PIRS Capital, LLC v. Renee Williams, No. 22-1723 (8th Cir. 2022)
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PIRS Capital, LLC (“PIRS”), appeals the district court’s order that affirmed the bankruptcy court’s April 2021 order denying PIRS’s motion to set aside a January 2018 default judgment in the amount of $157,214. PIRS argues it is entitled to this extraordinary post-judgment relief because the bankruptcy trustee did not properly serve her adversary's complaint seeking recovery of preferential transfers. PIRS relies on provisions of Rule 7004(b)(3) of the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure, the bankruptcy counterpart to Rule 60(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
The Eighth Circuit affirmed. The court held that here, consistent with Espinosa, the bankruptcy court and the district court concluded the bankruptcy court had at least an arguable basis for jurisdiction. First, the trustee arguably complied with Rule 7004(b)(3) by serving PIRS in the manner directed in its Proof of Claim, a direction reinforced by the trustee’s diligent research of PIRS on the DOS website. Second, the trustee sent the summons and complaint by certified mail, return the receipt requested and received the receipt showing the summons and complaint was actually received by a PIRS employee at its Suite 403 address. The Supreme Court in Espinosa expressly stated that receiving actual notice “more than satisfied [PIRS’s] due process rights.”
Further, the court wrote that even if Rule 60(b)(6) relief is not precluded under Kemp, it agrees with the district court that “the circumstances that led to PIRS’s failure to defend were of its own making [and therefore] PIRS cannot establish the existence of exceptional circumstances” that warrant Rule 60(b)(6) relief.
Court Description: [Loken, Author, with Arnold and Kobes, Circuit Judges] Civil case - Bankruptcy. The bankruptcy court did not err in denying PIRS's motion to vacate a default judgment against it; the trustee arguably complied with Bankruptcy Rule 7004(b)(3) by serving PIRS in the manner directed in its Proof of Claim; second, the summons and complaint were in fact received by PIRS; third, the court did not err in reasoning that an entity served by legal process should not benefit from its own inaccurate or dated records when others attempt in good faith to determine the appropriate agent for service; relief was not available under Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b)(6) and, even if it was, PIRS failed to show the kind of exceptional circumstances required for relief under Rule 60(b)(6). [ December 07, 2022 ]
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