Beesley v. Burke (In Re Beesley)

212 B.R. 4, 38 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1212, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 1366, 1997 WL 539413
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Maine
DecidedAugust 15, 1997
Docket14-10399
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 212 B.R. 4 (Beesley v. Burke (In Re Beesley)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beesley v. Burke (In Re Beesley), 212 B.R. 4, 38 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1212, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 1366, 1997 WL 539413 (Me. 1997).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION

JAMES B. HAINES, Jr., Chief Judge.

Before me is Robert and Gail Beesley’s motion seeking an order compelling Karen M. Burke, Esq., their former Chapter 7 counsel, to disgorge fees. For the reasons set forth below, I will grant the motion. In addition, because Attorney Burke’s conduct raises substantial questions regarding her fitness to practice in'this court and regarding her billing practices for Chapter 7 debtors, I will order her to appear before me to show cause why additional sanctions should not be imposed. 1

Facts

1. Case History

The Beesleys, contemplating bankruptcy, met with Attorney Burke in May 1996. On May 8 they paid her $750.00 to represent them in a Chapter 7 filing. On June 5 they paid her the $175.00 filing fee. On June 6 Attorney Burke filed their voluntary Chapter 7 petition.

*6 With the debtors’ petition, Attorney Burke filed the statement required by § 329(a) 2 and Rule 2016(b). 3 That statement is reproduced as Appendix A to this opinion. After unremarkable travel, the trustee filed a “no asset” report and the Beesleys received their discharge. The case was closed on November 25,1996.

On May 27, 1997, the Beesleys, represented by new . counsel, moved to reopen their case, alleging that Attorney Burke had charged them over $1,800.00 for services she had agreed to provide for $925.00, 4 that her fees were unreasonable, and that she had failed to file a supplemental Rule 2016(b) statement disclosing additional fees paid her before their bankruptcy ease closed. The Beesleys sought return of some or all of the money they had paid Attorney Burke, plus costs and fees.

I concluded that the Beesleys’ motion set forth facts that, if proved, would entitle them to relief and granted the motion to reopen on May 30, 1997. See § 350(b). Attorney Burke, with counsel of her own, responded and, on June 27, 1997, filed a supplemental Rule 2016(b) statement disclosing that, in addition to the $925.00 payment reported on her initial statement, the debtors had paid her $478.24 and that they still owed her $425.00.

2. Fee History

Shortly after the Beesleys paid Attorney Burke’s $750.00 fee for representing them in routine Chapter 7 matters, they received a bill, dated July 8, 1996, for $985.43 (fees and costs). It set forth a $60.43 “balance due.” They promptly paid. They next received Attorney Burke’s August 5, 1996, bill for work performed during July, an additional $157.95. Again they paid.

On September 6, 1996, the Beesleys were billed another $365.45. This time they were unable to pay. In response to their inquiries, Attorney Burke wrote them on September 20, agreeing to accept minimum monthly payments of $25.00 and to forgo interest on unpaid balances so long as they made minimum payments. On September 27, they paid $25.00. In October, November, and December, they were billed another $172.63, $45.25, and $83.14, respectively. Each month they paid $25.00. They paid $25.00 against their balance in January and $25.29 in February. Mrs. Beesley testified that she discussed Attorney Burke’s mounting fees with her. Mrs. Beesley considered the bills she received to be at variance with her understanding of what Attorney Burke had agreed to charge. Mrs. Beesley paid as best she could because she “wasn’t sure what could be done about it.”

*7 Discussion

1. Truth

Attorney Burke concedes that she failed to file supplemental fee disclosures as required by Rule 2016(b), and recognizes that sanctions might issue for that default. In re Larsen, 190 B.R. 713, 717 (Bankr.D.Me.1996) (denying compensation and ordering disgorgement for counsel’s fee' disclosure defaults). See Law Offices of Nicholas A. Franke v. Tiffany (In re Lewis), 113 F.3d 1040, 1045 (9th Cir.1997) (attorney’s disregard of provisions requiring fee disclosure warranted denial of all compensation, without inquiry into whether fees were reasonable or excessive) Mapother & Mapother v. Cooper (In re Downs), 103 F.3d 472, 478 (6th Cir.1996) (noting that in cases involving failure to disclose fee arrangements for debtor’s counsel, courts have “consistently denied all fees”) (collecting cases). She contends, however, that, aside from overlooking the requirement that she supplement her Rule 2016(b) statement to disclose fees collected postpetition, she acted properly in charging for Chapter 7 on an hourly basis, billing against (and beyond) the $750.00 retainer the Beesleys provided.

I cannot accept Attorney Burke’s position. Characterizing her fee arrangement for the Beesleys’ Chapter 7 case as “hourly against retainer,” rather than “flat fee,” contradicts Attorney Burke’s June 13,1996, Rule 2016(b) statement. That statement provides that “[t]he compensation paid and to be paid” to counsel was $925.00 (including the filing fee). It describes “[t]he services rendered and to be rendered” as including all routine Chapter 7 work (prefiling counseling, document preparation, § 341 meeting attendance, negotiation/communication with creditors, response to relief from stay motions, reaffirmation agreements). It states that “[a]ny addition: al services ... are the subject of a separate fee agreement and will be billed at ... $115.00 per hour.” (Emphasis added).

Although Attorney Burke testified that it was “always” her practice to execute written fee agreements, calling for hourly billing, with her clients, she could produce no such agreement for the Beesleys. 5 Mrs.. Beesley, whose testimony I credit, testified that her fee arrangement with Attorney Burke called for a flat fee for routine Chapter 7 representation. Moreover, as one who sees scores of Chapter 7 files each week, I know that a flat fee charge for routine Chapter 7 legal services is far and away the prevailing practice in this district. 6 I am convinced that the reason that the Beesleys’ file did not contain a separate fee agreement is because their case required none of the “additional services” (referred to in the Rule 2016(b)state-ment’s paragraph 4) that would be the subject of such an agreement.

Because Attorney Burke conceded that she provided the Beesleys no services beyond run-of-the-mill, I conclude that she, .in effect, double-billed them. They were charged over $1,800.00 for a routine Chapter 7 case— something they were to have received for $925.00.

Were I to conclude, as Attorney Burke contends, that she and her clients agreed to an “hourly against retainer” fee arrangement, she would be left to explain why her Rule 2016(b) statement misrepresented that *8

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Bluebook (online)
212 B.R. 4, 38 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1212, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 1366, 1997 WL 539413, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beesley-v-burke-in-re-beesley-meb-1997.