Summary:
At first glance, Coney Island Auto Parts Unlimited, Inc. v. Burton, which may be the annual "Kumbaya" bankruptcy" case that Supreme Court Justices took to try and be (mostly) unanimous before the acrimony of the rest of its docket sets in, looks like a fairly pedestrian procedural dispute—one that barely seems to belong in the bankruptcy canon at all. It is, after all, a civil-procedure case about Rule 60(b)(4), default judgments, and whether a motion to set aside a “void” judgment must still be brought within a reasonable time. The Supreme Court’s answer was a firm yes: Rule 60(c)(1)’s reasonable-time requirement applies even when the judgment is alleged to be void for lack of proper service. The Sixth Circuit was affirmed, and the defendant lost its chance to unwind a six-year-old default judgment.
The holding, briefly.
Justice Alito, writing for eight justices, focused on text and structure. Rule 60(c)(1) says all Rule 60(b) motions must be made within a reasonable time; the Rule expressly creates a one-year cap for some grounds, but nowhere carves out an unlimited window for void-judgment claims. Even if a void judgment is a “legal nullity,” that does not entitle a litigant to sleep on its rights forever. Due process, the Court reasoned, is satisfied by a flexible “reasonable time” standard—particularly in default cases, where it may be reasonable not to act until enforcement efforts put the defendant on notice.
Justice Sotomayor concurred in the judgment, cautioning that the majority wandered unnecessarily into constitutional hypotheticals no party raised. But on the core point—that void does not mean timeless—there was no dissent.
Why this “boring” case isn’t boring at all.
As SCOTUSblog recently observed in The Case for Embracing Boring Cases, these disputes only look dull until you’re the one on the wrong end of a default judgment:
Additionally, as a few justices noted during oral argument, this case could have consequences for people across the country, particularly those who may not know enough about the law to realize when to take a legal document seriously. The dispute won’t seem very boring if you’re the one in need of more time to challenge a default judgment.
That observation lands squarely in the consumer-bankruptcy world. Default judgments often become the predicate for wage garnishments, bank levies, and—critically—credit reporting.
The credit-reporting angle bankruptcy lawyers shouldn’t miss.
The “Big Three” credit reporting agencies have long tried to sidestep consumer disputes tied to bankruptcy discharges by labeling them “legal” rather than “factual.” This has included questioning whether a judgment or bankruptcy discharge is truly final and settled. That move took a hit in the Fourth Circuit’s Roberts v. Carter-Young decision, where the court rejected the idea that CRAs can avoid their FCRA reasonable-investigation duties simply by invoking a “legal dispute” mantra.
Coney Island Auto Parts reinforces the same instinct from a different angle: procedural rules still matter, even when the underlying defect is serious. Just as CRAs cannot ignore bankruptcy discharges by waving the word “legal,” litigants cannot ignore timing rules by waving the word “void.” The one-year time limit to set aside a judgment or bankruptcy discharge precludes that distinction.
Void vs. avoidable — an oblique but important reminder.
The Court treats “voidness” as real, but not magical. A judgment may be void, yet still subject to procedural limits on when relief can be sought. That maps closely onto bankruptcy doctrine. Actions taken in violation of the automatic stay—such as liens recorded post-petition—are generally described as void and, in theory, never valid in the first place. By contrast, preferential or fraudulent transfers, including preferential liens, are merely avoidable under provisions like 11 U.S.C. § 548, and remain fully effective unless and until the trustee (or debtor with standing) affirmatively acts to avoid them. When that happens, 11 U.S.C. § 551 steps in to preserve the avoided lien for the benefit of the estate, meaning the value of the lien is captured for creditors as a whole and is not swept back to the debtor through individual exemptions.
Practice takeaway.
Yes, this is a “boring” case. It does not expand the discharge, redefine estate property, or announce a new consumer-protection doctrine. But it quietly reinforces something bankruptcy practitioners see every day: default judgments, notice failures, and timing rules have long shadows—affecting collections, bank accounts, and credit reports years later. For debtors and consumers, missing a deadline can be just as devastating as losing on the merits. And for lawyers, this case is a reminder that even the dull corners of procedural law can shape outcomes long after the bankruptcy case itself has faded from view.
For further analysis and commentary, please see:
Rochelle's Daily Wire: Supreme Court Holds Void Judgments Must Be Attacked Within a ‘Reasonable Time’
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To read a copy of the transcript, please see:
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