Gokey v. McIntosh (In Re McIntosh)

89 B.R. 144, 5 Bankr. Ct. Rep. 327, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 1263, 1988 WL 81232
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Colorado
DecidedAugust 5, 1988
Docket19-10665
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 89 B.R. 144 (Gokey v. McIntosh (In Re McIntosh)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gokey v. McIntosh (In Re McIntosh), 89 B.R. 144, 5 Bankr. Ct. Rep. 327, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 1263, 1988 WL 81232 (Colo. 1988).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

SIDNEY B. BROOKS, Bankruptcy Judge.

THIS MATTER comes before the Court on the Debtor/Defendant’s Application for Attorney’s Fees and/or Imposition of Sanctions after the Plaintiffs filed their Motion to Dismiss with Prejudice their own Complaint contesting the discharge in bankruptcy of the Debtor, and Motion to Vacate Pre-Trial Conference one day prior to the scheduled pre-trial conference. Hearings on the Defendant’s Application were heard in Open Court on May 3, 1988 and June 21, 1988.

Defendant requested that the Court award attorney’s fees and costs incurred in this adversary proceeding to reimburse the *145 Defendant for what he alleges are burdensome fees resulting from unnecessary, repetitive, and harassing litigation procedures undertaken by the Plaintiffs. Defendant seeks an Order requiring Plaintiffs to pay his attorney’s fees, as sanctions or otherwise, for improperly initiating and pursuing the within adversary claim.

BACKGROUND AND FINDINGS OF FACT

The Court has reviewed the file, heard argument from counsel, considered all pleadings, motions, and affidavits filed by the Defendant and Defendant’s counsel. From such examination of the record, the Court recites the following background and findings of fact:

1.This adversary proceeding is the second such adversary proceeding filed by Plaintiffs against the Debtor/Defendant. The within proceeding is virtually identical, in allegations, management of case, and conclusion, to the first adversary ease. The first case, Adversary Proceeding No. 87-E-269, was commenced by Plaintiffs’ counsel, Mr. Bradley Pollock, on April 9, 1987, and subsequently voluntarily withdrawn by counsel on May 27, 1987 after Chief Judge Charles E. Matheson issued on April 23, 1987 a Show Cause Order as to why Plaintiffs’ Complaint should “... not be dismissed and sanctions imposed for the filing ... contrary to the provisions of Bankruptcy Rule 9011.” This first proceeding before Judge Matheson involved various procedural delays, confusion, and problems, as well, and Mr. Pollock belatedly admitted to the Court that the Complaint had been filed “inadvertently.” Mr. Pollock further admitted that the initial adversary proceeding was an attempt to bar a discharge of debt which was plainly dis-chargeable under Debtor’s Chapter 13. 1
2. Debtor converted to a Chapter 7 case in June, 1987. The within Adversary Proceeding (87-M-1047) was prepared on December 28,1987 and filed by Mr. Pollock on December 30,1987, after the expiration of the sixty day time period within which B.R. 4007 allows for such filing. Subsequently, Mr. Pollock pursued the action without any Court Order extending the time to do so. Again, confusion and disruption pervaded the proceedings because (a) Mr. Pollock evidently filed Complaints simultaneously in the old, dismissed adversary proceeding (87-E-269) as well as this new adversary proceeding (87-M-1047), and (b) Mr. Pollock misnumbered certain pleadings so that they ended up in the wrong file and/or before the wrong Judge and/or got “lost.” 2
3. In the within case, the Summons was issued by the Court on January 8, 1988. Contrary to the provisions of B.R. 7004(f), the Summons and Complaint were served by mail by Mr. Pollock on the Defendant on Thursday, February 4,1988, only four days before the deadline for filing an Answer in the case, Monday, February 8, 1988. This compelled Defendant’s counsel to prepare and file a Request for Extension of Time Within Which to File an Answer.
4. A pre-trial conference was scheduled in this adversary proceeding, in the ordinary course, for May 3, 1988 and notice of the pre-trial conference was mailed by the Court to counsel of record on March 22, 1988. One day prior to the scheduled pre-trial conference, Plaintiffs filed a Motion to Dismiss with Prejudice and Motion to *146 Vacate Pre-Trial Conference. Mr. Pollock failed to notify this Court that he had filed with the Clerk of the Bankruptcy Court such a Motion. He notified Defendant’s counsel, Leslie Nunn, of the filing the afternoon prior to the hearing. Only through a subsequent telephone inquiry by Mr. Nunn, did the Court realize that the pre-trial conference was rendered moot and unnecessary by Plaintiffs’ filed pleading. Mr. Nunn, however, requested that the scheduled pre-trial conference time be reserved for a hearing nonetheless and he be allowed to explain to the Court the lost time, confusion, difficulty, and unnecessary costs and attorney’s fees this adversary proceeding had caused to his client.
5. By way of attorney’s Affidavit filed by the attorney for the Defendant, Leslie E. Nunn, P.C., it is represented that approximately 20 hours and five minutes was spent by counsel representing the Defendant in these two, voluntarily dismissed adversary proceedings. At counsel’s customary hourly billing rate of $100.00 per hour, this time represents $2,008.33 in attorney’s fees. Defendant incurred an additional $21.22 in costs for a total of fees and expenses of $2,029.55. 3
6. Plaintiffs’ maintain that the adversary proceeding was filed in good faith, but that the Plaintiff, Mr. Go-key, incurred certain physical ailments and that he was “not physically or financially able to proceed with the prosecution” of the case.
7. The Plaintiffs argue vigorously that the within adversary proceeding was well-founded and brought in good faith. They maintain that it was initiated for purposes of redressing a wrong and attempting to determine that an obligation of the Debtor was not dischargeable under Section 523 of the Bankruptcy Code.
8.Equally vehemently, the Defendant maintains that the claims were groundless and frivolous and brought solely for the purpose of harassing and intimidating the Defendant in violation of his rights under the Bankruptcy Code. The Defendant maintains that not only was the action brought in bad faith, it was conducted in a procedural manner such as to increase costs, cause confusion, and compound the Debtor’s problems.

DISCUSSION AND ORDER

The Court cannot, in this forum and under these circumstances, attempt to “try,” or decide, this case on its merits or speculate as to its outcome had there been a trial. The Plaintiffs voluntarily sought dismissal, with prejudice, of their Complaint. While the Court has before it strong allegations of the Plaintiffs and arguments of the parties, it has no facts, evidence, testimony, or a sound basis on which to make any judgments as to the legitimacy or strength of the Plaintiffs’ allegations, or merits of the two Complaints.

By contrast, the Court does have before it the facts and procedural history of the ease as reflected in the file and by arguments of counsel. The Court also is confronted with the simple conclusion that the adversary proceedings, actually two proceedings, were commenced and pursued by the Plaintiffs, but both were voluntarily dismissed. The cases were, each, laced with procedural errors and legal, as well as practical, defects. The proceedings cost the Debtor over $2,000.00.

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Related

Gokey v. McIntosh (In Re McIntosh)
94 B.R. 705 (D. Colorado, 1988)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
89 B.R. 144, 5 Bankr. Ct. Rep. 327, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 1263, 1988 WL 81232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gokey-v-mcintosh-in-re-mcintosh-cob-1988.