In Re LaBrum & Doak, LLP

227 B.R. 372, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 1463, 1998 WL 790707
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 13, 1998
Docket19-11544
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 227 B.R. 372 (In Re LaBrum & Doak, LLP) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re LaBrum & Doak, LLP, 227 B.R. 372, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 1463, 1998 WL 790707 (Pa. 1998).

Opinion

OPINION

DAVID A. SCHOLL, Chief Judge.

A INTRODUCTION

Presently before us for determination in the contentious Chapter 11 case of LAB-RUM & DOAK, LLP (“the Debtor”), a dissolved law firm, are certain Objections to the Liquidating Plan of Reorgani2iation (“the Plan”) proposed by the Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors (“the UC Committee”). The principal objections are these of former partners contending that the Plan improperly classifies their claims subordinate to the claims of general unsecured creditors and that the Plan improperly gives the UC Committee itself broad post-confirmation powers, which include pursuing deficiency claims against the partners.

*374 We conclude that the classification scheme proposed in the Plan is in conformity with applicable law and the Debtor’s partnership agreement. We also find that the powers delegated to the UC Committee are authorized by 11 U.S.C. § 1123(b)(3)(B) and are generally appropriate.

However, among the many objections are a few which possibly have merit and present suggestions for amending the plant to the UC Committee which it may wish to take. We will therefore give the UC Committee an opportunity to amend the Plan on or before November 23, 1998, and will reschedule the confirmation hearing for December 2, 1998.

B. PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL HISTORY

On January 6, 1998, six former partners of the Debtor filed an involuntary Chapter 7 case against it. Pursuant to the Debtor’s motion, filed on January 7, 1998, this case was converted to a Chapter 11 case on January 22,1998.

Although the Debtor filed its own initial Chapter 11 plan and accompanying disclosure statement as early as February 17, 1998, hearings on the disclosure statement were put off while some of the many adversary proceedings arising in this case were litigated, through July 22, 1998. At that time the Debtor agreed to produce, possibly jointly with the UC Committee, an amended plan by August 7, 1998. Although this deadline was later put off until August 28, 1998, the Debtor did file an amended plan and accompanying disclosure statement on the latter date. However, the UC Committee, which had not joined the Debtor’s plan after all, proceeded to file a plan and disclosure statement of its own on September 1, 1998. On September 9, 1998, both disclosure statements were approved as permissible modifications of the initial disclosure statement submitted in February by the Debtor. Confirmation hearings on both plans were scheduled on October 21,1998.

At the commencement of the hearings on October 21, 1998, the Debtor withdrew its plan, which had garnered less acceptances support than the instant Plan, and put its support behind this Plan. The UC Committee’s Chairman, Lawrence J. Tabas, Esquire, and its accountant, George L. Miller, testified in support of the Plan. Daniel J. Ryan, Esquire, who retired as a partner of the Debtor effective December 31, 1996, several months prior to it dissolution, was the only witness for the objectors. After the hearing, plan proponents were accorded until October 30, 1998, to file a supporting brief, and plan objectors were accorded with November 6, 1998, to submit briefs opposing confirmation.

Before focusing on the facts relevant to the contested matter at hand, comment should be made about the status of other outstanding litigation arising out of this case. Appearing in the Bankruptcy Reporter are a decision of July 30, 1998, allocating tax recapture liability arising from the Debtor’s former Philadelphia office among its former as well as present partners, reported at 222 B.R. 749; and an Opinion of August 14, 1998, reported at 225 B.R. Ill, supplemented by a further decision of October 19, 1998, reported at 226 B.R. 161, which awarded the Debtor a portion of fees from contingency-fee cases taken over by former firm attorneys who, unlike most, chose not to settle this issue with the Debtor. Briefing has also been completed on November 4, 1998, and November 6, 1998, respectively, regarding additional proceedings (1) seeking to recover distributions made to partners in the year prior to bankruptcy, pursuant to, principally, 11 U.S.C. § 548(b); and (2) an attempt to recover the value of hourly-fee cases taken over by former attorneys of the Debtor at their new firms. Seven other decisions, most deciding pre-trial motions in the various proceedings in this case, appear on Westlaw.

None of these prior decisions related directly to plan confirmation issues. This is atypical because generally developments in a Chapter 11 case revolve around confirmation of a plan. The different course of this case is explained by the fact that any Chapter 11 plan must be a liquidating one, as the Debtor dissolved on July 31, 1997. The only undertaking of a plan, in this context, is the development of the order for distribution of whatever assets the Debtor is able to recover, mostly through litigation, and the means for conducting any additional necessary litigation *375 to collect funds. Since the Debtor was a large law firm, the interested parties are themselves lawyers, and many of these parties have chosen to engage in a good deal of litigation in this case themselves.

The Plan provides for six classes. Class 1 is Priority Claims, which must be paid in full. Class 2-A consists of landlords’ claims and Class 2-B of all other general unsecured claims. Members of these two classes are treated equally, to be paid in full with interest or, in the absence of available funds pro rata prior to all other classes. Although these two Class 2 sub-classes may have divided to satisfy the 11 U.S.C. § 1129(a)(10) requirement of obtaining at least one accepting impaired class, both of these classes voted to accept the Plan by comfortable margins, e.g., Class 2-A voted 2-0, and Class 2-B voted 16-3, with 84% of the amount of claims voting having voted to accept the Plan.

Class 3 includes unsecured claims of former partners for withdrawal, termination, and retirement benefits. Its members are to be paid in full with interest or pro rata, as is applicable, only after Classes 2-A and 2-B are paid in full with interest. Class 4 consists of other allowed claims of former partners, defined as parties who left the Debtor one year or more prior to the dissolution vote of June 5,1997. Its members are paid in full with interest or pro rata, as is applicable, only after Classes 2-A, 2-B, and 3 are paid in full with interest. Class 5, including claims of present partners, defined as partners remaining with the Debtor 60 days prior to the dissolution vote, are to be paid only if all other classes are paid in full with interest.

All eighteen (18) attorneys included in Classes 3, 4, and 5 except Perry S. Bechtle, a retiree member of Class 3, voted to reject the Plan. Three attorneys, including Kean McDonald, the only attorney believed to have left the firm in the “gap” period between one year and 60 days prior to dissolution, voted as a member of both Classes 3 and 4.

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227 B.R. 372, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 1463, 1998 WL 790707, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-labrum-doak-llp-paeb-1998.