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Date: 09-17-2014

Case Style: Vehicle Market Research, Inc. v. Mitchell International, Inc.

Case Number: 12-3333

Judge: Ebel

Court: United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit on appeal from the District of Kansas (Wyandotte County)

Plaintiff's Attorney: Nora Kane (Mark Peterson on the brief), of Stinson Morrison Hecker, Omaha, Nebraska for Plaintiff-Appellant.

Defendant's Attorney: Allyson N. Ho of Morgan Lewis & Bockius, Dallas, Texas (Anthony J. Durone of
Berkowitz Oliver Williams Shaw & Eisenbrandt, Kansas City, Missouri; Scott T. Schutte and of Morgan Lewis & Bockius, Chicago, Illinois with her on the brief),
for Defendant-Appellee

Description: This is a judicial estoppel case, which is controlled by two principles: our
reluctance to impose the harsh remedy of judicial estoppel, and the failure by the party
asserting judicial estoppel to bear its burden to point to clearly inconsistent statements in
support of its arguments.
The case involves statements made by plaintiff Vehicle Market Research, Inc.
(VMR) in a breach of contract case that were allegedly inconsistent with earlier
statements by the sole owner and alter-ego of that company, John Tagliapietra, in his
Chapter 7 bankruptcy proceeding.1 Specifically, VMR developed and owned certain
intellectual property (referred to in the contract as “Materials and Intellectual
Property”)—including a software system to calculate the value of a total loss of an
automobile for the purposes of the automobile insurance industry (the “TLSS Product”)
and certain “pre-existing software tools, utilities, concepts, techniques, text, research or
development” used in the development of TLSS (the “Pre-Existing Materials”). (R. Vol. I
at 261, ¶8.1.) When Mr. Tagliapietra filed for personal bankruptcy, he asserted that his
shares in VMR were worth nothing. A few years later, as the bankruptcy was winding
down, VMR sued Mitchell International, Inc. (Mitchell), the company to which it had
exclusively licensed the Materials and Intellectual Property, seeking up to $4.5 million in
damages for the alleged misappropriation of the Materials and Intellectual Property. The
question before us is whether the statements by VMR and Mr. Tagliapietra in the
litigation against Mitchell were so clearly contrary to the statements made by Mr.
1 It is conceded that VMR and Mr. Tagliapietra are alter-egos of each other, so we will
not further address that issue.
3
Tagliapietra in his bankruptcy proceeding that VMR should be judicially estopped from
proceeding with its suit against Mitchell.
There is no doubt that when Mr. Tagliapietra filed his bankruptcy, he listed the
value of VMR’s stock as 0.00. He did not amend that statement, except to approve the
bankruptcy Trustee’s valuation of the shares at a value of “unknown” at some point in
2009, around the time that he was preparing to file his lawsuit (in the shoes of VMR)
against Mitchell. As a result of Mr. Tagliapietra’s representations in the bankruptcy court,
the Trustee and the bankruptcy court awarded Mr. Tagliapietra a discharge of his debts
based in part on the assumption that his company was worthless.
Turning to the VMR litigation at hand against Mitchell, VMR alleged in the
unverified complaint that it was entitled to up to $4.5 million on its contract with Mitchell
authorizing Mitchell to use the Materials and Intellectual Property. In Mr. Tagliapietra’s
2011 deposition in the instant litigation, he acknowledged that the Pre-Existing Materials,
the existence of which preceded the filing of his bankruptcy, were worth $4 million in
2009.
We review the doctrine of judicial estoppel with guidance telling us we should
apply it sparingly and require a clearly inconsistent statement before invoking it. We
conclude that neither VMR’s litigation claim for payments until they reach a cap of $4.5
million nor Mr. Tagliapietra’s deposition testimony in that lawsuit—that VMR was
entitled to “up to” $4 million in royalties and that, in 2009, the Pre-Existing Materials
were worth $4 million—is clearly inconsistent with his valuation of 0.00 for his VMR
4
stock at the time of his bankruptcy petition in 2005, the date when the initial bankruptcy
representations were made.
If there were grounds for judicial estoppel, it would have to be based on a duty by
Mr. Tagliapietra to amend his bankruptcy pleadings to report a possible increased value
for his VMR stock at least as of the time that VMR filed its suit against Mitchell in 2009.
However, our precedent is not clear on whether a debtor has a continuing duty to amend
his bankruptcy schedules when the estate’s assets change in value. Given our reluctance
to invoke judicial estoppel, and keeping in mind that judicial estoppel is an affirmative
defense that its proponent must prove, we conclude that in this case Mitchell has not met
its burden of showing any clearly inconsistent statements that would warrant that relief.
We therefore REVERSE the district court’s opinion as an abuse of discretion.
BACKGROUND
I. Development of VMR’s product and licensing to Mitchell
Mitchell is a company providing various products and solutions for insurance
companies and collision repair facilities. John Tagliapietra was Mitchell’s employee at
the time he conceived of the TLSS Product, which is “a product that assists automobile
insurers in providing a fair market value for a vehicle that has been declared a total
loss. . . .” (R. Vol. II at 540.). As Mitchell was Mr. Tagliapietra’s employer, Mitchell had
the option to develop the system further within its company, but instead gave Mr.
Tagliapietra permission to develop it on his own and retained a right of first refusal to
license the resulting software product. Mr. Tagliapietra incorporated VMR in 1997 to
5
develop the TLSS product. Mr. Tagliapietra is VMR’s sole shareholder and
decisionmaker.
Mitchell became VMR’s exclusive licensee, marketing the TLSS product VMR
developed as iNTOTAL. To facilitate that arrangement, in 1998 VMR and Mitchell
executed a Computer Programming and System Integration Services Agreement (the
“Agreement”) for the licensing of the Materials and Intellectual Property, which
provided:
8.1 Ownership of Materials and Intellectual Property: During the
term of this Agreement and upon completion of all payments due,
termination, cancellation, or expiration of this Agreement, but subject to
the provisions of Paragraph 28 hereof, VMR shall immediately turn over
all items (including the TLSS Product, Work Product or work in process)
in its possession which were prepared pursuant to this Agreement or made
available to VMR, . . . used in developing the TLSS Product and Work
Product and all rights, title, and interest or other materials furnished to
VMR by MITCHELL during the course of VMR performing Professional
Services, and all copies thereof. . . .
Notwithstanding the foregoing, VMR retains all right, title and interest in,
and to, any pre-existing software tools, utilities, concepts, techniques,
text, research or development methods that VMR used in or applied to the
development of the TLSS Product (the “Pre-Existing Materials”).
VMR hereby grants MITCHELL an exclusive right and license to
modify, adapt, reproduce, use and distribute the Pre-existing Materials
as part of the TLSS Product and as part of any adaptations, updates,
enhancements or other derivative works based thereon.
(R. Vol. I at 261, ¶8.1.) Thus, the Agreement encompassing the Materials and Intellectual
Property provided for Mitchell to license, use, and distribute, as part of the TLSS Product,
“any pre-existing software tools, utilities, concepts, techniques, text, research or
6
development methods that VMR used in or applied to the development of the TLSS
Product,” a.k.a the Pre-Existing Materials, but VMR retained title to those Pre-Existing
Materials.2
The Agreement mandated royalty payments from Mitchell to VMR such that each
time the TLSS Product was used to determine whether a vehicle was a total loss, it would
result in payment of no less than a $1.00 royalty to VMR, with a cumulative royalty
maximum to VMR of $3,500,000 over the life of the Agreement. Mr. Tagliapietra
resigned from his position with Mitchell in 2000. Later, in 2002, the parties amended the
Agreement to provide for a higher cumulative royalty maximum of $4,500,000. Over the
course of the Agreement, the monthly royalties Mitchell paid VMR amounted to between
$200 and $3,300. Mitchell paid VMR these royalties until September 2005 at the latest.
Sometime during September 2005, Mr. Tagliapietra spoke by phone with Mitchell’s inhouse
counsel, Jason Gray, and asked why the royalty payments had stopped. Mr.
Tagliapietra received no response, but in December 2005, Mr. Tagliapietra saw Mr. Gray
at a Costco store and brought up their September phone conversation, noting that Mr.
Gray had not followed up with him. Mr. Tagliapietra again asked why Mitchell had
stopped paying royalties, and Mr. Gray told him that Mitchell “had paid enough.”
In fact, Mitchell had begun to develop its own total loss product in 2003, and, on
2 The Agreement included the value of: 1) any royalty interest from use of the TLSS
Product and the Pre-Existing Materials; and 2) any residual value of the Pre-Existing
Materials which VMR retained. Both of these values will be included when we refer to
the Agreement for Materials and Intellectual Property.
7
November 2, 2005, Mitchell released its product to the market under the name Total Loss
Valuation (“TLV”). Mr. Tagliapietra found out that the TLV product was being
developed in December 2005. After looking into the TLV product he discovered that
Mitchell’s website was no longer marketing iNTOTAL, the product using his TLSS
Product. Upon inquiry, a contact at Mitchell told him that iNTOTAL was no longer used
by Mitchell. However, Mitchell never terminated the Agreement.
II. The bankruptcy proceeding and VMR’s lawsuit
On October 14, 2005, Mr. Tagliapietra filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy—which was
after Mitchell stopped paying VMR royalties but before Mr. Tagliapietra discovered
Mitchell was no longer using the TLSS Product.
At the time of his bankruptcy petition, Mr. Tagliapietra listed the value of his
VMR stock as “0.00.” According to his brief, this valuation was based on the fact that
VMR: “was no longer receiving royalties from Mitchell; had no expectation of receiving
additional royalties from Mitchell; did not have possession or right to possess the
software developed for Mitchell because the Agreement was never terminated; and had
no other assets.” VMR Br. at 4. When Mr. Tagliapietra filed for bankruptcy, he did not
know of the TLV product Mitchell was developing.
It was about two years after filing for bankruptcy, in mid-2007, that Mr.
Tagliapietra began to suspect that Mitchell’s TLV product violated the Agreement by
using the Materials and Intellectual Property. In July 2009, Mr. Tagliapietra viewed the
TLV product at a client’s facility, which convinced him that Mitchell had used VMR’s
8
Materials and Intellectual Property to develop its TLV product.
VMR sued Mitchell on October 5, 2009 for breach of contract and breach of the
covenant of good faith and fair dealing, among other causes of action, claiming that
“Mitchell has an obligation to pay VMR royalties . . . and . . . future royalties . . . at a rate
of $1.00 per transaction . . . until the total of payments to VMR equals $4.5 million.” (R.
Vol. I at 24-25, 29.) Meanwhile, on October 20, 2009, fifteen days after VMR filed its
lawsuit against Mitchell, the bankruptcy court entered its order approving Mr.
Tagliapietra’s discharge, and closed the estate. In the final account and certification, the
Trustee valued Mr. Tagliapietra’s profit sharing in VMR and two other companies as
“unknown.” Mr. Tagliapietra approved that final report.
Discovery materials from VMR’s lawsuit showed that several Mitchell employees
testified that Mitchell relied in some way on VMR’s Materials and Intellectual Property
to create Mitchell’s TLV product. Discovery in the VMR litigation also revealed the
following testimony related to Mr. Tagliapietra’s valuation of the Pre-Existing Materials
from a November 3, 2011 deposition of Mr. Tagliapietra:
MR. SCHUTTE [Attorney for Mitchell]: I’m not talking about – I’m not
talking about – I will stipulate right now that that is an issue
that is open as to what the amount of damages is. Okay. Mr
Tagliapietra has said over and over again that he doesn’t
know if it’s 4 million. It could be more. It could be less.
That’s an issue to be determined.
BY MR. SCHUTTE:
Q My question is when the complaint was filed on October 5th
of 2009, did you believe that the statement that “Mitchell
owes VMR,” let’s say, “up to $4 million in royalties” was an
accurate statement?
9
[BY MR. TAGLIAPIETRA:]
A I believe that to be an accurate statement.
Q Okay. VMR is the owner of the – as we talked about at length
yesterday – the preexisting materials. Correct?
A Yes.
Q Do you think those preexisting materials have any value?
MS. KANE [ATTORNEY FOR MR. TAGLIAPIETRA/VMR]: It’s a yesor-
no question.
THE WITNESS [MR. TAGLIAPIETRA:]: Yes, they have value.
BY MR. SCHUTTE:
Q What value do they have? I'm not asking for a dollar number.
I'm asking for –
[BY MR. TAGLIAPIETRA:]
A Four million dollars’ worth.
Q Okay. And you were entitled, according to your interpretation
of the contract, the-the- the—excuse me—the preexisting
materials, all the way back in 1998. Correct?
MS. KANE: Object to form.
THE WITNESS [MR. TAGLIAPIETRA]: Those preexisting materials
existed in 1996 and 1997.
(Id. at 233-35.)3
The district court granted summary judgment on judicial estoppel grounds. The
district court first determined that it would pierce VMR’s corporate veil and equate VMR
with its alter-ego Mr. Tagliapietra; neither party challenges that holding. The district
court then held that Mr. Tagliapietra was not judicially estopped from pursuing his action
based on Mr. Tagliapietra’s non-disclosure of VMR’s inchoate lawsuit against Mitchell
in Mitchell’s initial bankruptcy filing because Mitchell’s allegedly wrongful conduct was
not apparent until after Mr. Tagliapietra filed his bankruptcy petition. However, the
3 In this testimony, Mr. Tagliapietra expressed his belief that the Pre-Existing Materials
were worth $4 million dollars, which we assume is a rough estimate in line with his (nonverified)
complaint alleging that VMR was entitled to total payments up to $4.5 million.
10
district court concluded that VMR was judicially estopped from pursuing its action based
on the inconsistency of Mr. Tagliapietra’s valuation of VMR’s stock in its action against
Mitchell as compared to his 0.00 valuation of the VMR stock in his bankruptcy. The
district court found that VMR’s breach of contract claim was based on the allegation of
Mitchell’s use of the Pre-Existing Materials. Relying on the exchange above, the district
court concluded that “[t]he fact that the preexisting materials themselves had value means
that VMR was worth something at the time Tagliapietra filed his petition for
bankruptcy.” (R. Vol. II at 555) (emphasis in original). The district court also concluded
that the other requirements for judicial estoppel were met—in its view, Mr. Tagliapietra’s
actions appeared to be a deliberate attempt to mislead the bankruptcy court, and that this
provided Mr. Tagliapietra an unfair advantage in the present action.
When VMR moved to alter or amend the judgment under Fed. R. Civ. P. 59(e), the
district court “explained that the stock was an asset that existed pre-petition, unlike the
cause of action in this case, so Tagliapietra had a continuing duty to disclose its true
value” to the bankruptcy court. (R. Vol. II at 581.) The district court denied VMR’s
motion to alter or amend. VMR appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment
to Mitchell.
DISCUSSION
I. The doctrine of judicial estoppel
“The doctrine of judicial estoppel is based upon protecting the integrity of the
judicial system by ‘prohibiting parties from deliberately changing positions according to
11
the exigencies of the moment.’” Bradford v. Wiggins, 516 F.3d 1189, 1194 (10th Cir.
2008) (quoting New Hampshire v. Maine, 532 U.S. 742, 749-50 (2001)). Although there
is no precise formula for judicial estoppel, Bradford, 516 F.3d at 1194, generally,
the doctrine applies when (1) a party takes a position clearly inconsistent with an
earlier-taken position; (2) adopting the later, inconsistent, position would create an
impression that either the earlier or the later court was misled; and (3) allowing the
party to change their position would give them an unfair advantage.
Hansen v. Harper Excavating, Inc., 641 F.3d 1216, 1227 (10th Cir. 2011); see also New
Hampshire v. Maine, 532 U.S. at 750-51. The Tenth Circuit applies the doctrine “both
narrowly and cautiously.” Hansen, 641 F.3d at 1227.
Our rationale behind our cautious application of the doctrine is that judicial
estoppel is a powerful weapon to employ against a party seeking to vindicate its rights,
and there are often lesser weapons that can keep alleged inconsistent statements in check
while preserving a party’s option to have its day in court. See Bradford, 516 F.3d at 1194
(“Because of the harsh results attendant with precluding a party from asserting a position
that would normally be available to the party, judicial estoppel must be applied with
caution.”). The most obvious of these lesser remedies is to allow the opposing party to
impeach at trial the party that has made the inconsistent statement. Judicial estoppel is
only appropriate when that technique or other less forceful remedies are inadequate to
protect the integrity of the judicial system. See Bradford, 516 F.3d at 1194 (“The
doctrine of judicial estoppel is based upon protecting the integrity of the judicial
system . . . .”).
12
II. Standard of review
The district court held that VMR was judicially estopped on summary judgment,
so this court views all facts and reasonable inferences therefrom most favorably to VMR,
the non-moving party. Eastman v. Union Pac. R. Co., 493 F.3d 1151, 1155-56 (10th Cir.
2007) (evaluating a grant of summary judgment on judicial estoppel grounds). However,
if the district court “properly characterized the facts in light of the applicable standard,
we then review its decision to judicially estop [a party] . . . only for an abuse of
discretion.” Id. at 1156. “A court abuses its discretion only when it makes a clear error of
judgment, exceeds the bounds of permissible choice, or when its decision is arbitrary,
capricious or whimsical, or results in a manifestly unreasonable judgment.” Id. (internal
quotation marks omitted). In reviewing the district court’s decision in this diversity case,
this court applies federal principles because the purpose of judicial estoppel is to protect
the federal judicial process. Id.
III. Neither Mr. Tagliapietra’s act of bringing his 2009 action nor his 2011
testimony in that action was clearly inconsistent with his valuation of
his VMR stock at 0.00 in 2005
The overarching problem for Mitchell in this case, and the reason we reverse the
district court, is the lack of proof that there is a clearly stated change in position between
Mr. Tagliapietra’s personal bankruptcy and VMR’s later litigation. We look at whether
judicial estoppel should be applied with a strict eye and, as we explain below, Mitchell
has not met its burden to show proof of any such inconsistent statement.
13
Here, Mr. Tagliapietra’s initial statement in his bankruptcy filing, of course, was
that his VMR stock was worth “0.00.” The later allegedly inconsistent statements made
in the lawsuit by VMR were:
1) The claim in VMR’s lawsuit against Mitchell that Mitchell breached VMR’s
contract rights and tort rights, and that VMR should receive royalties “at a rate of
$1.00 per transaction . . . until the total of payments to VMR equals $4.5 million.”
(R. Vol. I at 29.)
2) The deposition testimony by Mr. Tagliapietra in VMR’s lawsuit that “the
statement that ‘Mitchell owes VMR,’ let’s say, ‘up to $4 million in
royalties’” was “an accurate statement.” (R. Vol. I at 234.)
3) The deposition testimony by Mr. Tagliapietra that the Pre-Existing
Materials had “[f]our million dollars’ worth” of value in 2011 and existed
at least back to the time of the 2005 bankruptcy filings. (R. Vol. I at 234-
35.)
The reason we reverse is that those statements are not sufficiently clearly
inconsistent with the bankruptcy valuation by Mr. Tagliapietra of the VMR stock at 0.00
to trigger judicial estoppel:
1) Both the amount alleged in the complaint against Mitchell, “until the total of
payments to VMR equals $4.5 million,” (R. Vol. I at 29,) and Mr. Tagliapietra’s
deposition statement in the Mitchell litigation about the royalties and Pre-Existing
14
Materials’ value were opinions, not assertions of verifiable fact.4 An opinion about
a value may often sound decisive, but it may be just an opinion, or even a wish
about what might happen. We will not treat such opinions in the same way we
treat factually inconsistent assertions designed to work a fraud on the court.
2) Mitchell also points to the deposition testimony by Mr. Tagliapietra in VMR’s
lawsuit that “the statement that ‘Mitchell owes VMR,’ let’s say, ‘up to $4 million
in royalties’” was “an accurate statement” (emphasis added). This statement could
reasonably mean only that the royalties could not exceed $4 million, i.e. it could
be interpreted as a statement of limitation. Thus, it is not a clear declarative
statement of the minimum royalties to which VMR was entitled, i.e., it is not a
statement of inclusion.
3) Finally, Mr. Tagliapietra’s statement about the Pre-Existing Materials’ value does
not necessarily correlate to the value of the VMR stock (the same goes for Mr.
Tagliapietra’s statement about the possible royalty value in 2), above). The
deposition testimony about the Pre-Existing Materials, in relevant part, was as
4 The assertion in the complaint was not even made by Mr. Tagliapietra—it was made by
counsel in an unverified complaint. (See R. Vol. I at 29-30). That the complaint was not
verified further weakens Mitchell’s case. See Barker v. Citigroup, Inc., 2:11-CV-51, 2012
WL 1379308 (D. Utah Apr. 20, 2012). Barker declined to apply judicial estoppel where
the plaintiff’s position asserted in an earlier state court case in an unverified complaint
had changed as a result of discovery so that the earlier court never adopted the position in
plaintiff’s complaint. Id. at *2-4.The court stated, “[h]ad the complaint in fact been
verified with a sworn factual statement that the check at issue was a forgery, the legal
analysis under judicial estoppel would have been different.” Id. at *3 n.2.
15
follows:
[BY MR. SCHUTTE:]
Q Do you think those preexisting materials have any value?
MS. KANE [ATTORNEY FOR MR. TAGLIAPIETRA/VMR]: It’s a yesor-
no question.
THE WITNESS [MR. TAGLIAPIETRA]: Yes, they have value.
BY MR. SCHUTTE:
Q What value do they have? I'm not asking for a dollar number.
I'm asking for –
[BY MR. TAGLIAPIETRA:]
A Four million dollars’ worth.
Q Okay. And you were entitled, according to your interpretation
of the contract, the-the- the—excuse me—the preexisting
materials, all the way back in 1998. Correct?
MS. KANE: Object to form.
THE WITNESS [MR. TAGLIAPIETRA]: Those preexisting materials
existed in 1996 and 1997.
(R. Vol. I at 234-35.)
The district court characterized VMR’s theory in its 2009 lawsuit as one in which
Mitchell owed VMR royalties “based on the value of VMR’s preexisting materials,
materials that existed at the time the contract was entered into.” (R. Vol. II at 553.) From
this portrayal, the district court concluded that VMR’s lawsuit must have been asserting
that the Pre-Existing Materials, in existence at the time of Mr. Tagliapietra’s bankruptcy
petition, had a value greater than 0.00 on the date of petition. From this conclusion, the
district court determined that the VMR stock must have had a value of greater than 0.00
at the time of Tagliapietra’s bankruptcy petition in 2005.
We conclude, however, that by presenting that testimony, Mitchell has not met its
burden of showing that Mr. Tagliapietra stated definitively that the Pre-Existing Materials
16
had a value of $4 million—or any other value—in 2005 when Mr. Tagliapietra’s personal
bankruptcy was filed. In that 2011 testimony, rather, Mr. Tagliapietra acknowledged that
the Pre-Existing Materials existed in those early years, but the question from counsel
about value was “[w]hat value do they have?”—a question posed in the present tense. (R.
Vol. I at 234. (emphasis added)) That Mr. Tagliapietra later volunteered that “[t]hose
preexisting materials existed in 1996 and 1997,” (id. at 235), was a statement about the
existence of the materials. The statement did not clearly express that the materials were
worth more than 0.00 in 2005.
More fundamentally, any alleged value of the Pre-Existing Materials in 2005 (or
in 2009 or later) could be offset by equally significant costs incurred in bringing
necessary litigation to unlock that value, or by other offsets, counterclaims, and similar
considerations. Thus, Mr. Tagliapietra could consistently state both that the Pre-Existing
Materials had value but that VMR the corporation did not, because he might have been
sufficiently unsure about the possibility of realizing any return on that asset in 2005.5
The district court thus erred twice in this case on each of these pieces of evidence
brought forward by Mitchell. First, the district court’s interpretation of Mr. Tagliapietra’s
5 For this reason, the debtor’s clearly inaccurate valuation of the pre-petition stock in his
closely held corporation in In re Bishop, No. 03-80636-JJR, 2009 WL 348844 at *1-2
(Bankr. N.D. Ala. Feb. 6, 2009), relied on by both Mitchell and the district court, is
inapposite. The district court’s reliance on In re Engel, 246 B.R. 784, 790 (Bankr. M.D.
Pa. 2000) fails for the same reason. There is a difference between a clear misvaluation of
stock that has a known asset underlying it and a stock with an uncertain inchoate claim
underlying it.
17
claim and his testimony required the district court to make an inference against the nonmovant,
here VMR/Mr. Tagliapietra, which violates the summary judgment standard. As
we explained, a plausible inference the other way was possible about each piece of
evidence relied upon. Second, to conclude that VMR’s 2009 lawsuit or Mr. Tagliapietra’s
testimony in that lawsuit was clearly inconsistent with Mr. Tagliapietra’s bankruptcy
valuation of 0.00 in 2005, the district court applied a punishing version of judicial
estoppel. But, as we explained, in this circuit, judicial estoppel only applies when “a
party takes a position clearly inconsistent with an earlier-taken position.” Hansen, 641
F.3d at 1227. It is to be applied “both narrowly and cautiously,” id., “[b]ecause of the
harsh results attendant with precluding a party from asserting a position that would
normally be available to the party.” Bradford, 516 F.3d at 1194. Mitchell has not satisfied
its burden.6
IV. Mitchell did not meet its burden of establishing judicial estoppel based
on a claim that Mr. Tagliapietra had a continuing duty in the
bankruptcy proceeding to update his valuation of the VMR stock as a
result of his later conclusions that the preexisting materials had
significant value.
In the district court’s “Memorandum and Order responding to Plaintiff’s Motion to
Alter or Amend a Judgment,” “[t]he Court explained that the stock was an asset that
6 Although we focus on the first prong of judicial estoppel, the latter two prongs—
“(2) adopting the later, inconsistent, position would create an impression that either the
earlier or the later court was misled; and (3) allowing the party to change their position
would give them an unfair advantage,” Hansen, 641 F.3d at 1227—support our
conclusion that judicial estoppel is not appropriate here.
18
existed pre-petition, unlike the cause of action in this case, so Mr. Tagliapietra had a
continuing duty to disclose its true value.” (R. Vol. II at 581.) Mitchell claims that Mr.
Tagliapietra certainly knew that the Pre-Existing Materials were worth something more
than 0.00 by the time the complaint was filed in October 2009, and that Mr. Tagliapietra
had a continuing duty to disclose the stock’s value. Thus, Mitchell contends, VMR
should be judicially estopped based on the inconsistency between Mr. Tagliapietra’s
failure to update the bankruptcy court about the 2009 stock appreciation and VMR’s
assertions, as those described above, in the present litigation.
It appears to be a minority view that in a bankruptcy proceeding, debtors have a
continuing duty to disclose changes in an asset’s value. But we need not reach the
question because we can look again to the principles governing this case: judicial
estoppel is to be applied cautiously and the party bringing the affirmative defense has the
burden to show the court the specific clearly inconsistent statement. Keeping these
principles in mind, we hold that for judicial estoppel purposes, Mitchell did not meet its
burden to show that VMR’s claim and beliefs about that claim—which existed even late
in Mr. Tagliapietra’s bankruptcy—meant that VMR was taking a clearly inconsistent
position from Mr. Tagliapietra’s position in bankruptcy regarding the value of the VMR
stock.
We acknowledge that the near-simultaneous timing between Mr. Tagliapietra’s
bankruptcy discharge and the filing of this lawsuit is suspicious, and there is some facial
incongruity between Mr. Tagliapietra’s approving a valuation of “unknown” for his VMR
19
stock given his testimony that he believed at the time he filed the lawsuit that VMR was
entitled to “up to $4 million in royalties” because of the legal claim. It is clear that Mr.
Tagliapietra had knowledge of some facts, or at least evidence, supporting this lawsuit
during the last year of his bankruptcy.
However, as we discussed above, what a person may think a claim is worth is
intrinsically non-determinative—it is not as clear-cut as a demonstrably proven fact. For
instance, any predicted recovery will be lessened by: 1) how expensive the claim is to
realize; 2) whether the claim will actually be satisfied; 3) possible affirmative defenses
that preclude prevailing in the suit; and 4) possible offsets to the award. All these
contingencies render ambiguous the value of the claim underlying the value of VMR
stock, and the opinions about the value of the claim will reasonably evolve over the
course of the litigation, as every trial lawyer and trustee knows. Thus, claims and
assertion of claims are often not assertions of fact, at least not for purposes of a
disfavored remedy like judicial estoppel. Bearing in mind that Mitchell bore the burden
of pointing to the specific inconsistent assertion by Mr. Tagliapietra/VMR, and noting
that in this case, it was the Trustee who suggested a value of “unknown” on the final
schedule of bankruptcy—Mr. Tagliapietra simply approved it, (R. Vol. I at 243)—we
conclude that Mitchell did not meet its burden.
Although we need not, and therefore do not, make a ruling on these points, we
note that the body of law is not clear with respect to the debtor’s duty to amend his
bankruptcy schedules about the evolving valuation of existing assets. The one case that
20
suggests that there might be a continuing duty to update is Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette
Sec. Corp. v. Mathiasen, 207 A.D.2d 280 (N.Y. App. Div. 1994). In Mathiasen, a petition
sought to revoke a bankruptcy estate’s abandonment of property to the debtor, and the
question was whether the debtor had properly scheduled an asset at the time of petition or
had later corrected the schedule if initially incorrect. Id. at 281-82. The court held that
“[t]he respondent’s listing of a ‘claim against Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette’ on his
schedule of assets, without further description or indication of value, was too vague to
satisfy the requirements for a proper scheduling,” and thus the property could not have
been abandoned by the bankruptcy estate. Id. at 282. By holding that the debtor’s
improper initial scheduling, by listing a claim with no description of value, precluded the
estate from abandoning the property to the debtor, Mathiasen implied that such poor
disclosure should be amended. But Mathiasen itself does not directly speak to the
debtor’s duty to amend, especially when the asset was properly scheduled initially.7
Cases that suggest or imply that such a duty to amend a bankruptcy schedule does
not exist are more numerous, however. In Thomas v. Guardsmark, Inc., No. 02 C 8848,
2005 WL 1629770 (N.D. Ill. July 7, 2005) the defendant Guardsmark contended that the
plaintiff, Thomas, was “judicially estopped from pursuing his lawsuit because he did not
properly disclose the existence or value of this lawsuit in his bankruptcy filings.” Id. at
7 Mathiasen is also only slightly more relevant than the inapposite cases In re Bishop,
2009 WL 348844 at *1-2 and In re Engel, 246 B.R. at 790, because it involves an
ambiguous initial valuation of a pre-petition asset, rather than a clearly erroneous
valuation.
21
*1. The district court noted that Thomas had disclosed the lawsuit and listed its value as
unknown, and rejected defendant’s assertion of judicial estoppel, reasoning that “while a
representation that the lawsuit ha[d] no value would be inappropriate . . . . [t]here is a
distinction between unknown, as opposed to no value.” Id. at *2. The court concluded
that a valuation of “unknown” was not “intentional wrongdoing [that] is the focus of
judicial estoppel,” and declined to judicially estop the plaintiff. Id. at *3.
Further, several cases where creditors or trustees petitioned to revoke a bankruptcy
estate’s abandonment of property to the debtor for improper disclosure of the asset’s
value imply that there is no duty to amend a bankruptcy schedule to reflect the evolving
value of an asset. In In re Johnson, 361 B.R. 903 (Bankr. D. Mont. 9th Cir. 2007), in this
context, the court held that disclosure of a class action suit with the sole description
“Class Action Suit” and “unknown” value was sufficient to avoid revocation of the
abandonment of estate property to the debtor. Id. at 904, 906. The court reasoned that
such a disclosure was not misleading and provided the trustee sufficient basis to conduct
an investigation. Id. at 909. In another failed attempt to revoke abandonment of estate
property to the debtor, In re Adair, 253 B.R. 85 (B.A.P. 9th Cir. 2000) held that a “debtor
did not have an ongoing duty to provide the [bankruptcy] trustee with updated
information about [a] lawsuit” which could impact the value of that lawsuit. Id. at 90. The
court reasoned, “[i]f Congress or the Bankruptcy Rule drafters had intended to impose a
broader duty of ongoing disclosure, either could have expressly so provided.” Id. The
court contrasted the bankruptcy rules to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure discovery
22
rules, which do require such an ongoing duty, and concluded that “[t]he Trustee bore the
burden of acting if he wanted further updated information about the [l]awsuit.” Id. at 90-
91. Similarly, In re Parson, No. 01-73786-SCS, 2007 WL 3306678 (Bankr. E.D. Va.
Nov. 6, 2007) rejected a challenge to an estate’s abandonment of property to the debtor—
this time real property, rather than a legal claim. Id. at *9. The court concluded that the
property was rightfully abandoned though the debtor had provided the trustee with no
update of its appreciation in value. Id. The court implied that it was the trustee’s
responsibility to determine any change in value, stating “[t]he Chapter 7 Trustee had
knowledge of the existence of the asset and ample opportunity for due investigation of
the nature and value of the Property.” Id. Finally, In re Ozer, 208 B.R. 630 (Bankr.
E.D.N.Y. 1997) held, in the context of a petition to revoke a bankruptcy estate’s
abandonment of property to the debtor, that “[s]uch abandonment is irrevocable even if
the trustee subsequently discovers that the abandoned asset has a value which is greater
than what the trustee initially believed” if the property was initially scheduled correctly
for bankruptcy purposes. Id. at 633.
Both Mitchell’s brief on appeal and the district court’s decision below rely on offpoint
precedent that we now address. For instance, Mitchell cites In re Batten, 351 B.R.
256, 258-59 (S.D. Ga. 2006) for the proposition that the “duty to disclose property of the
estate is a continuing one.” However, for support of this proposition, Batten references
Burnes v. Pemco Aeroplex, Inc., 291 F.3d 1282 (11th Cir. 2002) holding
uncontroversially that a debtor who does not disclose pre-petition claims at the time of
23
petition is under a continuing duty to disclose those claims. Id. at 1286 (emphasis added).
It appears that the Batten court may be referencing that continuing duty. Other inapposite
precedent includes In re Midkiff, 342 F.3d 1194 (10th Cir. 2003) (dealing generally with
Chapter 13 bankruptcies that do not have the same distinction between pre- and postfiling
causes of action) and In re Turner, 335 B.R. 755, 761 (Bankr. D.N.M. 2005)
(denying a debtor’s discharge for fraudulent pre- and post-filing acts under 11 U.S.C. “§
727(a)(2), which states that a discharge shall be denied if a debtor, with intent to hinder,
delay or defraud, transfers, removes or conceals property of the debtor within one year
before the filing or after filing of the petition” (emphasis added)).8
We do not here attempt to establish Tenth Circuit law on the debtor’s duty to
update an asset’s value during the course of a bankruptcy proceeding. However, it
8 Mitchell’s arguments about the requirements of 11 U.S.C. § 541(a)(6) are also not
persuasive, because that provision states that “[p]roceeds, product, offspring, rents, or
profits of or from property of the estate, except such as are earnings from services
performed by an individual debtor after the commencement of the case” belong to the
estate. Id. But the statute imposes no explicit duty on debtors to amend their filings as the
valuation of an asset changes. See In re Potter, 228 B.R. 422, 424 (B.A.P. 8th Cir. 1999)
(interpreting 11 U.S.C. § 541(a)(6) as requiring that appreciation of a pre-petition asset
belonged to the estate, but not discussing the debtor’s duty to amend the bankruptcy
schedule); see also In re IndyMac Bancorp, Inc., No. 08-bk-21752-BB, 2012 WL
1037481, at *33 (Bankr. C.D. Cal. Mar. 29, 2012) (holding that “the case law makes clear
that, when the estate owns an asset such as stock . . . that appreciates in value
postpetition, the added value inures to the benefit of the estate,” but not discussing the
debtor’s duty to amend); United States v. Messner, 107 F.3d 1448, 1453 (10th Cir. 1997)
(stating that “although, in general, property not owned by a debtor until after the filing of
a bankruptcy petition is not includable in the bankruptcy estate, an exception exists for
after-acquired property comprised of the proceeds of estate property” but not holding that
there is a duty to amend a bankruptcy schedule (citing 11 U.S.C. § 541(a)(6))).
24
appears that the view that a debtor’s duty to amend a properly reported schedule with
new information about the evolving estimate of value of a litigation claim is a minority
view at best. If we are going to weigh in on this issue in this circuit, it should be in a
bankruptcy case where the question is whether a discharge of bankruptcy should be
granted to a debtor given his failure to amend his schedules, and not in a judicial estoppel
case.
Thus, regarding Mitchell’s continuing duty to update argument, we merely hold
that in the context of an estoppel doctrine that this court must apply cautiously, Mitchell
did not meet its burden as an affirmative defense proponent to point to statements or
allegations in this lawsuit that were clearly inconsistent with Mr. Tagliapietra’s
statements to the bankruptcy court. The district court reached too far when it concluded
that “Mr. Tagliapietra had a continuing duty to disclose [the VMR stock’s] true value.”
(R. Vol. II at 581.) The district court’s reliance on Mr. Tagliapietra’s approval of the
bankruptcy Trustee’s “unknown” valuation of the VMR stock—itself not a strong
affirmative statement given the relevant ambiguity in bankruptcy law—applied an overly
robust version of judicial estoppel that is incongruent with this court’s precedent. See
Hansen, 641 F.3d at 1227.
CONCLUSION

Outcome: We conclude that Mitchell has pointed to no statements by Mr. Tagliapietra that
were clearly inconsistent so as to trigger judicial estoppel. Neither the claim for relief in Mr. Tagliapietra/VMR’s 2009 lawsuit nor Mr. Tagliapietra’s subsequent testimony in that lawsuit were clearly inconsistent with his valuing his VMR shares at “0.00” in his 2005 bankruptcy petition. Similarly, Mr. Tagliapietra’s lawsuit and deposition testimony are not clearly inconsistent with his approval of the Trustee’s valuation of “unknown” pertaining to the VMR stock towards the end of the bankruptcy so as to threaten “the integrity of the judicial system.” Bradford, 516 F.3d at 1194. Mitchell has failed to carry
its burden for judicial estoppel.

We REVERSE the district court’s grant of summary judgment on judicial estoppel
grounds and remand the case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

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