In Re Codesco, Inc.

18 B.R. 225, 6 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 395, 1982 Bankr. LEXIS 4640, 8 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 1089
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMarch 8, 1982
Docket18-36979
StatusPublished
Cited by107 cases

This text of 18 B.R. 225 (In Re Codesco, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Codesco, Inc., 18 B.R. 225, 6 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 395, 1982 Bankr. LEXIS 4640, 8 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 1089 (N.Y. 1982).

Opinion

HOWARD SCHWARTZBERG, Bankruptcy Judge.

Oftentimes the measure of success that distinguishes experienced bankruptcy counsel from attorneys who perform nonban-kruptcy-related services for a debtor is their obtaining a fee while funds are available. In this case the debtor’s experienced bankruptcy counsel, Levin & Weintraub, successfully applied for an interim allowance, as permitted under Code § 331, before the Chapter 11 case under the Bankruptcy Code was converted for liquidation purposes to Chapter 7. However, Eisen & Fishman (now Fishman Forman & Landau), who were the debtor’s prepetition attorneys and who were retained as co-counsel for the debtor to perform corporate legal services and contract negotiations apart from administering the ongoing Chapter 11 case, failed to obtain court consideration of their .interim fee application because their supporting papers were insufficient to sustain any allowance. Unfortunately the case was converted to Chapter 7 before they could resubmit a proper fee application. Substantially all of the debtor’s assets are claimed by I.U. North America, Inc. (hereinafter called “I.U.”) pursuant to an asserted perfected security interest. Therefore, Eisen & Fishman seek to salvage their claim for legal services by holding I.U. responsible for their fee on the theory that their services were required for the preservation and disposition of the estate through liquidation sales of the debtor’s assets and that such services benefitted I.U. and should be recovered from property securing I.U.’s claim, as authorized under Code § 506(c).

I.U. vigorously opposes this application on the ground that I.U. did not consent to the administration of their secured property by these attorneys and that the legal services were not incurred for the preservation, protection or benefit of the secured property. Additionally, I.U. asserts that the services rendered by the debtor’s co-counsel took place during the Chapter 11 proceeding and may not be treated as Chapter 7 administrative expenses entitled to a super-priority under Code § 726(b).

The United States Trustee takes no position concerning the issue as to whether or not these fees are compensable under Code § 506(c). However, the United States *227 Trustee notes that there appears to be unnecessary duplication of effort between the applicants and the debtor’s other co-counsel, Levin & Weintraub. Moreover, it appears that the applicants held funds of the estate, totalling approximately $1,400,000, in a non-interest bearing escrow account for a significant period of time, notwithstanding that Code § 345(a) requires that funds of an estate should be deposited or invested in a manner “as will yield the maximum reasonable net return on such money, taking into account the safety of such deposit or investment.” Moreover, the United States Trustee observes that the record indicates that the requisite financing statements in connection with the sale of the debtor’s facilities in California to Dentalloy, Inc. were not properly and timely filed with the appropriate recording office in California. Since Dentalloy thereafter became a debtor in a case under Chapter 11, which was commenced on November 19, 1981, the status of this debtor as a creditor of Dentalloy appears to be impaired because the applicants’ failure to comply with the filing requirements under the Uniform Commercial Code resulted in causing the debtor’s otherwise secured claim against Dentalloy to be deemed unsecured to the detriment of the estate and its creditors.

COMPENSATION FROM THE ESTATE

Code § 330 authorizes the payment of reasonable compensation to the debtor’s attorney for actual, necessary services rendered by such attorney based on the time, the nature, the extent and the value of the services rendered. Such compensation and reimbursement is expressly allowable from the debtor’s estate as an administrative expense pursuant to Code § 503(b)(2) and is accorded a first priority status under Code § 507(a)(1). In the event there are insufficient funds in the estate to pay the holders of a particular priority class in full, Code § 726(b) requires that all claims within that class should be paid on a pro rata basis.

The debtor’s co-counsel in this case face a greater obstacle to their claim for compensation than mere insufficiency of funds in the Chapter 11 estate. All of their legal services were rendered while the debtor operated under the provisions of Chapter 11 and before the case was converted for liquidation under Chapter 7. Code § 726(b) specifies that the so-called “burial expenses” incurred in the administration of a superseding Chapter 7 case are to have super-priority status and must be paid ahead of the administrative expenses attributable to the Chapter 11 case before it was converted. If this hurdle were not enough, the applicants are confronted by an additional impediment because it appears that I.U.’s secured claim is under-collateralized and that there may not even be any funds available to satisfy the super-priority administrative expenses of the Chapter 7 case.

The applicants argue that the super-priority status under Code § 726(b) does not preclude payment to them because all liquidation expenses are entitled to protection under this section and that is precisely what they claim; compensation for legal services performed in the course of liquidating the debtor’s assets under Chapter 11. Thus, they maintain that it matters not that the liquidation services were rendered during the Chapter 11 case, because such services, whenever performed, should be entitled to super-priority status. The weakness in this position stems from the fact that the applicants have read into Code § 726(b) the word “liquidation”, whereas this section clearly states that when a case is converted to Chapter 7 “the administrative expenses incurred under this chapter [Chapter 7] after such conversion have priority over administrative expenses incurred under any other chapter . . . ”. The super-priority status for the so-called “burial expenses” after the conversion was intended to provide an incentive to encourage capable trustees and professionals to act in superseding cases. This purpose would be negated if liquidating administrative expenses of an aborted Chapter 11 case could also qualify for super-priority status in a converted Chapter 7 case. The applicants’ position must be rejected because Code § 726(b) does not describe the super-priori *228 ty expenses in terms of “liquidating”, nor does this section allow for the inclusion of any administrative expenses of an aborted Chapter 11 case, liquidating or otherwise. Code § 726(b) expressly limits the super-priority status to those administrative expenses incurred solely under the Chapter 7 case after its conversion. Hence, the applicants are compelled to look beyond this estate for the source of any compensation with respect to their legal services performed during the Chapter 11 period.

COMPENSATION UNDER CODE § 506(c)

Understandably, the applicants also focus upon the funds held by the Chapter 7 trustee in bankruptcy who was elected by the unsecured creditors pursuant to Code § 702. These funds, consisting mainly of receipts from accounts receivable and the liquidation of the various facilities owned by the debtor throughout the country, are claimed by I.U. under its security interest. Hence, the applicants contend that I.U.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 B.R. 225, 6 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 395, 1982 Bankr. LEXIS 4640, 8 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 1089, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-codesco-inc-nysb-1982.