Rusk v. Beutler: The Tenth Circuit BAP Affirms a Stream-lined “Good-Cause & No-Prejudice” Test for Attorney Withdrawal and Re-emphasises Strict Compliance with Local Motion-Practice Rules

Rusk v. Beutler: The Tenth Circuit BAP Affirms a Stream-lined “Good-Cause & No-Prejudice” Test for Attorney Withdrawal and Re-emphasises Strict Compliance with Local Motion-Practice Rules

I. Introduction

The Bankruptcy Appellate Panel of the Tenth Circuit (“BAP”) was called upon to review an order of the United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Utah that permitted attorney Derek Beutler to withdraw from representing debtor Zachary Rusk in an ongoing Chapter 13 case. Rusk—appearing pro se after the withdrawal—argued that (i) the court denied him due-process protections, (ii) engaged in judicial misconduct, and (iii) mishandled his “Combined Motion to Strike and Motion for Contempt.”

The BAP’s per curiam opinion (designated “Not for Publication” but citable for persuasive value) firmly affirms the bankruptcy court, endorses a flexible but rule-driven approach to contested matters, and articulates a two-part touchstone for attorney withdrawal: “good cause” paired with “no material adverse effect on the client.”

II. Summary of the Judgment

  • The BAP possessed appellate jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 158 because the withdrawal order disposed of a discrete controversy and was thus a “final order.”
  • Standard of review: abuse of discretion for procedural/evidentiary rulings; de novo for pure legal questions.
  • The bankruptcy court did not err in:
    • Failing to rule on the defective contempt motion, which was never properly noticed under Fed. R. Bankr. P. 9014 and local rule 9013-1.
    • Denying Rusk’s request to “strike” the withdrawal motion (motions to strike are disfavoured and Rusk showed no prejudice).
    • Treating the contempt-styled filing as an objection to the withdrawal motion— a liberal construction that actually preserved Rusk’s right to be heard.
    • Granting counsel’s withdrawal: the record showed an irreparable communication breakdown and no articulated prejudice to the debtor.
  • Allegations of due-process violations and judicial misconduct were “nonsensical and unpersuasive.”
  • The ruling was affirmed in full.

III. Analysis

A. Precedents and Authorities Cited

The panel anchored its decision in a framework of circuit and national authority:

  • In re Durability, Inc., 893 F.2d 264 (10th Cir. 1990)
    —final-order doctrine in bankruptcy; a discrete controversy is the relevant “judicial unit.”
  • Cruz v. Farmers Ins. Exch., 42 F.4th 1205 (10th Cir. 2022)
    —abuse-of-discretion rubric (legal error or clearly erroneous fact finding).
  • Ohlander v. Larson, 114 F.3d 1531 (10th Cir. 1997)
    —trial court abuses discretion when it fails to consider the correct legal standard or pertinent facts.
  • Fed. R. Bankr. P. 9014, 7004, 7012; Utah LBR 9013-1, 9013-2, 2091-2
    —governing motion practice, notice, and attorney withdrawal.
  • Utah Rules of Professional Conduct 1.16(b)
    —“good-cause” bases for permissive withdrawal.

Collectively, these authorities informed the court that: (i) notice and service rules in contested matters are mandatory, (ii) discretionary decisions (like allowing withdrawal) stand absent clear abuse, and (iii) pro se filings are construed liberally, but the court need not overlook fundamental procedural defects.

B. The Court’s Legal Reasoning

  1. Jurisdiction & Finality. Applying Durability, the BAP deemed the withdrawal order final because it fully resolved that discrete dispute.
  2. Procedural Validity of the Contempt Motion.
    • Fed. R. Bankr. P. 9014(b) requires service “in the manner for serving a summons.” Rusk never served his motion that way.
    • Utah LBR 9013-1 demands a “Notice of Motion and Notice of Hearing” substantially conforming to Form 9013-1. None was filed.
    ➜ Result: The motion was not properly before the bankruptcy court; hence no ruling was required.
  3. Liberal Construction Aids, Not Hurts.
    Citing Hall v. Bellmon, the bankruptcy court construed the defective filing as an objection so Rusk could still be heard at the withdrawal hearing. This was within its discretion and in fact expanded Rusk’s participation.
  4. Motion to Strike Properly Denied.
    Because Rule 12(f) technically governs only pleadings in adversary proceedings, and because a motion to strike is “purely cosmetic” unless prejudice exists, the court had ample discretion to deny it.
  5. Attorney Withdrawal Standard.
    • Utah LBR 2091-2 & RPC 1.16(b): lawyer may withdraw when “good cause” exists and withdrawal will not create a “material adverse effect,” or even if it will, other good cause justifies it.
    • “Breakdown in communication,” corroborated by both sides, is quintessential good cause (per national caselaw).
    • Rusk offered no concrete prejudice if counsel left.
    ➜ Thus, the bankruptcy court acted well within its discretion in granting the motion.
  6. Constitutional & Misconduct Allegations.
    Due-process claims fail because notice and a hearing were given; equal-protection claims fail for lack of discriminatory intent or classification; judicial-misconduct accusations were procedurally mis-channeled and unfounded on the merits.

C. Likely Impact of the Decision

  • Attorney Withdrawal Doctrine.
    The BAP’s concise endorsement of a “communication breakdown + no tangible prejudice = good cause” formula supplies practical guidance to bankruptcy courts across the circuit, especially where Chapter 13 debtors periodically clash with counsel.
  • Strict Enforcement of Local Rules.
    Litigants—particularly pro se ones—are reminded that local notice and service rules in contested matters are not optional. A defective motion is simply a nullity.
  • Pro Se Liberal Construction Boundaries.
    Courts may re-characterise defective filings to preserve rights, but litigants cannot weaponise that liberality to circumvent procedural obligations.
  • Appellate Strategy.
    The opinion highlights that appellate review centres on the bankruptcy court’s actual rulings; if a motion was never properly before the court, no appeal lies from its “non-ruling.”

IV. Complex Concepts Simplified

  • Contested Matter – Everything in bankruptcy that is litigated by motion (rather than by adversary complaint) is a “contested matter.” They are governed by Rule 9014.
  • Final Order in Bankruptcy – An order is “final” not only when the whole bankruptcy case ends, but whenever a discrete controversy within the case (e.g., withdrawal of counsel) is completely resolved.
  • Abuse of Discretion – An appellate court will disturb a lower court’s discretionary ruling only if the lower court (a) applies the wrong legal standard, (b) relies on clearly erroneous facts, or (c) makes a decision that is arbitrary, capricious, or irrational.
  • Good Cause / Material Adverse Effect – Under RPC 1.16, a lawyer may withdraw if there is good reason (e.g., client misconduct, non-payment, communication breakdown) and leaving will not seriously harm the client—or, even if some harm ensues, the cause is compelling enough.
  • Liberal Construction of Pro Se Pleadings – Courts read self-represented filings generously to ascertain the substance over form, but the litigant must still meet baseline procedural requirements such as proper notice and service.

V. Conclusion

Rusk v. Beutler may look fact-specific, yet it crystallises two practitioner-centric lessons:

  1. When attorney–client relations irretrievably crumble, the bankruptcy court may grant withdrawal once it finds (a) documented good cause and (b) no concrete, material prejudice to the debtor.
  2. Motion practice—even by pro se debtors—demands strict adherence to Rule 9014 and local forms; otherwise, the court may simply disregard the motion.

By re-affirming these principles, the Tenth Circuit BAP advances orderly administration of bankruptcy cases, balances the interests of debtors and counsel, and underscores the indispensable role of procedural precision in the federal courts.

Case Details

Year: 2025
Court: Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit

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