In re: Deborah Jane Waltrip

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Hawaii
DecidedNovember 21, 2025
Docket24-00737
StatusUnknown

This text of In re: Deborah Jane Waltrip (In re: Deborah Jane Waltrip) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Hawaii primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re: Deborah Jane Waltrip, (Haw. 2025).

Opinion

Date Signed: November 21, 2025 Ay ii . >, SO ORDERED.

ety Robert J. Faris ier OF ge United States Bankruptcy Judge

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT

DISTRICT OF HAWAII

In re: Case No.: 24-00737 Chapter 13 Deborah Jane Waltrip, Debtor. Related: ECF 109

ORDER REGARDING APPLICATION FOR COMPENSATION

The applicant seeks approval of $4,607.00 in attorney’s fees for work

performed in a debtor’s chapter 13 case. The chapter 13 trustee objects,

arguing that the applicant improperly withdrew the fees from its client

trust account before earning them and that the applicant’s paralegal work

was unsupervised.

I. Background

A. The Presumptive Fee Process All fees for a chapter 13 debtors’ attorney are subject to bankruptcy

court review for reasonableness.1 Ordinarily, counsel must file a fee application with detailed timesheets that reflect hours actually spent on the

case and the attorney’s hourly rate. The court considers the application at a noticed hearing.

But like many courts we have established a streamlined procedure adopting the use of presumptive fees in chapter 13 cases. Prior to

commencing a chapter 13 case, the debtor and the debtor’s attorney agree to a “Chapter 13 Rights, Responsibilities and Fee Agreement” (the “Fee

Agreement”).2 As its title suggests, this agreement outlines the rights and responsibilities of both parties and specifies how the attorney will be paid

throughout the case. Namely, the parties may choose either a standard fee application or a “presumptive fee.”

1 11 U.S.C. § 330(a)(4)(B). 2 Local Form H2016R. An attorney who accepts the presumptive fee does not need to file a

fee application accompanied by timesheets. Under the presumptive fee, the parties agree to a flat fee of $5,000.00 for the pre- and post-petition services

outlined in Part A-2 and A-4 of the Fee Agreement.3 These tasks encompass all services typically required in a chapter 13 case, such as preparing and

explaining required documents, advising the debtor, filing and modifying plans, responding to objections and stay motions, providing other

necessary services, and communicating with the debtor throughout the case. The court approves the presumptive fee in the order confirming the

chapter 13 plan, and counsel is entitled to immediate payment of the entire presumptive fee (even though it covers certain post-confirmation services

that counsel has not yet rendered). The presumptive fee is not an hourly fee. Rather, it is a flat fee for

specified services. It is also not a retainer deposit to secure an hourly fee. But an attorney “may request a reasonable amount of funds from the

debtor for deposit in the attorneys’ client trust account to prepay the

3 ECF 6, Local Form H2016R at 2, 4. attorney fees.” The attorney may withdraw funds from the trust account

before the petition is filed “for services completed up to that point.”4 After the petition is filed, the attorney may not withdraw any funds from the

trust account without court approval.5 An attorney who seeks compensation for additional services not

covered by the presumptive fee, such as certain types of preconfirmation contested matters and certain services rendered more than a year after plan

confirmation, must file a standard fee application.6 This presumptive fee procedure is consistent with the Local

Bankruptcy Rule (“LBR”) 2016-1(g)(4), providing that: [u]nless fully earned and withdrawn from a client trust account prior to the filing of the petition, any funds paid to the attorney by or on behalf of the debtor for services in or in connection with the chapter 13 case must remain in a client trust account pending entry of a court order approving the compensation.

The procedure is also consistent with the Hawaii Rules of Professional Conduct (“HRPC”) stating that “[f]ee payments received by a

4 Id. at 5. 5 Id. 6 Id. at 7. lawyer before legal services have been rendered are presumed to be

unearned and shall be held in a trust account.”7 The Ninth Circuit has held that presumptive fee procedures like ours

are consistent with the Bankruptcy Code.8 B. Factual Background

Deborah Waltrip filed a petition for chapter 13 relief on August 12, 2024, with Cain Herren & McKelvey, ALC (the “applicant”) as her counsel.9

At the commencement of the case, Ms. Waltrip and the applicant signed the Fee Agreement, agreeing to the $5,000.00 presumptive fee for standard

services.10 Ms. Waltrip had paid the full $5,000.00, and the applicant deposited it into the client trust account, prior to the filing.11

On or before the petition date, the applicant transferred $4,960.00 from Ms. Waltrip’s client trust account to the applicant’s operating

7 HRPC Rule 1.5(b). 8 Id; Eliapo v. Devin Durham–Burk; U.S. Trustee (In re Eliapo), 468 F.3d 592, 598–600 (9th Cir. 2006) (holding that there is “nothing in § 330 that prevents a bankruptcy court from issuing and then relying on guidelines establishing presumptive fees for routine Chapter 13 cases”). 9 ECF 1. 10 ECF 6, Local Form H2016R. 11 ECF 1 at 33. account.12 The applicant paid the filing fee, credit counseling fee, and

debtor education fee and kept the balance of $4,607.00 for its attorneys’ fees.13

Between January 31, 2025, and June 10, 2025, the applicant received four post-petition payments totaling $1,900.00 from Ms. Waltrip.14 For each

payment, the applicant filed a corresponding supplemental disclosure of compensation.15

After several unsuccessful attempts to confirm a plan and persistent opposition from a creditor, the applicant moved to withdraw as counsel on

July 7, 2025.16 The following day, the applicant refunded Ms. Waltrip’s post-petition payments of $1,900.00.17 At the hearing on August 5, 2025, the

applicant cited irreconcilable disagreements with Ms. Waltrip as the basis for withdrawal.18 The court granted the motion, subject to the applicant

remitting $4,607.00 to the chapter 13 trustee and filing a fee application

12 Id. 13 Id. 14 ECF 86 at 4; ECF 46; ECF 49; ECF 64; ECF 73. 15 Id; Local Form H2016B. 16 ECF 77. 17 ECF 86. 18 ECF 102. within 30 days of the order’s entry.19

The applicant timely filed a fee application on September 8, 2025, requesting $4,607.00.20 This court held a hearing on October 29, 2025. David

Cain appeared for the applicant, and Bradley Tamm appeared for the chapter 13 trustee.

The trustee objects to the fee application, arguing that the applicant cannot withdraw the entire advance fee upon filing the petition because

this violates the terms of the Fee Agreement and LBR 2016-1(g).21 Further, the trustee asserts that fees should not be awarded for paralegal services

when they were not rendered under the direct supervision of a licensed attorney. The trustee argues the court should deny the fee application in its

entirety.22 In reply to the trustee’s objection, the applicant contends that the

$4,607.00 was a retainer intended to cover the duration of the debtor’s

19 ECF 103 at 2. 20 ECF 109. 21 ECF 111 at 5. 22 Id. at 9. case.23 The applicant also notes that while the estimated post-petition fees

in Ms. Waltrip’s case were approximately $4,000.00, the applicant refunded all of Ms. Waltrip’s $1,900.00 post-petition payments.24 The applicant

further asserts that the paralegal’s work was performed under the direct supervision of a licensed attorney and did not constitute the unauthorized

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