In re Peace

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Appellees filed a state court action, alleging that Peace caused property damage when he interfered with the water flow to the Appellees' Cleves, Ohio property. That lawsuit was stayed when Peace filed a chapter 7 bankruptcy petition. Appellees had already hired Abercrombie to provide an expert report, which was filed in the state litigation. After Peace’s bankruptcy filing, Appellees filed an adversary proceeding under 11 U.S.C. 523(a)(6), alleging that Peace owed them a non-dischargeable debt. The bankruptcy court agreed. Peace filed an untimely notice of appeal. The Bankruptcy Appellate Panel dismissed. Peace filed a Rule 60(b) motion for relief from judgment, asserting that Appellees’ expert witness, Abercrombie, committed fraud by giving false testimony and that Peace’s discovery that Abercrombie’s data sources were nonexistent was “new evidence.” The bankruptcy court denied the motion as untimely and stated that Peace failed to show that his evidence could not have been discovered with reasonable diligence and there was no clear proof that Abercrombie’s testimony was false. The Bankruptcy Appellate Panel affirmed. Peace made substantially similar arguments to the bankruptcy court in his initial post-trial brief. The bankruptcy court acted within its discretion in treating the motion as an attempt to relitigate issues previously decided and as an improper substitute for an appeal. View "In re Peace" on Justia Law