OPINION
KENNETH J. MEYERS, Bankruptcy Judge.
These cases, consolidated for purposes of opinion, are before the Court on motions for order to show cause filed by the United States Trustee (“trustee”). The trustee challenges the reasonableness of fees charged by debtors’ counsel, Peter F. Geraci, for his services in each of these Chapter 7 eases. The trustee requests the Court to order disgorgement of that portion of counsel’s fees found to be excessive under 11 U.S.C. § 329.
The cases at issue are routine, simple, no-asset Chapter 7 proceedings. The debtors’ schedules in each case show no real property, personal property of less than $14,000, and total debts of $50,000 or less. While not yet accomplished, the debtors in each case have stated an intention to reaffirm some or all of their secured debt. The fees charged and paid by the debtors in these cases vary from $895 in
Wolff,
to $1,000 in
Gregory,
and $1,100 in
Crivilare.
Debtors’ counsel has filed a time itemization for each case prepared by David M. Ueherek.
The affidavit accompanying these “itemizations” attests that Mr. Ueherek re
constructed the services performed and estimated the time of the tasks involved. The itemizations contain entries for work performed by attorneys in Geraci’s firm, as well as work performed by “Clerk.”
The trustee counters with a summary of nineteen consecutively filed bankruptcy cases in the Southern District of Illinois.
The average charge for these Chapter 7 cases is slightly more than $500. From this, the trustee argues that the fees charged by debtors’ counsel in the
Wolff, Gregory,
and
Crivi-lare
cases are excessive, as they grossly exceed the average fee charged in this district for Chapter 7 cases.
Responding to the trustee’s motion, debtors’ counsel maintains that the fees in the present cases are justified by the superior services provided by attorneys in the Geraci firm. In addition, counsel asserts that without an itemization of services in the nineteen cases submitted by the trustee, a fair comparison cannot be made.
At hearing, the Court queried debtors’ counsel concerning the Geraci firm’s purported “superior” representation in these cases. Counsel was unable to identify any services performed for the debtors that are not routinely performed by attorneys in other Chapter 7 cases of this type. Although debtors’ counsel asserted that, unlike other attorneys, attorneys in the Geraci firm are constantly available to their clients, counsel was unable to substantiate this broad generalization. Counsel also suggested that the Geraci firm’s services are superior in that “all” bankruptcy petitions are prepared by an attorney, rather than by a paralegal or other type of office assistant. This statement, however, is belied by counsel’s own itemization of services in the
Gregory
case, where it specifically states that “Clerk,” not an attorney,
[djrafted petition, reviewed for accuracy, mailed to client for signatures with request for filing fee and request for missing information.
For these reasons, the Court finds counsel’s argument concerning the purported superiority of services to be without merit and rejects it as a basis for the fees charged in these cases.
In evaluating the reasonableness of fees sought pursuant to § 329, a court must consider: (1) whether the services for which the fees were charged are properly compen-sable as legal services, (2) if so, whether performance of the services was necessary and whether the fees are adequately documented, and (3) whether the services were performed within a reasonable time and for a reasonable rate based on the attorney’s training and experience.
See In re Chellino,
209 B.R. 106, 113 (Bankr.C.D.Ill.1996),
aff'd sub nom. Geraci v. Hopper,
208 B.R. 907 (C.D.Ill.1997),
citing In re Wiedau’s, Inc.,
78 B.R. 904 (Bankr.S.D.Ill.1987). In order to support a fee request, counsel must submit a time itemization that lists each activity, its date, the attorney who performed the work, a description of the nature and substance of the work performed, and the time spent on the work.
Id.
at 114. Time entries for telephone calls, conferences, and letters must state the purpose or nature of the service and the persons involved. Each type of service must be listed separately with the corresponding specific time allotment. In addition, the time expended must be reasonable in light of the results obtained.
Id.
Examination of the time itemiza-tions in these cases reveals that none of them even remotely comply with the standards set forth above. Many of the time entries do not
sufficiently describe the service being performed, such as entries for “docket call, American General Finance,” which are vague and ambiguous.
In addition, many of the services are lumped together so that the Court is unable to determine the amount of time spent on each individual service.' Time entries in either of these two categories cannot form the basis for the compensation requested. The fee itemizations further show time billed at $75 per hour for “Clerk” time. At hearing, debtors’ counsel conceded that none of the individuals designated as “Clerk” are qualified as paralegals, for which such billing might be allowable. • Thus, the Court must conclude that itemizations for “Clerk” time are noncompensable billing of overhead by debtors’ counsel, which is forbidden in the Code and supporting case law.
See id.
Perhaps the most troubling aspect of the time itemizations submitted by counsel in these cases is that they are merely “estimates” of time spent by debtors’ counsel “based upon [Mr. Ucherek’s] performance of similar tasks.” Affidavit of David M. Ucher-ek, filed Aug. 12, 1997, par. 4. The Court was initially sympathetic to counsel’s attempted reconstruction of the itemizations here, thinking that perhaps counsel was caught unaware by the trustee’s objection to the fees charged and that these reconstructed time records were counsel’s best effort to show compliance with the requirements of § 329. However, upon closer examination of the time periods involved, the Court concludes that this sympathy was misplaced. Prior litigation in the Central District of Illinois concerning the reasonableness of fees charged by the Geraei firm should have alerted counsel to the probability that their fees would be challenged in other no-asset Chapter 7 cases such as those at bar.
See In re Chellino,
209 B.R. 106 (C.D.Ill.1996) (Fines, J.);
In re Day,
BK No. 96-72774 (C.D.Ill. March 6, 1997) (Lessen, J.);
In re Michaelson,
BK No. 96-83059 (C.D.Ill. July 31, 1997) (Altenberger, J.).
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
OPINION
KENNETH J. MEYERS, Bankruptcy Judge.
These cases, consolidated for purposes of opinion, are before the Court on motions for order to show cause filed by the United States Trustee (“trustee”). The trustee challenges the reasonableness of fees charged by debtors’ counsel, Peter F. Geraci, for his services in each of these Chapter 7 eases. The trustee requests the Court to order disgorgement of that portion of counsel’s fees found to be excessive under 11 U.S.C. § 329.
The cases at issue are routine, simple, no-asset Chapter 7 proceedings. The debtors’ schedules in each case show no real property, personal property of less than $14,000, and total debts of $50,000 or less. While not yet accomplished, the debtors in each case have stated an intention to reaffirm some or all of their secured debt. The fees charged and paid by the debtors in these cases vary from $895 in
Wolff,
to $1,000 in
Gregory,
and $1,100 in
Crivilare.
Debtors’ counsel has filed a time itemization for each case prepared by David M. Ueherek.
The affidavit accompanying these “itemizations” attests that Mr. Ueherek re
constructed the services performed and estimated the time of the tasks involved. The itemizations contain entries for work performed by attorneys in Geraci’s firm, as well as work performed by “Clerk.”
The trustee counters with a summary of nineteen consecutively filed bankruptcy cases in the Southern District of Illinois.
The average charge for these Chapter 7 cases is slightly more than $500. From this, the trustee argues that the fees charged by debtors’ counsel in the
Wolff, Gregory,
and
Crivi-lare
cases are excessive, as they grossly exceed the average fee charged in this district for Chapter 7 cases.
Responding to the trustee’s motion, debtors’ counsel maintains that the fees in the present cases are justified by the superior services provided by attorneys in the Geraci firm. In addition, counsel asserts that without an itemization of services in the nineteen cases submitted by the trustee, a fair comparison cannot be made.
At hearing, the Court queried debtors’ counsel concerning the Geraci firm’s purported “superior” representation in these cases. Counsel was unable to identify any services performed for the debtors that are not routinely performed by attorneys in other Chapter 7 cases of this type. Although debtors’ counsel asserted that, unlike other attorneys, attorneys in the Geraci firm are constantly available to their clients, counsel was unable to substantiate this broad generalization. Counsel also suggested that the Geraci firm’s services are superior in that “all” bankruptcy petitions are prepared by an attorney, rather than by a paralegal or other type of office assistant. This statement, however, is belied by counsel’s own itemization of services in the
Gregory
case, where it specifically states that “Clerk,” not an attorney,
[djrafted petition, reviewed for accuracy, mailed to client for signatures with request for filing fee and request for missing information.
For these reasons, the Court finds counsel’s argument concerning the purported superiority of services to be without merit and rejects it as a basis for the fees charged in these cases.
In evaluating the reasonableness of fees sought pursuant to § 329, a court must consider: (1) whether the services for which the fees were charged are properly compen-sable as legal services, (2) if so, whether performance of the services was necessary and whether the fees are adequately documented, and (3) whether the services were performed within a reasonable time and for a reasonable rate based on the attorney’s training and experience.
See In re Chellino,
209 B.R. 106, 113 (Bankr.C.D.Ill.1996),
aff'd sub nom. Geraci v. Hopper,
208 B.R. 907 (C.D.Ill.1997),
citing In re Wiedau’s, Inc.,
78 B.R. 904 (Bankr.S.D.Ill.1987). In order to support a fee request, counsel must submit a time itemization that lists each activity, its date, the attorney who performed the work, a description of the nature and substance of the work performed, and the time spent on the work.
Id.
at 114. Time entries for telephone calls, conferences, and letters must state the purpose or nature of the service and the persons involved. Each type of service must be listed separately with the corresponding specific time allotment. In addition, the time expended must be reasonable in light of the results obtained.
Id.
Examination of the time itemiza-tions in these cases reveals that none of them even remotely comply with the standards set forth above. Many of the time entries do not
sufficiently describe the service being performed, such as entries for “docket call, American General Finance,” which are vague and ambiguous.
In addition, many of the services are lumped together so that the Court is unable to determine the amount of time spent on each individual service.' Time entries in either of these two categories cannot form the basis for the compensation requested. The fee itemizations further show time billed at $75 per hour for “Clerk” time. At hearing, debtors’ counsel conceded that none of the individuals designated as “Clerk” are qualified as paralegals, for which such billing might be allowable. • Thus, the Court must conclude that itemizations for “Clerk” time are noncompensable billing of overhead by debtors’ counsel, which is forbidden in the Code and supporting case law.
See id.
Perhaps the most troubling aspect of the time itemizations submitted by counsel in these cases is that they are merely “estimates” of time spent by debtors’ counsel “based upon [Mr. Ucherek’s] performance of similar tasks.” Affidavit of David M. Ucher-ek, filed Aug. 12, 1997, par. 4. The Court was initially sympathetic to counsel’s attempted reconstruction of the itemizations here, thinking that perhaps counsel was caught unaware by the trustee’s objection to the fees charged and that these reconstructed time records were counsel’s best effort to show compliance with the requirements of § 329. However, upon closer examination of the time periods involved, the Court concludes that this sympathy was misplaced. Prior litigation in the Central District of Illinois concerning the reasonableness of fees charged by the Geraei firm should have alerted counsel to the probability that their fees would be challenged in other no-asset Chapter 7 cases such as those at bar.
See In re Chellino,
209 B.R. 106 (C.D.Ill.1996) (Fines, J.);
In re Day,
BK No. 96-72774 (C.D.Ill. March 6, 1997) (Lessen, J.);
In re Michaelson,
BK No. 96-83059 (C.D.Ill. July 31, 1997) (Altenberger, J.). In each of the Central District cases, the court emphasized the necessity of maintaining written time itemiza-tions detailing the services rendered and the value of those services to substantiate the reasonableness of fees requested under § 329. Judge Fines’ opinion in
Chellino
was entered in December 1996, well in advance of the filing of the petitions here and, indeed, two months before counsel’s initial consultation with the debtors in
Gregory
and
Wolff.
While the initial consultation in
Crivilare
predated Judge Fines’ ruling, it occurred after the filing and argument of the trustee’s motion challenging the Geraei firm’s fees and after Judge Fines issued an order directing counsel to submit “ ‘detailed written fee itemization[s] setting forth the services for which counsel requests.compensation.’”
Chellino,
209 B.R. at 109.
As a result of the litigation in the Central District, counsel in the Geraei firm should have taken steps to maintain detailed time itemizations to substantiate their fees in similar Chapter 7 cases. However, even with this prior warning, counsel neglected to keep such records and failed to submit actual itemizations to the Court in the present cases. For this reason, the Court will exercise no leniency in reviewing the time itemi-zations here but will hold counsel to the established standards set forth and applied by the courts in the Central District cases.
The Court has taken a random sample of fees charged in 137 Chapter 7 cases filed in this district. The average fee in those cases, which include both asset and no-asset cases,
is $521. Because of the burgeoning caseload
placed upon this Court, it is impossible to review each fee application. The Court, therefore, finds it necessary to set a fee which it believes to be presumptively reasonable in no-asset Chapter 7 cases. The fee this Court has determined to be presumptively reasonable is $700, an amount well in excess of the average fee in both no-asset and asset cases in this district. Therefore, in no-asset Chapter 7 cases in this district, the Court will not review fees of $700 or less to determine their reasonableness.
The Court’s determination of a presumptively reasonable fee does not mean that counsel who devote additional time cannot be compensated in excess of $700. However, in such instances, the burden is on counsel to substantiate the reasonableness of their requested fee by submitting written time records for the Court’s review. In the eases before the Court, debtors’ counsel has failed to submit actual time records showing services performed for the debtors. Even if the Court were to accept the “estimates” provided instead, the itemizations are either nonal-lowable on their face, such as entries for “Clerk” time, or insufficient, because of “lumping” of services or failure to clearly describe the service rendered, for the Court to make a reasoned determination concerning the reasonableness of the fees charged. Quite simply, the burden is on counsel to substantiate the reasonableness of fees requested, and, in the present cases, counsel has failed to sustain that burden. Therefore, counsel’s fees in the present eases will be limited to $700 per case.
For the reasons stated, counsel shall disgorge to the debtors that portion of the fee that exceeds $700 in each of the three eases before the Court. Counsel shall do so within ten (10) days and shall file with the Court proof of compliance with the Court’s order.