Angelito Uy Sepulvida and Maria Bituin Caranay

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. New Mexico
DecidedMay 14, 2021
Docket20-10063
StatusUnknown

This text of Angelito Uy Sepulvida and Maria Bituin Caranay (Angelito Uy Sepulvida and Maria Bituin Caranay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. New Mexico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Angelito Uy Sepulvida and Maria Bituin Caranay, (N.M. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT

DISTRICT OF NEW MEXICO

In re:

ANGELITO UY SEPULVIDA Case No. 20-10063-ta13 and MARIA BITUIN CARANAY,

Debtors.

OPINION Before the Court is the second fee application of Debtors’ chapter 13 counsel, New Mexico Financial and Family Law, P.C. (“Counsel”). In the application, Counsel seeks allowance of $6,436.50 in professional fees, plus $272.57 in costs and New Mexico gross receipts tax. The Court previously awarded Counsel $10,323.95 in fees, costs, and tax. Because the cumulative amount sought is significantly higher than the average fee application for a chapter 13 case in this district, the Court set the matter for hearing. Having examined the basis for the requested fees, the Court will allow Counsel’s them in the reduced amount of $3,000. 1. Facts. The Court finds:1 In late 2018, Debtors retained Counsel to file this case, providing a $3,000 retainer. Attorneys Don Harris and Dennis Banning and paralegal Jill Stevenson worked on the case. Counsel filed the case on January 13, 2020. The initial filings included the petition, disposable income calculation, schedules, statement of financial affairs, plan, credit counseling certificate, and attorney fee disclosure. The fee disclosure states that Counsel agreed to represent

1 The Court took judicial notice of the docket in this case. See St. Louis Baptist Temple, Inc. v. Fed. Deposit Ins. Corp., 605 F.2d 1169, 1172 (10th Cir. 1979) (holding that a court may sua sponte take judicial notice of its docket); LeBlanc v. Salem (In re Mailman Steam Carpet Cleaning Corp.), 196 F.3d 1, 8 (1st Cir. 1999) (same). Debtors in this chapter 13 case for a flat fee of $3,000. No retainer was disclosed. Debtors’ plan proposed 60 monthly payments of $1,000; proposed to pay Debtors’ home mortgage “outside” the plan; and proposed to pay three car loans “inside” the plan. The Plan also proposed to pay an IRS claim for back taxes as an unsecured priority claim. In the paragraph

discussing attorney fees, Debtors represented that they paid Counsel $3,000 prepetition, with no additional fees anticipated. The plan did not mention Debtor’s $54,133,07 prepetition mortgage arrearage, although Counsel was aware of it. The Debtors’ § 3412 meeting was held February 12, 2020. There, Debtors realized that their 2011 Mercedes secured a loan from TitleMax, not Bank of Albuquerque.3 TitleMax was omitted from Debtors’ initial schedules and had not received notice of the bankruptcy. The chapter 13 trustee objected to the plan, arguing that the proposed monthly payments were insufficient, that sections of the plan form were left blank, that she needed a copy of certain tax returns, and that there was a discrepancy between Counsel’s fee disclosure and the plan regarding the retainer. The trustee also asserted that TitleMax needed to be notified of the

bankruptcy and addressed in the plan. Debtors filed an amended plan on February 26, 2020. They fixed the mix-up with TitleMax and Bank of Albuquerque, proposed to pay Bank of Albuquerque “outside” the plan, and increased plan payments to $2,500 per month. The attorney fee paragraph was amended to show a $3,000 retainer and an additional $3,000 in estimated fees, for a total of $6,000 in fees through confirmation. The amended plan did not address the pre-petition mortgage arrears. Debtors gave TitleMax notice of the bankruptcy on March 20, 2020, more than five weeks after the trustee alerted them to TitleMax’s lien on the Mercedes.

2 All statutory references are to 11 U.S.C. unless otherwise indicated. 3 Bank of Albuquerque loan is secured by a certificate of deposit. Counsel amended its disclosure of compensation on March 24, 2020. The amended disclosure still described the fee arrangement as a $3,000 flat fee, but did disclose the prepetition retainer. The claims bar date in this case was March 23, 2020, for nongovernmental creditors. A

total of $512,049.69 in claims was filed, of which $396,196.85 is secured, $5,129 is priority, and $110,723.84 is non-priority unsecured. The Debtors’ amended plan was confirmed on April 6, 2020. Counsel filed its first fee application on April 13, 2020, seeking approval of fees of $9,174.50, tax of $725.05, and expenses of $424.40—a total of $10,323.95.4 On May 26, 2020, Don Harris filed an affidavit in support of the fee application, stating in part: “Due to the period of time that house payments were behind pre-petition, it took a significant amount of time for counsel to work through the proof of claim and appropriate arrearage amount as the amounts and calculations were unclear.” Nevertheless, the confirmed plan did not address the mortgage arrearage. The only explanation is that treatment of the mortgage arrears was omitted

by mistake. No objections were filed to the fee application, and the Court granted it on June 8, 2020. Counsel’s work for the Debtors continued post-confirmation. First, the IRS filed a proof of claim the same day the plan was confirmed.5 On May 4, 2020, Debtors moved to modify their plan to allow for payment of the secured portion ($4,084.05) of the IRS claim. The modification was unopposed and was granted on June 11, 2020. Second, Debtors filed a motion to modify on June 16, 2020, to correct the oversight of the

4 The initial fee application is lacking. While the application is for services performed between October 29, 2019 and April 11, 2020, Counsel only included billing statements beginning in January 2020. The Court therefore does not have a full accounting of Counsel’s billing in the case. 5 The deadline for governmental units to file a timely proof of claim in this case was July 13, 2020. prepetition mortgage arrears. In the motion, Debtors proposed to pay the $54,133.07 in arrears through the plan. No objections were filed and the motion was granted July 21, 2020. Third, in the fall of 2020 the mortgage lender transferred the loan to Shellpoint Mortgage Servicing. Counsel communicated with Debtors frequently for about six weeks to assist with the

transition. A notice of transfer was filed on the docket on November 11, 2020. Finally, Counsel worked on TitleMax’s proof of claim. Initially, the trustee objected to the claim, filed April 20, 2020, as untimely. Debtors responded with a motion to allow the late filed claim but also argued that TitleMax’s secured claim amount and interest rate6 should be treated as set forth in the confirmed plan. Debtors eventually filed their own claim objection to that effect and the trustee withdrew hers. TitleMax did not respond to Debtors’ objection so the Court sustained it on November 5, 2020. On December 2, 2020, Counsel filed its second fee application, requesting approval of fees of $6,436.50, taxes of $506.87, and costs of $272.57. The time spent and fees billed can be categorized as follows:

Category Attorney time Paralegal time Combined fees Plan modification for IRS claim 3.9 0.0 $780.00 Plan modification for mortgage arrears 7.4 0.0 $1,508.50 Correspondence about change in 6.3 0.0 $1,260.00 mortgage servicers Objection to TitleMax claim 5.4 0.2 $1,110.00 Work on fee applications 2.2 1.4 $859.00 Other correspondence; miscellany 4.5 0.0 $919.00 Total 29.7 hours 1.6 hours $6,436.50

2. General Requirements for Debtor Attorney Fee Allowance in Chapter 13.

6 The interest rate on the TitleMax loan was 120% per annum. Counsel was able to reduce this to 5%. Compensation of counsel for chapter 13 debtors is governed by § 330(a)(4)(B),7 which provides: In a ... chapter 13 case ...

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