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Discharge Injunction Violations Can’t Be Heard in Federal District Court

Circuits are split on whether claims for contempt of the discharge injunction must be brought in the bankruptcy court that issued the discharge.

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Opinion Link

Case Details

Case Citation

Henry v. Collection Professionals Inc., 23-00721 (N.D. Ill. June 17, 2024)

Case Name

Henry v. Collection Professionals Inc.

Case Type

Consumer

Comments

Is the lesson here that in such situations, a motion to withdraw the reference on subject matter jurisdictional grounds is suggested in tandem with the complaint in District Court?
Yes, I agree that withdrawal of the reference would be appropriate, but also I think the legal basis for the claims needs to be unpacked. First, there could be a claim that a violation of the discharge injunction satisfies the statutory requirements in the FDCPA, perhaps as an attempt to collect an amount not authorized by the agreement or permitted by law. 15 USC § 1692f(1). Second, there could be a claim that there is a private right of action for a violation of the discharge injunction, but most every court (except Bessette) rejects that. Third, there could be a motion to hold the creditor in (civil) contempt for violating the discharge injunction. It is this last claim with which a withdrawal of the reference fits most comfortably. There is an intersection of these claims and arbitrability. The first two claims--the FDCPA and the implied private right of action, would be subject to an arbitration agreement. Only the court that issued an order can hear the contempt motion. The other two claims vindicate private rights of the debtor and do not implicate the collective nature of a bankruptcy case. For those with little else to do, you can read my article "Reframing Arbitration & Bankruptcy" at 96 Am. Bankr. L.J. 202 (2022).