Missing the Forest for the Trees
This month's article is actually four sets of comments dealing with cases or articles where the writers have,
I believe, missed a critical issue, losing sight of the forest in the midst of analyzing the trees. Three
comments are on articles in the April <i>ABI Journal;</i> the fourth is on <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&vr=1.0&cite=… re Rashid,</i> 2000 WL 382727</a> (3rd Cir. 4/14/00).
</p><p>The first article, by Gregory Hesse, "More from the Labor Law Front," describes <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&vr=1.0&cite=… Healthcare
Systems Inc.,</i> 200 F.3d 170 (3rd. Cir. 1999)</a>, interpreting the Worker Adjustment and Retraining
Notification (WARN) Act. This act, as the article notes, dealt with companies that "abruptly clos[ed] or
laid off substantial numbers of employees without warning." United had struggled for a time and finally
filed bankruptcy when its secured lender abruptly placed it in default and refused to advance additional
funds. The debtor closed its facility and began to liquidate, but planned to provide employees with the 60
days notice (and pay) required by the WARN Act. The creditors' committee, however, demanded that the
employees be terminated immediately. The Third Circuit concluded that this could be done without
violating the WARN Act because, it held, when the debtor began liquidation, it was no longer a "business
enterprise" as defined by the Act and, hence, no longer subject to the Act's requirements. Each step of its
analysis seems logical, but the opinion boils down to saying that once a business shuts down, it is not
subject to the WARN Act. In other words, the precise action that triggers liability—closing abruptly without
compensation—also serves to <i>eliminate</i> that liability. The court noted various equitable factors in the
debtor's favor as reasons to eliminate liability, but ignored the fact that the Act already takes those matters
into account as affirmative <i>defenses.</i> The court seems to think its opinion can be confined to bankruptcy
cases, but its logic could well eliminate <i>any</i> meritorious WARN Act case—a result to which the court seems
blissfully oblivious.
</p><p>The second article, "On the Evidence of These Numbers: Why Consumers File for Bankruptcy," by
Gordon Bermant and Ed Flynn, suggests that the supporters of the consumer amendments in the pending
bankruptcy bills are arguing from a stereotype—namely, that if bankruptcies are increasing in an era of
strong economic growth, then those filing bankruptcy must be irresponsible, unscrupulous or both. The
article asserts that it is unfair to assume that filings will move in immediate correlation with the state of the
economy and proves that there is a strong, albeit delayed, correlation between levels of debt and bankruptcy
filings. But all that shows is that most people don't file bankruptcy when they have no need to do so at all,
although proving that merely disproves a red herring. Even if bankruptcy has lost its stigma, no one
suggests that it has become so pleasurable that people file just for the heck of it. No one, least of all the
creditors, would deny that people file bankruptcy because they have large debts.
</p><p>But by the same token, proving that filers have high levels of debt does nothing in and of itself to rebut
the claim that those persons are irresponsible or unscrupulous. Even accepting Bermant's and Flynn's proof
that increasing debt leads to increasing bankruptcy, one may still validly ask, "Why is consumer debt
increasing in an era of robust economic growth and low unemployment?" One hypothesis is that
individuals, believing that they can easily and painlessly rid themselves of their debts in bankruptcy,
voluntarily take on more debt, especially for luxury items, than they would have in an earlier, more
responsible age. Another hypothesis is that the state of the overall economy does not adequately reflect the
status of ordinary wage earners and that they are increasingly hard-pressed to maintain an adequate standard
of living and to deal with holes in the social safety net. Thus, the additional debt is being taken on not for
luxuries and baubles, but for day-to-day necessities. Since we can reasonably assume that those who file
bankruptcy have always had difficulty in making ends meet, the question still remains: Is it <i>harder</i> for
people with equivalent incomes to survive now than 15 or 20 years ago? In short, this is a
chicken-or-the-egg question: Is the easy availability of bankruptcy driving the increase of consumer debt
or is the increase in debt driving the rising number of bankruptcies? The article's analysis rules out neither
possibility. Each explanation undoubtedly has some validity and there are many subhypotheses that are also
likely to be part of the answer. It would take a book many times the size of this article to attempt to fully
discuss those issues, but I confidently predict we will get nowhere until we start asking the right questions,
not merely knocking down straw men.
</p><p>My third comment is on "The Toxic Avenger: Bankruptcy Court Jurisdiction over States." John W.
Ames and C.R. "Chip" Bowles argue that a state that objects to the abandonment of a piece of property
should be deemed to have made a general waiver of its sovereign immunity as to all aspects of the case.
This then would, in their view, allow the debtor to litigate any claims it has against the state. They assert
that if a state files a claim, it has agreed to at least a limited waiver of its rights and that the Supreme Court
has held that a state that invokes federal court jurisdiction outside of bankruptcy has consented to a general
waiver of immunity. They then argue that opposing an abandonment action should result in the same
supposed general waiver of immunity by the state. "This type of legislation [<i>sic</i>—action?]", they assert,
"constitutes the voluntary, unequivocal and clearly expressed submission to the jurisdiction of the federal
courts that courts have held will waive a state's Eleventh Amendment jurisdiction [<i>sic</i>—immunity?]."
Finally, they argue that, unlike the "Hobson's Choice" states face in deciding whether to either file a claim
and lose immunity or refrain from doing so and lose their rights to payment, the state has a real choice
where property is abandoned: It can take action in state court against the property and later seek to assert
a claim against the estate, or it can oppose the abandonment and ask the court to require the estate to
comply with state laws. This "choice," they argue, should lead courts to broadly construe the state's waiver
when it challenges an abandonment request.
</p><p>Virtually every aspect of that analysis, though, is dead wrong in that it merely resurrects the
"constructive" or "deemed" waiver notions that were expressed in <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&vr=1.0&cite=… v. Terminal Railway Co.,</i> 377 U.S. 184 (1964)</a>, and overruled by the Supreme Court in <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&vr=1.0&cite=… Savings Bank v. Florida Prepaid Postsecondary Education Board,</i> ___ U.S. ___, 119 S.Ct. 2199 (1999)</a>. To begin with, Ames and Bowles,
like most commentators, misunderstand the nature of the "waiver" of immunity that arises from the filing
of a claim. Properly understood, the filing of a claim (or any other court action by a governmental entity)
is not a waiver at all. <i>See, e.g.,</i> <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&vr=1.0&cite=…. v. Murdock Machine & Engineering,</i> 81 F.3d 922, 931 (10th Cir. 1996)</a>.
Rather, the filing of a federal action simply signals that the state has asked the federal court to resolve a
controversy that the state has brought to it. It has not "waived" its immunity because immunity is not at
issue when the state is not being sued.<small><sup><a href="#1" name="1a">1</a></sup></small> Instead, immunity issues only arise when the debtor tries to use the
occasion of the state's suit to bring its own (counter) claim against the state. It is black-letter law that a
defendant may only assert rights of recoupment, <i>i.e.,</i> mandatory counterclaims asserted up to the amount
that would defeat the state's claim, in response to the state's case.
</p><p>Why? For the same reason that recoupment does not violate the stay or the Code's priority rules even
though it is nowhere provided for in the Code. Recoupment, by definition, involves mandatory
counterclaims that are not independent claims at all. They are a <i>defense</i> to the original claim—recoupment
is not a right to payment; it is a right <i>not</i> to pay the claim of the other side. When the state litigates its claim
in federal court, that litigation must obviously include the defenses of the other party, including recoupment.
Indeed, mandatory counter-claims are waived if they are not raised in response to the original claim. As
such, they are <i>inherently</i> part of the litigation that the state chooses to bring in federal court. But, because
they are <i>defenses,</i> they may only be raised so long as they serve a defensive purpose. If there is an attempt
to go further and obtain affirmative relief, the claims cease being a defense and become an affirmative claim
of the debtor, for which the Eleventh Amendment <i>would</i> apply.
</p><p>The Second Circuit stated in <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&vr=1.0&cite=…. v. Forma,</i> 42 F.3d 759, 765 (1992)</a>, that "it has long been absolutely
clear that the exception [for mandatory counterclaims] does not permit any affirmative recovery against the
United States on a counterclaim that lacks an independent jurisdictional basis."<small><sup><a href="#2" name="2a">2</a></sup></small> Similarly, in <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&vr=1.0&cite=… States
v. Shaw,</i> 309 U.S. 495, 504 (1940)</a>, the Supreme Court held that where the government has not explicitly
waived its immunity, "no judgment may be entered against the government, even though the court has
ascertained, through its processes, that the government is actually indebted to the defendants." In short, a
defense is a defense is a defense; while in football the best defense is a good offense, the same does not
hold true in immunity litigation. It is for that reason, then, that the type of counterclaims that the debtor may
bring is not simply an arbitrary limit that can be expanded or contracted at will by Congress. To say, as
Congress did in §106(b), that by filing a claim the state is "deemed" to have waived its immunity from
affirmative recovery on mandatory counterclaims, is to admit that the state did not actually waive that
immunity. As Justice Scalia noted, "There is a fundamental difference between a state's expressing
unequivocally that it waives its immunity, and Congress expressing unequivocally its intention that if the state
takes certain action it shall be deemed to have waived that immunity...Forced waiver and abrogation are not
even different sides of the same coin; they are the same side of the same coin." The same principle applies
with even greater force to the attempt in §106(c) to allow a debtor to raise any claim as a defense against the
claim of a state. This is clearly not allowed under the common law, and the statutory change cannot survive
<i>College Savings.</i>
</p><p>If all this is true, then the attempts to distinguish the abandonment issue from the claim filing issue in
order to find a waiver based on the state's action make even less sense. In one case, the state files a claim
to receive a benefit from the debtor; in the other, it objects to the debtor's efforts to obtain a benefit by
abandoning burdensome property. In either case, the state is doing something that takes away from the
value of the estate. Moreover, filing the objection clearly does not establish that the state <i>actually</i> agreed
to be sued with respect to any other matter.<small><sup><a href="#3" name="3a">3</a></sup></small> Nor are the authors correct about does the purported absence
of a Hobson's Choice—even assuming such a choice is required for the state to be entitled to retain its
immunity. The reality is that the issues are just as difficult with respect to abandonment motions as with
respect to filing a claim.
</p><p>The point of an abandonment, after all, is to remove property from the estate so it cannot be asserted
that it would benefit the estate to have it cleaned up, thereby precluding any attempt to obtain administrative
priority for the remedial costs. At best, the state may be able to file a general unsecured claim for the costs
that it incurs in dealing with the abandoned land. On the other hand, if the property remains in the estate,
<a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&vr=1.0&cite=… U.S.C. §959(b)</a> obligates the debtor and the trustee to obey all valid state laws, including those requiring
remediation of the contamination, and to pay for that cleanup in administrative dollars with no
out-of-pocket expenses for the state. Making the state choose between that outcome and the alternative of
acquiescing in the abandonment, doing the work itself and being paid in tiny bankruptcy dollars so it can
retain its general immunity obviously presents a highly unpalatable dilemma. Indeed, the amounts at issue
in many environmental cases often dwarf the size of the claims in other situations. The fact is that the fight
over abandonment is really just an argument about claims priority. And, since priority issues are just
another aspect of claims allowance, disputes over such issues provide no more reason to find a general
waiver of immunity than disputes over liability for claims in general.
</p><p>Moreover, one reason why there have been very few cases about what actions in a case may waive the
state's immunity may be that <i>Congress</i> has only tried to rely on the act of claims filing to impose a limited
restriction on the state's immunity. Yet the authors here rush in where Congress has feared to tread! Where
would this argument stop? Can the state oppose a motion to strip its lien without generally waiving its
immunity?<small><sup><a href="#4" name="4a">4</a></sup></small> Can it request adequate protection for its cash collateral? Can it vote on the plan? Can it even
file a notice of appearance? Or read the pleadings? Once one starts allowing Congress to consent <i>for</i> a state,
it is hard to find a stopping point. The correct analysis, on the other hand, is simple and clear: When the
state enters the federal arena, the court may litigate the matter the state brings before it and the inherent
defenses thereto. To do anything more is to lose sight of the notion of what voluntary <i>waiver</i> is all about.
</p><p>My final concern is with the <i>Rashid</i> case, which deals with the dischargeability of criminal restitution
paid to a victim in a federal prosecution. In <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&vr=1.0&cite=… v. Robinson,</i> 479 U.S. 36 (1986)</a>, the court held that any
condition imposed in a state sentence—including restitution—was not subject to discharge under §523(a)(7).
It based that conclusion on the well-established belief that bankruptcy should not be allowed to interfere
with criminal sentences. Although <i>Kelly</i> involved a payment to the state, and the court stressed the comity
concerns between state and federal courts, later courts had no difficulty in concluding that the same
principle should apply to cases ordering restitution to go directly to victims and to federal cases. <i>See, e.g.,</i>
<a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&vr=1.0&cite=…. v. Grundhoefer,</i> 916 F.2d 788 (2nd Cir. 1990)</a> (court-ordered restitution should go to government but
be applied to loan obligations owed by victims to the government); <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&vr=1.0&cite=… v. Cost Control Marketing &
Sales Mgmt. of Virginia Inc.,</i> 64 F.3d 920 (4th Cir. 1995)</a> (<i>Kelly</i> and <i>Davenport</i> make all restitution orders,
even those owed to private parties and entered in civil cases, non-dischargeable); <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&vr=1.0&cite=…. v. Carson,</i> 669 F.2d
216 (5th Cir. 1982)</a> (restitution may be a condition of probation even though underlying debt is discharged;
probation reforms offender and protects the state from recidivism); <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&vr=1.0&cite=…. v. Caddell,</i> 830 F.2d 36 (5th Cir.
1987)</a> (<i>Kelly</i> applies to federal orders, even though it talked of comity with states; upholds restitution to
government as condition of probation); <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&vr=1.0&cite=… re Fussell</i> (<i>Fussell v. Price</i>), 928 F.2d 712 (5th Cir. 1991), <i>cert.
denied,</i> 502 U.S. 1107 (1992)</a> (prosecution of debtor allowed even though prosecution intended to provide
restitution to victim; <i>Kelly</i> says restitution is for the benefit of the state even if the money goes to victims);
<a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&vr=1.0&cite=…. v. Pepper,</i> 51 F.3d 469 (5th Cir. 1995)</a> (order of restitution to victims not subject to discharge); <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&vr=1.0&cite=… re
Vetter,</i> 895 F.2d 486 (8th Cir. 1990)</a> (<i>Kelly</i> applies to federal criminal restitution to victim, order allowed
even though debtor and victim had settled); <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&vr=1.0&cite=… States v. Cloud,</i> 872 F.2d 846 (9th Cir.), <i>cert. denied,</i>
110 S.Ct. 561 (1989)</a> (restitution to victim allowed even though victim had settled own suit); <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&vr=1.0&cite=… re
Soderling,</i> 998 F.2d 730 (9th Cir. 1993)</a> (<i>Kelly</i> rationale is equally applicable to federal cases; restitution
to FSLIC); <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&vr=1.0&cite=…. v. Lombardo,</i> 35 F.3d 526 (11th Cir. 1994)</a> (criminal restitution orders to victim are not
dischargeable) <i>Cf.</i> <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&vr=1.0&cite=… re Daulton,</i> 966 F.2d 1028 (6th Cir. 1992)</a> (criminal prosecution of a debtor may not
be enjoined even after debt is discharged; but holds in dicta that restitution is not allowed; case does not
discuss <i>Kelly,</i> and simply assumes debt <i>is</i> discharged).
</p><p>Notwithstanding that panoply of case law, the Third Circuit held that restitution that was directed to the
victims would not be excepted from discharge because it was not "payable to and for the benefit of a
governmental unit." It cited <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&vr=1.0&cite=… re Towers,</i> 162 F.3d 952 (7th Cir. 1998), <i>cert. denied,</i> 119 S.Ct. 2340 (1999)</a>,
which had made that distinction in a civil case and, in a two-sentence footnote, equated federal criminal and
state civil restitution orders by saying that neither dealt with comity issues in the criminal context. In doing
so, though, the court ignored language in <i>Kelly</i> that specifically discusses restitution <i>to the victim</i> as an
example of what should be protected, as well as its discussion of how criminal restitution serves to protect
society as a whole. It is bad enough that the court in <i>Towers</i> brushed aside the assertion that the interests of
the government and those of its citizens are congruent in the civil context. But to do so in the criminal context,
where the government acts as the representative of "the people," is to ignore the entire rationale on which
<i>Kelly</i> was based. Even worse, it results in the anomaly that criminal restitution paid to a victim can be
discharged in a chapter 7 case, but <i>not</i> in chapter 13 (since the language added to §1328(a) in 1990 merely
refers to criminal restitution generally). This turns the superdischarge on its head.
</p><p>In light of the circuit split, this case would be a good candidate for <i>certiorari</i> except for one
problem—Congress amended §523 to add subsection (13), which explicitly excepts all restitution ordered
under title 18 of the U.S. Code. Thus, this problem may well not occur again in the future for the federal
government.<small><sup><a href="#5" name="5a">5</a></sup></small> It is unclear why Congress did this, since no appellate court had ever before held that <i>Kelly</i>
did <i>not</i> apply to federal orders, but it has, in any event, been an occasion for mischief ever since its passage.
Its presence led the bankruptcy court in <i>Towers</i> to hold that, by adding this language, Congress intended
to eliminate all <i>other</i> restitution from the discharge exception. The Seventh Circuit rejected that argument,
holding that the provision was more likely enacted in an excess of caution than as an attempt to overrule,
<i>sub silentio,</i> the line of cases set forth above. The presence of that section here, though, apparently
convinced the court that it need not apply the <i>Kelly</i> analysis to victim restitution. The problem for the states,
though, is that they do not have any counterpart to subsection (13)—and the Third Circuit's analysis would
undercut their use of subsection (7) in victim restitution cases. Thus, they are left with the unenviable
position of having bad law made in a federal case where the federal government may see no need to appeal.
</p><hr>
<h3>Footnotes</h3>
<p><small><sup><a name="1">1</a></sup></small>The Eleventh Amendment limits the exercise of the judicial power of the United States with respect to "a suit in law or equity against
a state," not a suit brought by the state. <a href="#1a">Return to article</a>
</p><p><small><sup><a name="2">2</a></sup></small>These cases happen to deal with the sovereign immunity of the United States, but the principles are essentially identical in this respect
regarding state immunity. <a href="#2a">Return to article</a>
</p><p><small><sup><a name="3">3</a></sup></small>Both cases cited by the article for believing that such a general waiver would be allowed, <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&vr=1.0&cite=… re Straight,</i> 143 F.3d 1387
(10th Cir.), <i>cert. denied,</i> 119 S.Ct. 446 (1998)</a>, and <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&vr=1.0&cite=… re White,</i> 139 F.3d 1268 (9th Cir. 1998)</a>,
were decided before <i>College Savings.</i> Both cases were problematic before and are subject to even more serious doubt now. <a href="#3a">Return to article</a>
</p><p><small><sup><a name="4">4</a></sup></small> <i>See, e.g.,</i> <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&vr=1.0&cite=… re Lazar, 200 B.R. 358, 381 (Bankr. C.D. Cal. 1996)</a>, where Judge Bufford held that the
state had entered a general appearance because it had appeared "numerous times" to protect its security interest. He gives no clue as to how
many times it takes in order for a limited appearance to morph into a general appearance. <a href="#4a">Return to article</a>
</p><p><sup><small><a name="5">5</a></small></sup>The problem with the court's opinion is perhaps best exemplified by the fact that it had no idea when the amendment was actually enacted.
In at least four places, it refers to the change as having been made in October 1998, but then cites two 1995 cases that had
refused to apply the amendment retroactively. The fact is that the amendment was passed in 1994, not 1998, although still just too
late to be effective in this case. Perhaps the chance to correct that glaring error will convince the court to accept a petition for rehearing
and correct the rest of the opinion. <a href="#5a">Return to article</a>