Keathley v. Buddy Ayers Construction, Inc. | Case No. 25-6 | Docket Link: Here | Argument: 3/24/26
Overview: Fifth Circuit's mechanical judicial estoppel rule bars claims entirely when bankruptcy filers fail to timely disclose lawsuits, creating circuit split over whether courts must consider all circumstances or presume bad faith from potential motive alone.
Question Presented: Whether courts can bar a person's lawsuit if that person filed for bankruptcy and forgot to tell the bankruptcy court about the lawsuit?
Posture: Under rigid estoppel rule, district court and Fifth Circuit dismissed Keathley's lawsuit.
Main Arguments:
Petitioner Keathley:
(1) Courts must examine all circumstances, not presume bad intent automatically
(2) Estoppel punishes deliberate manipulation, not honest mistakes or simple confusion
(3) Rule rewards wrongdoers, harms innocent debtors, contradicts bankruptcy's fresh-start promise
Respondent Ayers Construction:
(1) Estoppel requires objective inconsistency, not proof of subjective bad intent
(2) Mistake exception covers only objective errors, not every non-malicious explanation
(3) Seventeen-factor test creates unworkable trials, eliminates deterrence, guts disclosure requirements
United States (supporting Keathley):
(1) Equity requires holistic assessment including bankruptcy-specific factors, not mechanical presumptions
(2) Bankruptcy courts' firsthand findings deserve weight when assessing debtor intent
(3) Fifth Circuit's restricted inquiry ignores relevant evidence, contradicts equitable principles
Implications:
Keathley victory: courts examine full circumstances before blocking lawsuits. Ayers victory: automatic blocking regardless of honest mistakes or creditor harm.
The Fine Print:
11 U.S.C. § 521(a)(1)(B)(i): "The debtor shall file a schedule of assets and liabilities"
Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure 1009(a): "A voluntary petition, list, schedule, or statement may be amended by the debtor as a matter of course at any time before the case is closed"
Primary Cases:
New Hampshire v. Maine (2001): Estoppel targets deliberate manipulation, not inadvertence or honest mistakes
Holland v. Florida (2010): Equity demands flexible judgments, not rigid mechanical rules