In re Howrey LLP

492 B.R. 19, 69 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1410, 2013 WL 1969312, 2013 Bankr. LEXIS 2034
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. California
DecidedMay 11, 2013
DocketNo. 11-31376DM
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 492 B.R. 19 (In re Howrey LLP) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Howrey LLP, 492 B.R. 19, 69 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1410, 2013 WL 1969312, 2013 Bankr. LEXIS 2034 (Cal. 2013).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION ON MOTION FOR RELIEF FROM STAY

DENNIS MONTALI, Bankruptcy Judge.

I. INTRODUCTION

Haynes and Boone, LLP (“H & B”) filed a Motion For Order Confirming That The Automatic Stay Is Inapplicable, Or In The Alternative, Granting Relief From The Automatic Stay (the “Motion”) on April 2, 2013. The Motion was prompted by a threatened lawsuit against H & B by Allan B. Diamond, chapter 11 trustee (“Trustee”), to recover profits earned by H & B on matters brought to it by a former member of Howrey LLP (“Debtor”).

Trustee made good on his threat three days later and filed an adversary proceeding (Diamond v. Haynes and Boone, LLP, A.P. No 13-03056) (the “Adversary Proceeding”) in this court. As predicted, the Trustee alleges, inter alia, that Debtor’s waiver of the duty of departing partners to account for unfinished hourly business was a fraudulent transfer under § 548, and that H & B is liable under § 5501. Paragraph 1 of the complaint states:

The Trustee files this lawsuit to recover a valuable asset of the Debtor’s estate. After or prior to Howrey’s dissolution, H & B, by virtue of hiring a former Howrey partner from Howrey’s Washington, D.C. office, has received the benefit of the revenues and profits from completing Howrey’s unfinished business. The Trustee is entitled to re[21]*21cover the profits H&B has obtained from Howrey’s unfinished business.

Trustee contends that H & B is liable for profits earned on Debtor’s unfinished business as the entity for whose benefit the transfers were made and/or the immediate or mediate transferee of the initial transferees of such transfers.2 More specifically, he seeks to recover profits earned on two hourly matters that Richard Ripley, a former partner of Debtor, brought to H&B.

H&B contends in its Motion that the law of the District of Columbia, applicable to Debtor’s partnership agreement, establishes a fundamental legal principle on which the Adversary Proceeding turns. That is, that Debtor’s partners had no duty to account to the firm for unfinished business on hourly rate matters, so a partner of Debtor who joined H&B would not have a duty to account for hourly rate matters handled prior to dissolution.3 Thus, absent a duty to account, the waiver by Debtor and its partners of such a duty could not be attacked as a fraudulent transfer because nothing of value was transferred. H&B calls this a “threshold” issue that has not been addressed by the District of Columbia courts.

H&B wants to file a declaratory relief action against the Trustee in the Superior Court of the District of Columbia (the “Dec Relief Action”). It contends that the automatic stay of § 362(a) does not prevent it doing so. If the automatic stay does apply, H&B seeks relief from stay to file and prosecute the Dec Relief Action for cause, citing judicial economy and the specialized knowledge and expertise of the District of Columbia courts.

Trustee’s position is that District of Columbia law applies; the law there is well-settled; this court can apply that law; the automatic stay applies; and relief from stay is not warranted.

For the reasons set forth below, the court concludes that the Trustee’s claims, first threatened and now asserted in the Adversary Proceeding, are property of the estate protected by the automatic stay. H & B’s prosecution of the Dec Relief Action would essentially be a defense more properly asserted and adjudicated in the Adversary Proceeding. Such prosecution elsewhere would be the exercise of control over property of the estate. Accordingly the automatic stay applies. Further, H & B has not persuaded the court that cause exists to grant relief from stay. Thus the Motion will be DENIED in all respects, eliminating the need for the court to consider Trustee’s alternative, namely to seek injunctive relief in the Adversary Proceeding prohibiting H&B from filing and prosecuting the Dec Relief Action.

II. DISCUSSION

Debtor’s partnership agreement recites, in part,

[22]*22“... that all clients for legal services served by any partners ... of the [Debt- or] are clients of the Partnership, not of any partner or employee, and that the Partnership has a legitimate interest in preserving and maintaining all aspects of its business, including its economically valuable relationships with its clients, as well as with its partners and employees. It is further expressly acknowledged and agreed that all partners and employees of the [Debtor] have a fiduciary duty to assist the [Debtor] in preserving and protecting all aspects of its business, and no partner or employee shall act in any way contrary to the interest of the [Debtor] ... including the solicitation of [Debtor] clients, partners or employees contrary to the provisions of this Paragraph.”

Partnership Agreement at ¶ 13.9.

That paragraph ends by stating it is deemed modified “to the extent required by any applicable Code of Professional Responsibility or other applicable professional disciplinary rules or other applicable laws binding on the [Debtor].”

On March 9, 2011, the partners of Debt- or amended the Partnership Agreement to waive any rights Debtor may have to profits from any unfinished business (the “Jewel Waiver”) and on the same date the Debtor elected to dissolve, effective March 15, 2011. The Jewel Waiver is the transfer Trustee contends was a fraudulent transfer that he can avoid as a necessary step in establishing H & B’s liability under § 550.

The Dec Relief Action would seek to establish that the final sentence of ¶ 13.9 (and the law it imports) trumps the duties imposed (as to hourly rate matters) earlier in that paragraph; if so, the Jewel Waiver waived nothing.

H & B argues that the Dec Relief Action could not have been brought prior to bankruptcy, and thus did not implicate § 362(a)(1). As to § 362(a)(3), H & B contends that such an action would not be one to obtain possession of property of the estate or to exercise control of the property of the estate. It suggests that no other provision of § 362 is implicated and Trustee does not contend otherwise.

The parties have devoted a portion of their written arguments for and against the applicability of § 362(a)(1). The court sees no purpose in trying to answer the somewhat philosophical question of whether H & B could have sued Debtor prior to bankruptcy to have a declaration that the unfinished business rule did not apply to hourly rate matters in the District of Columbia. By the time of Debtor’s dissolution it is safe to presume that the attack on Jewel Waivers as fraudulent transfers in law firm bankruptcies was a well-known reality. What intelligent financially troubled law firm management would do anything but concede H & B’s contentions?

The only automatic stay issue worth addressing here is whether forcing the Trustee or the Creditors Committee to defend the Dec Relief Action in the District of Columbia would amount to control over property of the estate. Stated otherwise, would it interfere with Trustee’s prosecution of the Adversary Proceeding where the very same legal issue that can and no doubt will be raised by H & B (and perhaps other law firm defendants in similar adversary proceedings).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
492 B.R. 19, 69 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1410, 2013 WL 1969312, 2013 Bankr. LEXIS 2034, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-howrey-llp-canb-2013.