In Re Nevels

415 B.R. 832, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 3187, 2009 WL 3246943
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. New Mexico
DecidedOctober 9, 2009
Docket19-01008
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 415 B.R. 832 (In Re Nevels) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. New Mexico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Nevels, 415 B.R. 832, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 3187, 2009 WL 3246943 (N.M. 2009).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION ON ATTORNEY SCHUCHARDT’S OBJECTION TO CHAPTER IS TRUSTEE’S FINAL ACCOUNT AND PETITION FOR FINAL DECREE

JAMES S. STARZYNSKI, Bankruptcy Judge.

This matter came before the Court on the Standing Chapter 13 Trustee’s Final Account of Trustee and Petition for Final Decree (doc 74), and the Objection to Chapter 13 Trustee’s Final Accounting (“Objection”) (doc 75) filed by Elliott Schu-chardt, the Debtor’s former counsel (sometimes “Counsel”). For the reasons set forth below, the Court finds that the Objection is not well taken and should be overruled. 1

Background

Debtor Cynthia Nevels filed a Chapter 13 petition and plan through Counsel on June 26, 2007. The Statement of Financial Affairs disclosed a $50,000 transfer to Debtor’s son some four months before the bankruptcy to cover his college expenses. Ms. Nevel’s largest creditor by far was her ex-husband Ronald Nevels, whose claim ultimately turned out to be a little under $50,000. Mr. Nevels was the only non-priority, non-administrative unsecured creditor to receive a distribution.

The plan called for monthly payments of $300 for 36 months. The confirmation order (doc 28) 2 , entered March 4, 2008, ordered Debtor to make these payments and also provided for the turnover to the estate of the $50,000. Since the $50,000 had been deposited in a certificate of deposit with *834 New Mexico Educators Federal Credit Union and had been held pending entry of the confirmation order, those funds were delivered to the Trustee shortly after the entry of the confirmation order.

On February 21, 2008, Counsel withdrew from representing Debtor and attorney William R. Brummett substituted in, doc 27, although Counsel had signed off on the confirmation order. Following confirmation, Counsel filed an application for approval of attorney fees of $5,527.58 and costs of $297.23 (doc 38), which Debtor contested. Ultimately the Court granted the application in the full amount of $5,824.81, having found that Counsel represented Debtor well at a very reasonable cost. Doc 65. Taking into account Debt- or’s prepetition payment of $776 and the Trustee’s initial (and only) post petition payment to Counsel of $1,524, Counsel is still owed $3,524.81. 3

On August 19, 2008, the Trustee filed a Motion to Dismiss for failure to make plan payments in the amount of $1200, doc 68, which the Court granted on October 3, 2008. Doc 70. Trustee filed the Final Account of Trustee and Petition of [sic — • should be “for”?] Final Decree (“Final Account”) on October 23, 2008, which drew Counsel’s objection.

In the meantime, the events which led to this dispute occurred. Plan section 111(b) discusses the treatment of Debtor’s attorney’s fees as an administrative claim:

Debtor’s Attorney’s Fees. The debtor’s attorney’s fees shall be paid as follows: (a) counsel for the debtor anticipates total attorney’s fees in an amount of at least $2,300 including gross receipts tax, and not including the filing fee (“Pre-Application Fees”); (b) counsel for the debtor shall be permitted to apply a pre-petition retainer (the “Retainer”) for fees and costs received by counsel in the amount of $776 (not including the filing fee) to the Pre-Application Fees; (c) upon confirmation, to the extent such funds exist and are available for this purpose, the trustee shall distribute the difference between the Pre-Application Fees and the Retainer to counsel for the debtor pending the filing and allowance of a fee application; (d) within fifteen (15) days after confirmation of the plan, counsel for the debtor shall file a fee application for all services rendered and costs incurred up to and including confirmation; (e) any fees requested in addition to the Pre-Application Fees shall only be paid by the trustee after approval by the Court; and (f) in the event that the fees approved by the Court are less than the Pre-Application Fees paid to counsel by the debtor, trustee or otherwise, then counsel for the debtor shall refund to the trustee the difference between the Pre-Application Fees and the amount awarded. If debtor’s attorney fads to file its fee application within fifteen (15) days after entry of an order confirming this plan (or within such additional time as the Court may allow upon motion for extension filed within said time), counsel shall refund to the trustee the Pre-Application Fees and funds distributed by the trustee, and the trustee shall be entitled to an order requiring such turnover. Nothing herein shall preclude counsel from filing a fee application after the time allowed hereunder, and being paid pursuant to this paragraph upon entry of an order allowing such fees, but counsel’s entitlement to payment at the time of the first distribution of funds from the trustee after confirmation of this plan shall de *835 pend on the timely filing of the initial fee application.

The confirmation order repeated in decre-tal paragraph 3 the substance of the first sentence of the above-quoted plan provision.

The Final Report states that the case was dismissed after confirmation, and accounted for total receipts of $54,575.72, no administrative payments, a priority payment of $1,524.00 4 , no secured payments, $49,281.42 unsecured payments, and $3,820.30 in Trustee fees, for total disbursements of $54,575.72. Counsel received from the estate only the $1,524.00 which, combined with the $776 that Counsel received from Debtor prepetition, totaled the $2,300 figure in the plan and confirmation order.

The deadline for filing the fee application was March 19, 2008. It got filed on April 22. On March 31, almost two weeks after the application was due, Counsel emailed the Trustee asking her for an extension of time because he would be out of the country until mid-April. However, Counsel did not, as some other counsel do, file a motion asking for an extension of time to file the application, which he could have done at any time before he left the country or indeed even before confirmation.

Counsel and Trustee agree that Counsel told Trustee on March 31 that the application was going to be filed, and they both agree that Trustee agreed that she would not seek disgorgement of any of his fees pursuant to the plan and confirmation order prior to April 30, 2008. 5 Counsel understood Trustee’s commitment not to seek disgorgement until April 30 as an agreement, de facto or explicit, to allow him up to April 30 to file a fee application and to withhold distribution, or withhold sufficient funds from the distribution, until then. Trustee understood no such thing, but merely that she would not file a disgorgement motion against Counsel.

The standard chapter 13 procedure in this District is that upon the filing of a fee application, Trustee reserves from distribution sufficient funds to cover the maximum amount requested by the application (to the extent of the funds available), and holds the funds until a ruling on the fee application. Trustee then pays according to the court order on the next disbursement date.

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Related

In re Chamberlain
555 B.R. 14 (D. Colorado, 2016)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
415 B.R. 832, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 3187, 2009 WL 3246943, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-nevels-nmb-2009.