In Re Kershaw

59 B.R. 618
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Tennessee
DecidedMarch 21, 1986
DocketBankruptcy 383-00432
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 59 B.R. 618 (In Re Kershaw) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Kershaw, 59 B.R. 618 (Tenn. 1986).

Opinion

ORDER

GEORGE C. PAINE, II, Bankruptcy Judge.

This matter is before the court on the debtors’ motion to “strike Trustee’s attorney’s ‘Application for Interim Compensation and Reimbursement of Expenses’ and all motions to invoke sanctions, for the reason that employment of special counsel and imposition of sanctions is an un-neces-sary and a needless burden on the Estate [sic].”

This case was filed by the debtors as a Chapter 13 on February 11, 1983. Although the debtors were ordered to make payments to the Chapter 13 trustee in the amount of $3,800.00 per month, no funds were ever paid according to the Chapter 13 trustee’s Final Report and Account. On August 11, 1983, the case was converted to one under Chapter 11. On March 14, 1984, the court appointed Margaret L. Behm trustee. On September 17, 1985, the case was converted to one under Chapter 7 and *619 the court ordered the Chapter 11 Trustee to continue as the Chapter 7 Trustee.

This case was a Chapter 11 case for over 25 months. It was, or should have been, a garden variety Chapter 11 case. It is also a garden variety business or personal Chapter 7 case. In bankruptcy parlance it is a “single asset” case with land being the primary asset of the debtors. There are only approximately twenty creditors. Chapter 11 cases often have numerous assets, involve ongoing and oftentimes sophisticated and complex businesses, and, usually have far more creditors than twenty. Some have hundreds or thousands of creditors.

One of the debtors, Jack Kershaw, is an attorney. At times he has represented himself and his wife. Three other attorneys have served as debtors’ counsel and his current counsel, Lucien Dale, is seeking to withdraw at this time.

In 1983, 3,543 cases were filed in this court of which 2,545 were Chapter 7, 120 were Chapter 11, and 878 were Chapter 13. In 1984, 8,347 cases were filed, of which 1,866 were Chapter 7,107 were Chapter 11, and 1,374 were Chapter 13. In 1985, 4,230 cases were filed, of which 1,887 were Chapter 7, 145 were Chapter 11, and 2,198 were Chapter 13. In January and February, 1986, 905 cases were filed of which 396 were Chapter 7, 15 were Chapter 11, and 494 were Chapter 13. This is a total of 12,025 cases. Further, 1,657 adversary proceedings were filed during these same periods. At this time there are 6,845 cases pending before the court. This latter figure does not include adversary proceedings.

The court can without a doubt opine that during the years this case has been pending it has occupied far more attorney and court time than any other case its size and probably more than any case regardless of size. Most of this effort was unnecessary and it has succeeded in delaying any payments to creditors during its Chapter 13, Chapter 11, or Chapter 7 existences. It is by far the best example this court has seen during its four and one-half years on the bench of debtors using the bankruptcy process to delay and obfuscate in order to keep their property from the reach of their creditors.

This case has spawned three adversary proceedings (385-0035, 385-0265 and 386-0010), all directed against the trustee.

This case has generated seven appeals by the debtors, of which two have been dismissed by the District Court. The docket sheet shows approximately 236 entries in addition to 63 certificates of mailing.

The first adversary proceeding filed against the trustee (385-0035) has generated six more appeals by the debtors to the District Court, of which at least two have already been dismissed. Its docket sheet reflects approximately 75 entries and 17 certificates of mailing.

The second adversary proceeding filed against the trustee (385-0265) has generated one additional appeal and approximately 18 docket entries and four certificates of mailing.

The last adversary proceeding filed against the trustee, at least to the date of this order, (386-0010) has not yet generated an appeal by the debtors. However, since the court has dismissed it for the failure of debtors’ counsel to appear at a court-ordered pretrial conference, the court assumes that one will be forthcoming.

This court can now fully sympathize with the Honorable Merritt S. Deitz, Jr. of the Western District of Kentucky when he described a similar case as follows:

We will not belabor the reader with a further description of what we have already identified as tactics “to delay, obfuscate and abuse” the bankruptcy process. The job is too great. The docket sheet lists 313 separate pleadings, ballots, memoranda and orders; some of the legal memoranda are themselves weighty tomes. The file is entering its seventh volume. Like an ill-healing chancre that continues to reopen, the Chou-Chen case demanded continuous treatment while 250 other Chapter 11 petitioners awaited our ministration; the case has been in *620 court for eleven separate hearings, most of them lengthy. It has generated three appeals. We have every reason to believe it will produce yet a fourth.
* # * * * *
At length the judge cried, quite out of breath, “I will give you your life if you will only stop fiddling.”

In re Chou-Chen Chemicals, Inc., 31 B.R. 842 at 846 (Bankr.W.D.Ky.1983), quoting The Jew Among Thorns, The Brothers Grimm (1837).

This court further suspects the situation of the trustee in this case is like that of the trustee in the Chou-Chen case who was described by Judge Deitz as “probably feeling as though he had been dropped squarely in the middle of a Bosch triptych”. Id.

Before analyzing the one-page writing before the court which is denominated a “Motion to Strike” and its attached Memorandum, the court must note a remarkable phenomenon on its face. It contains two different signatures for the counsel for the debtors. Bankruptcy Rule 9011 requires that a Motion shall be signed by an attorney of record in his individual name and sets out the significance of that signature. In this case the debtors’ attorney apparently only signed the certificate of service and someone else signed his name to the Motion. The court will assume it was signed with his permission although there is no indication of this.

This writing purports, first of all, to request the striking of “Trustee’s attorney’s ‘Application for Interim Compensation and Reimbursement of Expenses’.” It was filed the day before a Motion for Interim Compensation and Reimbursement of Expenses filed by the attorneys for the trustee was to be heard. Assuming this writing was filed in opposition to the request set the next day, the court notes that the following exchange subsequently occurred in open court in regards to this fee request:

BY THE COURT: Any objection, Mr. Dale?
BY MR DALE: No objections, may it please the court.

Although debtors’ counsel apparently thought it was necessary to move the court to “Strike” this request, he did not find it necessary to object to it. It is possible, however, that another interim fee request is referred to since the Memorandum addresses a previous request.

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89 B.R. 697 (W.D. Tennessee, 1988)

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Bluebook (online)
59 B.R. 618, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-kershaw-tnmb-1986.