In Re Commercial Consortium of California

135 B.R. 120, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 1611, 1991 WL 236294
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, C.D. California
DecidedOctober 22, 1991
DocketBankruptcy LA86-10794
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 135 B.R. 120 (In Re Commercial Consortium of California) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, C.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Commercial Consortium of California, 135 B.R. 120, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 1611, 1991 WL 236294 (Cal. 1991).

Opinion

OPINION RE AWARD OF INTERIM COMPENSATION TO ATTORNEYS FOR TRUSTEE

LISA HILL FENNING, Bankruptcy Judge.

Robinson, Diamant, Brill & Klausner (the “Firm”), court-appointed counsel for the chapter 7 trustee, has applied for an interim payment of attorney fees accrued during the first four years of this case. The amount requested reflects current billing rates, rather than the billing rates in effect at the time the services were rendered. The United States Trustee objects to the use of current billing rates as an unwarranted fee enhancement in violation of the “lodestar” standards governing fee awards. This Court holds that the use of current, rather than historical, billing rates is an appropriate way to compensate professionals for unavoidable delays in the awarding of interim or final fees in bankruptcy cases.

BACKGROUND

This case commenced in June 1986 with the filing of an involuntary chapter 7 petition against Commercial Consortium of California (the “Debtor”). After entry of an order of relief, the chapter 7 trustee retained the Firm as general counsel. At that time, the estate lacked any cash or other readily available assets from which to pay a retainer or, indeed, any administrative expenses. Any payment would be contingent upon the Firm’s ability to bring assets back into the estate.

The Firm’s principal assignment was to seek recovery on a disputed claim under a fire insurance policy. At the time of the fire, the debtor was insured by Mission American Insurance Company. Before the involuntary bankruptcy petition was filed, the debtor supposedly negotiated a tentative oral settlement for $250,000.00 with that company. Before any settlement was formally documented, the insurance company went into receivership. Its successor, National American Insurance Company, refused to acknowledge the settlement and contested the claim. The chapter 7 trustee retained the Firm to handle the litigation with the successor insurance company and other parties who asserted a security interest in any insurance proceeds. An adversary complaint was filed in May 1989. After discovery, the Firm negotiated a settlement with National that resulted in the payment to the chapter 7 trustee of $273,-000.00 after court approval of the compromise in April 1990.

The Firm seeks payment of interim fees from date of appointment through May 1990, now that the estate is liquid as a *122 result of the Firm’s successful efforts. It is undisputed that the services described in the application qualify as “actual, necessary services” within the meaning of 11 U.S.C. § 330 and that they produced a beneficial result for the estate. But for the success of the action against the insurer, the estate would be totally without funds to pay the Firm or to make any distribution to creditors.

This case was an involuntary filing in which the principals of the Debtor have not cooperated. Thus, the case probably cannot be closed for at least another year or more, due to the investigations necessary to make up for the lack of schedules, statement of affairs, or adequate books and records from which the assets and creditors can be identified. The Firm requests that an interim payment be authorized, rather than further delaying payment until the final hearing before closing the case.

Although all creditors and interested parties were given proper notice of the interim fee hearing, only the United States Trustee filed an objection to the fees. The objection is limited to the issue of whether the Firm's request for payment at current market rates is proper. The United States Trustee does not dispute that the Firm’s application contains sufficient evidence of the time expended by the Firm’s attorneys and paralegals, the nature of the Firm’s services, and their value to the estate. The Firm fully complied with the descriptive and documentation requirements of F.R.B.P. Rule 2016(a) and Local Bankruptcy Rule 141(3).

The Firm’s contentions on the following issues are undisputed. Therefore, the Court did not require supplemental evidence but rather accepted the Firm’s representations as to the reasonableness of the rates and charges. Accordingly, for purposes of this application, the Court finds that: (1) the hourly rates of the individual attorneys and paralegals were and are the Firm’s normal rates; (2) those rates were and are appropriate market rates for the years in question, based upon the various levels of experience and the nature of the tasks performed; (3) in setting these customary rates, the Firm does not take into account delays in payment beyond the typical 120-day intervals for interim fee applications in chapter 11 cases, or monthly or quarterly statements to a private client; and (4) the Firm, like others engaged in bankruptcy practice in this district, bills the same insolvency rates for all clients, whether the attorney fees are to be paid from a bankruptcy estate or by creditors or other clients whose assets are not subject to the Court’s jurisdiction.

These representations are consistent with the billing rates and practices reflected in the hundreds of attorney fee applications filed with and reviewed by this Court in the past five and a half years.

Multiplying the hours expended by the regular billing rates in effect at the time the services were rendered (“historical rates”) yields total fees of $24,408.00. The Firm has requested an award of fees in the sum of $27,612.00, based on its 1990 billing rates (“current rates”). The United States Trustee argues that the difference of $3,204.00 represents an unjustified premium, which would give the Firm a windfall as a result of raising its rates during the years before it applied for interim fees.

The record contains no evidence that the disputed claim could have been resolved more quickly than it was, compelling the finding that the Firm's long delay in applying for fees was unavoidable. Any earlier filing of a fee application would have been pointless and wasteful, for the trustee could not have paid any allowed fees before recovery on the claim.

ISSUES PRESENTED

1. Is an interim fee award appropriate in chapter 7 cases, or should trustees and professionals be required to await a final fee hearing and the closing of the case?

2. Are professionals in bankruptcy cases entitled to fee enhancements as compensation for delays in payment of their fees?

DISCUSSION

Sometimes Congressional intent regarding the bankruptcy law's of this country is clear. This is one of those occasions. *123 In enacting the professional compensation provisions of the Bankruptcy Code (11 U.S.C. § 326 et seq.), Congress expressly rejected the “economy of administration” principle that had guided fee awards under the Bankruptcy Act. Professionals in bankruptcy cases are entitled to be paid on a comparable basis to other privately retained counsel, both in terms of timeliness and amount of payment. In re Manoa Finance Co., Inc., 853 F.2d 687, 690 (9th Cir.1988);

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Bluebook (online)
135 B.R. 120, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 1611, 1991 WL 236294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-commercial-consortium-of-california-cacb-1991.