MEMORANDUM OF DECISION
JAMES B. HAINES, Jr., Bankruptcy Judge.
On April 17, 1992, this court confirmed a plan of reorganization proposed by Casco Northern Bank, N.A. (“Casco”), and Laurence A. and Patricia A. Kenny (the “Ken-nys”). The Casco/Kenny plan provided an immediate one hundred percent cash dividend to unsecured creditors, satisfied the proponents’ claims
and eliminated the interests of DN’s general partner and limited partners.
The plan provides for full payment of all priority claims, including allowed professional fees and expenses.
Before the court are final applications for compensation and for reimbursement of expenses for professionals who rendered services to the debtor during the course of the reorganization, including counsel,
appraiser,
accountant
and financial consultant.
By earlier-entered orders, the court authorized the debtor to employ each of the applicants pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 327(a).
In response to the fee applications, Casco and the Kennys argue that the debtor’s professionals were representing, or working to advance, interests “adverse to the estate” and, therefore, that all compensation must be denied. Alternatively, they argue that compensation must be disallowed because the professionals’ efforts provided no “benefit” to the estate. For the reasons set forth below, the court concludes that the applicants are entitled to compensation and reimbursement.
Procedural History
DN, a limited partnership, filed its voluntary Chapter 11 petition on April 19, 1991, in the face of state court foreclosure proceedings initiated by Casco. It filed its first proposed reorganization plan, with disclosure statement, on August 19, 1991, the last day of the 120 day exclusivity period.
See
11 U.S.C. § 1121(b). Casco and the Kennys objected to the plan and to the disclosure statement. They moved to appoint a trustee and, alternatively, to cut off exclusivity. During hearings on September 5, 1991, Casco and the Kennys represented that they imminently would file a plan providing a 100% payment to unsecured creditors. The court ordered termination of exclusivity so competing plans could be considered in expedient fashion.
DN filed its first amended plan on October 5, 1991. Casco and the Kennys filed their plan on November 25, 1991. DN continued to press its own plan, precipitating hearings to consider the classification and valuation issues it generated.
Following November 25, 1991, DN’s plan evolved in response to rulings and developments pertaining to, among other things, its classification scheme, the value of the debtor’s assets and the limited partners’ ability to retain their interests by making capital contributions to the reorganized entity. By the time the court considered confirming the Casco/Kenny plan, DN was promoting its fourth amended plan and promising a fifth. Because the joint creditor plan was readily confirmable, impaired no claims or interests,
provided for immediate, bank-guaranteed payment of unsecured claims; because DN’s proposals remained, in a word, fluid; and because confirmation truncated protracted and expensive litigation, the Casco/Kenny plan was confirmed.
Discussion
Casco and the Kennys argue that, as soon as they proposed a 100% plan, DN was obliged to concede the reorganization and, necessarily, that all its professionals’ subsequent efforts favored interests “adverse to the estate,” i.e., those of DN’s limited partners, management,
general partner,
and promoter.
In order to determine the applicants’ entitlement to compensation, the court must consider whether they lacked “disinterestedness,” or actually represented insiders, and thereby acted with an impermissible
conflict of interest. The court will next consider whether the professionals’ efforts conferred a “benefit” to the estate and whether the amounts sought as compensation are reasonable.
1.
Counsel for DN.
Because the role of debtor’s counsel is central, because counsel's actions have drawn the most criticism from Casco and Kenny, because other professionals were retained within the context of DN’s counsel-guided reorganization strategy and because counsel’s fees and expenses represent far and away the largest portion of fees sought, the court will first analyze the attorney fee application.
a.
Relevant Statutory Sections.
Section 323(a) of the Code states that a trustee in a bankruptcy case “is the representative of the estate.” Section 1107(a) of the Code gives a debtor-in-possession the same rights and duties as a trustee.
The debt- or-in-possession:
may employ one or more attorneys ... that do not hold or represent an interest adverse to the estate, and that are disinterested persons, to represent or assist the trustee in carrying out the trustee’s duties under this title.
11 U.S.C. § 327(a). Counsel for the debtor-in-possession is charged with providing legal services to assist the debtor in fulfilling its duties to the estate.
Services rendered are compensable from estate assets.
If, during the course of representation, counsel ceases to be disinterested or represents or holds an interest adverse to the estate, the court has discretion to reduce or to deny compensation:
Except as provided in section[s] 327(c), 327(e), or 1107(b) of this title, the court may deny allowance of compensation for services and reimbursement of expenses of a professional person employed under section 327 or 1103 of this title if, at any time during such professional person’s employment under section 327 or 1103 of this title, such professional person is
not a disinterested person, or represents
or holds
an interest adverse
to the interest of the estate with respect to the matter on which such professional person is employed.
11 U.S.C. § 328(c) (emphasis added).
See In re M-H Group, Inc.,
139 B.R. 836 (Bankr.N.D.Ohio
1991)
(court retains discretion regarding fees under § 328(c));
In re EWC, Inc.,
138 B.R. 276, 282 (Bankr.W.D.Okl.1992) (§ 328(c) provides discretion regarding compensation where disinterested professional subsequently comes into conflict). Even when a conflict is demonstrated, the court may award fees.
See e.g., In re Kendavis Industries Int'l, Inc., 91 B.R.
742, 761 (Bankr.N.D.Tex.1988) (awarding 50% of fees sought).
Thus, the court must scrutinize counsel’s actions to ascertain whether, having been retained to represent the debtor, he or she ceased to be disinterested or represented parties holding interests adverse to the estate.
See In re Kendavis Industries Int’l, Inc.,
91 B.R. at 748;
In re Chou-Chen Chemicals, Inc.,
31 B.R. 842 (Bankr.W.D.Ky.1983).
b.
Representing the Debtor: Fiduciary Duties and Conflicts of Interest.
Without question, the Chapter 11 debtor and its management occupy a fiduciary role vis-a-vis the estate and its constituents.
In re Freedom Solar Center, Inc.,
776 F.2d 14 (1st Cir.1985);
In re Office Products of Am., Inc.,
136 B.R. 983, 986 (Bankr.W.D.Tex.1992);
In re Chapel Gate Apartments, Ltd.,
64 B.R. 569, 576 (Bankr.N.D.Tex.1986).
See Commodity Futures Trading Comm’n v. Weintraub,
471 U.S. 343, 355, 105 S.Ct. 1986, 1994, 85 L.Ed.2d 372 (1985);
Wolf v. Weinstein,
372 U.S. 633, 649, 83 S.Ct. 969, 979, 10 L.Ed.2d 33 (1963). That role requires them to refrain from activities aimed to benefit only themselves.
See In re Wilde Horse Enterprises, Inc.,
136 B.R. 830, 840 (Bankr.C.D.Cal.1991);
In re Kendavis Industries Int’l, Inc.,
91 B.R. at 752. Counsel may not assist in such efforts, on pain of losing the right to compensation.
In re Wilde Horse Enterprises, Inc.,
136 B.R. at 840-43. “A debtor-in-possession’s attorney cannot be compensated for representing the interest of the debtor or the debtor’s directors, officers and/or shareholders in a manner which is adverse to, or does not benefit, the estate or the creditors.”
In re Office Products of Am., Inc.,
136 B.R. at 989.
See In re Freedom Solar Center, Inc.,
776 F.2d at 16-17 (Chapter 7 case discussing interests of debtor and its principal and holding that when their interests diverge counsel may not represent both).
See also In re Chapel Gate Apartments, Ltd.,
64 B.R. at 576.
Although DN’s limited partners, its general partner and its management appeared through separate counsel throughout the case, Casco and the Kennys argue that, in promoting DN’s proposals for reorganization, and shunning the creditor plan, DN’s counsel represented interests “adverse to the estate.” Therefore, they urge that compensation for such services be denied.
Casco and the Kennys ask the court to infer that counsel’s activities were imper-missibly intended to benefit DN’s insiders because continuing to prosecute DN’s plan after the Casco/Kenny plan was filed would “only” benefit them, not the creditors. Granted, differences in the competing plans can be found principally in DN’s objectives to retain control of its assets, to keep existing management and, with infusions of new capital, to maintain the interests of limited partners. However, DN’s
plan sought to achieve none of these results by denying creditors their due. DN proposed that unsecured creditors be paid in full shortly after confirmation; that Cas-co retain its collateral and be paid its secured claim; and that administrative claims be fully paid.
Although there were substantial hurdles to confirmation of DN’s plan, in none of its multiple incarnations did it aim to benefit insiders and equity
at the expense of
the creditor body. DN’s course was consistent with its fiduciary duties to
all
of the estate’s constituencies.
See Commodity Futures Trading Comm’n v. Weintraub,
471 U.S. at 355, 105 S.Ct. at 1994 (under the Code, debtor’s management bears same fiduciary obligations to “creditors and shareholders” as would a trustee for a debtor out of possession);
In re Office Products of Am., Inc.,
136 B.R. at 986;
In re Ken-davis Industries Int’l, Inc.,
91 B.R. at 747 n. 1 (discussion of legislative history of “disinterestedness” requirement which reflects concern for “investors and the public”).
See generally
Richard L. Epling and Claudia G. Sayre,
Employment of Attorneys by Debtors in Possession,
47 The Business Lawyer 671, 678-79 (1992) (discussing history of Chapter 11 including legislative concern for protection of investors).
This is not a case like
In re Kendavis Industries Int’l, Inc.,
91 B.R. at 749-51, in which the court found, on the basis of the firm’s conduct and documentary evidence, that debtor’s counsel represented both the debtor and the debtor’s owners in circumstances where their respective interests were opposed. The same factors distinguish
In re Wilde Horse Enterprises, Inc.,
where the court found that the Chapter 11 debtor’s counsel represented undisclosed adverse interests. 136 B.R. at 846.
In re Storms,
101 B.R. 645 (Bankr.S.D.Cal.1989), another case upon which Casco and the Kennys rely, is also readily distinguishable. In
Storms,
the Chapter 11 debtor was an individual engaged in an ongoing dispute with his ex-spouse. His efforts in opposing the plan she proffered were aimed to secure only his personal advantage.
This is a case more closely akin to
In re Office Products of Am., Inc.,
136 B.R. at 983. In
Office Products,
the court considered the debtor’s counsel’s application for compensation in the face of creditor objections alleging that counsel, by filing and promoting a reorganization plan which elevated officers’ and directors’ interests over those of creditors and which could be confirmed, if at all, only through a § 1129(b) cram down, represented interests adverse to the estate, thereby forfeiting their right to compensation. In
Office Products,
there was no direct evidence of a conflict, and the court, noting the Code’s provisions favoring a debtor’s attempts to reorganize, declined to find that a conflict existed. 136 B.R. at 988. It did, however, consider whether counsel’s efforts were beneficial to the estate.
DN’s reorganization efforts were attempts to harmonize the interests of all the estate’s constituent elements, including creditors and interest holders. Such attempts are consistent with the debtor’s fiduciary obligations, which extend to the entire community of interests affected by reorganization, including investors. It would be unfortunate if courts, looking only at plan provisions removed from context, concluded as a matter of law that a conflict of interest existed whenever a debtor and its counsel, in the face of creditor opposition, pursued a reorganization strategy that, while providing for creditors in a fashion consistent with Chapter ll’s priorities, sought to adjust the rights and relations of parties-in-interest so that the interests of equity interest holders could be preserved. This court declines the invitation to do so.
DN’s counsel remained disinterested and did not represent interests adverse to the estate.
c.
Benefit to the Estate: Success, Lodestar and the Futility Factor.
Casco and the Kennys argue that, whether or not DN’s counsel clears other hurdles, fees must be heavily discounted because counsel provided no benefit to the estate. “Benefit to the estate” is unquestionably a pertinent factor in evaluating professionals’ fee applications.
In this circuit, bankruptcy fee applications are evaluated under the lodestar approach.
In re Spillane,
884 F.2d 642, 647 (1st Cir.1989);
Boston & Maine Corp. v. Moore,
776 F.2d 2 (1st Cir.1985);
In re Casco Bay Lines, Inc.,
25 B.R. at 755.
See also In re Saturley,
131 B.R. 509 (Bankr.D.Me.1991). It is appropriate first to consider the time expended and the rates charged to arrive at the lodestar fee, before proceeding to adjust the fee upward or downward in light of the net benefit provided or the results achieved.
It is unnecessary to parse the application here. No party seriously contends that the applicants’ hourly rates
were unreasonably high or that too much time was spent on any of the tasks counsel undertook.
The court’s independent review of the detailed statement of services provided confirms that the $55,748.00 in fees sought, and the $7,150.15 expenses for which reimbursement has been requested, are reasonable.
Casco and the Kennys urge, once again, that all counsels’ efforts were aimed to benefit parties other than creditors and, therefore, that those efforts could not, and did not, benefit the estate. These concerns have been answered above. They also argue that, even if counsel's efforts are not faulted for their motive or their master, the debtor’s evolving reorganization plan fell so far short of confirmation standards that continuing to prosecute it in the face of the Casco/Kenny plan was a waste of time.
Counsel is charged with a “duty of diligence” and should be expected in every reorganization to make a “seasoned determination” whether the debtor is capable of achieving successful reorganization.
In re Amstar Ambulance Service, Inc.,
120 B.R. 391, 396 (Bankr.N.D.W.Va.1990). Attorneys will not be compensated for vain attempts to resuscitate the debtor long after they should have given up the ghost.
At the same time, counsel need not always be unqualifiedly successful to warrant an award of fees. The court “should not penalize an applicant solely because the efforts were not ultimately successful.”
In re The Gibbons-Grable Co.,
141 B.R. 614 (Bankr.N.D.Ohio 1992). Efforts that result in utter failure may be compensated when they are undertaken in good faith, based upon an objectively reasonable expectation of success and diligently performed.
Id.
The result obtained is an important factor in gauging the quality of representation provided and the benefit of counsel’s service to the estate. An across the board percentage reduction of fees may be imposed for failure to achieve beneficial results. As noted in
Casco Bay Lines,
“[i]t is under the heading ‘quality of representation’ that a bankruptcy court should particularly consider the results of the attorney’s participation in the bankruptcy proceeding, and the benefit to the estate to see if circumstances warrant adjustment of the lodestar figure.” 25 B.R. at 756.
In
Kendavis,
the court found that the debtor’s attorney, working with a conflict of interest, expended a great deal of energy on unproductive plan confirmation contests, including a frivolous appeal of the creditors’ committee’s plan’s confirmation. A 50% fee reduction was imposed “for failure to achieve beneficial results.”
In re Kendavis Industries Int’l, Inc.,
91 B.R. at 761. Other courts have imposed percentage fee reductions when debtor’s attorneys’ activities did not benefit the estate.
See In re Saunders,
124 B.R. 234, 238 (Bankr.W.D.Tex.1991) (20% fee reduction imposed where court found efforts of firm to be of questionable effect in reducing claims, restructuring secured debt or effectively recovering preferences);
In re Garnas,
40 B.R. 140, 142 (Bankr.D.N.D.1984) (50% reduction ordered where counsel’s diligent efforts were expended when a successful reorganization was unlikely);
In re Coastal Equities, Inc.,
39 B.R. 304, 311 (Bankr.S.D.Cal.1984) (debtor’s counsel’s fees reduced by 50% for failure to confirm a plan of reorganization).
See also In re Office Products of Am., Inc.,
136 B.R. at 990-91 (disallowing fees attributable to work opposing reconversion to Chapter 7 by proffering an unconfirmable plan).
When efforts to confirm a plan are unsuccessful, it is useful to consider the proposed plan’s vitality under § 1129(a) in assaying the worth of the plan proponent’s counsels’ services, by testing:
whether the proposed plan would have met even the standards of 1129(a), which is the
sine qua non
for confirmation of
any
plan, regardless of creditor opposition.
See
11 U.S.C. § 1129(a) (court may confirm a plan
only if
all requirements of the section are met). This section spells out the minimums for a plan that
represents a legitimate effort at reorganization, that operates in the best interests of the estate and its creditors. If it does not, then we are right to ask whether any benefit has been conferred on the estate in pursuing the plan in the first place,
if
it is clear from the context of the case that the debtor and its counsel knew or should have known from the outset that the plan could
not
satisfy the requisites of § 1129(a).
In re Office Products,
136 B.R. at 990. (Emphasis in original.)
Casco argues that DN’s plan proposals “placed the entire risk of non-payment and failure of the plan on creditors, secured and unsecured”
and that counsel “knew, or should have known, from the outset that the Debtor’s proposed plans could not satisfy the requirements of § 1129(a), particularly in light of the opposition of Casco and the Kennys and the announcement of the Casco/Kenny plan.”
Casco also contends that DN’s counsel spent “considerable time” opposing the Casco/Kenny plan, notwithstanding its promise of 100% payment to unsecured creditors.
The argument is, in significant respects, overstated.
Although even in the absence of the competing Casco/Kenny plan, DN’s ability to satisfy the requirements of § 1129(a) was far from certain, it was never foreclosed. The only exception is § 1129(a)(8), calling for acceptance by, or non-impairment of, each class of claims or interests. Because cram down under § 1129(b) is an option Congress provided for Chapter 11 debtors, creditor opposition should not be considered in assessing a proposed plan’s compliance with § 1129(a) for purposes of determining whether prosecuting the plan provides a benefit to the estate.
In re Office Products of Am., Inc.,
136 B.R. at 990.
Moreover, DN’s persistent push for its plan spurred Casco and the Kennys to file and press forward their own plan, ultimately resulting in a confirmed plan that paid trade creditors in full.
Throughout this proceeding DN worked toward confirmation of a plan that, in addition to paying creditors, left the interests of limited partners as undisturbed as possible. Although it was less than certain, its plan arguably did, or could, satisfy all requirements of § 1129(a), save one — acceptance by impaired classes of creditors.
Though ultimately unsuccessful, DN’s attorney’s efforts to present a cram down plan by arguing that it, rather than the Casco/Kenny plan, should prevail under a § 1129(c) “competing plans” analysis were part of a constructive effort aimed to obtain a confirmed plan for this debtor. Although a plan was confirmed, DN was un
successful in seeing that the plan was its own.
Under these circumstances, the court will not impose a percentage fee reduction. The case was hard fought. DN lost. But its efforts, through counsel, were neither quixotic nor unreasonably battlesome. Chapter 11 provides an avenue to consensual reorganization. Absent consent, the adversary process is the path to resolution. DN’s counsel contributed constructively to the resolution of this case by representing the debtor zealously, but always in reasonable, competent and ethical fashion. The fees will be allowed in full.
2.
Other Professionals.
Casco and the Kennys take no issue with either the nature of services performed or the rates charged by other professionals who served DN. Rather, their objection remains that these professionals served the wrong master in DN’s overall reorganization strategy. Having reviewed the applications in detail, and having previously answered the complaining parties’ concerns, the remaining applications for compensation will be allowed in full.
Conclusion
DN’s attorneys rendered reasonable and necessary services. Their application for compensation, as well as the applications of DN’s accountants, appraiser and financial consultant will be approved in accordance with the foregoing discussion.
This memorandum constitutes the court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law pursuant to F.R.Bankr. P. 7052. A separate order will issue forthwith.
ORDER
For the reasons set forth in the Memorandum of Decision of even date, it is
ORDERED that James D. Poliquin, Esq., and the firm of Norman, Hanson & DeTroy of Portland, Maine, be awarded $55,748.00 in fees and reimbursement of $7,150.15 in expenses,
ORDERED that Leland Buzzell of Buz-zell-Plourde Associates be awarded $5,700.00 in compensation,
ORDERED that Paul R. Marshall, CPA, and the firm of Marshall & Libby, be awarded $6,229.57 in compensation, and
ORDERED that Joseph V. O’Donnell and the Pilot Group be awarded payment of $17,813.00 in compensation for services and reimbursement of $195.78 for expenses.