In Re Leedy Mortg. Co., Inc.

126 B.R. 907, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 566, 1991 WL 66805
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 29, 1991
Docket19-10361
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 126 B.R. 907 (In Re Leedy Mortg. Co., Inc.) 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 Leedy Mortg. Co., Inc., 126 B.R. 907, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 566, 1991 WL 66805 (Pa. 1991).

Opinion

*909 .OPINION

DAVID A. SCHOLL, Bankruptcy Judge.

A. INTRODUCTION

On the Trustee’s appeal from this court’s award to him of final compensation of $2,305 in addition to prior interim compensation of $63,521.18 received by the Trustee, the district court remanded this matter to us (1) to review our power to reduce compensation requested by the Trustee sua sponte; (2) to conduct an evidentiary hearing and make findings of fact regarding the appropriate hourly rate of compensation for the Trustee, in light of the nature of his duties; and (3) to determine whether the Trustee was “lax and dilatory” in performing his duties and, if so, how this element should affect his compensation. We conclude that (1) we do have the power, and in fact have a duty, to review the Trustee’s request for compensation; (2) the Trustee was, to at least some degree, “lax and dilatory” in administering this case; (3) given this fact and the Trustee’s particular skills and duties, compensation of $50 per hour in reference to duties performed by him between June 2, 1986, and the present was quite generous; and (4) our prior award should be reinstated.

B. PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL HISTORY

The underlying bankruptcy of LEEDY MORTGAGE COMPANY, INC. (“the Debt- or”) was initiated by the filing of a voluntary Chapter 11 case on September 8, 1983. The case was assigned to our predecessor, the Honorable William A. King, Jr. On September 16, 1983, JOHN P. JUDGE (“the Trustee”) was appointed as Trustee, and, on September 20,1983, the law firm of Ciardi and Fishbone, now known as Ciardi, Fishbone, and DiDonato (“the Ciardi firm”), was appointed as his counsel. On September 30, 1983, George L. Miller, P.C., whose business is now known as Miller and Tate (“Miller”), was appointed as accountant for the Trustee.

The case thereafter remained in Chapter 11 for almost five years, despite the absence of an effort by any interested party to propose a plan, until its conversion to Chapter 7 as the result of a court-initiated dismissal hearing on August 10, 1988.

A good perspective of the case as a whole can be obtained by reading our two published Opinions which it elicited, reported at 111 B.R. 488 (Bankr.E.D.Pa.1990) (“Leedy II”); and 76 B.R. 440 (Bankr.E.D. Pa.1987) (“Leedy /”), respectively. In Leedy I, we denied in part and granted in part a motion for summary judgment by insurers sued by the Trustee on fidelity bonds covering certain high-level employees of the Debtor in light of the frauds of these employees. In so doing, we chronicled the apparent serious misdeeds of several of these employees. Leedy I, 76 B.R. at 451-59. In Leedy II, rejecting administrative claim of mortgage companies which had employed the Debtor to service their accounts for reimbursement of sums paid to Miller to reassemble the Debtor’s records, we discussed the early stages of the case in depth. Ill B.R. at 490, 492. Per Miller’s testimony on behalf of the Trustee, we observed as follows:

At the time of the filing of its bankruptcy petition, the Debtor was a party to servicing contracts with various mortgagees, including the Claimants. The Debtor had, on occasion, misapplied certain funds of Claimants and other mortgage holders. As the result of a pre-pe-tition Alabama state court action, all mail, including payments sent by mortgagors to the Debtor, was, for an indeterminate time, directed to the court house, resulting in a complete inability of the Debtor to service or post payments submitted to it.
At the time of the appointment of the Trustee, the Debtor had no funds on hand except payments received on account of the mortgages being served by it which had been sent to the court house. Under loan agreements with the mortgagees, those funds were to be held in trust by the Debtor and remitted to the mortgagees. The Trustee filed an Application with the court seeking authority to use the trust funds for payment of the Trustee’s administrative ex *910 penses. Several mortgagees objected to that Application. The ultimate resolution was a Stipulation, Order and Joinder (“the Stipulation”) approved by the Bankruptcy Court on or about October 31, 1983, joined by the Claimants, which provided that the Trustee would hire the Accountant, who would reassemble the Debtor’s records, with each claimant to pay its pro rata share of these costs as allowed by the bankruptcy court....
... By the time that its bankruptcy petition had been filed, the Debtor had been revealed as no longer trustworthy as a servicing agent by any responsible mortgagee, and all of the mortgagees, including the Claimants, withdrew their contracts from the Debtor, some immediately and others in the following months. The servicing contracts yielded the Debt- or only about $20,000 monthly in fees when it was servicing a full compliment of mortgagees, and hence it was not worth the Debtor’s while to preserve these contracts at a cost to it of almost $108,000. As the Accountant [Miller] frankly stated, the most economical course for the Debtor to follow would have been to dump the entire bin of payments remitted to the state court in the laps of the Mortgagees and compel them to collectively figure out a way to do the necessary accounting. The Accountant opined that the beneficiaries of the Stipulation pursuant to which he performed the accounting were the mortgagees and that they, rather than the Debtor, championed his undertaking.

Id.

On November 16, 1983, Judge King entered an Order directing that the parties who entered into the Stipulation of October 31,1983, advance, inter alia, $20,000 to the Trustee, as a pre-payment of anticipated commissions. Thereafter, from 1984 through 1986, a series of Orders were entered granting additional interim compensation to the Trustee, based upon calculations of the maximum commissions payable pursuant to the terms of former 11 U.S.C. § 326(a).

This statute presently reads as follows:

§ 326. Limitation on compensation of trustee
(a) In a ease under chapter 7 or 11, the court may allow reasonable compensation under section 330 of this title of the trustee for the trustee’s services, payable after the trustee renders such services, not to exceed fifteen percent on the first $1,000 or less, six percent on any amount in excess of $1,000 but not in excess of $3,000, and three percent on any amount in excess of $3,000, upon all moneys disbursed or turned over in the case by the trustee to parties in interest, excluding the debtor, but including holders of secured claims....

This version of § 326(a) reflects a revision, on July 10, 1984, as part of the Bankruptcy Amendments and Federal Judgeship Act (“BAFJA”), to provide, inter alia, that a trustee’s maximum commission is measured at three (3%) percent of all sums disbursed which exceed $3,000.

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126 B.R. 907, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 566, 1991 WL 66805, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-leedy-mortg-co-inc-paeb-1991.