In Re Evans

153 B.R. 960, 1993 Bankr. LEXIS 612, 1993 WL 154513
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 11, 1993
Docket19-11394
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 153 B.R. 960 (In Re Evans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Evans, 153 B.R. 960, 1993 Bankr. LEXIS 612, 1993 WL 154513 (Pa. 1993).

Opinion

OPINION

DAVID A. SCHOLL, Bankruptcy Judge.

A. INTRODUCTION

This Opinion reflects the outcome of a consolidated hearing of March 25, 1993, to determine whether two entities established under the auspices of We the People, Inc. (“WTP”) of Tampa, Florida, We the People Business Center (“WTPBC”) and Legal Self-Help, Inc. (“LSH”) (collectively WTPBC and LSH are referenced as “the Respondents”), are engaged in the practice of law and what actions this court should take as a result of their practices.

We find that the circumstantial evidence presented strongly suggests that LSH has been engaged in the unauthorized practice of law, as the United States Trustee (“the UST”) argues. However, we find that the evidence conclusively establishes the conclusion that, if LSH’s activities are as limited as it contends, that entity has grossly overcharged its customers. Based on this evidence and our conclusion that control of charges by such entities is in itself an issue of great import to this court, we will enter an Order preventing LSH from charging in excess of $100 to any debtor for its services in the future and directing it to refund all charges in excess of this amount to all customers obtained by LSH subsequent to February 10, 1993.

*961 B. PROCEDURE AND FACTUAL HISTORY

PATRICK JOSEPH EVANS (“Evans”) filed a Chapter 7 bankruptcy case pro se on November 4, 1992. As required of all pro se debtors by Local Bankruptcy Rule (“L.B.R.”) 2016.1(c) of this court, the Debt- or disclosed, on the requisite Local Bankruptcy Form (“L.B.F.”) 2016.1, that WTPBC, located in Frazer, Chester County, Pennsylvania, had charged him $150 for assistance in preparing and filing his papers. On November 9, 1992, we issued an Order requiring the Debtor and a representative of WTPBC to appear at a hearing of December 3, 1992, to disclose to this court what services WTPBC claimed to have performed for Evans to justify the charges imposed and why the sum charged should not be refunded; and to provide to the court the names of any other debtors and bankruptcy numbers of any other cases in which WTPBC charged fees to debtors for filings in this and any other bankruptcy courts.

Salvatore Sapienza (“Sapienza”) appeared on behalf of WTPBC at the hearing of December 3, 1992, which was, at our request, also attended by the Debtor and John D. McLaughlin, Jr., Esquire, an Assistant United States Trustee who apparently has been delegated the duty of investigation of claims of unauthorized practice of law by that office (“the AUST”). Sapienza indicated that the Debtor had been his only bankruptcy customer. He requested an opportunity for a further hearing at which he expected to be represented by counsel supplied by WTP, but he agreed not to accept any more bankruptcy cases until this matter was resolved. The AUST expressed an intention to imminently file pleadings challenging WTPBC’s continued practice in the bankruptcy area.

When no filing was made by the UST as of February 10, 1993, this court entered an Order that date in which we scheduled a hearing to determine the propriety of WTPBC’s activities in bankruptcy cases on March 25, 1993. In our Order, we requested WTPBC to appear, presumably with counsel, to explain fully the scope of its advertisements, affiliations, services, materials utilized, and fee schedules.

On January 26, 1993, ANGELA CHRISTINE HUSS (“Huss”), a resident of Parkesburg, Chester County, Pennsylvania, filed a Chapter 7 bankruptcy case pro se. She disclosed on L.B.R. 2016.1, that she had paid LSH, located in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, $250 for its assistance to her in filing her bankruptcy case. We entered an Order of February 8, 1993, which stated, in pertinent part, as follows:

1. [LSH] is requested to voluntarily suspend assistance to debtors and collection of fees pending resolution of the propriety of its doing so.
2. It is directed that a responsible person from [LSH] answer the following questions in writing, ...
a. What services have you performed for the Debtor to justify the charges imposed?
b. Are you the same organization or related to the organization which has appeared before Chief Judge Twar-dowski [ (“C.J. Twardowski”) ] regarding its practices in the past? ...
c. Please provide the names of any other debtors and bankruptcy numbers of any other cases in this or other courts in which you have charged fees to debtors.
d. Have you suspended your services in light of paragraph one of this Order?
3. Shortly after receipt of the answers, a hearing may be scheduled which the Debtor and a representative of [LSH] may be required to attend.

LSH filed responses to the Order of February 8, 1993, in which it declined our request to discontinue its services. Ultimately, it provided this court with a list of eighty-eight (88) cases in which it had assisted debtors in this court. It revealed that it was the same organization which had appeared before C.J. Twardowski in the past, but that the instant case was the first filed for a debtor in the Philadelphia Division of this court, as opposed to its Reading Division. After reviewing these responses, submitted by John C. Bates *962 (“Bates”) for LSH, we entered an Order of February 26, 1993, in which we scheduled a hearing “to determine whether [LSH] does engage in the unauthorized practice of law and, if so, what action this court should take, and to determine whether its charges are reasonable for services it provides and, if not, what actions this court should take,” also on March 25, 1993. We also stated in the Order that “[t]he court would like [LSH] to fully explain the scope of its advertisements, affiliations, services, materials utilized, and fee schedules at this hearing.”

Sapienza and Bates both appeared pro se, and the AUST also appeared, per our request, at the March 25, 1993, hearing. We also learned that, on February 2, 1993, the AUST had filed several adversary proceedings in the Reading Division of this court, before C.J. Twardowski, which sought to enjoin LSH from the unauthorized practice of law in those and other bankruptcy cases and to have LSH refund all charges made to it by the respective debtors (“the Proceedings”).

Sapienza initially took the stand and chronicled his experiences and ultimate disenchantment with WTP, particularly its failure to provide him (or Bates) with counsel in these proceedings despite their repeated requests for same. Sapienza testified that he had been, for many years prior to becoming involved with WTPBC, an officer and marketing director of a generic pharmaceutical company and that he had no legal training. After the hearing, he produced a Partnership Agreement of December 10, 1991, supporting his hearing testimony that WTPBC had been established by the formation of a partnership between Enza, Inc. (“Enza”), a corporation formed by Sapienza and his wife, and WTP Partners, Inc., an entity associated with WTP (“WTPP”). Enza was required to contributed $40,000 to this enterprise.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
153 B.R. 960, 1993 Bankr. LEXIS 612, 1993 WL 154513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-evans-paeb-1993.