Casper v. O'Sullivan

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedJune 19, 2020
Docket18-01077
StatusUnknown

This text of Casper v. O'Sullivan (Casper v. O'Sullivan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Casper v. O'Sullivan, (Mass. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS EASTERN DIVISION

) In re: ) Chapter 7 ) Case No. 18-10529-MSH KIMBERLEY L. O'SULLIVAN ) ) Debtor ) ) ) MADGE K. CASPER ) ) Plaintiff ) Adversary Proceeding ) No. 18-01077-MSH v. ) ) KIMBERLEY L. O'SULLIVAN ) ) Defendant ) )

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION AND ORDER ON ORAL MOTION OF DEFENDANT FOR JUDGMENT ON PARTIAL FINDINGS

After the plaintiff in this adversary proceeding, Madge Casper, completed the presentation of her case in chief at the trial which began on March 4, 2020, on her complaint seeking a determination that her claim against the defendant and debtor in the main case, Kimberly O’Sullivan, is non-dischargeable, Ms. O’Sullivan made an oral motion for judgment in her favor on the basis that Ms. Casper had failed to carry her burden of proof as to non- dischargeability under Bankruptcy Code § 523(a)(2)(A).1 The following are my findings of fact and rulings of law on this motion, which I will treat as a motion under Rule 7052(c) of the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure for judgment on partial findings. I base my findings on the evidentiary record and the submissions and arguments

1 All references to the Bankruptcy Code are to 11 U.S.C. §§ 101-1532. of the parties. In considering the testimony at trial, I relied exclusively on my first-hand observation of the witnesses reinforced where necessary by re-listening to their testimony in the audio recording of the trial. I did not review the written trial transcript which Ms. Casper claims contains errors. See May 27, 2020 Order, ECF No. 108. In or prior to October of 2008, Ms. O’Sullivan approached Ms. Casper, an attorney, about

Ms. Casper’s representing her in her divorce proceeding pending in the Massachusetts probate and family court. At the time Ms. O’Sullivan was represented by counsel but wanted Ms. Casper to replace him. Ms. Casper was well-acquainted with Ms. O’Sullivan, who conducted a plastic surgery practice in Wellesley and had treated both Ms. Casper and her law partner and husband, Joseph Casper. In fact, the Caspers credited Ms. O’Sullivan with saving Mr. Casper’s life by diagnosing (when other physicians had not) and successfully removing a cancerous growth from Mr. Casper’s arm. The Caspers held Ms. O’Sullivan in the highest esteem. At a meeting in Ms. Casper’s law office in early October 2008, Ms. Casper told Ms. O’Sullivan she could not represent her until she discharged her then attorney. Ms. Casper gave

Ms. O’Sullivan a fee agreement which was dated October 6, 2008, and explained its terms to her. The agreement provided that Ms. O’Sullivan would pay Ms. Casper at a fixed hourly rate for her services plus reimburse her for necessary expenses within 30 days of receipt of a bill. Bills would be sent on a regular basis. Also, the agreement called for Ms. O’Sullivan to pay Ms. Casper a retainer of $5000. Ms. O’Sullivan left the meeting with the unsigned fee agreement. Ms. Casper didn’t hear from Ms. O’Sullivan again until December 2008 (by which time, presumably, Ms. O’Sullivan had discharged her other attorney) when she received in the mail the signed fee agreement along with the $5000 retainer. The next month, in January of 2009, before Ms. Casper had sent Ms. O’Sullivan any bills, Ms. O’Sullivan asked Ms. Casper for a change in their billing arrangement. Rather than receiving and paying bills on an ongoing basis as provided for in their signed fee agreement, Ms. O’Sullivan asked Ms. Casper if she would agree not to send her periodic bills but rather to bill her all at once at the conclusion of her divorce case. This is a highly unusual billing arrangement

for obvious reasons. Nevertheless, Ms. Casper agreed. Her decision was motivated to a significant degree by her gratitude toward Ms. O’Sullivan for saving her husband’s life. Thus, in January 2009, the parties reached an oral agreement to amend the 2008 fee agreement so that Ms. O’Sullivan would no longer receive periodic bills for Ms. Casper’s legal services and as a result all fees would accrue and be payable in full at the end of the divorce case. Periodic bills for out of pocket costs and expenses would continue to be sent to Ms. O’Sullivan who remained obligated to pay them under the original fee agreement. On July 19, 2011, as the date for the divorce trial and, based on their fee agreement, the date for a lump sum fee payment, neared, Mr. Casper had a conversation with Ms. O’Sullivan.

Mr. Casper reminded her that once the divorce trial concluded she would be required to pay all legal fees that had been accruing over the past two-and-a-half years. He told her that total fees incurred to date, after a substantial courtesy discount, were $70,000. He suggested Ms. O’Sullivan begin planning for this payment. He offered her the option of paying in a lump sum or in installments. Ms. O’Sullivan registered no protest to anything Mr. Casper said but asked for some time to think about how she would like to pay the eventual legal bill. Shortly thereafter, Ms. O’Sullivan informed Mr. Casper that she preferred to pay the legal fee in installments of $2000 per month beginning in November 2011. The parties were assuming that the divorce trial would begin in August 2011 as scheduled by the probate and family court and would be concluded in one day. That would give Ms. O’Sullivan time to get her affairs in order before her first installment payment to Ms. Casper came due. On August 9, 2011, Ms. O’Sullivan came to the Caspers’ law office presumably to prepare for the divorce trial which was to take place the next day. At their meeting the Caspers presented Ms. O’Sullivan with a one-page document entitled “Agreement for Payment of Legal

Fees” which contained the terms of the payment arrangement Ms. O’Sullivan had requested in her prior conversation with Mr. Casper, namely that she would pay the total fees for her divorce case (which as of that date totaled $70,000) in monthly installments of $2000 each beginning on November 1, 2011. I find that Ms. O’Sullivan raised no objection to the agreement (after all, it memorialized terms she herself had requested). I do not credit her testimony that she signed the payment agreement under duress or that she was presented with the agreement, the terms of which she was completely unaware, with an ultimatum by Ms. Casper on the eve of trial that unless she signed then and there Ms. Casper would withdraw as her attorney. On the contrary, I find that if anyone’s conduct in connection with the payment

agreement and the events leading up to its execution on August 9, 2011, was inappropriate it was Ms. O’Sullivan’s. During the year prior to the negotiation and execution of the payment agreement, Ms. O’Sullivan had lost her hospital privileges to perform surgical procedures. At the time she had privileges at Newton-Wellesley, Beth Israel–Needham and Faulkner Hospitals. All privileges were terminated in 2010. These terminations triggered the initiation in 2010 of an administrative proceeding by the state medical licensing board to determine whether Ms. O’Sullivan’s medical license should be suspended or revoked. Ms. O’Sullivan actively defended herself in the administrative proceeding and in fact was successful in September of 2011 in obtaining an order from the medical licensing board requiring Beth Israel–Needham to reinstate her privileges. Reinstatement was short-lived, however, ultimately being revoked once and for all in 2012. Ultimately, Ms. O’Sullivan lost her license to practice medicine in Massachusetts. The upshot of all this was that in July and August of 2011, when Ms.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Palmacci v. Umpierrez
121 F.3d 781 (First Circuit, 1997)
Sharfarz v. Goguen (In Re Goguen)
691 F.3d 62 (First Circuit, 2012)
Dewitt v. Stewart
948 F.3d 509 (First Circuit, 2020)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Casper v. O'Sullivan, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/casper-v-osullivan-mab-2020.