Fessenden v. Ireland (In Re Hobbs)

213 B.R. 207, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 1579, 1997 WL 610381
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Maine
DecidedSeptember 19, 1997
Docket14-20290
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 213 B.R. 207 (Fessenden v. Ireland (In Re Hobbs)) 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
Fessenden v. Ireland (In Re Hobbs), 213 B.R. 207, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 1579, 1997 WL 610381 (Me. 1997).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION

JAMES B. HAINES, Jr., Bankruptcy Judge.

This adversary proceeding was brought by Peter C. Fessenden, Esq., Harrison and Deborah Hobbs’s former chapter 13 trustee, against David Ireland, Jr., d/b/a Penobscot Paralegal Services, for violations of Bankruptcy Code § 110 in connection with Ireland’s preparation of their Chapter 13 petition and related documents. 1

Fessenden asks that Ireland be fined under §§ 110(b), (c), and (f); that I order Ireland to disgorge fees under § 110(h)(2); that I certify violations of § 110(i) to the district court (with a recommendation that damages *209 be awarded); and that I enjoin Ireland from preparing Chapter 13 petitions and award fees and costs under § 110(j). Because I find that Ireland violated each of the subsections cited, I will grant substantially all of the relief requested and certify my finding that Ireland violated § 110(i) to the district court.

FACTS

1. Chapter 1.

In early 1996, Harrison and Deborah Hobbs hired Ireland to collect accounts receivable for their struggling automobile repair business. He collected roughly $1,000.00, retaining approximately $250.00 as his fee. But the Hobbs’s business was failing, and in the spring Mr. Hobbs traveled to Florida to find new work. By April, strained financial circumstances led the Hobbs to consider filing bankruptcy. They arranged to meet Ireland to discuss that eventuality.

In the course of an initial, one-hour meeting in their home, the Hobbs told Ireland they were moving to Florida, but that they needed debt relief and wanted to protect interests in their house, their cars, and in Mr. Hobbs’s tools. Ireland told the Hobbs that he had “done hundreds of bankruptcy cases,” and conveyed the impression that “he knew what he was doing” with a Chapter 13 filing. 2 He explained their options under Chapters 7 and 13, advising them that under Chapter 7 “they would give up everything and start with a clean slate,” and that under Chapter 13 they could keep their things. 3 The Hobbs hired Ireland because “he charged less than an attorney would.”

The following Monday, Mrs. Hobbs went to Ireland’s office and informed him that she and her husband had decided to file a Chapter 13 petition. She paid his $300.00 fee. There were no further consultations. Thereafter, Mrs. Hobbs saw Ireland only to drop off records, bills, account numbers, et cetera.

2. Chapter 13.

On June 19, 1996, the Hobbs met Ireland and signed their typed petition, without schedules and statements. Ireland gave Mrs. Hobbs three copies. She drove to the bankruptcy court clerk’s office and filed for relief that day.

On June 25, 1996, the Hobbs met Ireland at state district court, where they were to attend a domestic relations hearing. At this time they signed their Chapter 13 plan, schedules and statements. 4 Consistent with their announced intentions, immediately after signing the documents and attending the state court hearing, they departed Maine for Florida.

Most of the documents that the Hobbs signed on June 25, 1996, together with Ireland’s “Certification and Signature of Non-Attorney Bankruptcy Petition Preparer,” signed on June 24,1996, were filed on July 8, 1996. 5 Inexplicably, the Hobbs’s schedules were filed separately on July 9, 1996. 6 Ireland has never filed a sworn disclosure of compensation for the Hobbs' case. 7

Mr. and Mrs. Hobbs returned to Maine for their § 341 meeting on August 2, 1996. *210 There, in consultation with Fessenden, they determined that their plan, which called for monthly payments of $1,464.84, was not feasible. 8

Mrs. Hobbs returned to Ireland’s office on August 5, 1996, and told him the plan needed reworking. She spent ten to fifteen minutes there. Ireland agreed to draft a new plan and said he would call Mrs. Hobbs when he was done. When she did not hear back from Ireland within the next few days, she called him to inform him she would be returning to Florida. Ireland told Mrs. Hobbs he would revise the plan and send it to her in Florida.

Mr. and Mrs. Hobbs eventually received the amended plan, signed it, and returned it to Ireland in the envelope he provided. Although Fessenden, as trustee, received a copy of it, the amended plan was never filed with the court.

On August 26, 1996, Fessenden filed “Trustee’s Omnibus Motion Pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 110.” That motion was superseded by this adversary action, filed September 23, 1996. 9

On February 13, 1997, pursuant to Fessen-den’s motion, I dismissed the Hobbs’s Chapter 13 bankruptcy for failure to make payments required under their proposed plan. 10

Mr. and Mrs. Hobbs, now residing in Florida, have consulted bankruptcy counsel there and anticipate filing a Chapter 7 petition there shortly.

DISCUSSION

1. Genesis of Section 110.

Section 110 was enacted in 1994 “to protect consumers from abuses by non-lawyer petition preparers.” Consumer Seven Corp. v. United States Trustee (In re Fraga), 210 B.R. 812, 818-19 (B.A.P. 9th Cir1997). Although criticized by some non-lawyers as “a thinly-veiled attempt to protect the professional domain of lawyers and to exclude non-lawyers from making a living in the bankruptcy arena,” § 110 is “primarily ... a consumer protection measure unrelated .to the practice of law.” United States Trustee v. PLA People’s Law-Arizona, Inc. (In re Green), 197 B.R. 878, 879 (Bankr.D.Ariz.1996); see also Marshall v. Bourque (In re Hartman), 208 B.R. 768, 776 (Bankr.D.Mass.1997) (recognizing § 110 as “a consumer protection measure to deter and provide remedies for perceived abuses and the unauthorized practice of law by an increasingly large number of non-lawyers who were advising and assisting debtors in filing bankruptcy petitions.”); In re Rausch, 197 B.R. 109, 116 (Bankr.D.Nev.1996) (citing legislative history of § 110(c)); Ross v. Smith (In re Gavin), 181 B.R. 814, 820-21 (Bankr.E.D.Pa.1995) (reviewing tools available to bankruptcy courts in monitoring assistance provided debtors by non-lawyers prior to enactment of § 110, concluding § 110 was enacted to provide supplemental remedies). 11

Under the Code, bankruptcy courts act to protect debtors from negligence or abuse by all who assist them, lawyers as well as non-lawyers. See, e.g., 11 U.S.C.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
213 B.R. 207, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 1579, 1997 WL 610381, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fessenden-v-ireland-in-re-hobbs-meb-1997.