finds, first, it has the authority pursuant to the Rule 3002.1, pertinent caselaw, and its inherent powers, to impose punitive sanctions on PHH for its violations of Rule 3002.1 ; second, it has the authority, pursuant to § 105(a) and its inherent powers, to sanction PHH for its breach of the Debtor Current Orders in the Gravel and Beaulieu cases; third, there are specific dollar amount caps which set the outer limits of "modest," or "less than serious," sanctions; fourth, those caps may be adjusted to correlate to the present value of those dollar amounts; fifth, this Court has the authority to impose punitive sanctions on PHH for its Rule 3002.1 and Court Order violations, provided the amount of the sanction imposed in each case does not exceed the caselaw-defined cap for a non-serious sanction; and sixth, based on the facts and circumstances of these cases, it serves the interests of justice for PHH to pay the sanctions for its Rule 3002.1 violations to the chapter 13 Trustee and to pay the sanctions attributable to its violations of Debtor Current Orders to Legal Services Vermont.
[*913] Accordingly, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that:
(1) The following sanctions are imposed on PHH:
(a) in the Gravel case, a sanction of one hundred seventy-five thousand dollars ($175,000),
(b) in the Beaulieu case, a sanction of one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000), and
(c) in the Knisley case, a sanction of twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000).
(2) (a) PHH shall pay to the chapter 13 Trustee the portion of each sanction imposed for PHH's violation of Bankruptcy Rule 3002.1 :
(i) in the Gravel case, twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000),
(ii) in the Beaulieu case, twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000), and
(iii) in the Knisley case, twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000), within fourteen (14) days of entry of this Order.
(b) PHH shall pay to Legal Services Vermont the portion of each sanction imposed for PHH's violation of Debtor Current Orders:
(i) in the Gravel case, one-hundred fifty thousand dollars ($150,000), and
(ii) in the Beaulieu case, seventy-five thousand dollars ($75,000)
within fourteen (14) days of entry of this Order.
SO ORDERED.
In the interest of simplicity, all docket references in this decision cite to the Gravel case docket only; all documents, however, can be found in all three chapter 13 bankruptcy cases.
As will be discussed in detail below, the District Court focused on the total sanctions awarded in all 3 cases: $300,000 for violation of Court Orders, and $75,000 for violations of Rule 3002.1, rather than on the sanctions awarded in each case. See discussion at Part D.
The final paragraphs of the Remand Decision stated:
... [t]his court concludes that the statutory and inherent powers of the Bankruptcy Court are not sufficient to support the Bankruptcy Court's imposition upon PHH of $300,000 in punitive sanctions. The court notes that this conclusion does not leave Bankruptcy litigants free to engage in contemptuous conduct with impunity. ... [The Bankruptcy Court] may take steps to enforce its orders short of punitive sanctions of the scope and type imposed in these cases.
(doc. # 104, pp. 16-17) (emphasis added).
Although the Trustee provided evidence that PHH sent incorrect mortgage statements to the Debtors over a period of years, in the interest of simplicity and to provide PHH the benefit of the doubt that it would fulfill its pledge to alter its procedures after the first sanction was imposed against it in the Gravel case (doc. # 49, entered Mar. 31, 2014), this Court arrived at the number of sanctionable Rule 3002.1 violations, for purposes of the Sanctions Decision, by computing the number of months from the date of its previous sanction against PHH to the monthly statements sent in May 2016. The 25 months yielded by this calculation was the basis for the Rule 3002.1 sanctions imposed against PHH in each of the three cases (doc. # 82, p. 10).
These fears are not without rational basis. It is well-documented that mortgage lenders have admitted to foreclosing on mortgage loans based on erroneous records, See, e.g., Ranae Merle, Wells Fargo Admits it Incorrectly Foreclosed on 545 Homeowners It Should have Helped, The Washington Post , (Nov. 6, 2018), https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2018/11/06/wells-fargo-admits-it-incorrectly-foreclosed-homeowners-it-should-have-helped/?utm_term=.ca5d432cd9a5.
Though not disturbed, the District Court did not discuss the factor considering a sanctioned party's financial resources and ability to pay, so this Court addresses it below. See discussion at Part C(3).
All citations to statutory sections refer to Title 11, United States Code (the "Bankruptcy Code"), unless otherwise indicated.
Report of the Advisory Committee on Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure, Bankruptcy Rules Committee Report, p. 6 (May 2009), https://www.uscourts.gov/rules-policies/archives/committee-reports/advisory-committee-rules-civil-procedure-may-2009.
Advisory Committee on Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure, Subcommittee on Consumer Issues, Memorandum on Comments to Proposed Rules 3001(c) and Rule 3002.1, p. 12 (Apr. 7, 2010), https://www.uscourts.gov/sites/default/files/fr_import/BK2010-04.pdf [hereinafter 2010 Committee Memo].
In its Memorandum on Remand, PHH characterizes the Advisory Committee's reports and minutes as "legislative history." See, e.g., doc. # 127, p. 18. While the Federal Bankruptcy Rules "are a legislative enactment" and should be interpreted using the "traditional tools of statutory construction," any pertinent legislative history is still confined to the reports, hearing transcripts, and statements generated by Congress and its various committees. See Beech Aircraft Corp. v. Rainey,
In the context of international bankruptcy cases, until the passage of BAPCPA in 2005,
(1) enjoin the commencement of --
(A) any action against --
(i) a debtor with respect to property involved in such foreign proceeding; or
(ii) such property; or
(B) the enforcement of any judgment against the debtor with respect to such property, or any act or the commencement or continuation of any judicial proceeding to create or enforce a lien against the property of such estate;
(2) order other appropriate relief.
PHH also recognized the value of considering decisions analyzing Rule 37 sanctions to resolve the Rule 3002.1 issue. See doc. # 127, p. 20 ("Accordingly, case law germane to Rule 37(c)(1) is of particular and dispositive relevance to the analysis here, particularly given the interpretation of substantively identical language.").
Rule 37(b)(2)(A) provides, in the event a party does not obey a discovery order, "the court where the action is pending may issue further just orders," including those specifically enumerated in (i)-(vii) such as striking pleadings, dismissing the action, or entering a default judgment.
See discussion at Part B.
An injunction is "[a] court order commanding or preventing an action." Black's Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019). See also Edgar v. MITE Corp.,
In favoring the "narrower construction" adopted by the Fifth, Sixth, and Ninth Circuits, and rejecting the more expansive view of the First and Eighth Circuits, the District Court found that "[t]his narrower construction is also consistent with the direction of Second Circuit precedent addressing the scope of the Bankruptcy Court's contempt authority in other contexts" (doc. # 104, p. 16). It grounds this finding in the Second Circuit case of Kalikow (In re Kalikow),
The only circuit case, of the three cited by the District Court, that can be read to categorically prohibit bankruptcy courts from imposing any amount of punitive sanctions is the Fifth Circuit's decision in In re Hipp, Inc.,
The Richards court writes that, in addition to the Ninth Circuit, the Fifth Circuit "allow[s] bankruptcy courts to award relatively minor noncompensatory fines." In re John Richards Homes Bldg. Co.,
The Second Circuit has also recognized, however, "that the requirements of due process cannot be cabined within an inflexible regime, and must vary with each case." Reilly v. Natwest Markets Group Inc.,
The $10,000 sanction, which was imposed on an individual and triggered the need for procedural protections in June of 1998, would correspond to $15,711.17 in 2019 dollars. See United States Bureau of Labor Statistics, CPI Inflation Calculator, available at https://www.bls.gov/data/inflation_calculator.htm (last visited June 24, 2019) (hereinafter CPI Inflation Calculator). In adjusting a given sanction amount to its 2019 equivalent value, this Court relies upon the Bureau of Labor Statistics' Consumer Price Index (CPI) Inflation Calculator, the same tool utilized by the Supreme Court and the Second Circuit Court of Appeals. See, e.g., Janus v. AFSCME, Council 31, --- U.S. ----,
The apparently modest $10,000 sanction, in the Muniz case to which the Supreme Court referred, was imposed in 1975 and would correspond to $27,611.94 in 1994 dollars - far shy of $52 million; it would amount to $47,778.36 in 2019 dollars. See CPI Inflation Calculator, supra note 20.
It left all other components of the sanction unchanged for reasons inapplicable to this analysis.
A sanction of $2,000.00 in 2000 dollars is the equivalent of $2,964.03 in 2019 dollars. See CPI Inflation Calculator, supra note 20.
Company Overview, PHH Corporation, http://corporate.phh.com/phoenix.zhtml?c=187859&p=irol-media (last visited June 24, 2019, 9:35 a.m.).
Press Release, PHH Corporation, PHH Corporation Announces Second Quarter 2018 Results, (Aug. 3, 2018), http://corporate.phh.com/Phoenix.zhtml?c=187859&p=irol-news.
At the hearing on approval of that stipulated sanction, PHH asked the Court to authorize a "small sanction" to provide the Court additional room to impose a higher sanction if PHH failed to correct its procedures and comply with Rule 3002.1 and Court Orders going forward. The Court advised PHH that it imposed sanctions with the intent the sanction would be sufficient to deter misconduct - without need for subsequent, harsher penalties. See doc. ## 47, 48 for audio of the hearing held on March 21, 2014.
The Southern District of New York's decision in the New Pacific case illustrates this point well. There, the district court applied the Mackler factors and then explicitly imposed punitive sanctions intended to both punish past conduct and coerce future compliance. New Pac. Overseas Group (USA) Inc. v. Excal Int'l Dev. Corp.,
This sum of $100,000, in 1989 dollars, equals $205,531.30 in 2019 dollars. See CPI Inflation Calculator, supra note 20.
The Dyer court quoted the Ninth Circuit's decision in F.J. Hanshaw Enters. v. Emerald River Dev., Inc.,
The sum of $5,000 in 1989 dollars equals $10,469.83 in 2019 dollars. See CPI Inflation Calculator, supra note 20.
For example, the Hanshaw court pointed to the Fifth Circuit's 1998 conclusion that "$75,000 is manifestly non-petty in the case of an individual, just as $5 million is non-petty in the case of a corporation" and remarking that, in 1994, the Supreme Court in the Bagwell case had "strongly suggested, without deciding, that $5,000 was an appropriate limit for individuals, and $10,000 for corporations." Crowe v. Smith,
In stating that prior Ninth Circuit decisions implied any fine over $5,000, "at least in 1998 dollars," could be considered serious, the Dyer court inaccurately cited the case relied upon for that proposition. See supra note 29. In Himmelfarb, this inaccuracy went uncorrected by the district court, but did not affect its decision. In re Himmelfarb,
A sanction of $500,000 in 2005 dollars is the equivalent of $642,801.20 in 2019 dollars. See CPI Inflation Calculator, supra note 20.
This sum of $25,000, in 1986 dollars, equals $58,468.49 in 2019 dollars. See CPI Inflation Calculator, supra note 20.
In Taggart, the Supreme Court affirmed the bankruptcy court's basis for imposing a sanction that included $105,000 for attorney's fees and costs, $5,000 for emotional distress, and $2,000 in punitive damages. Taggart v. Lorenzen, --- U.S. ----,
The Trustee filed his motions for contempt in all three cases within a two-day period. See Gravel, no. 11-10112, doc. # 75; Beaulieu, no. 11-10281, doc. # 90; Knisley, no. 12-10512, doc. # 50. The Court combined the hearings, and issued a single decision addressing all the Trustee's motions, due to the common identity of the offending party in all three cases, the similarity of PHH's actions and alleged violations in the three cases, and a desire to promote judicial economy and cost-efficiency. This Court made no finding that the amount of the sanction imposed on PHH in any one case was contingent upon, or related to, the violations in the other cases, or that the Court intended the sanctions to be treated as a single sanction.
See discussion of Dyer and its progeny at Part C(2).
See Remand Decision, doc. # 104, p. 11.
See discussion at Part C(1).
As explained in Part C(1)(b), while Twentieth Century Fox considered the amount at which a fine or sanction triggers a corporation's right to a jury trial, this amount can be soundly analogized to the amount at which a sanction can be considered serious. This is precisely the analytical approach utilized by the Ninth Circuit in its Dyer decision, which the District Court cited favorably. See Knupfer v. Lindblade (In re Dyer),
At the time of this Court's Order it was known as Legal Services Law Line of Vermont; as of January 25, 2019, its legal name is Legal Services Vermont. See Press Release, Legal Services Vermont, 'Law Line' is Now 'Legal Services Vermont,' (Jan. 25, 2019), https://legalservicesvt.org/law-line-now-legal-services-vermont.
Advisory Committee on Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure, Minutes, p. 10 (Apr. 29-30, 2010), https://www.uscourts.gov/rules-policies/archives/meeting-minutes/advisory-committee-rules-bankruptcy-procedure-april-2010 [hereinafter April 2010 Advisory Committee Minutes].
The "Rule 37 sanctions," on which the Rule 3002.1 sanctions were modeled, "must be applied diligently both 'to penalize those whose conduct may be deemed to warrant such a sanction, [and] to deter those who might be tempted to such conduct in the absence of such a deterrent." Roadway Express Inc., v. Piper,