In Re Farrington Manufacturing Company, Debtors (Two Cases). New England Merchants National Bank v. Gerald M. O'donnell, Trustee, Robert E. McLaughlin and Steptoe & Johnson, Counsel for Trustee in Reorganization v. Gerald M. O'donnell, Trustee

540 F.2d 653
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedMarch 23, 1976
Docket75-1354
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 540 F.2d 653 (In Re Farrington Manufacturing Company, Debtors (Two Cases). New England Merchants National Bank v. Gerald M. O'donnell, Trustee, Robert E. McLaughlin and Steptoe & Johnson, Counsel for Trustee in Reorganization v. Gerald M. O'donnell, Trustee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Farrington Manufacturing Company, Debtors (Two Cases). New England Merchants National Bank v. Gerald M. O'donnell, Trustee, Robert E. McLaughlin and Steptoe & Johnson, Counsel for Trustee in Reorganization v. Gerald M. O'donnell, Trustee, 540 F.2d 653 (4th Cir. 1976).

Opinion

540 F.2d 653

In re FARRINGTON MANUFACTURING COMPANY et al., Debtors (two cases).
NEW ENGLAND MERCHANTS NATIONAL BANK, Appellant,
v.
Gerald M. O'DONNELL, Trustee, Appellee.
Robert E. McLAUGHLIN and Steptoe & Johnson, Counsel for
Trustee in Reorganization, Appellants,
v.
Gerald M. O'DONNELL, Trustee, Appellee.

Nos. 75-1354, 75-1355.

United States Court of Appeals,
Fourth Circuit.

Argued Oct. 10, 1975.
Decided March 23, 1976.

Daniel A. Carrell, Richmond, Va., Calvin H. Cobb, Jr., Irving H. Picard, Acting Chief Counsel, Div. of Corporate Regulation, S.E.C., Washington, D.C. (Stanley Keller, Jeffrey Swope, Palmer & Dodge, Boston, Mass., Lawrence E. Nerheim, Gen. Counsel, David Ferber, Sol., S.E.C., Robert E. McLaughlin, John M. Edsall, Steptoe & Johnson, Washington, D.C., on brief), for appellants.

Stewart C. Economou, Alexandria, Va., for appellee.

Before HAYNSWORTH, Chief Judge, and RUSSELL and WIDENER, Circuit Judges.

DONALD RUSSELL, Circuit Judge.

These are appeals from orders of the District Court drastically reducing the allowance of counsel fees for the former trustee of the debtors in reorganization and the claim of the indenture trustee for certain services, costs and expenses. We reverse.

The reorganization proceedings, in connection with which these allowances were requested, commenced in January, 1971. The debtor Farrington Manufacturing Company was originally a manufacturer of jewelry and eyeglass cases but it had expanded into the development of credit cards, credit-card imprinters and optical-character recognition equipment. In the late 1950s it began to broaden even farther its operations and embarked upon a major domestic and foreign acquisition program, becoming in the process a minor multinational corporation with two subsidiaries, Farrington Electronics, Inc. and Farrington Overseas Corporation, both of which are involved in the Chapter X proceedings. In its expanded operations, it incurred substantial indebtedness, including two debenture issues, one of which was placed domestically and the other with European investors. As it expanded, it experienced the not infrequent pains of other enterprises engaging in overexpansion into new fields, involving substantial technological problems; by 1969, it was faced with the inability to meet interest and principal payments of its debenture indebtedness incurred as a result largely of these expanded operations.

After fruitless efforts to solve these mounting financial difficulties, Chapter X proceedings were filed. Efforts to reorganize in the course of the proceedings as a continuing concern proved ultimately futile though the trustee and his attorneys had made a good faith effort to effect a reorganization. The trustee and his attorneys did, however, effect an orderly liquidation of most of the debtors' properties as going concerns. From this liquidation, cash assets of approximately $4,600,000 were created as against approximately $40,000,000 in debts.

These appeals are concerned with the allowance of fees to counsel for the former trustee for services rendered up to June 30, 1973 and to the Indenture trustee, the New England Merchants National Bank, as made by the District Court following a hearing on September 3, 1974. Prior to this hearing, both the Bankruptcy Judge, to whom the proceedings had been referred, and the Securities Exchange Commission (SEC) had filed their recommendations on such allowances. The SEC had recommended that counsel for the trustee be allowed a fee for services to June 30, 1973, of $575,000, plus all expenses; the Bankruptcy Judge's recommendation was in the amount of $450,000 for services rendered, together with full reimbursement of expenses. In their request for an allowance, counsel had asked for $673,200, along with $36,094.28 in reimbursement of expenses.1 So far as the indenture trustee was concerned, the SEC and the Bankruptcy Judge recommended $12,278 as full reimbursement of expenses incurred prior to bankruptcy, payable out of sums available to debenture holders; and for the period of bankruptcy, the SEC recommended a fee for services of $9,000, with $1,420 in expenses, both payable as administrative expenses of the estate, while the Bankruptcy Judge recommended $7,500 for these services along with reimbursement of expenses.

The District Court determined at the hearing that it wished to dispose of all fees to date of hearing and directed that the record be supplemented with a bill for services and expenses to date, to be filed with the Court within a week. On the basis of this record, the District Court entered its order allowing counsel for the trustee a fee of $350,000 in full payment for all services and expenses up to date of its order (i. e., November 14, 1974), less the payment of $70,000 already received by counsel. It adopted the Bankruptcy Judge's recommendations on the allowances in favor of the indenture trustee, with these two exceptions:

(a) The allowance for expenses during the pre-bankruptcy period was reduced by 50%;

(b) The allowance for the bankruptcy period was to be paid, not as an administrative expense, but out of the funds available for distribution among the Debenture holders.

Both counsel for the trustee and the indenture trustee have appealed. We shall treat the two appeals separately. In considering the appeal of counsel for the trustee, we must distinguish between the request of counsel for the trustee for an allowance on account of services rendered up to June 30, 1973, and for an allowance on account of services rendered between June 30, 1973, and November 14, 1974.

1. Claim of Counsel for Trustee

(a) Claim for Services up to June 30, 1973.

The Bankruptcy Act provides that counsel for a trustee in reorganization proceedings shall receive "reasonable compensation" for its services.1a The Court, in determining "reasonable compensation," under the Act, is not to use "benefit to the estate" as its criterion.2 This is so because counsel for the trustee is an officer of the court charged with specific duties and responsibilities for the performance of which it is entitled to fair recompense. This, of course, does not mean that it is to be paid for unnecessary services or for services ineptly done. But, so long as its services are within the proper range of its duties and are performed with reasonable competency, it is to be compensated, not necessarily by the same yardstick as "similar services command in purely private employment"3 but sufficient in amount to induce competent counsel to undertake the labors incident to a reorganization proceeding in reliance on the willingness of the Court later to deal fairly with it. In determining what is reasonable compensation in a particular case, the Court must give consideration to the time spent,4 to the character of the services rendered, the results achieved, the size of the estate, the evidence relating to the services rendered and "the economic spirit" of the Act itself.5

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