Estes & Hoyt v. Crake (In Re Riverside-Linden Investment Co.)

99 B.R. 439, 1989 Bankr. LEXIS 879, 1989 WL 58200
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedMay 17, 1989
DocketBAP No. SC-88-1526-RPAs, Bankruptcy No. 83-0948-M7
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 99 B.R. 439 (Estes & Hoyt v. Crake (In Re Riverside-Linden Investment Co.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estes & Hoyt v. Crake (In Re Riverside-Linden Investment Co.), 99 B.R. 439, 1989 Bankr. LEXIS 879, 1989 WL 58200 (bap9 1989).

Opinion

OPINION

Before RUSSELL, PERRIS and ASHLAND, Bankruptcy Judges.

RUSSELL, Bankruptcy Judge:

The attorneys for the Chapter 7 trustee appeal the bankruptcy court’s finding that the trustee exceeded his duties by investigating an unopposed claim when the estate was solvent, failing to distribute assets of the solvent estate, and hiring accountants to investigate the history and formation of the debtor. The court therefore held that the attorneys for the trustee were not entitled to compensation for fees and costs incurred in such endeavors and reduced and disallowed the fees accordingly. We AFFIRM.

FACTS

Riverside-Linden Investment Company (“Riverside-Linden”) (debtor) was a general partnership formed by the following general partners: Kathryn Crake (“Crake”) (appellee), Thomas and Donna Fowler (“Fowlers”), D.W. and Toni Mitchell (“Mitchells”), and Edmund and Kathryn Curriden (“Curridens”). The debtor partnership was formed in November 1981 for the purpose of acquiring an 8.4 acre parcel *441 of land located in Riverside, California (“Riverside Property”) from Pacific Property Fund, a partnership of Crake and Earl W. Hafer (“Hafer”) (appellee). The primary asset of the debtor’s estate was the Riverside Property, which was acquired on November 23, 1981.

On March 2, 1983, the debtor filed its Chapter 11 petition to prevent foreclosure on the Riverside Property. On November 7, 1984, the "case was converted to Chapter 7 and on December 11, 1984, Ralph Boldt was appointed as the Chapter 7 trustee. Thereafter, the bankruptcy court authorized Boldt to hire Estes & Hoyt (“E & H”) (appellants) as counsel to assist in the sale of the Riverside Property. On December 10,1985, the court expanded the scope of E & H’s authorized services to include assisting the trustee in the liquidation and winding up of the estate, including reviewing, analyzing and prosecuting objections to claims.

On August 22, 1985, the court approved the sale of the Riverside Property, from which the trustee received net proceeds of $398,453.41 in September 1985. On November 8, 1985, unsecured creditor Hafer filed a motion to compel distribution on his claim of $65,879.98, which was the former obligation, of Crake assumed by the debtor when it acquired the Riverside Property. None of the creditors objected to such distribution. However, the trustee filed opposition claiming that the distribution was premature since there existed the possibility of late filed 1 or amended claims and that the “claims” 2 of general partners had not been subordinated to those of the non-insider creditors. In his opposition to distribution, however, the trustee did not object to the allowability of the Hafer claim.

Over a period of approximately five months, Hafer, the trustee and Crake negotiated a court-approved stipulation and compromise arrangement whereby funds sufficient to satisfy the Hafer claim were placed into an interest-bearing trust account. The principal would only be released upon a final determination of the validity of Hafer’s claim. Interest from this account was to be paid directly to Hafer, with the trustee reserving his right to object to the Hafer claim at a later date. During the five-month negotiation period, as well as immediately thereafter, the trustee undertook and resolved various claims, including ones involving Crake. Thus, the Hafer claim remained as the sole unresolved claim.

On May 19, 1986, it became apparent that the debtor’s estate was solvent as a result of disallowance of certain substantial claims. The trustee possessed cash assets which substantially exceeded the sum of the Hafer claim and all administrative expenses. On June 5, 1986, the bankruptcy court authorized the trustee to hire the accounting firm of Steres, Alpert & Carne (“S A & C”) to prepare and file informational tax returns of the debtor and to aid the trustee in fulfilling his duties.

Since its formation, the debtor had never filed any tax returns. On January 16, 1987, the court granted the trustee’s ex parte application for production of documents in possession of the partners and creditors, pursuant to Bankruptcy Rule 2004, in order to prepare the partnership’s tax returns and investigate the financial history of the partnership. On January 20, 1987, the court granted the trustee’s application requesting turnover of all documents in the possession of Master Escrow Services, Inc., in connection with its investigation of the Hafer claim. On April 16, 1987, the trustee subpoenaed Crake and her non-bankruptcy attorney for depositions and production of documents on May 18-19, 1987, apparently to obtain information relating to Crake’s partnership interest, the Hafer claim, and the formation of the debtor. None of the trustee’s plead: ings, however, indicated that the estate was already solvent.

During this same time period, in order to save investigation expenses and to expedite the filing of tax returns prerequisite to closing the estate, counsel for Crake sug *442 gested to E & H and S A & C, on several occasions, that the trustee treat certain minor debts in a manner most favorable to the IRS. There is no evidence that the trustee considered or acted upon this suggestion.

On October 14, 1987, Crake filed a motion to compel distribution of the assets of the debtor’s estate, or, in the alternative, to dismiss the case. The trustee opposed the motion and concurrently filed a counter-motion for a partial disallowance of Crake’s unsecured claim (based on her ownership interest of a fifty percent interest in the debtor partnership) or, in the alternative, for equitable subordination of her claim. The trustee’s motion was based upon Crake’s alleged breach of fiduciary duties in causing the debtor to assume a note for $64,512.36, payable to Equity Investments, on which Crake was personally liable. This motion further alleged “inequitable misconduct [which] ... injured the creditors of the debtor,” (emphasis added) despite the fact that more than two years had elapsed since the September 17, 1985 claims bar date and that the only unpaid creditor, Hafer (who would be fully paid by distribution of the funds), joined Crake’s motion to dismiss.

On December 7, 1987, the bankruptcy court granted Crake’s motion for distribution and immediate release of the funds held in the trust account reserved to pay the Hafer claim. Thereafter, on December 30,1987, pursuant to the court’s order, E & H filed notice of a hearing on its fee application as special counsel for the trustee, seeking final fees of $50,217.00 and $2,180.65 for expenses. The fee application, in particular, requested reimbursement for fees incurred in investigating the Hafer claim, the Crake partnership interest, and the history and formation of the debtor. This fee application also requested reimbursement for costs and expenses incurred by S A & C.

Crake objected to this fee application on the grounds that some of the fees incurred by E & H were unreasonable.

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Bluebook (online)
99 B.R. 439, 1989 Bankr. LEXIS 879, 1989 WL 58200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estes-hoyt-v-crake-in-re-riverside-linden-investment-co-bap9-1989.