                                                               FILED
                                                               NOV 7 2019
                       ORDERED PUBLISHED
                                                          SUSAN M. SPRAUL, CLERK
                                                            U.S. BKCY. APP. PANEL
                                                            OF THE NINTH CIRCUIT



         UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY APPELLATE PANEL
                   OF THE NINTH CIRCUIT

In re:                                       BAP No.    CC-18-1301-TaFS

QDOS, INC.,                                  Bk. No.    8:18-bk-11997-MW

                 Debtor.

MATTHEW HAYDEN; FELICE TERRIGNO; JIM
MADDOX; CARL WIESE, as trustee for the
Wiese Family Trust dated as of
October 31, 2013,

                 Appellants,

v.                                            OPINION

QDOS, INC.,

                 Appellee.

               Argued and Submitted on September 26, 2019
                        at Pasadena, California

                           Filed – November 7, 2019

              Appeal from the United States Bankruptcy Court
                   for the Central District of California

         Honorable Mark S. Wallace, Bankruptcy Judge, Presiding
Appearances:        Patrick Costello of Vectis Law Group argued for
                    appellants; Damian Capozzola of The Law Offices of
                    Damian D. Capozzola argued for appellee.



Before: TAYLOR, FARIS, and SPRAKER, Bankruptcy Judges.

TAYLOR, Bankruptcy Judge:

                                INTRODUCTION

      Matthew Hayden, Felice Terrigno, Jim Maddox, and the Wiese

Family Trust (“Petitioning Creditors”) sought to place QDOS, Inc.

(“QDOS”) into an involuntary chapter 11 proceeding.1 QDOS sought

dismissal through a Civil Rule 12(b)(6) motion based on the assertion that

none of the Petitioning Creditors were qualified to file the involuntary

petition and, thus, the numerosity requirement of 11 U.S.C. § 303(b) was

not met. The bankruptcy court recognized that the issue could not be

resolved through a dismissal motion or other summary adjudication and

held a trial. And because it determined that Mr. Terrigno was an investor,

not a creditor, and because Mr. Maddox failed to appear, it agreed with

QDOS and dismissed the petition.

      1
        Unless specified otherwise, all chapter and section references are to the
Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. §§ 101–1532, all “Rule” references are to the Federal Rules
of Bankruptcy Procedure, and all “Civil Rule” references are to the Federal Rules of
Civil Procedure.

                                           2
      Petitioning Creditors appeal. They do not dispute the disqualification

of Mr. Terrigno. Nor do they adequately dispute the bankruptcy court’s

conclusion that Mr. Maddox failed to satisfy his burden of proof that he

qualified as a petitioning creditor. All that said, we conclude that the

bankruptcy court erred.

      Under controlling Ninth Circuit law and the facts of this case, all

creditors had the right to consider whether to join in the involuntary

petition. But the bankruptcy court did not require QDOS to file an answer

and the list of creditors required by Rule 1003(b) once it determined that

triable issues existed. And it neither required Civil Rule 26 disclosures nor

permitted discovery that would have otherwise allowed the Petitioning

Creditors to give the required notice to creditors. The record reflects that

QDOS’s alleged 40 to 50 creditors had no reasonable opportunity to join in

the involuntary petition. Dismissal based solely on an insufficiency in the

number of petitioning creditors, thus, was error.

      Therefore, we REVERSE and REMAND for further proceedings.

                                          FACTS

      In May 2018, Carl Wiese (as trustee of the Wiese Family Trust dated

as of October 31, 2013), Matthew Hayden, and Felice Terrigno filed an

involuntary chapter 11 petition against QDOS.2 On the petition, they stated


      2
          We exercise our discretion to take judicial notice of documents electronically
                                                                              (continued...)

                                              3
that each of their claims was for a loan.

      QDOS moved to dismiss and requested § 303(i) damages; in the

alternative, it sought abstention under § 305. It did not dispute the

petition’s allegation that it was not paying its debts as they came due; it

focused solely on Mr. Terrigno and alleged that he did not hold a

qualifying claim because he was an investor. It asserted that it had 12 or

more claimholders, and, thus, the involuntary petition was not filed by

three creditors as required by § 303(b).

      Petitioning creditors opposed the motion. Among other things, they

argued that the grounds for dismissal relied on disputed facts which could

not be resolved on a Civil Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss.

      Two days before the hearing, the bankruptcy court issued a tentative

ruling granting the motion because Mr. Terrigno was not a qualifying

petitioner and, as a result, there were less than three qualifying petitioning

creditors. It concluded that a Rule 1003(b) list was unnecessary because

QDOS filed a motion instead of an answer.

      But then Mr. Maddox joined the involuntary petition; the bankruptcy

court set a trial for two days later and directed each petitioning creditor to

appear personally or risk removal from the list of petitioning creditors.



      2
         (...continued)
filed in the bankruptcy case. See Atwood v. Chase Manhattan Mortg. Co. (In re Atwood), 293
B.R. 227, 233 n.9 (9th Cir. BAP 2003).

                                            4
      The next day, Petitioning Creditors’ counsel filed a document stating

that they were unable to appear on less than 48 hours notice for a variety of

reasons. So, the bankruptcy court continued the trial. Its order limited the

time for additional joinders to the petition to the following three weeks.

      Six business days later, Petitioning Creditors filed an ex parte request

for a telephonic conference on discovery matters because QDOS was

unwilling to negotiate a workable document production schedule and

refused to file a Rule 1003(b) list. QDOS opposed the ex parte request, and

the bankruptcy court thereafter entered an order striking it.

      An additional delay in the hearing occurred. And the bankruptcy

court altered the consequences of a failure to appear at the hearing from

being struck from the list of petitioning creditors to the striking of the non-

appearing petitioning creditor’s declaration.

      At the eventual trial, Mr. Maddox did not appear.

      The bankruptcy court then entered a combined memorandum

decision and order. It found that QDOS had more than 12 creditors for

§ 303(b)(1) purposes. It concluded that Mr. Terrigno was not a qualifying

petitioning creditor because he was an equity holder.3 Next, it concluded


      3
        QDOS also argued that the Wiese Family Trust and Mr. Hayden were not
appropriate petitioning creditors because it disputed that payment on their claims was
required at the time of the involuntary petition. The bankruptcy court disagreed; it
preliminarily determined that because liability and the amount owed were not in
question, the Wiese Family Trust and Mr. Hayden qualified as petitioning creditors. But
                                                                           (continued...)

                                           5
that Mr. Maddox was not a qualifying petitioning creditor for two reasons:

first, his claim was subject to a partial bona fide dispute; and second, he

failed to appear at the hearing as ordered and, as a result, failed to meet his

burden of proof that he was a qualifying petitioning creditor.

      Petitioning Creditors timely appealed.

                                  JURISDICTION

      The bankruptcy court had jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1334

and 157(b)(2)(A). We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 158(a)(3).

                                         ISSUE

      Did the bankruptcy court err when it dismissed the involuntary

petition?

                            STANDARD OF REVIEW

      We review de novo whether a particular procedure satisfies due

process. Owens-Corning Fiberglass Corp. v. Ctr. Wholesale, Inc. (In re Ctr.

Wholesale, Inc.), 759 F.2d 1440, 1445 (9th Cir. 1985); Garner v. Shier (In re

Garner), 246 B.R. 617, 619 (9th Cir. BAP 2000).

      We review the bankruptcy court’s conclusions of law de novo and its

      3
         (...continued)
it also allowed for additional briefing. QDOS filed a document that agreed with the
bankruptcy court’s analysis but raised another issue; it argued that because these
entities had the right to convert their claims to stock, they were contingent creditors
and, thus, disqualified as petitioning creditors. The bankruptcy court has not decided
this issue, and QDOS does not advance arguments related to the qualifications of the
Wiese Family Trust and Mr. Hayden on appeal. Because resolution of this issue is
irrelevant given the basis of our decision, we do not further consider this point.

                                            6
conclusions of fact for clear error. Liberty Tool, & Mfg. v. Vortex Fishing Sys.,

Inc. (In re Vortex Fishing Sys., Inc.), 277 F.3d 1057, 1064 (9th Cir. 2002).

                                 DISCUSSION

      The Code overhauled the standards for involuntary bankruptcy as

they existed under the former Bankruptcy Act of 1898; it relaxed them and

allowed an involuntary bankruptcy at an earlier point in an entity’s

economic decline. In re Kidwell, 158 B.R. 203, 212–13 (Bankr. E.D. Cal. 1993).

At the same time, it allowed for monetary remedies that counterbalanced

this new liberality. Id. at 213. The Rules then established the procedures

that a bankruptcy court must follow in balancing the important concerns

extant when a party seeks the involuntary bankruptcy of an unwilling

debtor. In sum, they require a speedy resolution and a full complement of

due process.

      A.    The law governing involuntary petitions.

      Section 303 authorizes the filing of an involuntary petition against a

corporation. 11 U.S.C. § 303(a). When the petition is not contested, the

bankruptcy court enters an order for relief, and the bankruptcy case

proceeds. 11 U.S.C. § 303(h). But corporations can resist the involuntary

petition, and the Code provides for standards and procedures that govern

the resulting decisional process.

      The Code requires that the involuntary debtor be in financial

distress and that a sufficient number of undisputed creditors request


                                         7
involuntary relief. When an involuntary petition is contested, the

petitioning creditors must show that the involuntary debtor is in actual

financial distress; they may meet this requirement by establishing that the

involuntary debtor is not paying its undisputed debts as they come due.

11 U.S.C. § 303(h)(1).4 Petitioning creditors must also show that there is

sufficient desire for an involuntary bankruptcy on the part of undisputed

creditors; in a case with fewer than 12 creditors, a single qualified creditor

suffices, but, where the debtor has a larger creditor body, three qualified

creditors must petition for involuntary relief. 11 U.S.C. § 303(b)(1), (2).

Petitioning creditors bear the burden of proof on both of these issues.

Cunningham v. Rothery (In re Rothery), 143 F.3d 546, 548 (9th Cir. 1998).

       Joinder can remedy a deficiency in the number of petitioning

creditors; and all creditors have the right to consider joinder where the

involuntary debtor is in economic distress. Where there are fewer than the

three required petitioning creditors, the Code and Rules allow for Civil

Rule 24(a)(1) joinder. 11 U.S.C. § 303(c); Fed. R. Bankr. P. 1018. Thus,

joinder may remedy a defect in the number of petitioning creditors.

       In deciding the issue before it, whether joinder could cure even a

tainted initial petition, the Kidwell court emphasized that such joinder was



       4
        Financial distress also may be demonstrated where, within the 120 days
previous, a custodian was appointed for substantially all of the debtor’s assets. 11
U.S.C. § 303(h)(2). No one argues that this section applies here.

                                            8
a matter of right. 158 B.R. at 211. It further noted the importance of the

right to join given that an involuntary petition may provide significant

benefit to all creditors. See id. at 212. We agree; where an entity is in true

economic distress, an involuntary filing may stop the race to the state

courthouse and the dismemberment of a debtor through involuntary liens,

level the playing field among unsecured creditors, and otherwise

appropriately aid creditors.5 Thus, the Kidwell court found that it is not

permissible to deprive eligible creditors of their statutory right to join in the

petition and then to dismiss for insufficiency in number of petitioners, even

if an initial petitioning creditor misbehaved. Id. at 220.

      The Kidwell court made a compelling case for a requirement that all

claimholders receive an opportunity to consider supporting an involuntary

petition when the debtor is in financial distress even if there initially are

too few petitioning creditors. And in Vortex Fishing Systems, the Ninth

Circuit agreed.

      Vortex Fishing objected to an involuntary petition; it disputed the

sufficiency in number of qualified petitioning creditors and also disputed

      5
         QDOS’s request for abstention as an alternative to dismissal of the involuntary
petition evidences its fundamental misunderstanding of the purpose of a proper
involuntary petition. It argued that because state court litigation was pending in
connection with the initial Petitioning Creditors’ claims, the involuntary bankruptcy
was unnecessary and improper. But an involuntary filing does not necessarily remove
the litigation from state court; the bankruptcy court may elect to allow the claim to be
liquidated there. Instead, an involuntary case can help to achieve appropriate
bankruptcy purposes. Reorganization or orderly liquidation may follow.

                                            9
that it was in economic distress. 277 F.3d at 1065, 1070–71. So, pending trial

on both disputed issues, the bankruptcy court ordered it to submit a list of

its creditors to the bankruptcy court, and the parties agreed that the list

could not be released without a court order. Id. at 1070. The petitioning

creditors did not ask for pre-trial release of the list. Id. At trial, the

bankruptcy court found that the number of then-existing petitioning

creditors was insufficient, but it also continued with the trial and

determined that Vortex Fishing was generally paying its debts as they

came due. Id. at 1063. It then dismissed the involuntary petition. Id.

      On appeal, the petitioning creditors argued, based on Rule 1003(b),

that the bankruptcy court should have notified all creditors of the

involuntary petition, afforded them an opportunity to join, and only then

dismissed the involuntary case. Id. at 1070. The Ninth Circuit rejected this

argument.

      It noted that generally when an alleged debtor answers a petition

filed by fewer than three qualifying petitioners, asserts the § 303(b)(1)

three-petitioning creditors requirement, and alleges that it has twelve or

more creditors, the bankruptcy court “must assure that other creditors have

a ‘reasonable opportunity’ to exercise their § 303(c) statutory power to join

as petitioners . . . .” Id. at 1071. But the Ninth Circuit concluded:

      We cannot say, in the face of Rule 1013(a) and of the omission
      of the appellants to ask that the creditor list be released, that the
      Bankruptcy Court abused its discretion when it proceeded to

                                         10
      determine the merits of the contested involuntary petition—i.e.
      whether Vortex was generally paying its debts as they came
      due—without requiring specific notification of other creditors.

Id. at 1071–72.

      Vortex Fishing, thus, underscores that all creditors must have a

reasonable opportunity to join in an involuntary petition.6 It was unnecessary

there only because, in a consolidated hearing, the bankruptcy court

correctly found that the involuntary debtor was not in financial distress;

joinder, thus, would have been a meaningless endeavor.

      The decisional process in relation to a contested involuntary

petition must be prompt but also consistent with Rule 1018 and the Civil

Rules it incorporates. While the standards for allowance of an involuntary

petition are clear, the procedure for making a qualification determination is

more meandering.



      6
        To that extent, § 303(j) and Rule 1017 are enlightening. Section 303(j) governs
dismissal of an involuntary petition and requires notice to all creditors when dismissal
follows petitioner motion, or petitioner and debtor consent, or is based on want of
prosecution. 11 U.S.C. § 303(j). Rule 1017 provides that such dismissal cannot occur
before a hearing and notice to all creditors pursuant to a list provided by the debtor or
other knowledgeable entity. Fed. R. Bankr. P. 1017(a). The First Circuit BAP concluded
in an unpublished decision that “Rule 1017 applies in the context of a motion to dismiss
an involuntary petition for failure to obtain the requisite number of petitioning
creditors.” Banco Popular de Puerto Rico v. Colon (In re Colon), BAP No. PR 07-053, 2008
WL 8664760, at *7 (1st Cir. BAP Nov. 21, 2008). As a result, § 303(j) and Rule 1017
supported its conclusion that a bankruptcy court erred when it dismissed an
involuntary petition on an insufficient number of creditor’s ground without “at least
giving all creditors notice and the opportunity for a hearing.” Id. at *8.

                                           11
      An involuntary debtor may initially contest the involuntary

petition through a Civil Rule 12(b)(6) motion, but where a trial is

required for resolution it must answer and file the list required by Rule

1003(b). Rule 1011 provides that the debtor may contest an involuntary

petition, and it expressly allows the alleged involuntary debtor to file a

Civil Rule 12 motion before answering. Fed. R. Bankr. P. 1011(a), (b), and

(c). Thus, Civil Rule 12(b)(6) applies in a contested involuntary situation

just as it does generally; the motion challenges the sufficiency of the

allegations in the involuntary petition and “may be based on either a ‘lack

of a cognizable legal theory’ or ‘the absence of sufficient facts alleged under

a cognizable legal theory.’ ” Johnson v. Riverside Healthcare Sys., 534 F.3d

1116, 1121 (9th Cir. 2008) (citation omitted). The court accepts factual

allegations as true but disregards legal conclusions. Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 556

U.S. 662, 678–79 (2009). It then determines if the remaining factual

allegations, construed in the light most favorable to the non-moving party’s

favor, state a facially plausible claim for relief. Id. at 679; see also Bell Atl.

Corp. v. Twombly, 550 U.S. 544 (2007).

      In many cases, a bankruptcy court will not be able to dismiss an

involuntary case solely on a motion to dismiss. If the petitioning creditors

plausibly allege that they have met the standards, the motion must fail, and




                                          12
the involuntary debtor must answer.7

        When an involuntary debtor files a Civil Rule 12(b)(6) motion in

connection with a contested involuntary bankruptcy, Rule 1011 extends the

time for the answer as permitted in Civil Rule 12(a). Fed. R. Bankr.

P. 1011(c). Civil Rule 12(a) provides that where a court denies a Civil

Rule 12(b) motion or postpones its determination until trial, the answer

must be filed within 14 days of the court’s action. Fed. R. Civ.

P. 12(a)(4)(A). So, once a trial is required to resolve issues in a contested

involuntary proceeding, the involuntary debtor must answer within 14

days.

        And, if the debtor asserts that it has more than 12 creditors in its

answer, it must comply with Rule 1003(b) and concurrently file the

required creditor list. Fed. R. Bankr. P. 1003(b). Rule 1003(b) serves two

purposes. It implements, in part, § 303(c)’s joinder provisions. In re Vortex

Fishing Sys., Inc., 277 F.3d at 1071. And it provides the mechanism by which

an alleged debtor substantiates its assertion that it has more than

12 qualifying creditors and returns the burden to petitioning creditors. In re

Clignett, 567 B.R. 583, 587 (Bankr. C.D. Cal. 2017) (“[A] debtor cannot

merely state that [it] has more than twelve creditors in [its] motion to



        7
         Rule 1018 also allows for summary judgment. But just as in ordinary civil
litigation, the court may not grant summary judgment if genuine disputes of material
fact exist or further discovery is warranted.

                                          13
dismiss.”).

      In summary, if resolution of a contested involuntary proceeding

requires a trial, there is no procedural path that allows the alleged

involuntary debtor to leap over the requirement that it answer and, if

appropriate given its answer, file the creditor list mandated by Rule

1003(b). The mere fact that the involuntary debtor initiated its opposition

through a Civil Rule 12(b)(6) motion delays, but does not invariably negate,

the requirement of answer and creditor list.

      The requirement that contested involuntary petitions be resolved

quickly must be read in tandem with the fact that Civil Rule 26 governs

the pre-trial process and that discovery is available under Civil Rules

7028 through 7037. Rule 1013(a) directs bankruptcy courts to “determine

the issues of a contested petition at the earliest practicable time and

forthwith enter an order for relief, dismiss the petition, or enter any other

appropriate order.” Fed. R. Bankr. P. 1013(a). The “earliest practicable

time” is when the bankruptcy court has “sufficient information to resolve

the conflict” before it. Hayes v. Rewald (In re Bishop, Baldwin, Rewald,

Dillingham & Wong, Inc.), 779 F.2d 471, 475 (9th Cir. 1985). Often the

bankruptcy court will acquire this information at trial.

      Where trial is required to adjudicate an involuntary petition,

Rule 1018 incorporates many procedural Rules and expressly provides that

references to adversary proceeding therein include a reference to a


                                       14
proceeding to contest an involuntary petition. Fed. R. Bankr. P. 1018.

Several of the incorporated rules are critical to providing the parties with

the information they need to either contest or defend the involuntary

petition at trial.

      First, Rule 1018 incorporates Rule 7026 which makes the

requirements of Civil Rule 26 applicable. Id. The initial notice requirements

of Civil Rule 26 mandate pre-discovery disclosure of individuals likely to

have relevant discoverable information and production of documents

supporting claims or defenses. Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(a)(1)(A)(i) & (ii).

Rule 1003(b) works in tandem with this requirement and, because it

mandates the creditor list when the involuntary debtor answers, actually

accelerates disclosure on this topic. But, even if Rule 1003(b) did not require

early submission of the creditor list, there can be no doubt that a list of

creditors or the provision of documents containing creditor information

would be a required Civil Rule 26(a)(1)(A) disclosure where there is a

dispute regarding the number of creditors.

      Civil Rule 26 also affects the pace of resolution unless the bankruptcy

court is immediately proactive. Rule 1018 allows for all typical discovery as

it incorporates Civil Rules 7028 through 7037. Fed. R. Bankr. P. 1018. But

such discovery cannot proceed until the parties confer as required by Civil

Rule 26(f) or as otherwise agreed by the parties or ordered by the

bankruptcy court. Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(d)(1). To achieve the prompt resolution


                                       15
required by Rule 1013(a), the bankruptcy court may establish a discovery

schedule that removes the limitations imposed by Civil Rule 26(d)(1).

      In short, Rule 1018 makes clear that resolution of a contested

involuntary petition should proceed with the discovery and disclosures

typical in an adversary proceeding, but Rule 1013(a) mandates that the

process move speedily.

      B.     The bankruptcy court erred when it imposed § 303(b)(1)’s
             numerosity requirement, did not require an answer, failed to
             allow for appropriate discovery, and dismissed the case
             before allowing appropriate notice and a meaningful
             opportunity for joinder to all creditors.

      As noted, a Civil Rule 12(b)(6) motion assumes the truth of the

allegations in the operative documents, here the involuntary petition. And

the involuntary petition in this case does not allege that QDOS had 12 or

more qualifying creditors. As a result, § 303(b)(1) does not facially apply

and there only needed to be at least one qualifying petitioning creditor. The

bankruptcy court correctly recognized that it could not resolve the issues

without a trial.

      The bankruptcy court, thus, accepted matters extrinsic to the

pleadings.8 In support of its assertion that it had more than 12 creditors,



      8
        The bankruptcy court stated at one point that it was converting the proceeding
to a summary judgment, but we read this as shorthand. The bankruptcy court correctly
determined that triable issues existed; thus, trial was required, and summary
adjudication was impossible.

                                          16
QDOS submitted Richard Gillam’s, QDOS’s CEO, declaration, which

baldly stated: “QDOS, Inc. has twelve or more entities or individuals which

would be classified as claimholders pursuant to 11 U.S.C. §§ 101(5), 303.”

At no time did QDOS provide additional information about its creditors.

Petitioning Creditors argued to the bankruptcy court and on appeal that

this generic statement is insufficient. We agree.

      The bankruptcy court erred when it proceeded to trial without

requiring QDOS to answer and file its Rule 1003(b) list. When Petitioning

Creditors asked the bankruptcy court to enforce the Rule 1003(b)

requirement, it declined to do so because, it reasoned, Rule 1003(b) applies

to answers, not motions to dismiss. This reliance was misplaced.

      We acknowledge that some courts find a “gap” in the Rules related to

Rule 1003(b). In re Kidwell, 158 B.R. at 209. Put simply, an alleged debtor is

allowed to raise the defense of a failure to comply with the three-petitioner

requirement by either a motion to dismiss under Civil Rule 12 or by an

answer, but Rule 1003(b) only facially applies when the defense is raised by

answer, not motion. Id. The “sensible solution”, concluded Kidwell, is to

apply the same procedure when the defense is raised by motion. Id. at 210.

If there is a gap, we completely agree with Kidwell.

      But if Rule 1011 is read in full and one recognizes that Rule 1018

treats contested involuntary petitions as adversary proceedings, there is no

gap. Rule 1011 allows the filing of a Civil Rule 12 motion, but Rule 1018


                                       17
incorporates Civil Rule 8 and requires the assertion of defenses through an

answer when Civil Rule 12(b)(6) relief is not available. And Rule 1011(c)

states that filing a Civil Rule 12 motion extends the time for filing a

responsive pleading or answer. Finally, Civil Rule 12(a)(4)(A) provides that

the answer is due 14 days after the court denies a Civil Rule 12(b)(6)

motion or postpones disposition until after trial.

       So here, once the bankruptcy court implicitly denied QDOS’s Civil

Rule 12(b)(6) motion and actually postponed decision until trial, QDOS

was required to answer within 14 days and to accompany its answer with

the list required by Rule 1003(b) as it asserted that it had more than 12

creditors.9

       The bankruptcy court erred when it proceeded to trial and

dismissed the involuntary petition without allowing Petitioning

Creditors a reasonable opportunity for discovery. The bankruptcy court

denied Petitioning Creditors any reasonable opportunity for discovery.

First, discovery is generally inappropriate while a Civil Rule 12(b)(6)

motion is pending. At some point, Petitioning Creditors informally


       9
         And, again, QDOS was also required to provide Civil Rule 26(a)(1) initial
disclosures even before receiving a discovery request. As these disclosures require the
name and contact information for all parties with discoverable information and
identification of all documents supporting all claims—here that more than 12 creditors
existed—it is impossible to assume that QDOS’s compliance with these rules would not
have identified its creditors before trial if QDOS acted as required by Rule 1018. Fed. R.
Civ. P. 26(a)(1)(A)(i)–(ii).

                                            18
attempted to confer with QDOS to obtain discovery; this conferral is

required by Civil Rule 26(d)(1). QDOS was not cooperative. But the

bankruptcy court penalized the Petitioning Creditors—it erroneously

asserted that discovery should have commenced before it took any action

on the pending Civil Rule 12(b)(6) motion, and it declined a request for a

telephonic discovery conference six business days after it set the matter for

trial. The bankruptcy court never relieved the parties from the

requirements of Civil Rule 26(d)(1) or otherwise regulated discovery. And

it limited the time for joinder in the petition to three weeks following its

implicit denial of the motion to dismiss and its conclusion that a trial was

necessary. The Petitioning Creditors could not obtain discovery allowing

them to solicit joinders before the deadline for joinder passed unless the

bankruptcy court shortened time; but it declined their requests for

assistance in obtaining discovery.

       We also acknowledge that in some regards the errors in relation to

discovery may be harmless. The Petitioning Creditors dispute that QDOS

has more than 12 creditors, but we have evidence in the record of 11

creditors exclusive of Mr. Terrigno and Mr. Maddox.10 It seems likely that

more exist. And QDOS should have provided the critical information as to



       10
         Five creditors other than the Petitioning Creditors filed proofs of claim, and the
Petitioning Creditors requested judicial notice of another four recent judgments against
QDOS.

                                            19
the identity of creditors with the required answer or as an initial disclosure.

Here the failure to allow discovery as allowed and conditioned by Rule

1018 merely compounded an existing problem. Petitioning Creditors could

not remedy these defects through the discovery allowed by Rule 1018.

      We acknowledge that the bankruptcy court correctly emphasized

Rule 1013(a)’s requirement that bankruptcy courts decide the merits of a

contested petition at the earliest practicable time. But Rule 1013(a) must be

read in concert with Rule 1018. Rule 1013(a)’s expeditious trial requirement

cannot negate Rule 1018 on the grounds that there is no time for discovery.

      The bankruptcy court erred when it did not allow all creditors a

meaningful opportunity to join in the involuntary petition. In this case,

the bankruptcy court did not provide for reasonable notice to all of QDOS’s

creditors and, thus, it denied them their statutory right to join in the

involuntary petition. The bankruptcy court intimated, at one point, that

other creditors had a “reasonable opportunity” to join because the petition

had been pending for more than five weeks on a public docket. The mere

pendency of a bankruptcy petition, however, is not sufficient notice to

creditors. In re Vortex Fishing Sys., Inc., 277 F.3d at 1071 (“[Rule 1003(b)],

which functions to provide an opportunity to moot a defense of

insufficiency in the number of petitioners, is needed because all creditors

do not necessarily receive notice of an involuntary case until there is an

order for relief adjudicating the merits of the petition in favor of the


                                        20
petitioning creditors.”).

       And while the bankruptcy court allowed Petitioning Creditors a

limited opportunity to solicit additional creditors after it set the matter for

hearing,11 Petitioning Creditors had no list of creditors to solicit. Again,

they had no Rule 1003(b) list, no initial disclosures, and no reasonable

opportunity to conduct discovery. As a result, we conclude that the

bankruptcy court erred when it dismissed the involuntary petition based

on a § 303(b)(1) infirmity without affording other creditors an opportunity

to join the involuntary petition through Rule 1003(b) notice or Petitioning

Creditor solicitation.

       Vortex Fishing Systems, Inc. does not stand for a contrary result. First,

the alleged debtor filed a sealed list of creditors but the petitioning

creditors never sought access to it and only raised Rule 1003(b) on appeal.

Here, Petitioning Creditors have consistently sought access to a list of

creditors or discovery on this topic. Second, the Vortex Fishing bankruptcy

court determined the merits of the contested petition and concluded that

Vortex Fishing was paying its debts as they came due. And the Ninth

Circuit affirmed that finding. As a result, it was immaterial whether there

was a sufficient number of petitioning creditors because, even if there were,



       11
         The temporal limitation on the time for joinder (three additional weeks) also
raises an issue. By statute, creditors can join an involuntary petition at any time before
“the case is dismissed or relief is ordered.” 11 U.S.C. § 303(c).

                                             21
entry of an order for relief would have been inappropriate. 11 U.S.C.

§ 303(h)(1). Here, the bankruptcy court made no findings about whether

QDOS was paying its debts as they came due; QDOS effectively admitted

that it was not.12 Thus, it deprived creditors of the joinder right mandated

by Vortex Fishing.

      The only creditor information that Petitioning Creditors had as to the

QDOS creditor body came from a declaration that came too late for

solicitation and named no one, trial testimony that asserted that it had 40 to

50 creditors but did not name them, and information obtainable from the

claims docket and litigation databases showing judgments against QDOS.

Both Rule 1003(b) and Ninth Circuit authority require more, especially

given that QDOS never argued that it was paying its undisputed debts as

they came due.


      12
          QDOS never disputed this point in its Civil Rule 12(b)(6) motion and when
questioned on appeal side-stepped inquiry by saying that other creditors were working
with it. Petitioning Creditors allege financial distress, and the claims docket in the
involuntary case supports this conclusion. A few creditors found the case and filed
claims; almost all evidence that QDOS was not regularly paying its debts. The IRS and
Employment Development Department filed substantial claims for unpaid and
delinquent tax obligations; these claims evidenced interest accruals, penalties, and tax
liens. In the EDD’s case, they alarmingly were filed on account of unpaid employee
withholdings. Another claim evidenced a judgment and lien from 2017. AT&T filed a
claim that evidenced arrearages, including some more than 90 days past due. And even
more dispositive of a broad-based failure to pay debts as they come due and financial
distress is a February 22, 2018 email from the QDOS principal that is attached to the
Wiese Family Trust proof of claim. See Claim No. 6 at 13–15. The Petitioning Creditors
also requested judicial notice of several recent judgments against QDOS.

                                           22
       C.     The bankruptcy court did not err in concluding that
              Mr. Maddox was not entitled to be a petitioning creditor at
              that time.

       The bankruptcy court concluded that Mr. Terrigno and Mr. Maddox

did not qualify as petitioning creditors. On appeal, Petitioning Creditors

only discuss Mr. Maddox’s disqualification.

       To be a petitioning creditor, an entity must hold a claim that is not

contingent “as to liability or the subject of a bona fide dispute as to liability

or amount . . . .” 11 U.S.C. § 303(b)(1). The bankruptcy court concluded that

Mr. Maddox did not qualify as a petitioning creditor for two reasons: his

claim was subject to a bona fide dispute as to the amount of the claim, and

he did not appear in person at the trial. We start, and end, with the latter.13


       13
           The former reason is an unsettled area of law. Pre-BAPCPA, the Ninth Circuit
had held that the undisputed portion of a debt could qualify under § 303(b)(1) as not
subject to a bona fide dispute. Focus Media, Inc. v. Nat’l Broad. Co. (In re Focus Media,
Inc.), 378 F.3d 916, 926 (9th Cir. 2004). But in 2005 Congress amended § 303 and added
the phrase “as to liability or amount” after “bona fide dispute.” In re Honolulu Affordable
Hous. Partners, LLC, No. 15-00146, 2015 WL 2203473, at *2 (Bankr. D. Haw. May 7, 2015)
(Faris, J.). Some courts have found that the 2005 amendments overruled the Ninth
Circuit’s decisions. E.g., id.; see Mont. Dep't of Revenue v. Blixseth, 581 B.R. 882, 898 (D.
Nev. 2017) (citing cases). Two circuit courts have agreed with this line of reasoning.
Mont. Dep’t of Revenue, 581 B.R. at 898-89. But other bankruptcy courts (and Collier) have
concluded otherwise. Id. at 899–900; 2 Collier on Bankruptcy ¶ 303.11[2] (Richard Levin
& Henry J. Sommer eds. 16th ed. 2019).

       Although neither we nor the Ninth Circuit have decided the matter, the Ninth
Circuit heard oral argument on this issue and took the matter under submission on
August 26, 2019. See Mont. Dep’t of Revnue v. Blixseth, Case No. 18-15064, Dkt. No. 47
                                                                            (continued...)

                                             23
      Petitioning Creditors raise a variety of arguments on appeal. But,

crucially, they conceded at oral argument that the record contains no

explanation for Mr. Maddox’s failure to appear. He just did not show up.

      The bankruptcy court had the right to control the proceedings before

it. QDOS disputed that Mr. Maddox properly qualified as a petitioning

creditor; it had the right to cross-examine him. And, the bankruptcy court’s

amended scheduling order was clear about the consequences for non-

appearance: the bankruptcy court would strike any and all declarations

signed by that petitioning creditor. At issue, in the main, was whether

Mr. Maddox held an undisputed claim. And the dispute centered on

whether his loan was usurious. We acknowledge that Mr. Maddox filed a

proof of claim that temporarily, and far from definitively, waived disputed

interest. But the bankruptcy court and QDOS had every right to question

him on this point. Thus, the bankruptcy court concluded that Mr. Maddox

had not carried his burden of proof that he was a qualifying petitioning

creditor. The bankruptcy court did not err in so deciding.14



(...continued)
(submitting appeal after oral argument on August 26, 2019). Because the bankruptcy
court excluded Mr. Maddox’s claim for an alternate reason, and we affirm on that
ground, we need not resolve this well-ventilated question.
      14
         We leave to the bankruptcy court’s discretion, on remand, whether
Mr. Maddox may revive his participation in the involuntary proceedings by, for
instance, appearing at future hearings to testify or by affirmatively and absolutely
                                                                          (continued...)

                                            24
                                   CONCLUSION

      Based on the foregoing, we REVERSE and REMAND for further

proceedings.




(...continued)
waiving the disputed portions of his claim. See 2 Collier on Bankruptcy ¶ 303.11[2] (“Of
course, as a practical matter, the prudent creditor will take the suggestion loudly
whispered by some courts and simply assert the undisputed, non-contingent portion of
its claim.” (footnotes omitted)). Unless, of course, in the interim, the Ninth Circuit
determines that he need not do so.

                                           25
