In Re Atlas Automation, Inc.

27 B.R. 820
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedFebruary 24, 1983
Docket19-41327
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 27 B.R. 820 (In Re Atlas Automation, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Atlas Automation, Inc., 27 B.R. 820 (Mich. 1983).

Opinion

OPINION

STANLEY B. BERNSTEIN, Bankruptcy Judge.

Issue:

The issue raised in a contested hearing on an application for fees is whether an attorney appointed in a Ch. 11 case filed under the Bankruptcy Code to represent a creditors’ committee should be compensated at the prevailing hourly rate where his office is located or at the prevailing hourly rate where the case is filed. The applicable section under the Code is 11 U.S.C. § 330(a)(1). Facts:

Alan Gilbert, a partner in the firm of Rice, Rice, & Gilbert, filed a fee petition in this confirmed Ch. 11 case for services performed as attorney for the Creditors Committee. Mr. Gilbert’s office is located in Detroit, Michigan. This Ch. 11 case was filed in Flint, Michigan. Flint and Detroit are in different administrative units of the bankruptcy court for this district. Flint is approximately 60 miles northwest of Detroit. The 1980 census shows the population of Genesee County comprising greater Flint at 450,449, and the population of the three counties comprising greater Detroit at 4,143,633. Suffice it to say that Flint is referred to as “out-state” by the denizens of Detroit.

Mr. Gilbert applied for compensation at his “Detroit” rate of $120 an hour. He has specialized in Ch. 11 cases and more particularly in the representation of creditors committees over the past twelve years; he has been practicing law for more than twenty years, and by his estimation bankruptcy cases represents about 75% of his practice.

The proponent of the confirmed plan, Mr. Albert Austin, objected to the $120 rate argued that the prevailing rates charged by business lawyers representing corporate clients in Flint in bankruptcy and non-bankruptcy cases range from $65 to $80 — no testimony to support that allegation was introduced. request; he

Analysis:

A. The “Expectations” of the Creditors Committee

Mr. Austin alleged that when the Creditors Committee voted to have Mr. Gilbert appointed, the members expected that he would be paid at the hourly rate they customarily paid their respective corporate counsel, and had they been advised at the time of his appointment that Mr. Gilbert would request compensation at his higher Detroit rate, they would have chosen other counsel.

Mr. Austin’s allegation can not be the basis for this Court’s decision. First, there was no testimony introduced at the hearing to substantiate that allegation; second, the Chairman of the Committee is an officer of a corporation based in Detroit and his company presumably pays higher Detroit rates to their corporate counsel, so the committee was not of one mind; third, frequently creditors committees select counsel on the basis of experience and not the lowest bid on rates; and fourth, it is the Court’s function, not the Creditors’ Committee’s, to determine the reasonableness of compensation.

This Court also suspects that the objection to rates was framed in terms of the Creditors Committee’s expectations as a more diplomatic statement that “out-of-town” lawyers should be paid at “in-town” rates. The issue should be met head on because of its significant policy implications. Two recently reported decisions impose “local” rates on “metropolitan” lawyers. 1 See In re Nova Real Estate Invest *822 ment Trust, 25 B.R. 252, 9 B.C.D. 1310 (Bkrtcy.E.D.Va.1982); In re International Coins & Currency, Inc., 23 B.R. 814, 9 B.C.D. 929 (Bkrtcy.D.Vt.1982).

B. The Reform Policy of the Bankruptcy Code

The legislative history of the Code takes a strong stance in favor of encouraging the highest standards of professional practice in the bankruptcy courts. Congress understood that unless business lawyers were awarded rates in reorganization cases that they are paid for professional services in nonbankruptcy cases, there would be insufficient economic incentive to practice in the bankruptcy courts. 2 The justification from turning away from the frugal standards of compensation applied in cases under the Bankruptcy Act of 1898, as amended, was to improve the quality of practice in the bankruptcy courts. As the Bankruptcy Court in In re Hamilton Hardware Co., Inc., 11 B.R. 326, 4 C.B.C.2d 699, 702 (Bkrtcy.E.D.Mich.1981) stated: “The legislative history accompanying section 330 makes it clear that: ‘notions of economy of the estate in fixing fees are outdated and have no place in a bankruptcy code.’ ”

Consistent with the new position on fees must be the inference that more experienced practitioners with regional or metropolitan practices should be encouraged to accept appointments in cases filed in less populous communities. It is simply a fact that in a small community like Flint there are just not that many Ch. 11 cases filed involving substantial assets and liabilities; in this instance, Atlas Automation dwarfed almost all the other Ch. 11 cases then pending in this unit by the extent of its operations and corporate complexities. One would expect under these circumstances that an attorney who has regularly been appointed by the Bankruptcy Court in Detroit in comparably complex cases would have the relevant experience that would make him an attractive candidate to the creditors committee.

This Court observes that almost all of the Ch. 11 “regulars” with offices in greater Flint were appointed or privately retained to represent parties or creditors in this case. This Court does not take the position, however, that unless all of the competent Ch. 11 lawyers are already appointed or represent creditors or equity security holders, local rates apply to regional or metropolitan attorneys who accept appointment by the Court. The Flint-based attorneys who represented other parties in the case should, and may, have welcomed “tilting in the lists” with an experienced insolvency lawyer from Detroit.

From the Court’s perspective, appointment of regional or metropolitan counsel also has a prophylactic effect on the administration of bankruptcy cases. Such counsel often enjoy the independence which is required to take an appeal from an erroneous ruling of or abuse of discretion by the bank *823 ruptcy court; one need not emphasize perhaps that local counsel perceive themselves as constrained in taking appeals when their professional income is dependent upon favorable review of fee petitions in the mine run of cases by the one or two bankruptcy judges in town. In addition, appointment of regional or metropolitan counsel may also introduce insightful or innovative strategies in the formulation of plans or the prosecution of claims in adversary proceedings.

The dark side of limiting regional or metropolitan attorneys to local rates is to protect parochial values and the cozy comfort of a close-knit professional family of bench- and-bar. That form of professional inbreeding has, unfortunately, led to widespread public suspicion of impropriety or corruption. An effective antidote is to open appointments to all qualified applicants.

C.

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Bluebook (online)
27 B.R. 820, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-atlas-automation-inc-mieb-1983.