In re: William Robert Norrie

FILED OCT 26 2016 1 NOT FOR PUBLICATION SUSAN M. SPRAUL, CLERK U.S. BKCY. APP. PANEL 2 OF THE NINTH CIRCUIT 3 UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY APPELLATE PANEL 4 OF THE NINTH CIRCUIT 5 In re: ) BAP No. CC-16-1002-KuKiTa ) 6 WILLIAM ROBERT NORRIE, ) Bk. No. 2:13-bk-25751-BR ) 7 Debtor. ) ______________________________) 8 ) WILLIAM ROBERT NORRIE, ) 9 ) Appellant, ) 10 ) v. ) MEMORANDUM* 11 ) MARK BLISS; JOHN M. PULOS; ) 12 KELLY T. MALLEN, ) ) 13 Appellees. ) ______________________________) 14 Submitted Without Oral Argument 15 on September 22, 2016 16 Filed – October 26, 2016 17 Appeal from the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Central District of California 18 Honorable Barry Russell, Bankruptcy Judge, Presiding 19 20 Appearances: Appellant William Robert Norrie pro se on brief; Paul R. Burns on brief for appellees. 21 22 Before: KURTZ, KIRSCHER and TAYLOR, Bankruptcy Judges. 23 24 25 26 * This disposition is not appropriate for publication. 27 Although it may be cited for whatever persuasive value it may have (see Fed. R. App. P. 32.1), it has no precedential value. 28 See 9th Cir. BAP Rule 8024-1. 1 INTRODUCTION 2 Over the course of several months, Chapter 71 debtor William 3 Robert Norrie filed a counseled motion seeking relief from the 4 bankruptcy court’s contempt orders and four pro se motions also 5 seeking relief from the contempt orders. Norrie appealed from 6 some of the contempt orders, but that appeal was dismissed for 7 lack of prosecution. The bankruptcy court denied all of the 8 motions for relief from the contempt orders, but Norrie only 9 appealed the denial of the fourth pro se motion. 10 Because the contempt orders and the denials of the first 11 three pro se motions are all final and nonappealable, we lack 12 jurisdiction to review in this appeal those arguments Norrie 13 could have made or did make in the original contempt proceedings 14 or in support of the first three pro se motions. 15 There is only one argument of Norrie’s we can address. 16 Norrie claims that the bankruptcy court should have granted his 17 fourth pro se motion for relief on the ground that the contempt 18 orders are void because he no longer can purge his contempt (and 19 hence the contempt orders have become criminal and punitive in 20 nature rather than coercive). However, in denying Norrie’s 21 fourth pro se motion, the bankruptcy court implicitly found that 22 Norrie still had the ability to purge his contempt and that he 23 had not done everything he could to purge his contempt. 24 25 1 Unless specified otherwise, all chapter and section 26 references are to the Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. §§ 101-1532, and all "Rule" references are to the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy 27 Procedure, Rules 1001-9037. All "Local Rule" references are to the Local Bankruptcy Rules of the United States Bankruptcy Court 28 for the Central District of California. 2 1 That finding was not clearly erroneous, so we AFFIRM. 2 FACTS 3 Most of the long and tortuous history of Norrie’s bankruptcy 4 case (and the seven other bankruptcy cases commenced by or 5 against Norrie and his affiliated entities) is not directly 6 relevant to this appeal. That history has been set forth in more 7 detail in the memorandum decisions this panel has issued in 8 Norrie’s other appeals and in other court documents. See Norrie 9 v. Mallen (In re Norrie), 2016 WL 4009979 (Mem. Dec.) (9th Cir. 10 BAP July 21, 2016); Bliss v. Norrie (In re Norrie), 2016 WL 11 373868 (Mem. Dec.) (9th Cir. BAP Jan. 29, 2016). 12 In terms of general bankruptcy background, it suffices to 13 say that Norrie commenced his current chapter 7 bankruptcy case 14 in June 2013 and that the bankruptcy court entered a default 15 judgment in July 2014 denying Norrie a discharge. The default 16 judgment resulted from terminating sanctions the bankruptcy court 17 imposed against Norrie based on his violation of discovery orders 18 in the discharge objection adversary proceeding filed against 19 Norrie.2 20 This appeal in large part concerns the court’s orders 21 seeking to compel Norrie to submit to examination and to produce 22 documents under Rule 2004 and Norrie’s failure to do so. The 23 relevant train of events began when one of Norrie’s creditors, 24 2 The excerpts of record the parties provided omitted many 25 relevant documents and transcripts. To overcome this impediment, 26 we have reviewed the bankruptcy court’s electronic case docket and its adversary proceeding dockets. We can and do take 27 judicial notice of their contents and the imaged documents attached thereto. Heers v. Parsons (In re Heers), 529 B.R. 734, 28 738 n.3 (9th Cir. BAP 2015). 3 1 Mark Bliss, filed a motion in May 2014 for an order granting 2 leave under Rule 2004 to examine Norrie and to request that 3 Norrie produce documents responsive to Bliss’ 88 categories of 4 documents requested. According to Bliss, this discovery was 5 necessary in order to help ascertain the true state of Norrie’s 6 assets, liabilities and financial condition. 7 Norrie filed an opposition to the motion, in which he argued 8 that he was in the process of objecting to Bliss’ claim and that 9 Bliss should not be permitted to conduct discovery under 10 Rule 2004 unless and until Norrie’s claim objection was 11 overruled. Norrie further asserted that Bliss’ document 12 requests related to the then-pending objection to discharge 13 litigation brought by other creditors as well as to the chapter 7 14 trustee’s fraudulent transfer litigation seeking to recover for 15 the benefit of the estate a parcel of real property located in 16 Venice Beach, California. In addition to these general 17 objections, Norrie further raised specific objections to certain 18 categories of document requests based on relevance, alleged 19 improper purpose, and a claimed privilege of financial privacy. 20 After a hearing, the bankruptcy court entered an order on 21 July 10, 2014, granting Bliss’ Rule 2004 motion in its entirety. 22 The Rule 2004 order required Norrie to produce the requested 23 documents by July 17, 2014, and to appear for examination 24 (deposition) on July 24, 2014. 25 When Norrie failed to comply with the Rule 2004 order, Bliss 26 filed a motion for an order to show cause re contempt. According 27 to Bliss, Norrie defied the Rule 2004 order by not attending his 28 examination as directed and by not producing the requested 4 1 documents. Instead of producing the requested documents, 2 Norrie’s counsel resent responses to document production requests 3 previously sought by the chapter 7 trustee, which Bliss 4 maintained were not adequate or appropriate responses to his 5 document requests. 6 In August 2014, the bankruptcy court entered the order to 7 show cause re contempt as requested by Bliss. In response to the 8 order to show cause, Norrie argued that the proposed contempt 9 sanctions – which consisted of a proposed $17,350 attorney’s fees 10 award and a new order (again) requiring Norrie to appear for 11 examination and produce documents by dates certain – were neither 12 coercive nor compensatory in nature but rather were punitive and 13 hence constituted an improper attempt by the bankruptcy court to 14 impose criminal contempt sanctions. 15 In addition, Norrie argued: (1) that the Rule 2004 order was 16 not specific and definite enough to be enforced; (2) that he was 17 prepared to purge his contempt by arranging for a new examination 18 date; (3) that Bliss should have initiated meet and confer 19 proceedings before bringing his motion for contempt; (4) that he 20 could not attend the examination as originally scheduled because 21 his son was ill; and (5) that the order to show cause was 22 improperly served. 23 After holding a hearing, the bankruptcy court entered an 24 order on October 15, 2014 finding Norrie in contempt of the 25 court’s Rule 2004 order. To purge this contempt, the court 26 directed Norrie to produce the documents Bliss requested by no 27 later than October 17, to appear for examination (deposition) on 28 October 24 and to pay $17,350 in attorney’s fees to Bliss. 5 1 Norrie did not appeal the October 2014 contempt order, nor 2 did he comply with the order’s terms. Bliss then filed a new 3 motion for an order to show cause re contempt. Bliss asserted 4 that Norrie had willfully refused to comply with both the 5 bankruptcy court’s July 2014 Rule 2004 order and the court’s 6 October 2014 contempt order, and, consequently, Bliss requested 7 that the court again find Norrie in contempt. Bliss further 8 requested roughly $15,000 in additional compensatory sanctions 9 and that the court order Norrie remanded into the custody of the 10 U.S. Marshal’s service until he purged his contempt by producing 11 all documents requested and by appearing for and answering all 12 questions asked of him at his Rule 2004 examination. 13 By way of response, Norrie, through new counsel, reiterated 14 his claim that Bliss was not really his creditor but, 15 nonetheless, proposed to purge his contempt by producing the 16 requested documents on December 1, 2014, and by appearing for 17 examination on December 5, 2014, or on any other date agreeable 18 to both parties. 19 Bliss filed a reply in which he, in essence, asserted that 20 Norrie’s promise to purge his contempt and proposal for complying 21 with his discovery obligations under Rule 2004 were not credible 22 in light of the prior conduct of Norrie and his counsel. 23 On December 2, 2014, the bankruptcy court issued the order 24 to show cause re contempt as requested by Bliss, and set a 25 hearing date of February 3, 2015. The court’s order specifically 26 required Norrie to appear at this hearing. 27 Meanwhile, a different creditor – Kelly Mallen – sought and 28 obtained a separate order to show cause re contempt against 6 1 Norrie.3 According to Mallen, the bankruptcy court had ordered 2 Norrie to reimburse Mallen $7,525.00 on account of attorney’s 3 fees he had incurred in obtaining an order expunging a lis 4 pendens, which Norrie had recorded against real property on 5 Pacific Avenue in Manhattan Beach, California. Mallen claimed 6 that Norrie had willfully violated the bankruptcy court’s 7 sanctions order by not paying the attorney’s fees award. He 8 further claimed that he should be awarded another $7,875 in 9 attorney’s fees incurred in bringing the motion for the order to 10 show cause and that the court should order Norrie remanded into 11 custody until Norrie purged his contempt by paying his attorney’s 12 fees in the aggregate amount of $15,400. Mallen alleged that 13 Norrie was financially capable of paying the attorney’s fees but 14 had chosen instead to ignore the court’s prior sanctions order. 15 Mallen supported this allegation by pointing to the amounts 16 Norrie had stipulated to pay to his ex-wife in child support and 17 spousal support and to the amounts Norrie had expended in 18 litigating against Mallen and others. 19 In response, Norrie denied Mallen’s allegation regarding his 20 financial ability to satisfy the sanctions award. Norrie further 21 asserted that a finding of contempt should not be made for what 22 amounted to a failure to satisfy a money judgment. As Norrie 23 pointed out, the ordinary consequence for nonpayment of a 24 3 Sometimes, the papers filed on behalf Mallen indicated that 25 another creditor, John Pulos, was participating jointly in the 26 Mallen initiated contempt proceedings. At other times, the papers indicated that Mallen was acting alone. Whether Mallen 27 was acting alone or in concert with Pulos does not alter our analysis or our resolution of this appeal, and we only refer to 28 Mallen herein for ease of reference. 7 1 judgment debt is enforcement of the judgment by writ of execution 2 and other judgment enforcement remedies. 3 The bankruptcy court set the Mallen initiated contempt 4 proceedings for hearing on the same date as the hearing on the 5 Bliss initiated contempt proceedings – February 3, 2015. The 6 court’s order explicitly required the attendance of both Norrie 7 and his counsel at the hearing. 8 Norrie filed responses to both orders to show cause. Norrie 9 claimed that the contempt sanctions sought were punitive in 10 nature, rather than coercive or compensatory. With respect to 11 the Mallen initiated contempt proceedings, Norrie reiterated his 12 contention that a finding of contempt should not flow from what 13 amounted to nonpayment of a money judgment. 14 At the February 3, 2015, hearing on both orders to show 15 cause, the court noted that Norrie had failed to appear as 16 ordered and that his failure to appear was cause for issuance of 17 an arrest warrant in and of itself. Norrie’s counsel of record, 18 who did appear, argued that he and Norrie thought that his 19 counsel’s appearance would be sufficient regardless of what the 20 order said. But the court rejected that argument based on the 21 order’s plain language. 22 With respect to the Mallen initiated contempt proceedings, 23 the court held that the monetary sanctions requested were meant 24 to compensate Mallen for attorney’s fees incurred and, hence, 25 qualified as civil contempt sanctions. On the other hand, the 26 court explained, regardless of whether nonpayment of the prior 27 sanctions award was akin to nonpayment of a money judgment, the 28 court would not incarcerate Norrie based on his failure to pay. 8 1 As for the Bliss initiated contempt proceedings, the court 2 indicated that, if Norrie had appeared at the hearing as ordered, 3 it merely would have ordered him (again) to comply with the 4 Rule 2004 discovery order and the October 2014 contempt order. 5 Even so, because Norrie failed to appear for the hearing, the 6 court stated that it was prepared to order Norrie incarcerated 7 until he fully complied with the Rule 2004 discovery requests. 8 After the hearing, the court issued three orders. The first 9 order held Norrie in contempt for failing to pay Mallen the prior 10 sanctions imposed and awarded Mallen additional attorney’s fees 11 in the aggregate amount of $15,400. The second order held Norrie 12 in contempt for willfully failing to comply with Bliss’ Rule 2004 13 discovery requests and awarded Bliss additional attorney’s fees 14 of $14,695. The third order provided for Norrie’s arrest by 15 federal marshals and for him to remain in custody until he fully 16 complied with Bliss’ Rule 2004 discovery requests. 17 Norrie filed an appeal from the February 2015 contempt 18 orders, but that appeal was dismissed for failure to prosecute. 19 In March 2015, Norrie filed a motion effectively seeking to 20 alter the terms of the February contempt orders to permit him an 21 opportunity to purge his contempt without first being 22 incarcerated. Norrie admitted that he left the country shortly 23 before the February 3, 2015, contempt hearings but nonetheless 24 contended that he was not a fugitive and did not flee the country 25 in order to evade his required appearance. According to Norrie, 26 he left the country only in order to be in England to address 27 health issues involving his parents. Norrie also reiterated 28 that, before the February 3 hearings occurred, he was under the 9 1 (mistaken) impression that his counsel’s appearance would 2 suffice. Additionally, Norrie proposed to purge his contempt, if 3 the court permitted him to do so and if it rescinded the warrant 4 for his arrest, by having his attorney forward to Bliss the 5 documents requested and by appearing in the United States for his 6 Rule 2004 examination on a mutually agreed upon date. 7 Alternately, he proposed appearing in England in person, by video 8 or by telephone conference. According to Norrie, the contempt 9 orders as currently worded were punitive and criminal in nature 10 because they unnecessarily required his incarceration before he 11 could carry out his latest promise to comply. 12 In response, Bliss and Mallen pointed out that no documents 13 had yet been produced as ordered by the court, even though Norrie 14 had the capability of complying with the document requests 15 through his counsel of record. They also pointed out that Norrie 16 had promised on a number of prior occasions that he would comply 17 with the Rule 2004 discovery requests but had not done so. As an 18 alternative to Norrie’s proposal for purging his contempt without 19 incarceration, Bliss and Mallen suggested that Norrie should 20 immediately turn over, without objection, all documents 21 responsive to Bliss’ document requests and that Norrie should 22 return to the United States and voluntarily surrender to federal 23 marshals. Bliss and Mallen further proposed expedited procedures 24 for convening Norrie’s Rule 2004 examination so that Norrie’s 25 time in custody could be minimized if he properly cooperated in 26 the Rule 2004 examination process. In essence, Bliss and Mallen 27 contended that withdrawing the coercive incarceration sanction 28 before Norrie fully complied with the Rule 2004 discovery 10 1 requests would only encourage Norrie to continue his pattern of 2 noncompliance with the bankruptcy court’s orders. 3 At the hearing on Norrie’s motion seeking to alter the terms 4 of the bankruptcy court’s February contempt orders, the 5 bankruptcy court denied Norrie’s motion without prejudice. The 6 bankruptcy court specifically declined to modify its prior 7 contempt orders so as to postpone or remove the provision for 8 Norrie’s arrest and incarceration. After carefully and 9 thoughtfully considering the issue of Norrie’s compliance, the 10 court expressed the belief that, given Norrie’s past conduct, 11 Norrie would not comply with the Rule 2004 discovery requests – 12 particularly the production of documents – in the absence of 13 incarceration. On the other hand, the court expressed a 14 willingness to revisit the issue of whether incarceration was 15 necessary if Norrie fully complied with the document requests. 16 The bankruptcy court entered an order in April 2015 denying 17 Norrie’s motion to modify the terms of the February contempt 18 orders. The order specified that Norrie could not set a hearing 19 on a further motion of this type before he fully complied, 20 without objection, to all of Bliss’ 88 categories of document 21 requests. The order also specified that “Debtor Norrie remains a 22 disentitled fugitive, subject to arrest and remand to the Federal 23 Marshal.” Norrie did not appeal this order.4 24 25 4 This was not the first time the bankruptcy court declared 26 Norrie to be a disentitled fugitive. On March 12, 2015, the bankruptcy court entered an order denying Norrie’s motion for 27 sanctions against Mallen and his counsel Paul Burns because, as the court put it, Norrie had fled the country to evade the 28 (continued...) 11 1 Between August and December, 2015, Norrie filed, in pro per, 2 four additional motions seeking to modify or vacate the February 3 2015 contempt orders and the bankruptcy court’s April 2015 order 4 stating that he was a disentitled fugitive and restricting him 5 from seeking modification of the contempt orders without first 6 fully complying with Bliss’ 88 document requests. The arguments 7 in Norrie’s August through December pro se motions are in large 8 part duplicative of each other and also duplicative of the 9 arguments he raised during the contempt proceedings. For 10 instance, Norrie repeatedly claims that neither Bliss nor Mallen 11 are his creditors, that they are defrauding the court by claiming 12 to be his creditors and that they should not be permitted to 13 continue to seek discovery under Rule 2004 because they are not 14 his creditors. Norrie also argued that he does not meet the 15 requirements under 28 U.S.C. § 2466 to qualify as a disentitled 16 fugitive. 17 Norrie additionally renewed his argument that the contempt 18 sanctions imposed – particularly the sanction providing for his 19 incarceration – are criminal rather than civil in nature. In his 20 October and December, 2015, pro se motions, he sets forth new 21 grounds for this argument. In essence, Norrie claimed that he no 22 longer had the funds to pay an attorney to collect and deliver 23 the responsive documents to Bliss and that he has no one else to 24 do this for him. Consequently, Norrie explained, if he is 25 26 4 (...continued) 27 February 2015 contempt orders and that, under the fugitive disentitlement doctrine, Norrie’s status as a fugitive precluded 28 him from pursuing the sanctions motion against Mallen and Burns. 12 1 arrested the moment he returns to the United States, there is no 2 way that he can produce the documents requested and, hence, no 3 way he can purge his contempt – which renders the incarceration 4 sanction punitive and criminal in nature. As Norrie put it: 5 “Given the fact that 75% of the 88 categories [of documents 6 requested] either cannot be produced prior to . . . arrest . . . 7 or cannot be produced at all, it is physically impossible for 8 Norrie to purge the contempt as the ruling currently stands.” 9 Motion for hearing to determine purging of contempt, etc. 10 (Oct. 13, 2015) at p. 5 of 27; see also id. at 8 of 27. 11 No responses were filed to the first three of Norrie’s pro 12 se motions, and the court denied all three of these motions 13 without holding a hearing. In its orders denying these motions, 14 the bankruptcy court merely stated that Norrie had failed to 15 demonstrate good cause in support of the motions. 16 In December 2015, Mallen and Bliss filed a joint opposition 17 to Norrie’s fourth pro se motion. According to Mallen and Bliss, 18 Norrie’s fourth pro se motion did not offer any legitimate 19 explanation why, after roughly 17 months of being under court 20 order to produce documents, Norrie had not produced a single 21 document responsive to Bliss’ 88 document requests. Mallen and 22 Bliss further asserted that their counsel remained ready, willing 23 and able to receive any documents Norrie produced in response to 24 Bliss’ document requests, and counsel pledged to promptly report 25 to the court the status of any such production, in accordance 26 with the bankruptcy court’s April 2015 order on Norrie’s first 27 (counseled) motion seeking to modify the February contempt 28 orders. 13 1 On December 18, 2015, the bankruptcy court entered an order 2 denying Norrie’s fourth pro se motion seeking to vacate or modify 3 the court’s February 2015 contempt orders and its April 2015 4 order. Norrie timely appealed the December 18, 2015 order. 5 JURISDICTION 6 The bankruptcy court had jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. 7 §§ 1334 and 157(b)(2)(A). To the extent we have jurisdiction 8 over this appeal, that jurisdiction arises under 28 U.S.C. § 158. 9 ISSUES 10 1. What is the permissible scope of this appeal? 11 2. Does the bankruptcy court’s incarceration sanction qualify 12 as a criminal contempt sanction or a civil contempt 13 sanction? 14 STANDARDS OF REVIEW 15 The issue regarding the permissible scope of this appeal 16 requires us to examine our jurisdiction, which we review de novo. 17 See Wolkowitz v. Beverly (In re Beverly), 374 B.R. 221, 230 (9th 18 Cir. BAP 2007), aff'd in part & dismissed in part, 551 F.3d 1092 19 (9th Cir. 2008). 20 The issue regarding whether the bankruptcy court’s 21 incarceration sanction qualifies as civil or criminal hinges on 22 the correctness of the bankruptcy court’s determination that 23 Norrie has the ability to purge his contempt by producing the 24 documents requested. That determination was a finding of fact, 25 which we review under the clearly erroneous standard. SEC v. 26 Elmas Trading Corp., 824 F.2d 732, 732-33 (9th Cir. 1987). 27 A factual finding is not clearly erroneous unless it is 28 illogical, implausible, or without support in the record. Retz 14 1 v. Samson (In re Retz), 606 F.3d 1189, 1196 (9th Cir. 2010). 2 DISCUSSION 3 Before we conduct any review of the bankruptcy court’s 4 December 18, 2015 order denying Norrie’s fourth pro se motion, we 5 first must ascertain what effect – if any – Norrie’s failure to 6 file (or perfect) appeals from the court’s other contempt-related 7 orders has on our jurisdiction. We have an independent duty to 8 consider the extent of our jurisdiction even when the parties 9 have not raised the issue. See Couch v. Telescope, Inc., 10 611 F.3d 629, 632 (9th Cir. 2010). 11 Norrie stated in his fourth pro se motion that the motion 12 was procedurally based on Civil Rule 60(b), which is made 13 applicable in bankruptcy contested matters by Rule 9024. How 14 (and whether) we address the denial of Norrie’s Civil Rule 60(b) 15 motion depends in part on whether the bankruptcy court’s February 16 2015 contempt orders were final orders. If they were not final, 17 the bankruptcy court’s denial of relief under Civil Rule 60(b) 18 was appropriate for the simple reason that Civil Rule 60(b), on 19 its face, only applies to final judgments and orders. 20 In any event, we hold that the bankruptcy court’s contempt 21 orders do qualify as final orders. In order to explain how we 22 reach this holding, we must describe the difference between 23 criminal and civil contempt sanctions – particularly in the 24 bankruptcy context. 25 As first decided by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in 26 Knupfer v. Lindblade (In re Dyer), 322 F.3d 1178, 1192-95 (9th 27 Cir. 2003), bankruptcy courts have no authority to impose 28 significant criminal contempt sanctions; under § 105(a), they 15 1 only may impose civil contempt sanctions. Dyer also described 2 the difference between compensatory civil contempt sanctions and 3 criminal contempt fines: 4 Civil penalties must either be compensatory or designed to coerce compliance. In contrast, a flat 5 unconditional fine totaling even as little as $50 could be criminal if the contemnor has no subsequent 6 opportunity to reduce or avoid the fine through compliance, and the fine is not compensatory. This is 7 so regardless of whether the non-compensatory fine is payable to the court or to the complainant. Whether 8 the fine is payable to the complainant may, however, be one relevant factor in determining whether the fine is 9 compensatory or punitive. 10 In re Dyer, 322 F.3d at 1192 (citations and internal quotation 11 marks omitted). On this record, the attorney’s fees awards that 12 the bankruptcy court granted all qualify as compensatory civil 13 contempt sanctions. The bankruptcy court repeatedly stated in 14 its rulings that the monetary sanctions it was awarding were 15 meant to compensate Bliss and Mallen for the attorney’s fees they 16 incurred in enforcing the bankruptcy court’s orders. 17 As for the incarceration sanction, incarceration can be a 18 civil contempt sanction, but only if the contemnor can purge the 19 contempt and thereby free himself from custody by complying with 20 the court’s orders. In other words, a “civil contemnor ‘carries 21 the keys of his prison in his own pocket’ because civil contempt 22 is ‘intended to be remedial by coercing the defendant to do what 23 he had refused to do.’” Lasar v. Ford Motor Co., 399 F.3d 1101, 24 1110 (9th Cir. 2005) (quoting Gompers v. Buck's Stove & Range 25 Co., 221 U.S. 418, 442 (1911)); see also United States v. United 26 Mine Workers of Am., 330 U.S. 258, 303–04 (1947) (holding that 27 civil contempt sanctions only may be imposed for two purposes: 28 either to coerce compliance or to compensate the other side for 16 1 losses sustained as a result of the contempt). 2 Here, the bankruptcy court imposed the incarceration 3 sanction as a civil contempt sanction. The patent purpose of the 4 sanction was to coerce Norrie to comply with Bliss’ Rule 2004 5 discovery requests, and the February 2015 contempt orders 6 contained a provision indicating that the incarceration only 7 would last until Norrie purged himself of the contempt by 8 complying with the Rule 2004 discovery requests. Because the 9 contempt orders afforded Norrie with the means to prevent or 10 limit his incarceration, the incarceration sanction imposed 11 against Norrie was civil in nature. See United Mine Workers of 12 Am. v. Bagwell, 512 U.S. 821, 828 (1994). 13 Civil contempt orders typically are considered interlocutory 14 – not final – until the conclusion of the underlying litigation. 15 Elmas Trading Corp., 824 F.2d at 732. In the bankruptcy context, 16 however, when a civil contempt order is entered as a stand-alone 17 matter and not as part of another pending adversary proceeding or 18 contested matter, then the contempt order ordinarily is treated 19 as final upon entry. Stasz v. Gonzalez (In re Stasz), 387 B.R. 20 271, 276 (9th Cir. BAP 2008). Stasz explained that a civil 21 contempt order entered as a stand-alone matter in a bankruptcy 22 case needed to be considered final and immediately appealable 23 upon entry because there was no other clear time at which such a 24 contempt order could or would become final. Id. 25 Here, as in Stasz, the debtor violated orders requiring 26 examination and the production of documents pursuant to 27 Rule 2004. Id. at 273-74. By its very nature, discovery 28 conducted under Rule 2004 is a stand-alone matter. See 17 1 In re Dinubilo, 177 B.R. 932, 943 (E.D. Cal. 1993); Clark v. 2 Farris-Ellison (In re Farris-Ellison), 2015 WL 5306600, at *3 3 (Bankr. C.D. Cal. Sept. 10, 2015). Accordingly, we consider the 4 contempt orders entered against Norrie to enforce the bankruptcy 5 court’s Rule 2004 order to have been final and immediately 6 appealable. 7 Having concluded that the contempt orders were final, we 8 next consider the scope of our appellate review. Norrie filed 9 this appeal after the denial of his fourth pro se motion seeking 10 to modify or set aside the February 2015 contempt orders and the 11 April 2015 order denying Norrie’s counseled motion to modify the 12 contempt orders. Norrie’s appeal from the February 2015 contempt 13 orders was dismissed for lack of prosecution, and Norrie did not 14 appeal the April 2015 order. Nor did he appeal any of the orders 15 denying his first three pro se motions. 16 Because the contempt orders and the orders denying the first 17 three pro se motions are all now final and nonappealable, 18 Norrie’s attempt to argue in this appeal matters that were or 19 should have been raised in the original contempt proceedings or 20 in support of his first three pro se motions constitutes an 21 impermissible collateral attack on the prior, final orders. See 22 Valley Nat'l Bank of Ariz. v. Needler (In re Grantham Bros.), 23 922 F.2d 1438, 1442 (9th Cir. 1991) (rejecting as frivolous 24 appellant’s attempted collateral attack of bankruptcy court’s 25 final, non-appealable sale order); Alakozai v. Citizens Equity 26 First Credit Union (In re Alakozai), 499 B.R. 698, 704 (9th Cir. 27 BAP 2013) (“A final order of a federal court may not be 28 18 1 collaterally attacked.”).5 2 Put another way, the denials of the first three pro se 3 motions all were separately appealable final post-judgment 4 orders. See Jeff D. v. Kempthorne, 365 F.3d 844, 850 (9th Cir. 5 2004); TAAG Linhas Aereas de Angola v. Transamerica Airlines, 6 Inc., 915 F.2d 1351, 1354 (9th Cir. 1990). Norries’ failure to 7 timely appeal those orders deprives this Panel of jurisdiction to 8 review those denials and the issues addressed therein. A timely 9 filed notice of appeal is mandatory and jurisdictional. Browder 10 v. Dir., Dep’t of Corr., 434 U.S. 257, 264 (1978); Slimick v. 11 Silva (In re Slimick), 928 F.2d 304, 306 (9th Cir. 1990). 12 Slimick is particularly instructive. In Slimick, the bankruptcy 13 court entered an order sustaining the bankruptcy trustee’s 14 exemption claim objection. Id. at 305. After the time for 15 filing an appeal from that order had run, the Slimicks filed a 16 motion requesting that the bankruptcy court enter written 17 findings of fact and conclusions of law. Id. Several months 18 later, the bankruptcy court entered written findings and 19 conclusions and also entered a judgment disallowing the Slimicks’ 20 exemption claim. Id. at 305-06. The Slimicks timely appealed 21 the subsequent judgment but not the prior order. Id. On appeal, 22 the Ninth Circuit held that the Slimicks’ appeal was untimely and 23 that the entry of the subsequent judgment did not “constitute a 24 second final disposition” that would start over the appeal 25 26 5 In light of our conclusion that the contempt order and the 27 orders denying the first 3 pro se motions are final and nonappealable, we need not address the impact, if any, of the 28 order denying the counseled motion in this appeal. 19 1 period, nor did it extend the original appeal period, which ran 2 when the bankruptcy court entered its original order disallowing 3 the exemption claim. Id. at 306-07. 4 Here, Norrie could not extend the time to appeal the 5 contempt orders or the orders denying his first three pro se 6 motions by filing and obtaining a ruling on his fourth pro se 7 motion. To hold otherwise would undermine the mandatory and 8 jurisdictional nature of the appeal filing deadline. Thus, the 9 issues raised and determined by the bankruptcy court’s contempt 10 orders and its denial of Norrie’s first three pro se motions are 11 beyond the permissible scope of this appeal. 12 Our holding regarding the limited permissible scope of this 13 appeal is consistent with United States v. Wheeler, 952 F.2d 326, 14 327 (9th Cir. 1991). The Wheeler court held that the denial of a 15 motion seeking to vacate a contempt order is “nonappealable” when 16 the motion to vacate is premised on grounds that existed at the 17 time of entry of the contempt order and the contemnor did not 18 timely appeal the contempt order. As Wheeler explained, to hold 19 otherwise would enable the contemnor to indefinitely extend the 20 appeal period as to issues that could have and should have been 21 addressed in the original contempt proceedings or in an appeal 22 following the contempt proceedings. Id. 23 In sum, to the extent Norrie did raise or could have raised 24 his arguments against the contempt orders in the initial contempt 25 proceedings or in support of his first three pro se motions, we 26 cannot address those arguments in this appeal from the denial of 27 his fourth pro se motion. 28 Many of Norrie’s pro se arguments should have been asserted, 20 1 if at all, in response to the original contempt motion. For 2 example, in his third and fourth pro se motions, Norrie goes 3 through the 88 categories of documents set forth in the original 4 document requests and asserts that documents responsive to 26 of 5 the categories requested do not exist, documents responsive to 9 6 of the categories requested are not within his possession or 7 control, documents responsive to 28 of the categories requested 8 might be in storage in Los Angeles, documents responsive to 2 of 9 the categories requested should not have to be produced because 10 the requests are subject to “legitimate objection” and documents 11 responsive to 23 of the categories requested are not subject to 12 any impediment that would prevent Norrie from producing them – 13 even though he has not actually produced them. 14 Even if we were to assume that Norrie’s assertions regarding 15 the document categories are truthful and accurate, and even if we 16 were to assume that these assertions partly mitigate the 17 bankruptcy court’s contempt finding (which they do not), it 18 simply is much too little – and much too late – an effort on 19 Norrie’s part to comply with the bankruptcy court’s original 20 order requiring Norrie to produce documents. Nothing in our 21 review of the entire record indicates why Norrie could not have 22 provided this same information (and produced whatever documents 23 were available to him) years ago – at the time the bankruptcy 24 court entered its original Rule 2004 order – or at any time 25 thereafter. 26 In any event, for purposes of this appeal, we cannot 27 consider Norrie’s assertions addressing the individual categories 28 of documents he was directed to produce because that issue (and 21 1 virtually all of the other issues set forth in his fourth pro se 2 motion) are beyond the permissible scope of this appeal. As we 3 explained above, we lack jurisdiction over these issues because 4 Norrie did not file (or perfect) appeals from the contempt orders 5 or from the orders denying Norrie’s first three pro se motions. 6 We only can address the merits of one argument raised by 7 Norrie on appeal. Norrie contends on appeal that the bankruptcy 8 court erred by not granting his fourth pro se motion because 9 there is no longer any way for Norrie to purge his contempt. 10 According to Norrie, even if the incarceration sanction 11 originally was intended to be coercive rather than punitive, his 12 inability to purge the contempt by producing all of the documents 13 requested caused the incarceration sanction to change into a 14 purely punitive criminal contempt sanction. Norrie correctly 15 points out that civil contempt sanctions providing for 16 incarceration can become criminal in nature when the contemnor no 17 longer has the ability to purge the contempt. See Elmas Trading 18 Corp., 824 F.2d at 732–33. Norrie additionally points out that 19 bankruptcy courts do not have authority to impose criminal 20 contempt sanctions. See In re Dyer, 322 F.3d at 1192-95. 21 For purposes of this appeal, we will assume without deciding 22 that bankruptcy court issuance of a coercive civil contempt 23 sanction that later becomes criminal (because it no longer can be 24 purged) is a jurisdictional defect and is the type of 25 jurisdictional defect that could render the court’s contempt 26 order void. But see United Student Aid Funds, Inc. v. Espinosa, 27 559 U.S. 260, 271–72 (2010) (indicating that a jurisdictional 28 defect only is sufficient to justify Civil Rule 60(b)(4) relief 22 1 from a void judgment in “the exceptional case in which the court 2 that rendered judgment lacked even an ‘arguable basis’ for 3 jurisdiction.”). 4 Even if we make these assumptions, Norrie’s argument does 5 not justify reversal of the bankruptcy court’s denial of Norrie’s 6 fourth pro se motion. In denying Norrie’s fourth pro se motion, 7 the bankruptcy court did not explicitly find that Norrie still 8 had the ability to produce the requested documents and purge his 9 contempt, but that finding is implicit based on the entirety of 10 the record and on the comments the bankruptcy court made at the 11 time of the hearing on Norrie’s first (counseled) motion seeking 12 to modify the contempt orders. At that time, after thoughtfully 13 considering Norrie’s contentions, the bankruptcy court stated 14 that Norrie had “virtually zero” credibility on the Rule 2004 15 order compliance issue. The bankruptcy court indicated that 16 Norrie only could recover some amount of credibility by actually 17 producing some of the requested documents. The bankruptcy court 18 further indicated that it might be willing to revisit the issue 19 regarding the purge provision of the contempt orders once Norrie 20 actually had produced the documents as requested. 21 In support of his inability to purge argument, Norrie 22 asserted in his appeal brief and in his fourth pro se motion that 23 he cannot gather together and produce some of the documents 24 requested while in England and that, if he returns to the United 25 States, he immediately will be taken into custody, which also 26 will prevent him from gathering together and producing some of 27 the documents. Norrie also asserted that documents responsive to 28 some of the document requests do not exist and that others are 23 1 not within his possession or control. Notwithstanding Norrie’s 2 assertions, the alleged state of affairs regarding Norrie’s 3 efforts and ability to purge his contempt did not change 4 drastically from the time of his first (counseled) motion seeking 5 to modify the contempt orders to the time of Norrie’s fourth pro 6 se motion. More importantly, nothing had changed to increase 7 Norrie’s credibility regarding the extent of his efforts to 8 comply with the document requests. 9 Under these circumstances, we are not persuaded that the 10 bankruptcy court’s implicit finding – that Norrie still had the 11 ability to purge his contempt at the time of the denial of 12 Norrie’s fourth pro se motion – was clearly erroneous. 13 CONCLUSION 14 For the reasons set forth above, we AFFIRM the bankruptcy 15 court’s order denying Norrie’s fourth pro se motion. 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 24