Barnett v. Norman (In Re Norman)

41 B.R. 8, 1984 Bankr. LEXIS 6361
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Alabama
DecidedJanuary 26, 1984
Docket13-33339
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 41 B.R. 8 (Barnett v. Norman (In Re Norman)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barnett v. Norman (In Re Norman), 41 B.R. 8, 1984 Bankr. LEXIS 6361 (Ala. 1984).

Opinion

OPINION ON ORDER REQUIRING ACCOUNTING

OPINION ON MOTION TO REVIEW CONVEYANCE OF REAL ESTATE TO SWANEE RIVER PECAN, INC. AND FOR OTHER RELIEF

RODNEY R. STEELE, Bankruptcy Judge.

This Opinion and Order concern an accounting of trustee’s sale of debtor’s real property. The accounting is at the instance of the Court by an Order of December 29, 1983, and upon the motion filed by Conoco, Inc., to review the conveyances and to have an accounting.

The sale occurred on December 7, 1983, and was of five parcels of land to Swanee River Pecan, Inc. for $340,000.00.

The trustee in April of 1983, filed his complaint to sell these properties free and clear of encumbrances; the Court authorized such a sale, and has since that time monitored the progress of the proposed sales.

When the sale was consummated, a hearing was held on December 28, 1983. The attorneys for Alabama National Bank and for Conoco, Inc. protested that a proper accounting had not been made of the sale, and in one instance that moneys had been improperly paid to the real estate broker who arranged for the sale.

The accounting took place on Friday, January 20, 1984.

Present at that time were all of the persons who were required by the Order of the Court to appear, who brought with them the books and documentation relating to the closing of the sale.

The attorney for Conoco examined the trustee, Mr. Roy Mason, a prospective purchaser who had ultimately assigned his contract for purchase to Roy Hodges and others, and Mr. W.R. Fowler, the real estate broker.

The Court examined all of the documentation provided, including the statement of sale of the trustee, the statement of expenses and time of the title attorney for trustee, the statement of receipts and disbursements by the trustee, and the closing statement filed by the attorneys for the lending agency, the Alabama National Bank of Montgomery.

FINDINGS & CONCLUSIONS

The disbursements made and questioned in this case by Alabama National Bank and Conoco, Inc., fall into these categories:

1) Taxes: The Court finds and concludes that the taxes which were paid by the trustee from the proceeds of this sale were taxes which were liens under Alabama law, and were required to be paid as taxes in *10 arrears, prorated upon a sale. There is no evidence that these taxes were irregular, or were not owed. They were verified either by the trustee or by his title attorney.

2)The payment of mortgages, with attorneys fees for mortgage holders.

a) The mortgages held by persons represented by Mr. Tom McGregor, Attorney at Law, and paid by checks No. 135 and 136 of the trustee, were verified to the trustee by Mr. McGregor, as was the amount of interest owed on those mortgages. In addition, Mr. McGregor was paid a fee of approximately 10% of the balance due on these mortgages, which was authorized by the mortgage, and was payable as a part of the mortgage expense, and did not include the interest and insurance to which those mortgage holders were entitled. We conclude that these charges were justified under Title 11, U.S.C., Section 506(b).

b) Mortgages held by the Federal Land Bank of New Orleans and by Grover C. Barnett were paid by checks No. 139 and 140. Trustee testified that he was kept up to date on the amount of interest by the attorney representing these two mortgage holders, and was satisfied of the correctness of those interest payments. The attorney for these two mortgage holders, Mr. John B. Scott, was paid by check No. 141 for his services on behalf of these mortgage holders in an amount which is approximately 2% of the amount which he recovered for his clients, and the Court finds these amounts paid reasonable and necessary under Title 11, U.S.C., Section 506(b).

c) A mortgage to Real Estate Finance Company was paid by check No. 142, and the trustee testified that he had been kept up to date by the attorney for Real Estate Financing as to the amount of interest. It does not appear that any attorney’s fees were added to this amount. The Court finds this a reasonable and necessary payment under Section 506(b).

d) A mortgage to Roy Mason was paid by check No. 143, in the amount of $4,971.58. Some controversy arose over this mortgage payment, but the mortgage was a mortgage of record, and trustee had been advised that Mason had been paid; however, Mason testified, and so did the trustee, that the mortgage was unsatisfied of record, and that Mr. Mason declined to satisfy unless and until he was paid. The debtor in this case, Clayton Welton Norman, has been uncooperative, and has suffered a stroke, which prevents the trustee from obtaining accurate information as to the payment. In addition, there are no books and records available to disprove or discredit the claim of Mason under this mortgage. The Court concludes that the trustee was obliged to satisfy the mortgage in order to clear the title, and that this payment is justified under Section 506(b).

3) Some question concerning the trustee’s settlement with Grover D. Barnett, growing out of a preference suit, which settlement was in the amount of $21,-000.00, was apparently explained to the satisfaction of creditors. It appears that trustee was able to reach settlement with Barnett, concerning certain personal property which trustee asserted Barnett had received as a preference. As an accommodation to Barnett, the trustee agreed to wait upon payment of this $21,000.00 until the closing in this case on the five parcels of realty. This money, which was offset against what was owed to Barnett on his mortgage, goes directly into the general estate of this bankrupt. It cannot be accounted as a reduction or other credit in disposing of mortgages and judicial liens in the sale of this property. It is a separate and unique claim, not associated with the real estate or the closing in this case.

4) Expenses of the trustee in closing: The trustee was obliged to pay for abstracts from Autauga County and from Montgomery County, Alabama (checks No. 133 and 134), and no question has arisen about these payments. He was required, moreover, to pay some additional taxes on property which had been sold (check No. 107), and there is no question about this disbursement.

Some question did arise concerning the fee paid to the trustee’s title attorney, Mr. *11 Lanier Branch, in the amount of $3,310.15. That amount has not yet been paid, and the examination by the Court, and the examination of his time charges and services rendered and expenses involved by the creditors, leads the Court to conclude that there is no question about the title attorney’s fee. He was examined concerning his hourly rate, at $90.00 per hour, and he represented to the Court that his usual fee is $95.00 per hour for these services, and that considerable time was required in bringing the abstracts to date and examining them on five separate parcels of property.

The Court concludes that Mr. Branch’s time charges for title work ought to be approved and paid.

An additional item was title insurance, which is an expense of the trustee, in the amount of $805.00, and the parties to this hearing agreed that it was an established fee which had to be paid.

THE REALTOR’S FEE

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 B.R. 8, 1984 Bankr. LEXIS 6361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnett-v-norman-in-re-norman-almb-1984.