In re Imperial '400' National, Inc.

431 F. Supp. 155, 1977 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16874
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedMarch 16, 1977
DocketNo. 656-65
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 431 F. Supp. 155 (In re Imperial '400' National, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Imperial '400' National, Inc., 431 F. Supp. 155, 1977 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16874 (D.N.J. 1977).

Opinion

OPINION

WHIPPLE, Chief Judge.

There are presently before the Court 21 separate applications for allowances in this [160]*160Chapter X reorganization proceeding. These applications have been submitted for services rendered over varying part of the 11 year period during which this enterprise was operated under the aegis of court protection — briefly under Chapter XI and for the rest of the period under Chapter X. The proceedings culminated in a confirmed plan of reorganization which has been in the process of consummation since the date of confirmation. Creditors have received 100 cents on the dollar in cash, notes and/or stock, and former stockholders have received one share of new stock, with an investment value of $4.89 per share, for every three shares of old stock. I have previously expressed my views on the fairness and feasibility of the plan, and its overwhelming acceptance, together with the absence of appeals from my plan determinations, indicates to me that the reorganization has finally concluded successfully.

Many of the applicants contributed to this success. It is virtually impossible to pinpoint those applicants who may have been most responsible or the principal catalyst in achieving this result. I believe that all participants were of assistance to both the Court and the proceedings, even when one party’s interests were adversary to those of another party. I received cooperation from each and every professional involved in this case, and the result was a blending or balancing of interests to reach the final outcome achieved here. While there is no question that some of the actors were more center-stage than some of the supporting players, I feel that the overall performance is the true measure of the cast, and I am, happy to applaud the show. While the finale may have been long in coming, it was a happy ending.

I will now proceed to a brief review of the criteria I have considered in analyzing

the applications, and I will then deal with the specific allowance requests.

General Principles

In evaluating the various requests for allowances that are on file and before me for consideration, I have had the benefit of the submissions of various parties to these proceedings. Counsel for the Trustee has submitted a comprehensive memorandum pertaining to the general principles applicable to request for allowances, other counsel have made submissions, and the S.E.C. has submitted a memorandum outlining what it considers to be the relevant considerations and principles of law that bear upon the pending applications. The S.E.C. declined to make specific recommendations on the amounts to be awarded to the applicants.

The foregoing submissions, as well as decisions in the within proceedings by the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit1 and the District Court, have furnished me with considerable guidance. It is unnecessary to restate the principles contained in those source materials in any depth. Rather, I would note that my determinations on the individual applications took into account all of the principles enunciated therein, and I have considered each and every application from the standpoint of the time expended (and the quality of the time records maintained), the benefits conferred upon the estate by the work performed, the degree of difficulty of that work, the results accomplished, the standing of the particular professional performing the work both within his professional community and as a professional skilled in reorganization proceedings, and the other criteria enunciated in the numerous cases cited by counsel.2

[161]*161As a result of my consideration of all the fee criteria, different applicants will be compensated at different rates, i. e., a comparison of hourly rates reached by dividing the hours claimed into the total compensation, will show disparate results. No uniform hourly rate can be applied because of the numerous factors that must be carefully considered. Moreover, in making these awards I have taken into account the specific time period during which the services were rendered by respective applicants, the hourly rates that were in effect during those time periods, the fact that many of the applicants have been waiting many years for compensation in this proceeding without having had the benefit of the use of that compensation contemporaneous with the rendering of the services, the aggregate amount that I deem to be the reasonable total compensation to be awarded in these proceedings (see discussion, infra) and other intangible factors that only a presiding reorganization judge is in a position to evaluate.

In summary, after applying all of the foregoing criteria, I have attempted to encourage the participation by all parties in interest to work toward the successful conclusion of the reorganization,3 without indiscriminately compensating applicants who have merely been active, but have not satisfactorily met the tests enunciated in the authorities cited above.4

BERNARD KUTTNER, ATTORNEY FOR ESTATE OF CHARLES HANDLER

Charles Handler appeared in this proceeding on behalf of Continana Corporation, one of the co-proponents of the plan that was ultimately approved and confirmed by this Court. However, Mr. Handler died long before the confirmed plan was submitted. For his representation of Continana Corporation, his estate now requests the sum of $3,500, together with disbursements. No detailed time records were submitted although 37 hours of time are claimed at the rate of approximately $100 per hour. As .was set forth in the case of In re Meade Land & Development Co., Inc., 527 F.2d 280, 284 (3d Cir. 1975):

“We stress that it is the attorneys obligation to keep and submit to the court time records supporting an application for compensation. And, absent unusual circumstances, it is the court’s independent obligation to give credit only where there are such supporting documents, even in cases where no interested parties raise objections to the claim.”

See also cases cited in submissions referred to above.

From the submissions of Mr. Kuttner, it is difficult to determine any real benefit that inured to the estate from the work of Mr. Handler. Nonetheless, it can be stated that Mr. Handler did contribute to the movement of the case and may have inspired the filing of the first plan by Continana Corporation which incorporated features that might be traced to the confirmed plan which was also co-sponsored by Continana. Accordingly, I deem the services of Mr. Handler to this creditor to be compensable and I evaluate their worth to be $1,500, together with disbursements of $214.87.

SANFORD SILVERMAN AND EDWARD WALSH

I have grouped the applications of Messrs. Silverman and Walsh together because they appear to have acted as a team during the Chapter XI phase of this pro[162]*162ceeding. Mr. Walsh was appointed receiver in the Chapter XI, and Mr. Silverman was named as his counsel. They both served for the period from June 4, 1965 through February 8, 1966, when this proceeding was converted into a Chapter X proceeding.

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Matter of Imperial400'nat., Inc.
431 F. Supp. 155 (D. New Jersey, 1977)

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