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No. 10118663
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
International Petroleum Produc v. Black Gold S.A.R.L.
No. 10118663 · Decided September 16, 2024
No. 10118663·Ninth Circuit · 2024·
FlawFinder last updated this page Apr. 2, 2026
Case Details
Court
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Decided
September 16, 2024
Citation
No. 10118663
Disposition
See opinion text.
Full Opinion
FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
INTERNATIONAL PETROLEUM No. 22-15109
PRODUCTS AND ADDITIVES
COMPANY, INC., Judgment Creditor, D.C. No.
4:19-cv-03004-
Plaintiff-Appellee, YGR
v.
OPINION
BLACK GOLD S.A.R.L., Judgment
Debtor; LORENZO NAPOLEONI,
Shareholder; SOFIA NAPOLEONI,
Shareholder,
Defendants-Appellants.
INTERNATIONAL PETROLEUM No. 22-16341
PRODUCTS AND ADDITIVES
COMPANY, INC., Judgment Creditor, D.C. No.
4:19-cv-03004-
Plaintiff-Appellee, YGR
v.
BLACK GOLD S.A.R.L., Judgment
Debtor,
2 INT’L PETROLEUM PROD. V. BLACK GOLD S.A.R.L.
Defendant,
and
LORENZO NAPOLEONI,
Shareholder; SOFIA NAPOLEONI,
Shareholder,
Defendants-Appellants.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Northern District of California
Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers, District Judge, Presiding
Argued and Submitted February 12, 2024
San Francisco, California
Filed September 16, 2024
Before: Carlos T. Bea, David F. Hamilton,* and Morgan
Christen, Circuit Judges.
Opinion by Judge Bea
*
The Honorable David F. Hamilton, United States Circuit Judge for the
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, sitting by designation.
INT’L PETROLEUM PROD. V. BLACK GOLD S.A.R.L. 3
SUMMARY**
Bankruptcy
The panel affirmed the district court’s judgment and
award of attorneys’ fees and costs in favor of judgment
creditor International Petroleum Products and Additives Co.,
confirming and enforcing IPAC’s arbitration award against
Black Gold, S.A.R.L., a foreign company, and against
Lorenzo and Sofia Napoleoni as owners and alter egos of
Black Gold.
After the district court entered judgment confirming the
arbitration award against Black Gold, and IPAC sought
discovery of Black Gold’s assets, Black Gold petitioned the
bankruptcy court for recognition of its Monaco bankruptcy
proceedings. The bankruptcy court denied this petition on
March 15, 2021. Black Gold appealed to the Bankruptcy
Appellate Panel, and the bankruptcy court lifted a
provisional stay it had imposed while it considered Black
Gold’s petition. This allowed IPAC to continue its collection
efforts in the district court action. As a sanction for Black
Gold’s discovery misconduct, the district court inferred the
necessary facts and granted IPAC’s motion to add the
Napoleonis as judgment debtors on the theory that they were
Black Gold’s alter egos.
Black Gold and the Napoleonis appealed to this court,
and while the appeal was pending the Bankruptcy Appellate
Panel reversed the bankruptcy court’s order denying Black
Gold’s petition for recognition of the Monaco proceedings
**
This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
4 INT’L PETROLEUM PROD. V. BLACK GOLD S.A.R.L.
and held that the petition must be granted. When such a
petition is granted, any action against the debtor corporation,
or against any of its property located in the United States, is
automatically stayed under 11 U.S.C. § 1520. This court
stayed the appeal as to Black Gold, the debtor in the Monaco
proceedings. This court denied the Napoleonis’ motion to
remand for the district court to reconsider its final judgment
but allowed the Napoleonis to renew the motion provided
that they raise their argument that the automatic stay
extended to IPAC’s alter ego claim before the district court
in the first instance as a motion for relief from judgment
under Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b). The Napoleonis instead reprised
this argument in their opposition to IPAC’s motion for
attorneys’ fees. The district court granted IPAC’s motion
and ordered the Napoleonis to pay IPAC’s attorneys’ fees
and costs, in addition to IPAC’s $1 million arbitration award.
There was no dispute that the automatic bankruptcy stay
applied to IPAC’s enforcement of its judgment award
against Black Gold in the district court. The panel held that
the Bankruptcy Appellate Panel’s order reversing the
bankruptcy court’s March 15, 2021, denial of Black’s Gold’s
petition for recognition of the Monaco proceedings did not
result in the retroactive trigger of the automatic stay as of
March 15, 2021. The panel concluded that the Napoleonis’
argument that it should use its equitable powers as a
workaround to the clear language of § 1520 was foreclosed
because the Napoleonis failed to move for a stay of the
bankruptcy court’s denial of Black Gold’s petition pending
Black Gold’s appeal to the Bankruptcy Appellate Panel.
The panel also held that the automatic stay, once
triggered, did not encompass IPAC’s alter ego claim against
the Napoleonis. Applying California law, the panel rejected
the argument that IPAC’s alter ego claim was the property
INT’L PETROLEUM PROD. V. BLACK GOLD S.A.R.L. 5
of Black Gold’s estate that only Black Gold’s trustee, not
IPAC, could pursue.
The panel addressed the Napoleonis’ remaining
arguments for reversal in a concurrently-filed memorandum
disposition.
COUNSEL
Patrick Burns (argued), Anthony J. Dutra, Shandyn H.
Pierce, and Gary A. Watt, Hanson Bridgett LLP, San
Francisco, California; Adam W. Hofmann, Hanson Bridgett
LLP, San Francisco, California; for Defendants-Appellants.
Vinay V. Joshi (argued) and Andrew T. Oliver, Amin
Turocy & Watson LLP, San Jose, California, for Plaintiff-
Appellee.
OPINION
BEA, Circuit Judge:
Foreign companies which declare bankruptcy in their
home countries have the option of filing a petition in United
States bankruptcy court that seeks “recognition” of those
foreign bankruptcy proceedings. If the petition is granted,
any action against the foreign debtor corporation—or against
any of its property located within the United States—is
automatically stayed under 11 U.S.C. § 1520 of the
Bankruptcy Code. In this case we confront two questions
regarding that statutory provision.
6 INT’L PETROLEUM PROD. V. BLACK GOLD S.A.R.L.
The first question concerns timing: Does an order that
denies a petition for recognition retroactively trigger Section
1520’s automatic bankruptcy stay to the date when the
petition for recognition was denied if the denial order is later
reversed by a higher court? The second question concerns
scope: Does the automatic stay, once triggered, encompass a
creditor’s garden-variety alter ego claim against the foreign
debtor’s sole owners? Because our answer to both questions
is “No,” we affirm the district court’s judgment below.
I
A
Plaintiff-Appellee International Petroleum Products and
Additives Company (IPAC), a California-based company,
develops petroleum-based lubricant products that help
protect engines, transmissions, and other types of
mechanical equipment from erosion and wear. In 2016, the
company entered into two agreements—a sales agreement
and a distribution agreement—with Black Gold S.A.R.L., a
limited liability company headquartered in the Principality
of Monaco. The terms of the sales agreement obligated
Black Gold to act as IPAC’s sales representative as to a
predetermined schedule of customers in return for a 3.5%
commission on the dollar value of any sales Black Gold
made. Under the distribution agreement, Black Gold itself
purchased IPAC’s products and sold them at a markup to a
different schedule of customers.
As with most contracts of this sort, the distribution and
sales agreements gave Black Gold access to a host of
sensitive IPAC business information—customer lists,
pricing methods, the volume of products shipped or sold,
research and development, and the like. Naturally then, the
agreements contained non-disclosure and non-compete
INT’L PETROLEUM PROD. V. BLACK GOLD S.A.R.L. 7
provisions. Neither Black Gold nor any of its officers,
agents, or employees, for example, could disclose IPAC’s
sensitive information to any third parties while the
agreements were in effect and for a period of five years
thereafter. Black Gold also promised not to develop any
products that competed with IPAC’s products while the
agreements were in place. And Black Gold agreed to return
all of IPAC’s property and business records to IPAC once
the agreements terminated.
Black Gold did not live up to any of these contractual
obligations. But IPAC learned of Black Gold’s breaches
only after the two parties mutually terminated the
distribution and sales agreements in 2018. While the
agreements were still in effect, Lorenzo Napoleoni, Black
Gold’s CEO and 50% shareholder, held meetings
undisclosed to IPAC with two of IPAC’s chemists—Mr.
Plitt and Dr. Crow—about the prospect of forming a
company that would compete with IPAC in the petroleum
additives market.1 To his credit, Dr. Crow backed out of the
talks after expressing “concern[s] about how . . . they
[could] proceed in such a new business without using IPAC
Confidential Information.” In 2017, Mr. Plitt left IPAC to
join Mr. Napoleoni on this new venture, but only after he
surreptitiously emailed himself a confidential password-
protected Excel spreadsheet “detailing the identity, vendor,
price, and relative composition for each component in each
of IPAC’s products,” as well as “large amounts of other
IPAC Confidential Information relating to IPAC sales and
pricing.”
1
Mr. Napoleoni’s wife, Sofia Napoleoni, owns the other 50% of Black
Gold.
8 INT’L PETROLEUM PROD. V. BLACK GOLD S.A.R.L.
Later in 2017, while the sales and distribution
agreements were still in effect, Mr. Napoleoni and Mr. Plitt
founded PXL Chemicals BV, a Netherlands-based company.
“[D]espite . . . having no test facilities, no formulation
capability, no blending or other technical expertise, and no
chemists,” PXL was selling lubricant products in
competition with IPAC “[l]ess than five months after
PXL . . . was founded.” According to IPAC’s expert, PXL’s
products were “so strikingly similar to IPAC[’s] products”
that “they c[ould] be called knock-off[s].” In fact, that was
exactly what PXL “t[old] its customers.” Most revealing of
all, when asked during the arbitration how PXL could sell
lubricant products “in such a short time” and “with such
similarity” to IPAC’s products without using IPAC’s
confidential product information, Mr. Napoleoni admitted
that the explanation was as simple as it seemed, he “had
[IPAC’s information] available, and yeah. That’s it.”
PXL’s entry into the market caused IPAC “a steep drop-
off of business.” IPAC’s “steady” flow of revenue in 2016
started to decline in 2017—the year PXL was founded—and
then “fell precipitously . . . to zero” in the latter part of 2018.
Reeling from these losses, IPAC filed an arbitration demand
against Black Gold, as the sales and distribution agreements
provided.2 IPAC’s demand asserted, among other claims,
breach of the sales and distribution agreements, tortious
interference, and trade secret misappropriation. After a
three-day hearing in San Francisco, the arbitrator found in
IPAC’s favor on all claims and issued IPAC an award in
2
IPAC had also named the Napoleonis in its arbitration demand, but the
arbitrator dismissed them as respondents because they were not parties
to the sales and distribution agreements.
INT’L PETROLEUM PROD. V. BLACK GOLD S.A.R.L. 9
excess of $1 million—the sum total of IPAC’s damages,
administrative costs, and attorneys’ fees.
B
Winning in arbitration was only part of the battle for
IPAC. There was still the matter of collecting its $1 million
arbitration award from Black Gold, and that would prove far
more difficult for IPAC than winning on the merits of its
claims.
IPAC’s collection efforts started out smoothly enough.
After the arbitrator handed down his award, IPAC filed an
action in the Northern District of California that same month.
The action petitioned for confirmation and enforcement of
IPAC’s $1 million arbitration award under the Federal
Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C. § 9, as well as entry of judgment
of the award against Black Gold as the sole judgment debtor,
all of which the district court granted in full. With its
arbitration award confirmed, and judgment against Black
Gold entered, IPAC’s action transitioned to the post-
judgment, asset discovery phase. In an effort to uncover
potential assets of Black Gold that could satisfy its judgment,
IPAC served Black Gold 11 interrogatories,32 requests for
admission, and 30 requests for production.
Black Gold “completely stonewalled” IPAC’s discovery
efforts. Instead of providing substantive answers to IPAC’s
discovery requests, Black Gold refused to produce a single
document and instead lodged baseless objections disputing,
for example, the meaning of words such as “you” and “hold
assets” as vague and ambiguous. Even when the magistrate
judge, on IPAC’s motion to compel, found “all of Black
Gold’s objections” “wholly meritless,” and ordered Black
Gold to respond to IPAC’s discovery requests within 50
days, Black Gold still did not meaningfully comply. It
10 INT’L PETROLEUM PROD. V. BLACK GOLD S.A.R.L.
produced fewer than 100 documents by the court-ordered
deadline and “for nearly 10 months” it “simply ignored th[e]
court’s order” to answer IPAC’s 11 interrogatories.
IPAC also noticed depositions for the Napoleonis, but
that also faced delay. Ten days before those depositions were
to take place, Black Gold declared bankruptcy in Monaco
where it was headquartered. Black Gold’s trustee in the
Monegasque proceedings then petitioned the Northern
District of California’s bankruptcy court for “recognition” of
the Monaco proceedings under Chapter 15 of the United
States Bankruptcy Code. The bankruptcy court provisionally
stayed all ongoing actions against Black Gold—including
IPAC’s enforcement of its judgment award—“[p]ending
disposition of [Black Gold’s Chapter 15] Petition.” The
provisional stay therefore paused the Napoleonis’
depositions. More importantly, however, Black Gold’s
Chapter 15 petition threatened to delay IPAC’s enforcement-
of-judgment action indefinitely. If Black Gold’s petition
were granted, and the Monaco proceedings were
“recogni[zed],” then IPAC’s enforcement action against
Black Gold would be automatically stayed under Chapter 15
until the Monaco proceedings terminated. See 11 U.S.C.
§ 1520(a)(1).
The bankruptcy court, however, denied Black Gold’s
Chapter 15 petition in an order dated March 15, 2021—a
date to keep an eye on. Order, In re Black Gold S.A.R.L., No.
20-bk-41815, ECF No. 72 (Bankr. N.D. Cal. Mar. 15, 2021).
In the court’s view, Black Gold’s petition was a “sham”
designed to “preclude IPAC from recovering on its
[arbitration] judgment” in the separate enforcement action in
the Northern District of California. Among the most obvious
signs that Black Gold filed its petition in bad faith was the
fact that Black Gold fixed the date of its own insolvency in
INT’L PETROLEUM PROD. V. BLACK GOLD S.A.R.L. 11
the Monaco proceedings as the day before IPAC won its
$1 million award in arbitration, a move “clearly aimed [to]
thwart[] the legitimate [collection] efforts of IPAC, the only
significant creditor Black Gold ha[d].”
Black Gold timely appealed the bankruptcy court’s order
to this Circuit’s Bankruptcy Appellate Panel (BAP).
Because neither Black Gold nor the Napoleonis moved the
bankruptcy court to stay its denial of Black Gold’s Chapter
15 petition pending that order’s appeal to the BAP, the
bankruptcy court lifted the provisional stay that it previously
imposed while it considered Black Gold’s petition. This
allowed IPAC to continue its collection efforts in the district
court action.
With its action to enforce its judgment resumed, IPAC
then moved the district court to add Mr. Napoleoni and his
wife, Sofia Napoleoni, as judgment debtors on the theory
that they were Black Gold’s alter ego. By then, IPAC’s
action to enforce its judgment award against Black Gold was
more than two years old. Yet Black Gold’s discovery
misconduct throughout that period had made it next to
impossible for IPAC to gather the facts necessary to prove
its alter ego theory. IPAC thus separately moved the district
court to infer those facts as a form of sanctions for Black
Gold’s discovery misconduct. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(b).
The district court granted both of IPAC’s motions. The
court first agreed with IPAC that “Black Gold’s repeated
failure to comply with previous court [discovery] orders”
warranted adverse inferences under Rule 37(b). The court
then, pursuant to Rule 37(b), adopted the following
“designated” facts as true: that Mr. Napoleoni, as Black
Gold’s 50% shareholder and sole officer, “diverted” Black
Gold’s “funds” and “business” “to undercapitalize Black
12 INT’L PETROLEUM PROD. V. BLACK GOLD S.A.R.L.
Gold . . . to avoid paying [IPAC’s] judgment” and that he
“continu[es] to profit from the illicit use of IPAC’s trade
secrets by making and selling” knockoff petroleum additive
products. Lastly, while the parties disputed whether
California’s or Monaco’s test for alter ego liability applied,
the district court saw this as a “non-issue” because both
jurisdiction’s alter ego tests were substantively the same.
With that, the district court concluded, based on the above
adverse inferences, that the Napoleonis were Black Gold’s
alter ego under both California and Monaco law.
The district court then amended its final judgment to add
the Napoleonis as judgment-debtors to IPAC’s $1 million
arbitration award, and Appellants timely appealed.
C
While that appeal was pending, the BAP reversed the
bankruptcy court’s order that had denied Black Gold’s
Chapter 15 petition for recognition of the Monaco
proceedings. In re Black Gold S.A.R.L., 635 B.R. 517 (9th
Cir. BAP 2022). Although the BAP agreed with the
bankruptcy court that Black Gold’s insolvency proceedings
in Monaco were a sham, in the BAP’s view, that was a
legally insufficient basis to deny Black Gold’s Chapter 15
petition.
As the BAP read Chapter 15, there was little room for a
bankruptcy court to exercise its discretion and deny a
petition for recognition. So long as the face of the petition
satisfied certain threshold pleading requirements (all of
which Black Gold’s petition met here), “recognition was
mandatory” unless it was “manifestly contrary to U.S. public
policy.” Id. at 528. This “public policy” exception, the BAP
explained, was a narrow exception to begin with, and did not
depend solely on whether the foreign debtor had acted in bad
INT’L PETROLEUM PROD. V. BLACK GOLD S.A.R.L. 13
faith. See id. at 529–32. Thus, while Black Gold’s
insolvency proceedings in Monaco “were clearly designed
to thwart the collection efforts” of IPAC, its “largest
creditor,” that alone “[wa]s not a proper basis” for the
bankruptcy court to deny Black Gold’s petition. Id. at 531.
Rather than remand for the bankruptcy court to decide
whether the public policy exception applied, the BAP did the
analysis itself and held that it did not. See id.
Because IPAC did not appeal the BAP’s decision in In
re Black Gold, the decision became final. And because the
BAP’s decision was a flat reversal of the bankruptcy court’s
denial of Black Gold’s Chapter 15 petition for “recognition”
of the Monaco proceedings, it was, in effect, a grant of Black
Gold’s petition that triggered the automatic bankruptcy stay.
For that reason, we stayed Appellants’ appeal of the district
court’s final judgment but “for Black Gold . . . only,”
because the Napoleonis were not debtors in the Monaco
insolvency proceedings. See Order, IPAC v. Black Gold, No.
22-15109, Dkt. Entry No. 15 (June 22, 2022).
The Napoleonis subsequently moved this Court to
remand this case back to the district court so that it could
reconsider its final judgment in light of the BAP’s decision
in In re Black Gold. They argued, much as they do now, that
IPAC’s alter ego claim against them was subject to the
automatic bankruptcy stay because the claim was the
“property” of Black Gold’s estate that only Black Gold’s
trustee could assert. Thus, the argument went, IPAC had no
authority to assert the alter ego claim against the Napoleonis,
and the district court’s final judgment was void to the extent
it granted IPAC relief against the Napoleonis on an alter ego
theory.
14 INT’L PETROLEUM PROD. V. BLACK GOLD S.A.R.L.
We denied the Napoleonis’ motion to remand but
allowed them to renew it, provided they raised their
argument that the automatic stay extended to IPAC’s alter
ego claim before the district court in the first instance as a
motion for relief from judgment under Federal Rule of Civil
Procedure 60(b). Id. (permitting a district court, on a motion,
to “relieve a party . . . from a final judgment” on the ground
the judgment “is void”); Dkt. Entry No. 36 (Oct. 19, 2022).
The Napoleonis, however, failed to move the district court
for relief under Rule 60(b). They instead reprised their
theory that IPAC’s alter ego claim was subject to the
automatic bankruptcy stay in their opposition to IPAC’s
motion requesting that the Napoleonis pay its attorneys’ fees
that IPAC had filed shortly after the district court amended
its final judgment to include the Napoleonis as judgment
debtors. The district court rejected the Napoleonis’
argument, granted IPAC’s motion, and ordered the
Napoleonis to pay IPAC upwards of $146,000 in attorneys’
fees and costs—in addition to IPAC’s $1 million judgment
award. The Napoleonis timely appealed to us.
II
We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 to review
both the district court’s final judgment holding the
Napoleonis personally liable for IPAC’s $1 million
arbitration award and the district court’s order granting
IPAC’s motion for attorneys’ fees and costs. Whether the
judgment or order of a district court is void for violating the
automatic bankruptcy stay is reviewed de novo. See In re
Mwangi, 764 F.3d 1168, 1173 (9th Cir. 2014).
III
The automatic bankruptcy stay is well familiar and needs
only a brief introduction. “[D]esigned to provide breathing
INT’L PETROLEUM PROD. V. BLACK GOLD S.A.R.L. 15
space to the [bankrupt] debtor, . . . [and] assure that all claims
against [him] will be brought in the sole forum of the
bankruptcy court,” Section 362 of the Bankruptcy Code
provides that a debtor’s filing of a bankruptcy petition in the
United States operates as a self-executing stay that halts
“almost any type of formal or informal action against the
debtor or property of the [debtor’s] estate.” Burton v. Infinity
Cap. Mgmt., 862 F.3d 740, 746–47 (9th Cir. 2017) (citation
omitted). It is “one of the most important protections in
bankruptcy law” for domestic entities that file for
bankruptcy in the United States. Porter v. Nabors Drilling
USA, L.P., 854 F.3d 1057, 1061 (9th Cir. 2017) (citation
omitted).
In 2005, Congress added Chapter 15 to the Bankruptcy
Code, which extended the protections of the automatic
bankruptcy stay to foreign entities that declare insolvency in
their home countries. See 11 U.S.C. § 1520(a)(1). For a
foreign debtor to invoke the protection of automatic
bankruptcy stay, he must first file a petition for “recognition”
of the foreign bankruptcy proceedings. Id. § 1515. Unlike in
the domestic bankruptcy context, however, the mere filing
of the petition does not itself trigger the automatic stay. Only
“[u]pon” the “entry of an order granting recognition” of the
foreign bankruptcy proceedings does the automatic stay
come into effect. Id. §§ 1520(a), 1502(7) (defining
“recognition”). But, once triggered, the stay’s protections
apply in full force “with respect to” the “debtor” who is “the
subject of [the] foreign [bankruptcy] proceeding,” id.
§ 1502(1), and any of the debtor’s “property” that is “within
the territorial jurisdiction of the United States,” id.
§ 1520(a)(1).
Everyone agrees that the automatic bankruptcy stay
applies to IPAC’s enforcement of its judgment award against
16 INT’L PETROLEUM PROD. V. BLACK GOLD S.A.R.L.
Black Gold in the district court below. The BAP settled that
question when it reversed the bankruptcy court’s order
denying Black Gold’s petition for recognition of the Monaco
proceedings. The dispute, rather, is over timing and scope:
When did the automatic stay begin and what or whom else
does it protect (other than Black Gold)?
On the question of timing, the Napoleonis argue that the
stay took effect on the date that the bankruptcy court denied
Black Gold’s petition for recognition of the Monaco
proceedings—March 15, 2021—because the BAP reversed
that order in In re Black Gold. The Napoleonis, in other
words, urge us to give the BAP’s reversal retroactive effect,
even though their “[r]esearch has not revealed a case . . . []in
this circuit” where we have ever done that.
March 15, 2021, matters greatly to the Napoleonis. If it
marks the date when the automatic bankruptcy stay took
effect, any court action or decision between then and now in
IPAC’s enforcement-of-judgment action against Black Gold
would be void. See Burton, 862 F.3d at 747. That would
include the district court’s December 2021 order that
sanctioned Black Gold for its discovery misconduct and
granted IPAC’s motion to add the Napoleonis as judgment
debtors on the ground that they were Black Gold’s alter ego.
Recall, as punishment for Black Gold’s discovery abuses,
the December 2021 order drew adverse factual inferences
against Black Gold, which then served as the factual
predicates for the district court’s finding that the Napoleonis
were Black Gold’s alter ego. The Napoleonis argue that it
violated the stay for the district court to draw those
inferences against Black Gold in the first place, and that the
district court’s alter ego determination is therefore void as
well because it rested on factual findings that the district
court had no authority to make.
INT’L PETROLEUM PROD. V. BLACK GOLD S.A.R.L. 17
As for the separate issue of scope, the Napoleonis raise
two arguments. They first contend that IPAC’s alter ego
claim—the linchpin holding together IPAC’s enforcement-
of-judgment action against the Napoleonis—is subject to the
automatic bankruptcy stay because it is the “property” of
Black Gold’s bankruptcy estate that only Black Gold’s
trustee may assert. If that argument does not persuade, the
Napoleonis argue that this case presents the “perfect
opportunity” for us to recognize, as an exception to the
general rule, that a non-debtor is the “debtor” for the
purposes of the automatic bankruptcy stay under Chapter 15
if he is found to be the alter ego of the foreign bankrupt
company. If we accept either argument, the Napoleonis
argue, then we should hold that IPAC’s enforcement-of-
judgment action against the Napoleonis can proceed no
further, and we must, at the very least, vacate the district
court’s final judgment that held the Napoleonis liable for
IPAC’s judgment along with the court’s subsequent award
of attorneys’ fees against the Napoleonis.
We address each of the Napoleonis’ arguments in turn.3
A
It is a matter of first impression whether the reversal of a
bankruptcy court order that denies a Chapter 15 petition for
recognition of a foreign insolvency proceeding retroactively
triggers the automatic bankruptcy stay under Section 1520.
But the answer is as straightforward as the question is novel.
As explained below, the bankruptcy court’s March 15, 2021,
order, which denied Black Gold’s Chapter 15 petition for
3
The Napoleonis’ remaining arguments for reversal do not warrant
publication. We dispose of them in a memorandum disposition filed
concurrently with this opinion.
18 INT’L PETROLEUM PROD. V. BLACK GOLD S.A.R.L.
recognition, did not trigger the automatic stay under
Section 1520’s plain language. Only when a petition for
“recognition” is “grant[ed]” does the automatic stay begin.
See 11 U.S.C. § 1502(7). And while the BAP’s decision in
In re Black Gold unequivocally reversed the bankruptcy
court’s denial order, the circumstances here hardly “warrant
the drastic remedy” of giving the BAP’s reversal retroactive
effect. See In re Lomagno, 429 F.3d 16, 18 (1st Cir. 2005).
As noted, Section 1520’s plain text provides only that the
automatic bankruptcy stay begins once the foreign
proceeding is “recogni[zed],” id. § 1520(a), an event that
Congress defined as simply “the entry of an order granting
recognition,” id. § 1502(7) (emphasis added). To state the
obvious, orders that deny and orders that grant are not one
and the same. Had Congress meant for “recognition” to also
include the “entry of a[] [later reversed] order [denying]
recognition,” “it could have easily” defined “recognition”
that way, Connell v. Lima Corp., 988 F.3d 1089, 1099 (9th
Cir. 2021). That “Congress did not write the statute” so
broadly is “strong affirmative evidence” of our
interpretation. Id. at 1099, 1108 (quoting United States v.
Naftalin, 441 U.S. 768, 773 (1979)). Because our “function
[is] to apply statutes on the basis of what Congress has
written, not what Congress might have written,” United
States v. Great N. Ry. Co., 343 U.S. 562, 575 (1952), we
conclude that only an order “granting” a petition for
recognition triggers the automatic bankruptcy stay under a
plain-text reading of Section 1520.
The Napoleonis ask us to use our equitable powers as a
workaround to Section 1520’s clear language. Their
argument is simple: Because the BAP’s decision in In re
Black Gold reversed the bankruptcy court’s March 15, 2021
order denying Black Gold’s Chapter 15 petition, we should
INT’L PETROLEUM PROD. V. BLACK GOLD S.A.R.L. 19
hold that the automatic stay retroactively went into effect “as
of th[at] date” because that is when the bankruptcy court
“should have granted” Black Gold’s petition. A contrary
ruling would “punish [the Napoleonis] simply because the
[bankruptcy] court committed reversible error.”
The Napoleonis’ argument is foreclosed because they
failed to move for a stay of the bankruptcy court’s denial of
Black Gold’s Chapter 15 petition pending Black Gold’s
appeal to the BAP. Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure
8007 allows “[a] party that disagrees with an order of a
bankruptcy judge . . . [to] move to stay the order before that
bankruptcy judge” or before the BAP “during the pendency
of an appeal of the order.” In re Mortgs. Ltd., 771 F.3d 1211,
1215 (9th Cir. 2014) (citing pre-2014 version of the rule).
Moving under Rule 8007 to stay an “objectionable order”
that is pending review on appeal, we have explained, is less
of a right and more of an “obligation” because a stay
pursuant to Rule 8007 “protect[s] the rights of all parties in
interest,” not just the party who lost below. Id. at 1215, 1216
(emphasis added) (citation omitted). For the losing party, a
stay under Rule 8007 of an order pending appeal ensures
“that the estate and the status quo [will] be preserved” in the
event that the order is later reversed. Id. at 1215 (quoting In
re Chateaugay Corp., 988 F.2d 322, 326 (2d Cir. 1993)). But
just as important, for the prevailing party Rule 8007 allows
the BAP or the bankruptcy court to “condition . . . the stay
on [the] payment of a . . . bond or other security,” which
guarantees that the prevailing party will collect on its
judgment if the order is ultimately affirmed. Id.; see Fed. R.
Bankr. P. 8007(a)(1)(B), (c). “Our requirement that a party
seek a stay of a bankruptcy court order with which it
disagrees before appeal is [thus] grounded in important
20 INT’L PETROLEUM PROD. V. BLACK GOLD S.A.R.L.
principles of equity” that balance the interests of all parties.
In re Mortgs. Ltd., 771 F.3d at 1216.
Were we to excuse a losing party’s failure to seek a stay
of a bankruptcy court’s order simply because that order is
later reversed on appeal, then moving for relief under Rule
8007 would no longer be “obligatory.” See id. at 1215
(quoting In re Roberts Farms, Inc., 652 F.2d 793, 798 (9th
Cir. 1981)). The party that lost below and appealed would
already enjoy the protection that comes with a stay under
Rule 8007 without any of the attendant burdens. He would
benefit from the knowledge that—no matter what happened
in the proceedings below during the pendency of his
appeal—this Court would retroactively restore the status quo
if he ultimately prevailed in front of a higher court. And if
he lost on appeal, then at least he did not have to post a bond
as a condition for obtaining a stay, as Rule 8007
contemplates.
The “inequitable results” that would follow from such an
exception are no less difficult to imagine. See id at 1216.
Without the benefit of a “bond or other security” that
normally accompanies a Rule 8007 stay, there would be
nothing to “protect[] the prevailing p[arty] from the risk of a
later uncollectible judgment,” N.L.R.B. v. Westphal, 859
F.2d 818, 819 (9th Cir. 1988) (per curiam). Especially in
cases where “the chances of success” on appeal are “dim,”
the losing party would have every incentive to squander or
conceal assets while his appeal remained pending. See In re
Mortgs. Ltd. 771 F.3d at 1216 (citation omitted).
The Napoleonis, to be sure, attempt to explain their
failure to move for a stay under Rule 8007, but their only
excuse as to why they did not exercise this option is far from
adequate. They argue that it would have been procedurally
INT’L PETROLEUM PROD. V. BLACK GOLD S.A.R.L. 21
impossible for them to move for a stay under Rule 8007
because they were not parties to Black Gold’s Chapter 15
proceedings when the bankruptcy court ruled on Black
Gold’s petition. But the Napoleonis could have remedied
this through a motion to intervene in Black Gold’s Chapter
15 proceedings under Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure
2018(a), which allows a bankruptcy court, on a motion and
after a hearing, to “permit any interested entity” to join a
bankruptcy proceeding “generally or with respect to any
specified matter.” So while the Napoleonis were not parties
to Black Gold’s Chapter 15 proceedings, they likely could
have become parties had they only asked the bankruptcy
court below.4
In future cases, an interested party who finds itself in the
Napoleonis’ position would do well to act “diligently” to
intervene and stay an objectionable denial of a Chapter 15
petition that is pending appeal. See In re Lomagno, 429 F.3d
at 18 (declining to restore “retroactively” the automatic
bankruptcy stay, which terminated after the bankruptcy court
erroneously dismissed a Chapter 13 petition, because the
party failed to move promptly for a stay of the dismissal
4
The Napoleonis had every reason to move to intervene in Black Gold’s
Chapter 15 proceedings under Rule 2018(a) and seek a stay of the
bankruptcy court’s denial of Black Gold’s Chapter 15 proceedings under
Rule 8007. As explained below, a stay of the bankruptcy court’s denial
order would have kept IPAC’s separate enforcement-of-judgment action
in district court on pause—at least until the BAP resolved the bankruptcy
court’s denial of Black Gold’s Chapter 15 petition. That would have
prevented IPAC from moving to add the Napoleonis as judgment debtors
on an alter ego theory in the district court proceedings below. Important
here, the Napoleonis were on notice that IPAC would likely attempt this
procedural maneuver. Recall that IPAC had previously tried (but failed)
to hold the Napoleonis personally liable for Black Gold’s $1 million
judgment in the arbitration proceedings. Supra note 2.
22 INT’L PETROLEUM PROD. V. BLACK GOLD S.A.R.L.
order); see also In re Lashley, 825 F.2d 362, 364 (11th Cir.
1987) (holding that “a debtor[’s] [failure to] obtain a stay
pending appeal of a bankruptcy court[’s] . . . order”
dismissing a Chapter 13 petition “renders moot any appeal”
of subsequent acts that allegedly violate the automatic stay).
Had the Napoleonis done so here, the alleged errors that
they complain of below in IPAC’s enforcement-of-judgment
action (all of which occurred after the bankruptcy court’s
denial of Black Gold’s petition for recognition) likely never
would have taken place. IPAC’s action would have remained
on pause until the BAP reversed the bankruptcy court’s
erroneous decision—because recall that the bankruptcy
court provisionally stayed IPAC’s action until Black Gold’s
Chapter 15 petition was definitively resolved. After that
time, the automatic bankruptcy stay would have then taken
effect and would have remained in place until Black Gold’s
insolvency proceedings in Monaco concluded. There would
have been no opportunity for the district court below to draw
adverse inferences against Black Gold for its discovery
misconduct, and thus no basis to add the Napoleonis as
judgment debtors or to order them to pay IPAC’s attorneys’
fees. As a result of their failure to intervene and seek a stay,
the Napoleonis “permit[ted] [these] developments to
proceed” through their “own inaction.” In re Mortgs. Ltd.,
771 F.3d at 1217 (first alteration in original) (quoting In re
Thorpe Insulation Co., 677 F.3d 869, 881 (9th Cir. 2012)).
***
The bankruptcy court’s denial of Black Gold’s Chapter
15 petition was not an order “granting” recognition of the
Monaco proceedings necessary to trigger the automatic
bankruptcy stay. And even if it fell within our equitable
powers to backdate retroactively the BAP’s reversal of the
INT’L PETROLEUM PROD. V. BLACK GOLD S.A.R.L. 23
bankruptcy court’s denial order in In re Black Gold—a
question we need not answer today—we would not exercise
it here where the interested party failed to move for a stay of
the bankruptcy court’s erroneous denial. The events that
transpired in IPAC’s enforcement action in the district court
are thus not void for violating any automatic stay. We turn
now to the second point of contention in this case.
B
The Napoleonis next argue that IPAC’s alter ego claim
belongs to Black Gold’s trustee, not IPAC, because it is a
“general” alter ego claim that alleges harm against Black
Gold’s creditors as a group, not IPAC as an individual
creditor. The Napoleonis therefore ask us to hold that, for the
purposes of the automatic bankruptcy stay currently in
effect, IPAC’s alter ego claim is the “property” of Black
Gold’s estate that only Black Gold’s trustee may pursue.
“[S]tate law determines whether a claim belongs to the
trustee or to the creditor.” Ahcom, Ltd. v. Smeding, 623 F.3d
1248, 1250 (9th Cir. 2010). That, in turn, invites another
question in need of an answer: What state law governs
whether IPAC’s alter ego claim belongs to IPAC or Black
Gold’s trustee?
The Napoleonis do not address this choice-of-law issue,
while IPAC observes only that Black Gold’s bankruptcy
proceedings are in Monaco, which “logically suggests” that
Monegasque law determines whether its alter ego claim
belongs to Black Gold’s trustee. But neither Black Gold nor
the Napoleonis offered “any such Monegasque law” on that
question in the proceedings below, IPAC continues, even
though Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 44.1 would have
required them to. Fed. R. Civ. P. 44.1 (“A party who intends
to raise an issue about a foreign country’s law must give
24 INT’L PETROLEUM PROD. V. BLACK GOLD S.A.R.L.
notice by a pleading or other writing.”). For that oversight,
IPAC asks us to treat Appellants’ failure to give Rule 44.1
notice as “a dispositive point in [IPAC’s] favor.”
While not in the sense that IPAC may mean, Appellants’
failure to give Rule 44.1 notice is “dispositive” insofar as it
resolves the choice-of-law issue just discussed. “The
appropriate reading . . . of Rule 44.1” is that a party forfeits
“the right to rely on foreign law if [he does not] supply the
information needed to determine it.” G & G Prods. LLC v.
Rusic, 902 F.3d 940, 949 (9th Cir. 2018) (citation omitted).
He therefore “acquiesce[s] [to] the application of the law of
the forum.” Id. at 950 (quoting Interpool Ltd. v. Char Yigh
Marine (Pan.) S.A., 890 F.2d 1453, 1458 (9th Cir. 1989)).
Because Appellants did not give Rule 44.1 notice to the
district court below that an alter ego claim against a debtor
corporation’s sole owners is the exclusive “property” of the
corporate debtor’s bankruptcy trustee under Monagasque
law, Appellants forfeited any such argument here. See id.
That leaves California, the forum state, as the
“presumptively controlling” source of law on that question.
Id. at 949 (citation omitted).
We have already answered the question as to who owns
an alter ego claim under California law in Ahcom—a case
that, on the facts, is a near spitten image of this one. After
winning in arbitration against Nuttery Farms, Inc. for its
failure to deliver on some contracted-for almonds, Ahcom
sued in state court to collect its award, and the action was
removed to the Northern District of California. 623 F.3d at
1249. But rather than seek recovery from Nuttery Farms—
which declared bankruptcy shortly after losing in
arbitration—Ahcom named Nuttery Farms’ joint owners, the
Smedings, as the sole judgment-debtors in the enforcement
action. Id. While Ahcom’s complaint asserted the
INT’L PETROLEUM PROD. V. BLACK GOLD S.A.R.L. 25
“substantive claim[]” that Nuttery Farms breached its
contract with Ahcom, the complaint alleged that the
Smedings were liable for Nuttery Farms’ wrongdoing
through the “procedural claim” that they were Nuttery
Farms’ alter ego. Id. at 1249, 1250.
The Smedings moved to dismiss. Id. at 1249. Like the
Napoleonis argue here with respect to IPAC’s alter ego
claim, the Smedings argued that Ahcom’s claim was a
“general alter ego” claim that depended on factual
allegations about the “general conduct [by the Smedings]
that harmed all creditors.” Id. at 1250–51. It was therefore
“exclusively the property of [Nuttery’s] trustee,” the
Smedings argued, and the district court agreed, dismissing
Ahcom’s complaint for failure to state a claim. Id. at 1249–
50.
We reversed. The “crucial problem” with the Smeding’s
argument was that, under California law (which the parties
agreed applied) a “general” alter ego claim was a “made-up
cause of action” that simply “d[id] not exist” in that state. Id.
at 1250–52. To the extent a trustee had authority to bring an
alter ego claim against a corporate debtor’s sole owners,
California courts required “some allegation of injury to the
corporation” itself that “giv[es] rise to a right of action” held
by the corporation against the sole owners. Id. at 1251
(emphasis omitted) (quoting Stodd v. Goldberger, 73 Cal.
App. 3d 827, 833 (1977)); id. at 1252 (citing examples, such
as “fraudulent conveyance,” “conversion” of corporate
assets, or “theft”). “In the absence of any such allegation, the
asserted cause of action belong[ed] to [the] creditor
individually,” and the alter ego claim along with it. Stodd,
73 Cal. App. 3d at 833. But there was “no such thing” in
California as the right of a trustee to assert an alter ego claim
against a corporation’s owners on behalf of all creditors.
26 INT’L PETROLEUM PROD. V. BLACK GOLD S.A.R.L.
Ahcom, 623 F.3d at 1251; id. at 1252 (“Stodd teaches that a
trustee ‘is not an appropriate general representative of
creditors.’” (quoting Stodd, 73 Cal. App. 3d at 835)).
Applying these principles here, the outcome is the same
as it was in Ahcom. There is still “no such thing” as a general
alter ego claim in California. Id. at 1251; see Favila v.
Pasquarella, 65 Cal. App. 5th 934, 946 (2021). And all of
IPAC’s substantive causes of action—breach of contract,
trade secret misappropriation, and the rest—allege injury to
IPAC, not to Black Gold. See Ahcom, 623 F.3d at 1249.
IPAC’s alter ego claim against the Napoleonis is thus
“merely . . . a procedural mechanism” through which IPAC
seeks to “h[old] [the Napoleonis] jointly liable for the
wrongdoing” of Black Gold. See Double Bogey, L.P. v.
Enea, 794 F.3d 1047, 1051–52 (9th Cir. 2015) (citing
Ahcom, 623 F.3d at 1251). To the extent this purely
procedural claim belongs to anyone, it belongs to IPAC. See
Stodd, 73 Cal. App. 3d at 833.
C
Aside from the “property of the debtor,” the automatic
bankruptcy stay also applies to “the debtor” himself, whom
Chapter 15 defines as “[the] entity that is the subject of [the]
foreign [bankruptcy] proceeding.” 11 U.S.C. § 1502(1). The
Napoleonis all but concede that they fall far short of meeting
this statutory definition because it is Black Gold, not they,
who declared bankruptcy in Monaco. And they acknowledge
further that it is “the general rule” in this Circuit “that the
automatic stay does not apply to actions against non-
debtors,” which is what the Napoleonis are. In re Excel
Innovations, Inc., 502 F.3d 1086, 1096 (9th Cir. 2007); cf.
Harrington v. Purdue Pharma L.P., 144 S. Ct. 2071, 2081
(2024) (holding corporate debtor’s sole-owner, as non-
INT’L PETROLEUM PROD. V. BLACK GOLD S.A.R.L. 27
debtor in underlying bankruptcy proceedings, was not
entitled to bankruptcy protection of a discharge of liability
to a non-consenting creditor). Relying on the Fourth
Circuit’s decision in A.H. Robins Co., Inc. v. Piccinin, 788
F.2d 994 (4th Cir. 1986), the Napoleonis urge us instead to
create an exception to this rule in the “unusual situation”
where “there is such identity between the debtor and the
[non-debtor] . . . that a judgment against the [non-debtor]
will in effect be a judgment or finding against the debtor.”
Matter of Lockard, 884 F.2d 1171, 1179 (9th Cir. 1989)
(quoting A.H. Robins Co., 788 F.2d at 999). After all, if it is
true that the Napoleonis are Black Gold’s alter ego, the
Napoleonis explain, then the Napoleonis and Black Gold are
“one and the same entity” and IPAC’s enforcement-of-
judgment action against the Napoleonis is, in essence, really
just an action against Black Gold.
We have declined to adopt the Fourth Circuit’s “unusual
situation” exception on several occasions. In re Excel
Innovations, Inc., 502 F.3d at 1098; In re Chugach Forest
Prods., Inc., 23 F.3d 241, 246–47 (9th Cir. 1994); United
States v. Dos Cabezas Corp., 995 F.2d 1486, 1491 n.3 (9th
Cir. 1993); Matter of Lockard, 884 F.2d at 1179. While our
reasons for refusing have varied from case to case, the
“vitality” of the Fourth Circuit’s “unusual situation”
exception has, in this Circuit, remained “[un]clear.” In re
Chugach, 23 F.3d at 247. Here again we find good reason to
defer that question for a future case.
“Even if” we wanted to adopt the A.H. Robins exception,
the bankruptcy court in the Chapter 15 proceedings below
“first need[ed] to [decide whether] to extend the automatic
stay” to the Napoleonis “after [a] hearing” and a finding of
an “unusual need” to “take this action to protect” Black
Gold’s estate. Id. at 247 n.6 (quoting Patton v. Bearden, 8
28 INT’L PETROLEUM PROD. V. BLACK GOLD S.A.R.L.
F.3d 343, 349 (6th Cir. 1993)). That is because the A.H.
Robins “unusual situation” exception—“although referred to
as [an] extension[] of the automatic stay”—is rooted in the
bankruptcy court’s “injunctive powers under section 105” of
the Bankruptcy Code. Id. (quoting Bearden, 8 F.3d at 349;
In re Advanced Ribbons & Office Prods., Inc., 125 B.R. 259,
266 (9th Cir. BAP 1991)). Because the bankruptcy court was
not asked to answer these questions in the first instance, this
case is not in the correct procedural posture for us to decide
whether to adopt A.H. Robins as the law in this Circuit. Thus,
“we again postpone resolution of th[is] issue until another
day.” Id. at 247.
IV
No automatic bankruptcy stay was in place when the
district court drew adverse factual inferences against Black
Gold for its discovery misconduct and later relied on those
inferences to find the Napoleonis jointly liable for IPAC’s
judgment. And while there is, of course, an automatic
bankruptcy stay currently in effect with respect to Black
Gold, it does not extend to the Napoleonis—who are not
“debtors” in the Monaco insolvency proceedings—nor to
IPAC’s alter ego claim against the Napoleonis—which is not
the “property” of Black Gold’s estate under California law.
We therefore affirm the district court’s final judgment below
and its subsequent award of attorneys’ fees and costs.
AFFIRMED.
Plain English Summary
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT INTERNATIONAL PETROLEUM No.
Key Points
01FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT INTERNATIONAL PETROLEUM No.
0222-15109 PRODUCTS AND ADDITIVES COMPANY, INC., Judgment Creditor, D.C.
03OPINION BLACK GOLD S.A.R.L., Judgment Debtor; LORENZO NAPOLEONI, Shareholder; SOFIA NAPOLEONI, Shareholder, Defendants-Appellants.
0422-16341 PRODUCTS AND ADDITIVES COMPANY, INC., Judgment Creditor, D.C.
Frequently Asked Questions
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT INTERNATIONAL PETROLEUM No.
FlawCheck shows no negative treatment for International Petroleum Produc v. Black Gold S.A.R.L. in the current circuit citation data.
This case was decided on September 16, 2024.
Use the citation No. 10118663 and verify it against the official reporter before filing.