Ettinger & Associates LLC v. Miller (In re Miller)

529 B.R. 73
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 25, 2015
DocketCase No. 10-21288REF; Adv. No. 10-2110
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 529 B.R. 73 (Ettinger & Associates LLC v. Miller (In re Miller)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ettinger & Associates LLC v. Miller (In re Miller), 529 B.R. 73 (Pa. 2015).

Opinion

[78]*78 MEMORANDUM OPINION

Richard E. Fehling, U.S. Bankruptcy Judge

I. INTRODUCTION

This distasteful sanctions matter1 is before me on remand from the Third Circuit Court of Appeals through the District Court to this Court. On December 19, 2011, I granted in part a motion for sanctions pursuant to Rule 9011 filed by Debtors/Defendants, Gregory Joseph Miller and Tammy Lynn Miller (“the Millers”). My order imposed sanctions, jointly and severally, in the amount of $20,000 against Plaintiff, Ettinger & Associates, LLC (“Ettinger & Associates”), Plaintiffs principal, Neil Ettinger, Esquire (“Mr. Ettinger”), and Plaintiffs counsel, Demetrious H. Tsarouhis, Esquire (“Mr. Tsarouhis”) (together, “Ettinger”), under Rule 9011(c)(1)(A). Ettinger appealed my December 19, 2011 decision to the District Court, which determined that the Millers had failed to comply with the safe harbor notice requirements of Rule 9011(e)(1)(A). The District Court therefore reversed my decision imposing sanctions on Ettinger. The Court also declined to remand to me to consider whether sanctions should be imposed pursuant to some other authority. The Millers appealed the District Court’s decision to the Third Circuit Court of Appeals. The Circuit Court affirmed the District Court’s decision that imposition of sanctions against Ettinger under Rule 9011(c)(1)(A) was improper because the Millers had failed to comply with the notice requirement.

But the Third Circuit went further and concluded that “sanctions may be upheld, notwithstanding a safe harbor violation, if they are ‘clearly valid’ under a different sanctioning mechanism.” Ettinger & Associates, LLC v. Miller (In re Miller), 730 F.3d 198, 206 (3d Cir.2013).2 The Third Circuit therefore vacated the District Court’s decision with instructions to remand the matter to me to consider whether sanctions against Ettinger are appropriate on grounds other than Rule 9011(c)(1)(A).

[79]*79I find and conclude, based on the discussion below, that Ettinger’s conduct warrants imposition of sanctions under 11 U.S.C: § 105(a), Rule 9011(c)(1)(B), and my inherent powers, and that the Mr. Tsarouhis’ conduct as counsel for Plaintiff warrants imposition of sanctions under 28 U.S.C. § 1927. These sanctions are “clearly valid.” I will therefore enter an order imposing sanctions, jointly and severally, against Ettinger in the amount of $75,000 based on all of these authorities.3

II. BACKGROUND

A. Factual History

In January 2008, well before filing their Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition, the Millers retained Mr. Ettinger and his firm, Ettinger & Associates, as their attorney. Mr. Ettinger represented the Millers in certain state court litigation involving Mrs. Miller’s mother and stepfather. The familial dispute ultimately settled. Under the terms of the settlement, the Millers were required to pay Mrs. Miller’s mother and stepfather $9,500. Mr. Ettinger charged the Millers approximately $43,000 for legal services in representing them in the state court litigation over two years.

The total amount at issue with Mrs. Miller’s parents was about $16,500. Mr. Ettinger testified that he suggested to the Millers that they settle earlier or drop the litigation altogether, because the legal fees were high. I do not believe him.4 To the contrary, I believe that Mr. Ettinger extended the litigation for personal gain. Mrs. Miller credibly testified, and I find, that when the Millers first retained Mr. Ettinger, they told him they wanted to pay Mrs. Miller’s mother and step-father $10,000 because they believed that they owed them that amount. But Mr. Ettinger told the Millers not to settle at $10,000 because his fees would only be $5,000. $43,000 in fees plus a $9,500 settlement obligation later, the Millers filed their bankruptcy.

During the landlord tenant litigation, the Millers paid Mr. Ettinger approximately $20,000 in legal fees. Notwithstanding these payments, Mr. Ettinger sued the Millers in state court to collect immediate payment from the Millers of the remaining balance (approximately $23,000) that they owed to him. That suit, along with mounting financial difficulties caused by both of the Millers being out of work due to medical conditions, prompted the Millers to file their bankruptcy.

[80]*80In late 2009, Mr. Ettinger twice petitioned the state court for leave to withdraw as counsel for the Millers. Mr. Et-tinger’s first petition claimed that the Millers were delinquent in paying his legal fee. His second petition alleged the Millers’ lack of cooperation. Mr. Ettinger agreed to withdraw his first petition in exchange for the Millers’ agreement to make good faith payments on the outstanding amount owed to him, which they did. The state court entered an order confirming the terms. Mr.- Ettinger’s second petition was rejected by the state court.

The Millers faced increasing financial difficulties throughout the state court litigation, attributable hot only to the debt they owed to Mr. Ettinger, but also to medical conditions that caused them to be unable to work. Notwithstanding their financial and medical difficulties, the Millers managed to scrape together monthly good faith payments to Mr. Ettinger in the approximate amounts of $100 to $200. Despite receiving continuous good faith payments from the Millers, Mr. Ettinger sued them on March 11, 2010, to collect the outstanding balance of his fee (about $23,000 plus a demand for interest at 18%5 ), asserting only claims for breach of contract and quantum meruit. Mr. Ettinger alleged no fraud claims against the Millers in his state court collection complaint. On March 25, 2010, notwithstanding that Mr. Ettinger had sued them, the Millers showed extraordinary loyalty and good faith toward Mr. Ettinger by making yet another $100 payment to him as they had promised. The Millers did not file an answer to Mr. Ettinger’s state court complaint, but instead filed their Chapter 7 petition initiating this bankruptcy case on March 30, 2010.

B. The Dischargeability Proceeding

1. Dischargeability and Sanctions

After the Millers filed their Chapter 7 petition, Ettinger & Associates, through its principal Mr. Ettinger, retained Mr. Tsar-ouhis to file an adversary complaint demanding that the outstanding fees owed by the Millers be declared nondischargeable under 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(2), (4) and (6). Mr. Tsarouhis filed the adversary proceeding on behalf of Ettinger & Associates on August 20, 2010. Among some basic allegations, Mr. Tsarouhis alleged that the Millers’ debt to Ettinger & Associates was incurred as a result of “false pretenses, false representations, actual fraud, and or the intentional use of materially false statements which were reasonably relied upon, because [the Millers’] conscious, deceptive conduct through multiple acts and omissions, wrongfully induced [Ettinger & Associates] to continue to provide legal services.” Complaint filed August 20, 2010, in Adv. No.

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Bluebook (online)
529 B.R. 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ettinger-associates-llc-v-miller-in-re-miller-paeb-2015.