In re Mangum

147 B.R. 875, 1992 Bankr. LEXIS 1874, 1992 WL 348249
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedNovember 10, 1992
DocketBankruptcy Nos. 92-23220-B, 90-26257-B, 92-24355-B and 92-41664-B
StatusPublished

This text of 147 B.R. 875 (In re Mangum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Mangum, 147 B.R. 875, 1992 Bankr. LEXIS 1874, 1992 WL 348249 (E.D. Va. 1992).

Opinion

ORDER REGARDING PROFESSIONAL PERSONS

HAL J. BONNEY, Jr., Bankruptcy Judge.

In re WARREN MANGUM, Debtor.

Case No. 92-23220-B

This Chapter 7 case was filed on May 29, 1992. H.B. Price, III, was appointed Interim Trustee by the U.S. Trustee no later than June 4, 1992, when notice went to creditors. The § 341 meeting of creditors was held July 7, 1992, on which date the trustee filed a report of no assets to distribute.

On August 5, 1992, an objection to the debtor’s claim of exempt property was filed with the Court by Steven L. Brown, Esquire, representing himself as attorney for the trustee.

On August 25, 1992, the Clerk returned to Brown a proposed order appointing him attorney for the trustee advising that no application to employ had been filed. This application came in on August 31, 1992. The Court entered the order of appointment on September 1, 1992.

On September 3, 1992, Brown filed on behalf of the trustee a motion to extend the time to object to the debtor’s discharge.

On September 24, 1992, the Court conducted a hearing on the motion to extend and on the objection to the claimed exemptions. At that hearing it came to light that Brown had been serving as the trustee’s attorney since July 1992. In fact, failure to be appointed became an issue in the hearing on the objection to exemptions.

By an Order to Show Cause entered on October 2, 1992, the Court directed H.B. Price, III, to show cause why he should not be removed as trustee in this case and/or sanctions imposed and why Steven L. Brown should not be removed as attorney for the trustee and/or sanctions imposed for their proceeding so long without Court approval of the employment of an attorney, the trustee utilizing an attorney without proper authority and the _ attorney holding himself out as appointed when this was not so.

A hearing on the show cause was conducted on October 20, 1992. For this purpose Brown employed Jerrold G. Weinberg, Esquire, to represent him.

The evidence shows that Price contacted Brown about being his attorney on July 23, 1992, and Brown sent Price a proposed order for endorsement on July 28, 1992. On August 10, 1992, Brown passed the proposed order to the U.S. Trustee at Norfolk. Deberá F. Conlon, Assistant U.S. Trustee, represented her office moved these papers on in two to three days. The proposed order finally came to the Court on August 21,1992 but, as noted above, had to be returned, Brown had filed no application to employ.

During this time, both on the telephone and by letter dated July 28, 1992 and August 17, 1992, Brown represented to Douglas C. Fredericks, Esquire, attorney for the debtor, that he was attorney for the trustee.

At the show cause hearing the trustee was forthright to state he should have been more diligent and he should have supervised Brown.

Brown said it was his “policy” to take care of these matters as soon as possible. Too, he argued, and correctly so, that due to time restraints a trustee’s attorney must often quickly get to work. That cannot be a justification.

[877]*877However, both Brown and the trustee acknowledge there was delay here which could have been avoided if full diligence had been given the matter. And that is the problem.

(1) The appointment of counsel for the trustee, where required, is basic and should be immediately tended to. It is a matter of cranking out form material, perhaps on a computer, getting it signed and very promptly to the Court. The lack of diligence is (a) the total time required here to get the material to the Court and (b) such fall-out as sending a proposed order without'the basic motion or application upon which the order is based.

(2) There is something unwholesome about telephone calls, letters, action under the guise of authority.

The danger, dear friends, is that such a modus operandi can become habitual and the quality of the system is lessened.

H.B. Price, III, is hereby removed as trustee in this case. This action does not bar him from serving in other cases.

Steven L. Brown is hereby removed as attorney for the trustee. This action does not bar him from serving in other cases.

The Court agrees that the action of concern here is not contemptuous. No sanctions are imposed.

The Court will cite the law below for all of these cases.

In re B and S & T ENTERPRISES, INC., Debtor.

Case No. 90-26257-B

This case was filed under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code on December 26, 1990. H.B. Price, III, was appointed interim trustee on January 14, 1991 and by operation of law became trustee. A § 341 creditors meeting was held on February 14, 1991.

Then, in 1992, a strange set of events occurred. Price orally employed another attorney, not a party here, who on his own, without knowledge of Trustee Price, found he could not pursue the representation and “in the latter part of August” 1992 contacted Steven L. Brown, Esquire, and delivered all of the papers to Brown. Mind you, Price knew nothing of this until Brown contacted him on August 25, 1992.

Brown represents that he prepared legal papers on September 3, 1992, sent them to Price, received them back on the 10th, got them to the office of the U.S. Trustee on the 10th, got them back on the 17th and to the Court on the 18th.

Yet again representing himself to be trustee’s counsel when he was not so appointed, Brown filed a motion on September 4, 1992 to sell certain property. Not until September 18,1992 was an application to employ himself as counsel for the trustee filed. The Court entered the order of appointment on September 21, 1992. On September 28,1992, Brown filed an application to employ an auctioneer to sell said property. The sale was scheduled for September 30, 1992.

We have another case of delay and mismanagement. [The Court has considered each case separately on its own merits. However, a pattern existing in several cases cannot be ignored.] But this case holds another untenable fact.

On the morning of the sale, the Court received a telephone call from Calvin Zedd, auctioneer, who reported the sale had been advertised, set-up and several hundred persons had appeared for the event scheduled for 10:30 A.M. Zedd said he had no order authorizing the sale. When staff could not resolve the matter, the undersigned spoke to Zedd, concluded the sale should proceed and that the Court would prepare and enter an order prior to 10:30 A.M. This was done and the emergency order signed at 9:50 A.M.

In investigating the matter in-house, it was determined Brown’s proposed order of sale came to the Clerk’s Office the day before, September 29, 1992, and flowed across the Judge’s desk on the 30th. Due to the scenario of this case and realizing a sale had been advertised and prepared without an order, the undersigned would not enter Brown’s proposed order.

The Court subsequently entered an order on October 2, 1992, directing Price and [878]*878Brown to show cause why they should not be removed as officers of the court in the case and/or sanctions imposed.

The Court has addressed the tardy appointment papers above. As to the tardy seeking of authority to employ an auctioneer and sell the property, Brown represented at the hearing that Zedd had insisted on September 30,.

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Bluebook (online)
147 B.R. 875, 1992 Bankr. LEXIS 1874, 1992 WL 348249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-mangum-vaed-1992.