Hunter Sav. Ass'n v. Baggott Law Offices Co., LPA

34 B.R. 368, 1983 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12505
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedOctober 21, 1983
DocketBankruptcy C-3-83-265
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 34 B.R. 368 (Hunter Sav. Ass'n v. Baggott Law Offices Co., LPA) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hunter Sav. Ass'n v. Baggott Law Offices Co., LPA, 34 B.R. 368, 1983 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12505 (S.D. Ohio 1983).

Opinion

DECISION AND ENTRY AFFIRMING BANKRUPTCY COURT’S DECISION AND ORDER IN PART AND REMANDING MATTER FOR FURTHER HEARING AND FINDINGS IN CONFORMITY WITH THIS DECISION AND ENTRY; TERMINATION ENTRY

RICE, District Judge.

The present matter is before the Court on an appeal by Hunter Savings Association (Hunter), successor to debtor-in-possession, from a Decision and Order of the Bankruptcy Court granting The Baggott Law Offices (the Baggotts) $13,965.00 in compensation, pursuant to an application for fee allowance, for services rendered on behalf of the debtor-in-possession in the below Chapter 11 proceeding. In the Matter of Georgetown of Kettering, Ltd., 28 B.R. 120 (Bkrtcy.S.D.Ohio 1983). The Court, based upon the reasons and authorities cited below, affirms the Bankruptcy Court’s determination that the Baggotts should receive some compensation for the services they rendered on behalf of the Debtor, but finds that the standard applied by the Bankruptcy Court in evaluating the number of hours to be compensated to the Baggotts did not require sufficient particularity in view of the complicated and intertwined proceedings below. The Court finds, therefore, that this matter should be remanded to the Bankruptcy Court for a further hearing and findings in conformity with this Decision and Entry.

I. Background

The present controversy between Hunter and the Baggotts arises out of the Chapter 11 proceeding of Georgetown of Kettering, Ltd., (Georgetown), a residential apartment complex. Though a detailed recitation of the Bankruptcy Court’s findings of fact is unnecessary to a determination of the present appeal, a general understanding of the complexity of the various proceedings below, as well as the sequence of events leading up to the present appeal, is essential in weighing the equities between Hunter and the Baggotts.

As found by the Bankruptcy Court, Frederick E. Gagel, Steven Williams and H. Garrett Frey formed a number of partnerships for the purpose of acquiring and operating rental properties, of which Georgetown was one. A121. All of these partnerships were “property” of a holding partnership, “G.W.F.” In addition to the present Chapter 11 proceeding of Georgetown, G.W.F. and four of the other partnerships are also before the Bankruptcy Court under separate petitions for relief.

As found by the court below,

Nearly all of these various proceedings have prompted a large amount of litigation, including internecine struggles among the partnership interests, vis-a-vis an overwhelming mortgage upon which there was potential personal liability against the individual partners. In the instant proceeding, the parties, along with the mortgagee [Hunter] in Debtor’s property, were involved in two such adversarial proceedings.

Id.

Throughout the proceedings, Mr. Gagel has appeared in a variety of capacities. For example, he has appeared as a creditor in his role as president of Imperial Management, Inc., the corporation created to maintain and manage the various partnership properties. Mr. Gagel, in his capacity as a partner of G.W.F., also endorsed Debtor’s Schedules and endorsed two proposed plans for reorganization as “managing partner of G.W.F. Investment, Ltd.”

The Baggotts have represented Mr. Gagel in all of his capacities in the proceedings below. The particular interests being asserted by the Baggotts in the various proceedings have corresponded to the interests of Mr. Gagel at any given time. The Bag-gotts have represented Mr. Gagel personally, and as the Debtor, as the Debtor-in-Possession, as an equity owner, and as a creditor. Because of the variety of roles into which Mr. Gagel’s business involvements *371 cast him, he was pursuing, concurrently, interests characterized as those of a creditor and those of a debtor or debtor-in-possession. In addition to the Chapter 11 case, the Baggotts represented the various interests of Mr. Gagel in two related adversarial proceedings. The Baggotts are now seeking compensation for services they provided that were beneficial to the interests of Mr. Gagel in his capacity as a partner to Debt- or-in-Possession, Georgetown.

In attempting to bring about the successful reorganization of Georgetown, various interested parties, including Mr. Gagel and Hunter, the mortgagee, filed proposed reorganization plans. Eventually it was the plan of Hunter that was able to garner the requisite level of acceptance and was confirmed by the Bankruptcy Court on January 22, 1982. The Hunter plan provided, inter alia, that Hunter would pay all Administrative Expenses of the estate, for which the plan allocated $1,000. When the plan was being proposed and considered, the only Administrative Expense known by Hunter to exist were fees and expenses for the attorney for the creditor’s committee ($766.13). The record reveals the following events which, transpiring subsequent to the Confirmation, gave rise to the present dispute:

(1) On March 5, 1982, over a month after Confirmation of Hunter’s Plan, Baggott Law Offices filed a “Request for Payment” for legal services and expenses in representation of Debtor in Possession in the amount of $22,100.00 (A126-128).

(2) On March 8, 1982, Baggott Law Offices filed a Motion for an Order of Appointment Nunc Pro Tunc as of March 3, 1981, to be appointed attorney for Debtor in Possession (A125).

(3) On March 15, 1982, the Bankruptcy Court entered an ex parte order of appointment of the Baggotts as general counsel for the Debtor in Possession Nunc Pro Tunc as of March 3, 1981. No notice of said order was given to Frey or Hunter (A123), although the certification upon the Order and Request for fees was dated March 8, 1982 (A123, 126).

(4) On March 16, 1982, Frey filed Objection to the Motion to Appoint Baggott as Counsel Nunc Pro Tunc (A121) and requested his own attorney be appointed instead (A122). On the same day the Court dismissed Frey’s pending complaint to determine the Debtor in Possession as moot (A192).

(5) On June 18, 1982, Hunter filed Objection to the Motion to Appoint Baggott as counsel Nunc Pro Tunc (118-119). At the hearing on applications for fees held on June 22, 1982, Hunter contended that it learned for the first time of the ex parte, Nunc Pro Tunc order of Appointment and requested the Court to thereafter consider its Objections to the Motion to Appoint on the merits (A107-108).

(6) At the hearing, Baggott was granted ten days to file a memorandum and Hunter was granted ten days to respond (A110). When Baggott failed to file a timely memorandum, Hunter filed a post-hearing memorandum on July 13, 1982, citing among other issues Baggott’s complete failure to comply with 11 U.S.C. § 329(a) and Bankruptcy Rules 215 and 219 and local (and interim) Rule 2006 (A46-47).

(7) On July 16,1982, Baggott filed a post-hearing brief (A44-45). On August 3,1982, Hunter filed a Supplemental Memorandum in Reply (A41-43).

(8) On January 5, 1983, the Bankruptcy Court noted, on its own action, that Bag-gott had failed to “completely” comply with 11 U.S.C.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 B.R. 368, 1983 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12505, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunter-sav-assn-v-baggott-law-offices-co-lpa-ohsd-1983.