In Re Mattocks

15 B.R. 379, 5 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 764, 1981 Bankr. LEXIS 2810
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. New York
DecidedOctober 9, 1981
Docket1-19-40900
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 15 B.R. 379 (In Re Mattocks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Mattocks, 15 B.R. 379, 5 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 764, 1981 Bankr. LEXIS 2810 (N.Y. 1981).

Opinion

CECELIA H. GOETZ, Bankruptcy Judge:

A hearing was held before this Court on July 27, 1981 under 11 U.S.C. § 329 and Bankruptcy Rule 220 to determine the reasonableness of the fees charged the above-named debtors by Salzman, Ingber & Winer (“Salzman”), their attorneys. At such hearing, Harvey Winer, Esq., a member of the firm of Salzman, Ingber & Winer, appeared and was heard. Evidence was also received from the debtors.

11 U.S.C. § 329 expressly authorizes the Court to review all compensation paid, or agreed to be paid, to an attorney for a debtor in connection with a bankruptcy case and to determine the reasonableness of the payment. If the compensation exceeds the reasonable value of such services, the Court may cancel any such agreement, or order the return of any such payment, to the extent found to be excessive. Pursuant to Bankruptcy Rule 220, which continues to be applicable to cases brought under the Bankruptcy Code, 1 the hearing was scheduled by the Court sua sponte.

THE FACTS

1. The debtors, Mr. and Mrs. Mattocks, are the parents of three children whose ages at the time the petition was filed were 13,16, and 18. Mr. Mattocks is employed as a television repairman; she works as a housekeeper. Sometime prior to December, 1980, they fell behind on the mortgage payments on their home and foreclosure proceedings were initiated on November 17, 1980 by the holder of the mortgage, Federal National Mortgage Association.

2. During the pendency of this foreclosure proceeding, the debtors received a letter from “Midland Equities of New York, Inc.” (“Midland Equities”). This letter, after adverting to the possibility that Mr. Mattocks could lose his home in the foreclosure action, continued:

“We can stop the foreclosure and save your house. We can arrange a plan, that you can afford, that will allow you to continue living in your home and keeping title and ownership to it.”

3. The name of the servicing agency used by the mortgagee of the Mattocks’ home is Public Equities Corporation, and when Mr. Mattocks received the letter from Midland Equities, he thought it was a communication from the similarly-named Public Equities Corporation.

4. When Mr. Mattocks, in response to the letter from Midland Equities, visited that firm’s office, he saw a woman who identified herself as “Shirley Dorf,” and told him that “she would work out a plan where I would be able to save my home.”

5. Mr. Mattocks gave Mrs. Dorf the papers he had received relating to the foreclosure proceeding, and the summons and complaint, dated November 17, 1980, were evidently later turned over by Midland Equities to the Salzman firm.

6. The same day as Mr. Mattocks first saw Mrs. Dorf, he signed a four-page form document prepared by Midland Equities entitled “Contract for Services.” A copy of this document, together with the annexed “Notice Regarding Legal Fees,” is appended to this Opinion. Mr. Mattocks agreed, pursuant to this Contract, to retain Midland Equities “to seek and obtain a solution to the mortgage foreclosure suit” in return for a fee of $1,000. This “solution” could take any one of four forms, one of which was “obtaining competent counsel to file a Wage Earn [s/e] Plan.” Both the contract and a supplemental agreement set forth that there would be an additional fee required for the filing of a wage earner plan.

7. A paragraph captioned “Exclusive Term” provided that the appointment of *381 Midland Equities “shall be sole, exclusive and irrevocable during the term commencing with the date hereof and continuing for a period of 180 days.” The 180 days would have expired around June 26, 1981.

8. Mr. Mattocks has only paid Midland Equities $500 of the $1,000 fee stipulated in the “Contract for Services.” Following his retention of Midland Equities, Mr. Mattocks kept calling Mrs. Dorf and “asking her what was taking such a long time. She said she was working out the problems. She said: ‘You don’t have to worry about that. We have sent the papers over and they will be processed.’ The only thing you have to worry about is that you have to make an appearance in court.”

9. However, in fact, no court proceedings were initiated on behalf of Mr. and Mrs. Mattocks until March 26, 1981.

10. On February 18, 1981, Mr. Mattocks paid Midland Equities $500 in cash. Sometime during the following week, he received a telephone call from Midland Equities telling him that on March 4,1981, he was to go to an attorney’s office of which they would provide him the address, and that he should take with him $310 in cash to give to the attorneys to whom Midland Equities was referring him.

11. On March 4, 1981, Midland Equities directed him to the firm of Salzman, Ingber & Winer.

12. On arriving at the offices of Salzman, Ingber & Winer, where he was expected, he turned over $310 in cash to an associate of that firm, Alan Goldberg, Esq., who gave him a receipt for the money. The receipt, dated March 4, 1981, recites that there is a balance due of $350.

13. But for the arrears on their mortgage and the contract with Midland Equities, Mr. and Mrs. Mattocks had no debts, except possibly a $50 parking fine, at the time they consulted Salzman, Ingber & Winer. They would have had no need for relief under the bankruptcy laws but for the pending foreclosure proceeding.

14. Mr. Mattocks was interviewed by Norman Ingber, Esq., a partner of the firm, who, in the presence of Mr. Mattocks, called up the attorney for the mortgagee and ascertained the arrearages on the mortgage.

15. The same day, Mr. Mattocks signed a one-page “Contract to Hire Attorney,” pursuant to which he retained the Salzman firm to represent him “for all purposes in connection with Chapter 13,” and agreed to pay $650 for their services. The contract specifies that appeals are not included, and that no promises or guarantees have been made regarding the outcome of the client’s case.

16. The retainer agreement produced by Salzman, Ingber & Winer is dated March 5, 1981, but the Court is satisfied that it was, in fact, signed on March 4, 1981, and that the date of March 5, 1981 was added subsequently. Not only did Mr. Mattocks testify that March 4, 1981 is the date he went to the offices of Salzman, Ingber & Winer and that he did not return there until some weeks later, but both the receipt given him, and the notation on the retainer, reflects that the initial payment on the retainer was made on March 4, 1981.

17. On March 5, 1981, a judgment of foreclosure was entered in the pending foreclosure suit.

18. Not until several weeks after Mr. Mattocks first retained the Salzman firm did that firm, on March 26, 1981, file a petition under Chapter 13 on behalf of him and his wife. The schedules prepared by Salzman, Ingber & Winer for Mr. and Mrs. Mattocks contain no reference to Midland Equities, and the debts listed did not include the balance of $500 apparently due Midland Equities under the “Contract for Services.”

19. The proceeding initiated by Mr. and Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 B.R. 379, 5 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 764, 1981 Bankr. LEXIS 2810, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-mattocks-nyeb-1981.