Hosseini v. Key Bank, N.A. (In Re Hosseini)

504 B.R. 558
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedDecember 19, 2013
DocketBAP CC-12-1516-DKiTa; Bankruptcy SV 10-66228-WA; Adversary SV 10-01385-WA
StatusUnpublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 504 B.R. 558 (Hosseini v. Key Bank, N.A. (In Re Hosseini)) 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
Hosseini v. Key Bank, N.A. (In Re Hosseini), 504 B.R. 558 (bap9 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

DUNN, Bankruptcy Judge.

The debtor, Seyed Shahram Hosseini, appeals the bankruptcy court’s order 1) denying his motion for attorney’s fees and 2) allowing only costs for service of process requested in his bill of costs. 1 We AFFIRM.

FACTS

Prepetition, the debtor obtained a total of $280,046.34 in student loans (“student loan debt”) from Key Bank, N.A. (“Key Bank”) to fund his medical school edu *560 cation. Despite several attempts, he was unable to pass the medical licensing exam. The debtor did not become a physician, as he had hoped, but instead became a night security guard earning only $13.50 per hour. He also was beset with various physical and mental ailments, including diabetes and depression.

The debtor filed a chapter 7 bankruptcy petition on May 24, 2010. He initiated an adversary proceeding to discharge the student loan debt under § 523(a)(8). Two years after Key Bank filed its answer in the adversary proceeding, the bankruptcy court held a trial. It granted judgment in the debtor’s favor, discharging his entire student loan debt to Key Bank (“Discharge Order”).

Shortly after the bankruptcy court entered the Discharge Order, the debtor filed a bill of costs (“Cost Bill”) seeking a total of $4,960.39 in expenses incurred by his attorney, Denise Fitzpatrick, in the adversary proceeding. 2 Along with the Cost Bill, he submitted a declaration by Ms. Fitzpatrick (“Cost Bill Declaration”), which included an itemization of each cost sought to be recovered by him (“Cost Bill Itemization”).

According to the Cost Bill Itemization, the debtor sought $101.20 for copying and printing (mostly for documents served electronically), $20.90 ■ for faxing (all for evidentiary documents from the debtor to Ms. Fitzpatrick), $107.74 for “service of process” (postage for service of summons, status reports and other documents mailed by Ms. Fitzpatrick), and $4,730.55 for miscellaneous costs (consisting of messenger service fees, online software purchases, exhibit preparation costs, transportation costs for Ms. Fitzpatrick’s meetings with co-counsel and/or the debtor, “research and document retrieval” costs, phone charges for a status conference through Court Call, a $2,500 “consultant fee” to Charles Murray 3 (“Murray consultation fee”), and a $500 fee to Hector Vega for “[consultation] and appearance — necessary to obtain trial continuance and prevent dismissal”). 4

The debtor also filed a motion for allowance of attorney’s fees (“Attorney Fee Motion”), seeking a total of $110,701.50 “for reasonable and necessary fees incurred [by Ms. Fitzpatrick] in [the adversary proceeding].” 5

In support of the Attorney Fee Motion, the debtor relied on a provision (“fee provision”) in the promissory note for the student loans (“promissory note”), which *561 he claimed authorized him to seek attorney’s fees as the prevailing party in the adversary proceeding. 6 The fee provision stated:

When and as permitted by applicable law, I [the borrower] agree to pay your [the lender] reasonable amounts, including reasonable attorney’s fees for any attorney who is not your regularly salaried employee and court and other collection costs, that you incur in enforcing the terms of the [promissory] Note if I am in default.

He further relied on California Civil Code (“Civil Code”) § 1717, arguing that Civil Code § 1717 reinforced the fee provision through reciprocity. 7 According to the debtor, Civil Code § 1717 “requires payment of attorney fees to prevailing parties when attorney fees are afforded to any contracting party.”

Key Bank opposed the Cost Bill, contending that the debtor could not recover certain costs because they were not allowed under LBR 7054-1. Specifically, it opposed the debtor’s request for recovery of costs for every copy ever made in the adversary proceeding because LBR 7054-1 allowed recovery of costs of copies of documents admitted into evidence only if the original documents were not available. It further opposed recovery for postage, Court Call charges, fax charges, messenger and delivery charges, software costs, transportation costs, PACER research charges and the Murray consultation fee because LBR 7054-1 did not include such expenses as recoverable costs.

Key Bank also opposed the Attorney Fee Motion, arguing that there was no statutory basis for an award of attorney’s fees under § 523(a)(8) as required under the American Rule.

Key Bank also contended that the fee provision only applied to actions seeking to enforce the terms of the promissory note. Here, the debtor had initiated the adversary proceeding to discharge his student loan debt under § 523(a)(8), not to enforce the promissory note’s terms. The debtor therefore could not seek attorney’s fees because he prevailed on a claim to relieve *562 himself from his debts under federal law, not on a Key Bank claim to recover following a default under the promissory note.

Key Bank further asserted that Civil Code § 1717 did not apply because the promissory note contained a provision stating that Ohio law, not California law, governed the prevailing party’s recovery of attorney’s fees (“governing law provision”).

Specifically, the governing law provision stated:

I understand and agree that (i) you are located in Ohio, (ii) that this Note will be entered into in Ohio and (iii) that your decision on whether to lend me money will be made in Ohio. CONSEQUENTLY, THE PROVISIONS OF THIS NOTE WILL BE GOVERNED BY FEDERAL LAWS AND THE LAWS OF THE STATE OF OHIO, WITHOUT REGARD TO CONFLICT OF LAW RULES. I agree that any suit I bring against you (or against any subsequent holder of this Note) must be brought in a court of competent jurisdiction in the county in which you maintain your (or the county in which the subsequent holder maintains its) principal place of business.

On September 10, 2012, the bankruptcy court held a hearing on the Cost Bill and the Attorney Fee Motion.

After hearing extensive argument from counsel, the bankruptcy court first addressed the Cost Bill. The bankruptcy court agreed with Key Bank that LBR 7054-1 allowed for the recovery of filing fees and certain of the service of process fees, but not for the other fees requested by the debtor.

The bankruptcy court then turned to the Attorney Fee Motion. It began by recognizing that, under the American Rule, a prevailing party may not recover attorney’s fees unless there was a statute or a contract authorizing such recovery. The bankruptcy court acknowledged that the fee provision allowed Key Bank to recover any attorney’s fees incurred in enforcing the terms of the promissory note if the debtor defaulted.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
504 B.R. 558, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hosseini-v-key-bank-na-in-re-hosseini-bap9-2013.