In Re Good Taste, Inc.

317 B.R. 112, 2004 Bankr. LEXIS 1795, 43 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 269, 2004 WL 2634358
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Alaska
DecidedOctober 29, 2004
Docket19-00029
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 317 B.R. 112 (In Re Good Taste, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Good Taste, Inc., 317 B.R. 112, 2004 Bankr. LEXIS 1795, 43 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 269, 2004 WL 2634358 (Alaska 2004).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION ALLOWING ADMINISTRATIVE EXPENSE PRIORITY FOR BENNETT’S ATTORNEY FEES AND COSTS

HERB ROSS, Bankruptcy Judge.

Contents Page

1. INTRODUCTION..114

2. ISSUE.114

3.ANALYSIS.114

3.1. The Successful Defendant Against a Trustee’s § 544(b) Avoidance Action Based on the Alaska Fraudulent Conveyance Act is Entitled to Attorney Fees and Costs.114

3.2. The Abercrombie and Kadjevich Cases Are Not Dispositive as to Whether or Not the Fees and Costs Are Entitled to Administrative Expense Priority.114

3.3. The Fundamental Fairness Doctrine of Reading Company v Broim Requires That Administrative Expense Priority for Attorney Fees and Costs for Successfully Defending Against the Trustee’s § 544(b) Avoidance Action.116

4.CONCLUSION.121

*114 1. INTRODUCTION—The trustee brought an avoidance action under § 544(b), 1 in conjunction with the Alaska Fraudulent Conveyance Act, 2 to recover a prepetition transfer from the debtor to Connie Bennett, debtor’s sole shareholder. Bennett successfully defended and was awarded $14,364.40 in attorney fees and costs which were allowable under state law.

She moved to have these treated as administrative expenses. The trustee objected that the fees should not be given administrative expense priority because they did not benefit the estate and arose from a prepetition transaction.

I hold that attorney fees and costs awarded against the trustee (i.e., the estate) in a postpetition adversary proceeding seeking to avoid a transfer under § 544(b), and relying on state law which allows for attorney fees and costs to the prevailing party, should be granted administrative expense priority as a matter of fundamental fairness alluded to in Reading Company v. Brown. 3

2. ISSUE—When a trustee files an avoidance action under § 544(b), using the Alaska Fraudulent Conveyance Act as his vehicle, and he loses the case, are the attorney fees and costs which the defendant is awarded under Alaska law entitled to administrative claim priority?

3. ANALYSIS—

3.1. The Successful Defendant Against a Trustee’s § 511(b) Avoidance Action Based on the Alaska Fraudulent Conveyance Act is Entitled to Attorney Fees and Costs—-The general rule regarding attorney fees in bankruptcy is that they are not awarded to the successful party. 4

In a case decided in state court under the Alaska Fraudulent Conveyance Act, 5 attorney fees are awardable to the prevailing party per court rule. 6

If a bankruptcy matter is decided with reference to state law which does recognize the award of attorney fees to a prevailing party, bankruptcy law will generally follow the state law rule and award attorney fees. The 9th Circuit Bybee case involved a § 544(b) action in which the defendant was awarded attorney fees, but the opinion does not say whether they were to be treated as an administrative expense claim with high priority in payment or a general unsecured claim, which is at the lower end of the payment priorities. 7

The trustee does not contest the award of attorney fees and costs in this case, only the priority of payment.

3.2. The Abercrombie and Kadjevich Cases Are Not Dispositive as to Whether or Not the Fees and Costs Are Entitled to Administrative Expense Priority—Recently, the BAP, in In re Ybarra, 8 discussed the ambiguous state of the 9th Circuit authority regarding either the dis-chargeability of attorney fees against a *115 debtor, or their status as administrative expenses, with respect to postpetition litigation activity based on prepetition claims.

The ambiguity arose when the 9th Circuit deciding two cases in close proximity, in arguably a contradictory manner, without referring to each other (Abercrombie and Siegel). 9 A third case (Kadjevich) adopted the view of Abercrombie without referring to or distinguishing Siegel. 10 The trustee relies on the Abercrombie and Kadjevich cases to argue that postpetition attorney fees with respect to a prepetition claim should not be given administrative priority.

The BAP, in Ybarra, summarized the three circuit cases and tried to harmonize them. It determined the cases stood for the following: 11

ABERCROMBIE 12 This matter involved whether a claim to attorney fees was entitled to administrative expense priority. When the debtor filed his chapter 11, he was defending a state court appeal on a case filed prepetition. The state court reversed the decision postpetiton and awarded attorney fees against the debtor pursuant to a contract provision regarding attorney fees.
The defendant who was awarded the attorney fees after the appeal sought administrative expense treatment for them in the bankruptcy case. The 9th Circuit rejected the request. Ybarra summarizes the reasoning as:
The reasoning of Abercrombie is that a claim for attorney fees is a prepetition claim if the source of fee award is a prepetition contract, regardless of whether the fee award is the result of debtor’s postpetition activity. 13
SIEGEL 14 The BAP panel in Ybar-ra surmised this was a chapter 7 case. It involved whether attorney fees arising from litigation commenced postpetition on a prepetition matter were discharged as a prepetition debt.
A lender had filed a proof of claim in the bankruptcy case which went unchallenged. The debtor then received a discharge. After the discharge, the debtor sued the lender on a lender’s liability claim in state court (i.e., postpetition), although he had not disclosed the claim on his schedules.
The lender removed the state court action to district court, which entered a summary judgment against the debtor.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
317 B.R. 112, 2004 Bankr. LEXIS 1795, 43 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 269, 2004 WL 2634358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-good-taste-inc-akb-2004.