In re Gianasmidis
This text of 318 F. Supp. 3d 442 (In re Gianasmidis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
YOUNG, DISTRICT JUDGE
I. INTRODUCTION
This appeal from the Bankruptcy Court deals with whether the Appellants Stephen J. Kuzma ("Kuzma"), The Law Offices of Russo & Minchoff ("Russo & Minchoff"), and India L. Minchoff ("Minchoff" and collectively, the "Lawyer Creditors"), are able *445to obtain interest on the legal fees they were awarded in binding arbitration, and, if so, what the appropriate interest rate ought be from the Debtor and Appellee, Savvas V. Gianasmidis ("Gianasmidis"). Although interest generally stops accruing when a debtor files for bankruptcy,
Due to the protracted procedural history described below, the Appellants also argue on appeal that the Bankruptcy Court erred in not granting them interest on their claims prior to the filing of the bankruptcy petition ("prepetition interest").
II. FACTS1
A. Procedural History and Relevant Facts
In 2009, Gianasmidis, an attorney by profession, entered into an agreement (the "2009 Fee Agreement") with Minchoff and her firm Russo & Minchoff to represent him in a suit to recover real property from his daughter (the "Palangas Case"). Bankruptcy Dock. R. ("R.") No. 360-1 at 19-22, ECF No. 2. In 2011, Kuzma joined Minchoff and they entered into a new contingency fee agreement with Gianasmidis (the "2011 Fee Agreement").
Gianasmidis eventually secured the assets, including several real properties (the "Properties"), from his win in the Palangas Case. R. No. 360-1 at 56-81. Pursuant to the 2011 Fee Agreement, the Lawyer Creditors sought forty percent of the jury award as compensation for their legal services.
After several unsuccessful attempts to force Gianasmidis to arbitrate, the Lawyer Creditors filed suit for breach of contract in the Suffolk Superior Court. R. No. 360-1 at 2-7. On June 27, 2014, the Superior Court granted, pursuant to Massachusetts Rule of Civil Procedure 4.1, an $800,000 prejudgment attachment on the Properties, which was recorded in the Suffolk County Register of Deeds.
Shortly before filing the appeal, however, Gianasmidis filed a Chapter 13 voluntary petition for bankruptcy under
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YOUNG, DISTRICT JUDGE
I. INTRODUCTION
This appeal from the Bankruptcy Court deals with whether the Appellants Stephen J. Kuzma ("Kuzma"), The Law Offices of Russo & Minchoff ("Russo & Minchoff"), and India L. Minchoff ("Minchoff" and collectively, the "Lawyer Creditors"), are able *445to obtain interest on the legal fees they were awarded in binding arbitration, and, if so, what the appropriate interest rate ought be from the Debtor and Appellee, Savvas V. Gianasmidis ("Gianasmidis"). Although interest generally stops accruing when a debtor files for bankruptcy,
Due to the protracted procedural history described below, the Appellants also argue on appeal that the Bankruptcy Court erred in not granting them interest on their claims prior to the filing of the bankruptcy petition ("prepetition interest").
II. FACTS1
A. Procedural History and Relevant Facts
In 2009, Gianasmidis, an attorney by profession, entered into an agreement (the "2009 Fee Agreement") with Minchoff and her firm Russo & Minchoff to represent him in a suit to recover real property from his daughter (the "Palangas Case"). Bankruptcy Dock. R. ("R.") No. 360-1 at 19-22, ECF No. 2. In 2011, Kuzma joined Minchoff and they entered into a new contingency fee agreement with Gianasmidis (the "2011 Fee Agreement").
Gianasmidis eventually secured the assets, including several real properties (the "Properties"), from his win in the Palangas Case. R. No. 360-1 at 56-81. Pursuant to the 2011 Fee Agreement, the Lawyer Creditors sought forty percent of the jury award as compensation for their legal services.
After several unsuccessful attempts to force Gianasmidis to arbitrate, the Lawyer Creditors filed suit for breach of contract in the Suffolk Superior Court. R. No. 360-1 at 2-7. On June 27, 2014, the Superior Court granted, pursuant to Massachusetts Rule of Civil Procedure 4.1, an $800,000 prejudgment attachment on the Properties, which was recorded in the Suffolk County Register of Deeds.
Shortly before filing the appeal, however, Gianasmidis filed a Chapter 13 voluntary petition for bankruptcy under
The arbitration proceeded before the LFAB and on January 20, 2017, the arbitration panel issued an award for the Lawyer Creditors. R. No. 452 at 2-3. After discounting the initial fee Gianasmidis had paid, the LFAB awarded the Lawyer Creditors $646,755.00 in "fees, costs and disbursements."
The Lawyer Creditors subsequently filed a motion in the Bankruptcy Court to allow interest on the LFAB's award. R. No. 480. The Lawyer Creditors acknowledged that the arbitration was not appealed as it was "final, binding and represents a final adjudication," but characterized the arbitration as only determining the "principal amount" of the legal fees owed.
B. Proceedings at the Bankruptcy Court
Although the Fee Agreements do not prescribe an interest rate, the Lawyer Creditors argued before the Bankruptcy Court that as contracts they are covered by Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 231, section 6C, which provides in relevant part that:
In all actions based on contractual obligations, upon a verdict, finding or order for judgment for pecuniary damages, interest shall be added by the clerk of the court to the amount of damages, at the contract rate, if established, or at the rate of twelve per cent per annum from the date of the breach or demand.
See, e.g., R. No. 480 at 9; see also Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 231, § 6C. Thus, the Lawyer Creditors claimed, they were entitled to a 12% annual increase on the contingency fee from the date5 the Fee Agreements were breached until Gianasmidis filed a bankruptcy petition (the prepetition interest). R. No. 480 at 9-14. Additionally, the Lawyer Creditors asserted they are entitled to post-petition interest, or pendency interest, because their claim was over-secured -- a point the Bankruptcy Court noted was not in dispute because the value of the properties attached (either under the judicial lien or the attorney's lien) greatly exceeded the Lawyer Creditors' claim. Bankruptcy Ct. Tr. July 12, 2017 ("Bankr. Hr'g & Order") 38, ECF No. 5-6.
The Lawyer Creditors' pendency interest claim is based on
To the extent that an allowed secured claim is secured by property the value of which, ... is greater than the amount of such claim, there shall be allowed to the holder of such claim, interest on such claim, and any reasonable fees, costs, or charges provided for under the agreement or State statute under which such claim arose.
(emphasis added). Arguing that the relevant "State statute" was again Massachusetts' Chapter 231, Section 6(c), the Lawyer Creditors contended the pendency interest rate should also have been 12% per annum from the date Gianasmidis filed the bankruptcy petition (May 28, 2015) until any reorganization plan was confirmed. R. No. 480 at 11.
Gianasmidis opposed the motion primarily on the basis that the LFAB had not included interest in its award and that the Bankruptcy Court was not permitted to "look behind" the arbitration award. Bankr. Hr'g & Order 31.
The Bankruptcy Court rejected Gianasmidis's argument that the LFAB's failure to include interest in its arbitration award precluded the Bankruptcy Court from assessing interest.
*448Section 506(b) is the relevant "statutory credit predicate," and it authorizes the Bankruptcy Court to assign interest if permitted under state law or per the terms of the agreement.
The Bankruptcy Court further concluded that the Chapter 231, Section 6(c) of the Massachusetts General Laws did not apply because it requires a "verdict" or "judgment" and the Massachusetts Appeals Court had vacated the Superior Court's judgment without any "conditions or restrictions on the vacator."
The Bankruptcy Court ruled, however, that because the claim was over-secured, the Lawyer Creditors were entitled, under section 506(b), to "the federal judgment rate of interest," beginning from the date of the arbitration award.
It is from this order that the Lawyer Creditors appealed to this Court on July 27, 2017 pursuant to
1) Whether the Bankruptcy Court erred by failing to provide prepetition interest on the Lawyer Creditors' Claims, commencing as of the date of [Gianasmidis's] breach of contract.
2) Whether the Bankruptcy Court erred in its calculation of the duration of post-petition interest on the Lawyer Creditors' over-secured nonconsensual claim.
3) Whether the Bankruptcy Court erred in determining that the Lawyer Creditors were not entitled to post-petition interest at the Massachusetts statutory rate.
Appellants' Br. 1. Both parties have fully briefed the issues. See Appellants' Br.; Appellee's Br., ECF No. 19; Appellants' Reply Br. ("Appellants' Reply Br."), ECF No. 20. These issues are examined in turn below.
*449III. ANALYSIS
A. Standard of Review for Bankruptcy Appeals
Bankruptcy appeals under
B. Whether the Bankruptcy Court Erred in Not Assigning Prepetition Interest
Whether the Lawyer Creditors had a right to prepetition interest is matter of law and the Bankruptcy Court's denial of interest is reviewed de novo. In re Garcia,
In determining the availability or amount of prepetition interest, bankruptcy courts apply nonbankruptcy law by looking to the language of the agreement or relevant state law. Loft v. Lapidus,
If a contract is silent on the applicable interest rate, Massachusetts law provides that "upon a verdict, finding or order for judgment for pecuniary damages, interest shall be added by the clerk of the court ... at the rate of twelve per cent per annum from the date of the breach or demand." Mass. Gen. Laws Ann. ch. 231, § 6C. The purpose of prejudgment interest is to compensate a party "for the loss of use or the unlawful detention of money." McEvoy Travel Bureau, Inc. v. Norton Co.,
Neither the 2009 nor the 2011 Fee Agreement provides that interest will be paid in case of a dispute over fees, much less provide an interest rate. R. No. 360-2 at 19-22; 49-52. As the Bankruptcy Court observed, the text of section 6C is unambiguous; its application is premised on a "verdict" or "order for judgment" resulting in pecuniary damages. The Lawyer Creditors cite to no authority establishing that section 6C may apply in the absence of a judgment or after a judgment has been vacated, and they do not offer their own explanation as to why it ought apply. Appellants' Br. 12-13; Appellants' Reply Br. 5-7. Nor do they attempt to claim any other basis for their entitlement to prepetition *450interest, common law or otherwise. Appellants' Br. 12-13. Consequently, because the Lawyer Creditors cannot provide a legal basis for prepetition interest, there is no need to "look behind" or examine the basis for the arbitration award. See Appellee's Br. 11-13. The Lawyer Creditors argue that the Bankruptcy Court did not articulate grounds for denying prepetition interest. Appellants' Reply Br. 5. This is patently false; the Bankruptcy Court's denial of prepetition interest as set forth above was premised on the fact that the Massachusetts Appeals Court vacated the Superior Court's judgment and that there was therefore no judgment upon which to apply the statutory 12% interest rate. See Bankr. Hr'g & Order 40-41; Reilly,
Truly fatal to the Lawyer Creditors' claim, however, is the holding of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court in Reilly, not cited by either party here, but which appears to control as it directly references section 6C. The Reilly court endorsed a previous Appeals Court holding that when an arbitration award is silent on interest, preaward interest ought not be granted in order to discourage litigants from requiring courts to examine the arbitration award and thereby undermine the purpose of arbitration.
For these reasons, the denial of prepetition interest is AFFIRMED.
C. Whether the Bankruptcy Court Erred in Its Calculation of the Period for Which Pendency Interest Was Available
The second issue the Lawyer Creditors appeal is the Bankruptcy Court's calculation of the period during which pendency interest accrued. Gianasmidis argues that this calculation was within the Bankruptcy Court's discretion and is therefore subject to the abuse of discretion review. Appellee's Br. 15-16. The Lawyer Creditors allege the Bankruptcy Court committed "clear error" in its calculation. Appellants' Br. 12-14. As discussed below, the plain reading of section 506(b), when read in context with section 502, requires that pendency "shall be allowed" as of the date of the filing of the petition. The issue therefore is matter of law and the Court reviews this ruling de novo.
The Bankruptcy Court ruled the Lawyer Creditors are entitled to "interest upon the Arbitration Award at the interest rate provided under
The general rule is that interest stops accruing "as of the date of the filing of the petition."
The Court must read the words of a statute "in their context and with a view to their place in the overall statutory scheme." Food & Drug Admin. v. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp.,
A claim for reimbursement or contribution of [an entity that is liable with the debtor on or has secured the claim of a creditor] that becomes fixed after the commencement of the case shall be determined, and shall be allowed under [ § 502(b)(2) ] ... the same as if such claim had become fixed before the date of the filing of the petition.
In other words, although Gianasmidis objected to the Lawyer Creditors' claim of proof and the claim was therefore not "determined" at the time of the petition, the claim, once determined, is not to be treated any differently than it would be were it determined at the time the petition was filed. To treat section 506(b) motions for pendency interest as accruing from the time the claim is determined would violate the spirit of section 502(e)(2) by disadvantaging claims that were not determined at the time the bankruptcy petition was filed. Thus, the plain meaning of section 506(b) mandates that an over-secured creditor's claim shall be allowed interest from the date of the petition (provided of course that the creditor is over-secured at the time of the petition).
This intuitively makes sense since the amount to which an over-secured creditor is entitled often is not settled until the plan confirmation proceeding. An alternative reading would inappropriately incentivize debtors to oppose determination of over-secured creditors' claims solely in order to delay accrual of pendency interest.
The United States Supreme Court and numerous other courts have likewise held that for creditors who are over-secured at the time of the petition, interest pursuant to section 506(b) begins as of the date of the petition filing. Rake v. Wade,
Gianasmidis misconstrues or takes out of context several scattered statements from the Bankruptcy Court's ruling in an attempt to provide an explanation for why it chose the date of the arbitration award. Appellee's Br. 15. There is simply no support in the ruling, to which Gianasmidis cites, for the notion that the Bankruptcy Court applied some totality of the circumstances test somehow to arrive at the date it did. Moreover, the cases upon which Gianasmidis relies, see
Most of the litigation around section 506(b) has centered on whether and when a debtor becomes "over-secured" as defined in the bankruptcy code. The First Circuit recently confronted this issue in In re SW Boston Hotel Venture, LLC, where it identified disagreement amongst its sister circuits.
In sum, the "flexible approach" to determine when pendency interest should accrue is not implicated because the Lawyer Creditors were undisputedly over-secured at all times before and after the petition date. The Bankruptcy Court's ruling that the pendency interest began accruing after the arbitration award -- nearly twenty months later -- is therefore inconsistent with section 506(b).
Having established that the Lawyer Creditors have a right under section 506(b) to pendency interest prior to the arbitration award, the Court is presented with the question whether this right conflicts with state policy, which is not to grant preaward interest. Massachusetts law, as announced by its highest court, prohibits *453courts from entertaining claims for preaward interest when the arbitration award does not provide for it. Reilly,
The Supreme Court has carefully construed section 506(b) to separate out what it has called the "unqualified" right to pendency interest from the recovery of "reasonable fees, costs, or charges," which, unlike the pendency interest, are subject to state statutes. United States v. Ron Pair Enters., Inc.,
For the reasons set forth the Court REVERSES the Bankruptcy Court's ruling to the extent it ordered pendency interest to run from the date of the arbitration award. Pendency interest runs from the petition date.
D. Whether the Bankruptcy Court Erred in Not Using the Massachusetts Statutory Rate to Calculate the Pendency Interest
The First Circuit has affirmed that the "appropriate rate of pendency interest is ... within the limited discretion of the court." In re SW Boston Hotel,
Turning to whether the Bankruptcy Court abused its discretion in applying the federal post-judgment interest rate codified in
Under Massachusetts law, the 12% interest rate set forth in Massachusetts General Laws chapter 231, section 6C (discussed above) automatically attaches to arbitration awards -- even when the award is silent on the issue . The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court affirmed this rule in Reilly, where it stated: "To encourage 'swift obedience' to the [arbitration] award without the necessity of court proceedings, the rule in Massachusetts is that post-award interest runs from the date of the award."
The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court was presented with a similar situation in Murphy v. National Union Fire Ins. Co.,
Thus, in the absence of any bankruptcy proceeding, it appears the Lawyer Creditors would have been entitled under Massachusetts law to post-award interest accruing from the date of the award. In other words, even though the Lawyer Creditors did not have their award confirmed by the Superior Court, the underlying substantive law under which the Fee Agreements were entered would have entitled them to a 12% interest rate beginning on January 20, 2017.
The Bankruptcy Court, however, stated: "The allowed amount of a secured claim is not based on equity. It's not based on fairness. It's based on value of security and the allowance of interest under a state statute or contract . It does not depend on the common law because Section 506(b) specifically refers to interest and charges under state statute for the contract ." Bankr. Hr'g & Order 41-42 (emphasis added).
*455As matter of statutory construction, it appears the Bankruptcy Court incorrectly construed section 506(b) to make the right to pendency interest dependent on the contract or state statute. The Supreme Court explicitly rejected this construction in Ron Pair, where it held:
[ Section 506(b) ] entitles the holder of an oversecured claim to postpetition interest and, in addition, gives one having a secured claim created pursuant to an agreement the right to reasonable fees, costs, and charges provided for in that agreement.... This reading is also mandated by the grammatical structure of the statute. The phrase "interest on such claim" is set aside by commas, and separated from the reference to fees, costs, and charges by the conjunctive words "and any." As a result, the phrase "interest on such claim" stands independent of the language that follows. "[I]nterest on such claim" is not part of the list made up of "fees, costs, or charges," nor is it joined to the following clause so that the final "provided for under the agreement" modifies it as well. The language and punctuation Congress used cannot be read in any other way. By the plain language of the statute, the two types of recovery are distinct.
489 U.S. at 241-42,
As set forth above, the Lawyer Creditors' claim under section 506(b) is presumptively determined by the applicable nonbankruptcy law under which the agreement was made, but it is still subject to the Bankruptcy Court's "limited discretion."
There are a few statements in the Bankruptcy Court's oral ruling that may be interpreted as justification for granting the Lawyer Creditors a lower pendency, post-award interest rate than their statutory entitlement under Massachusetts law. The Bankruptcy Court rejected the Lawyer Creditors' estoppel argument in part because of its observation that "the lawyer creditors sued because despite the arbitration clause and opposed arbitration in this court as well and the debtor's breach of contract simply gives rise to a claim." Bankr. Hr'g & Order 41. But using this observation as justification for invoking the Bankruptcy Court's equitable power to apply an interest rate different from that provided for in the applicable nonbankruptcy law seems implausible at best.
Still, whether the Bankruptcy Court abused its limited discretion in applying the federal judgment rate to post-award interest rather than the 12% under Massachusetts law is a close call, made more difficult due to the lack of a formal order explicitly explaining its reasoning.
When sitting in an appellate capacity, this Court is especially reluctant to chide another court for not "writing up" some finding or ruling. The reason is simple. I am a trial judge. "This is a trial court. Trial judges ought go out on the bench every day and try cases." Hon. John H. Meagher, Senior Justice, Massachusetts Superior Court (1978).8 This is -- and has been -- the central organizing principle of my own judicial practice for over forty years. We are busy. Some things must be written up. See, e.g., Fed. R. Civ. P. 52(a)(1).9 We are encouraged to write up other things. See, e.g., *456Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). But see United States v. Massachusetts,
Therefore, on this record, this Court cannot conclude that the Bankruptcy Court abused its "limited discretion" in awarding the lower federal interest rate rather than the 12% Massachusetts statutory rate. Even so, since the Bankruptcy Court needs to recalculate the pendency interest over the correct period, the better part of valor is to vacate the determination of the interest rate to allow the Bankruptcy Court further to consider the matter of the appropriate pendency interest rate in light of the foregoing.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the Court AFFIRMS the Bankruptcy Court's ruling that the Lawyer Creditors are not entitled to prepetition interest, REVERSES the Bankruptcy Court's ruling that pendency interest began accruing as of the date of the arbitration award, and VACATES the Bankruptcy Court's determination that the federal judgment rate applies to post-award, pendency interest. Further proceedings shall take place in accordance with this opinion.
SO ORDERED.
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