In Re Cody

122 B.R. 520, 1990 Bankr. LEXIS 2699, 1990 WL 241880
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedMarch 30, 1990
Docket19-60435
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 122 B.R. 520 (In Re Cody) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Cody, 122 B.R. 520, 1990 Bankr. LEXIS 2699, 1990 WL 241880 (Ohio 1990).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION RE: COMPENSATION OF COUNSEL

JAMES H. WILLIAMS, Chief Judge.

The court is asked to award compensation, pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 330, to John B. Wirtz, former counsel for the debtors in possession. Mr. Wirtz initially applied for compensation on July 14, 1989. Although not specifically so stated, it is obvious that he was at that time seeking interim compensation pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 331. The United States Trustee (UST) filed an objection and a hearing was duly scheduled and held on September 6, 1989, at which Mr. Wirtz was awarded $5,000.00 as interim compensation out of more than $11,-000.00 sought. The UST on September 11, 1989 filed a “Supplemental Statement” in which that office reiterated its opposition to what it calculated to be a request for $4,027.00 for pre-petition services and withdrew certain other objections it had raised at the hearing.

The present motion is styled an “Amended Application by Former Attorney for Debtor-(sic)-in-Possession for Allowance for Compensation and Disbursement” and seeks the allowance of $14,496.75, less “$2,000.00 [paid] when this case originally began and the sum of $5,000.00 as previously ordered by this Court for a total of $7,000.00.” The movant also seeks the allowance of $210.00 in reimbursement - of expenses advanced on behalf of the debtors in possession, although no detailed itemization of these expenses is provided.

The UST has met the current application with a motion to disgorge the $5,000.00 previously awarded by the court. (The motion was orally amended at the hearing to encompass the full $7,000.00 already paid to Mr. Wirtz.) The impetus for the UST’s motion is a letter sent to the UST’s office, with copies to the court and Mr. Wirtz, by the debtors in possession under date of October 4, 1989. They complained that the hourly rate asserted by Mr. Wirtz for his services was higher than had been agreed upon at the outset of the case and further stated:

2) Mr. Wirtz’s law firm has owed me (sic) $3,779.07 since November, 1988 (see attached invoice) for architectural services for their new offices, which we have been unable to collect. We are asking the court to 1) request the firm of Bog-gins, Moore & Wirtz to pay us in full for the architectural fees still due; or 2) subtract this sum from the legal fees for which the court is being petitioned.

A hearing was convened on both the amended application for compensation and the motion to disgorge at which the court heard the statements of Mr. Wirtz and counsel for the UST and took the testimony of one of the debtors in possession, Gerald L. Cody, and Edgar M. Moore, Jr., an attorney in Canton with whom Mr. Wirtz shares office space.

The following will constitute this court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law as required by Fed.R.Civ.P. 52, made applicable to these proceedings by Bankruptcy Rule 7052.

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. This case commenced with the filing of a voluntary petition for relief under Chapter 11 of Title 11 of the United States Code on October 14, 1987. The petition was signed by Phillip D. Schandel as attorney for the petitioners and, on the same date, the court entered an order appointing Mr. Schandel as counsel for the debtors in possession. No mention is made in the application for authority to employ Mr. *523 Schandel of any other attorney, firm or partnership of attorneys.

2. Messrs. Schandel and Wirtz were, on the date of the filing of the Chapter'll petition, partners in the practice of law and occupied offices with Boggins, Centrone & Bixler, described by Mr. Wirtz at the hearing on his amended application for compensation as an “association of individual practitioners.” That “association” eventually came to be known as Boggins, Moore & Wirtz. At no time has the “association” actually been a partnership.

3. According to Mr. Wirtz, he and Mr. Schandel terminated their own partnership on August 19, 1988.

4. Although there is some confusion in the testimony as to dates, Mr. Cody appears to agree, and the court therefore finds, that, as asserted by Mr. Moore, Mr. Cody, an architect, in late 1987 or early in 1988, orally contracted with attorney Moore and attorney Boggins to provide certain services in conjunction with the relocation of that entity known as either Bog-gins, Centrone & Bixler or Boggins, Moore & Wirtz to new space in the United Bank Building in Canton. Mr. Cody was then, and for some period of time prior thereto had been, a client of Mr. Wirtz.

5. The debtors in possession, on February 7, 1989, sent to the attention of Mr. Moore, a “Statement” which reflects a total of $3,779.07, including interest, due for “invoices outstanding” which invoices were allegedly issued on July 1, 1988 and November 1, 1988. According to Mr. Moore, the unpaid invoices, while admittedly received by the “association,” are disputed by the attorneys for the reason that the work which Mr. Cody was responsible to oversee still is not complete.

6. According to Mr. Moore, invoices such as those issued by the debtors in possession would, when received by the “association,” be approved and forwarded to the “association’s" lessor for payment. (Apparently, such charges would be credited against a “tenant improvement allow-anee,” negotiated as a part of the “association’s” move to the new space.)

7. Mr. Wirtz filed an “Application for Substitution of Counsel” on May 3, 1988 “on the grounds that prior counsel has withdrawn ...” Accompanying the Application was Mr. Wirtz’s Affidavit, which recites in pertinent part:

To the best of my knowledge I do not represent any interest adverse to the debtors or their estate ...

The court, by order entered May 30, 1989, ordered Mr. Wirtz substituted as counsel.

8. The detailed charges supporting Mr. Wirtz’s amended application reflect 64.4 hours of time spent on behalf of the debtors in possession by Mr. Schandel at an hourly rate of $75.00 for a total of $4,826.25 during the period from September 27, 1987 through March 24, 1989. Mr. Wirtz’s charges, which make up the balance of the total sought, commence on September 26, 1986, or more than a year prior to the filing of the Chapter 11 petition, and conclude on October 11, 1989.

DISCUSSION

1.

While the amended application before the court is signed, presented and prosecuted by Mr. Wirtz, it clearly separates those services rendered by him from those performed by Mr. Schandel. Mr. Wirtz advised the court at the hearing that Mr. Schandel’s services in this case were taken into account when the partnership between him and Mr. Wirtz was dissolved, and the court will treat the attorneys separately for the purposes of this decision.

The court will allow, in substantial part, compensation for services performed by Mr. Schandel on behalf of the debtors in possession.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
122 B.R. 520, 1990 Bankr. LEXIS 2699, 1990 WL 241880, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-cody-ohnb-1990.