Background
Milton Thomas completed a Chapter 13 bankruptcy process that led to confirmation of his plan in 2005 and a discharge order in 2009. Years later, the City of Philadelphia pursued collection actions tied to two properties, and Thomas sought contempt sanctions on the ground that those efforts violated the discharge. Earlier proceedings had included a 2013 bankruptcy ruling suggesting inadequate notice as to a different property, but the Third Circuit had already held that ruling was not preclusive as to the properties involved here.
The court’s reasoning
The court applied traditional civil contempt standards for discharge violations and focused on whether there was any fair ground of doubt that the discharge barred the City’s conduct. It held Thomas satisfied the first two contempt elements because the discharge order was valid and the City had knowledge of it. As to the 1618 Property, the court found no objectively reasonable basis for the City’s conduct because the City had extensive actual notice of the bankruptcy, confirmation, and discharge, selectively participated in the case, and improperly tried to extend a narrow 2013 ruling about a different property. The court also said the City could not violate a final injunction and then collaterally attack it in contempt proceedings. As to the 1620 Property, however, Thomas failed to prove he made the payments necessary to strip the relevant liens, leaving the City with an objectively reasonable argument that the discharge did not apply to that debt.
Because of the City’s actual notice and inappropriate unilateral extension of the 2013 ruling, which was wrong as a matter of law, civil contempt sanctions are warranted.
What it means going forward
On remand, the bankruptcy court may determine the scope of the City’s discharge violation and calculate compensatory damages for the 1618 Property. The City faces no contempt damages for the 1620 Property on the present record.