Gabbidon Builders, LLC

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. North Carolina
DecidedAugust 13, 2021
Docket20-30845
StatusUnknown

This text of Gabbidon Builders, LLC (Gabbidon Builders, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gabbidon Builders, LLC, (N.C. 2021).

Opinion

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UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT WESTERN DISTRICT OF NORTH CAROLINA CHARLOTTE DIVISION In re: ) ) GABBIDON BUILDERS LLC, ) Chapter 7 ) Case No. 20-30845 Debtor. ) eo) ORDER DENYING FEE APPLICATION IN PART AND GRANTING FEE APPLICATION IN PART THIS MATTER is before the court on counsel for the Debtor’s Interim Report and Application of Attorney Robert Lewis, Jr., for Compensation and Reimbursement of Expenses as Attorney for the Debtor in Possession (the “Fee Application”) and _ the Bankruptcy Administrator’s (I) Response to First Interim Fee Applications and (II) Motion to (A) Sanction Debtor’s Attorney or (B) Require Repayment Pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 329(b) (the “Response”). In the Fee Application, Debtor’s counsel seeks attorney’s fees and expenses in the total amount of $15,068.75. The Debtor’s counsel seeks the $15,068.75 in addition to a $10,000 retainer that he received before the Debtor filed for bankruptcy. The Response requests that the court deny the Fee

disgorgement of his $10,000 retainer. For the reasons set forth below, the court denies the Fee Application to the extent of the $10,000 retainer that Debtor’s counsel received pre-petition and allows counsel for the Debtor to receive the balance of the fees and expenses sought in the amount of $5,068.75. Facts and Procedural Background The Debtor filed a Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition on September 19, 2020 and elected to proceed under Subchapter V. The Debtor’s Application for Employment of Attorney (the “Application to Employ”) filed on October 1, 2020 states that it discloses the compensation paid to its attorney, Robert Lewis, Jr. (“Lewis”), in an attached affidavit. In the attached affidavit, which is notarized, Lewis attests that he had no business with any creditor or other party in interest in connection with the Chapter 11 estate at any time, but it does not disclose any compensation paid to Lewis. The Debtor then

filed its initial Statement of Financial Affairs (the “SOFA”) on October 5, 2020 stating that prior to filing for bankruptcy, the Debtor’s principal, Leonard Gabbidon (“Gabbidon”), paid Lewis $11,717 to cover Lewis’s $10,000 retainer and the $1,717 Chapter 11 filing fee. With the SOFA, Lewis contemporaneously filed a Disclosure of Compensation of Attorney for Debtor(s) (the “Disclosure”). In the Disclosure, Lewis notes that the source of his compensation was the Debtor. The Debtor subsequently “Amended Application”) on October 16, 2020, which tells the same story as the SOFA—prior to filing the bankruptcy, the Debtor paid Lewis $1,717 for the Chapter 11 filing fee and $10,000 as a retainer for Lewis. The Amended Application reiterates that Lewis had no business with any creditor or other party in interest in connection with the Chapter 11 estate at any time. On February 1, 2021, Lewis filed the Fee Application seeking compensation for services rendered and reimbursement of expenses in the total amount of $15,068.75 and noticed the Fee Application for hearing on February 24. Up to this point, the court and the other parties in interest had no reason to suspect there was anything wrong with the Fee Application, the Disclosure, or any other filings with the court. This all changed starting with a deposition of Gabbidon (the “2004 Examination”) conducted on February 22, 2021 pursuant to the Order Allowing Ex Parte Motion for Examination of

Gabbidon Builders, LLC and for Production of Documents under Rule 2004 of the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure. During the 2004 Examination, Gabbidon testified that the source of the $11,717 payment to Lewis was a loan made by an individual named Deepak Jain (“Jain”). The next day, the Debtor amended its Schedule E/F to add a $20,000 liability to Jain; however, Lewis did not immediately amend the Disclosure or any other document filed with the court to show that the source of his retainer and Administrator to orally move at the February 24, 2021 hearing for an extension of time to object to the Fee Application and to file an ex parte motion for the production of documents pursuant to Rule 2004. The court entered an order granting the Bankruptcy Administrator’s ex parte motion on March 1, 2021. Afterwards, Lewis did file a Disclosure of Compensation of Attorney for Debtor(s)–Amended (the “First Amended Disclosure”) on March 2, 2021, which states that Lewis agreed to accept $30,000 for legal services, and, prior to filing the First Amended Disclosure, he received $10,000 plus an additional $1,717 for the filing fee. Notably, the First Amended Disclosure still incorrectly indicates that the source of the compensation to Lewis was the Debtor and not the loan from Jain. Thereafter, on March 19, 2021, the Bankruptcy Administrator filed the Response seeking an order denying the Fee Application and requesting that the court sanction Lewis by requiring

disgorgement of the $10,000 retainer. In an email from the Bankruptcy Administrator to Lewis dated March 22, 2021, the Bankruptcy Administrator informed Lewis that she saw no choice but to file the Response given that she asked Lewis to file an amended 2016 statement a week prior to accurately reflect the source of his fees, and he had not.1 On March 27, 2021, over a month after the Bankruptcy

1 The email is attached as Exhibit A to the Declaration of Robert Lewis, Jr filed on May 4, 2021. retainer, Lewis filed yet another Disclosure of Compensation of Attorney for Debtor(s)—Amended (the “Second Amended Disclosure”) showing that the Debtor paid Lewis’s $10,000 retainer and the filing fee using money borrowed from Jain. It further notes that the Debtor paid Lewis using a cashier’s check from the checking account of Deepak Jain. The cashier’s check, which was introduced into evidence by the Bankruptcy Administrator, lists Deepak Jain as the remitter of the funds. The Second Amended Disclosure is the first time throughout these proceedings that Lewis disclosed Jain’s loan as the source of the funds used to pay his retainer and the filing fee. Next, just before the April 23, 2021 continued hearing on the Fee Application, Lewis filed the Attorney’s Amended Declaration (the “Amended Declaration”) on April 22. Interestingly, Lewis notes in the Amended Declaration that upon the filing of the Chapter 11 petition, Lewis learned that Gabbidon had obtained a loan from

Jain in the amount of $15,000 and agreed to pay Jain $20,000 at a later date to satisfy the loan. In the very next sentence of the Amended Declaration, however, Lewis attests that he subsequently learned that Gabbidon utilized the loan proceeds received from Jain to pay Lewis’s retainer and the filing fee. Lewis does not provide the exact time when he “subsequently” learned this information. The court continued the April 23 hearing on the Fee the Debtor filed a reply to the Response (the “Debtor’s Reply”), which muddled the waters even further. In the Debtor’s Reply, the Debtor contends that Gabbidon dropped off a check to Lewis the day before the Debtor filed for bankruptcy. Gabbidon mentioned to Lewis that he borrowed the money to pay the initial retainer but did not elaborate any further regarding who he borrowed the money from, and, since Gabbidon is the sole owner of the Debtor, Lewis presumed that Gabbidon borrowed the money personally and was making a voluntary capital infusion.

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