In Re Olson

36 B.R. 74, 10 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 798, 1983 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10451
CourtDistrict Court, D. Nebraska
DecidedDecember 23, 1983
DocketBankruptcy BK 82-0-379, CV 83-0-277 and CV 83-0-297
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 36 B.R. 74 (In Re Olson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Nebraska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Olson, 36 B.R. 74, 10 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 798, 1983 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10451 (D. Neb. 1983).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

BEAM, District Judge.

These consolidated cases are on appeal from an order dated April 13, 1983, by the Bankruptcy Court for the District of Nebraska, in which the Honorable Richard Stageman, sitting by special designation, denied the debtors’ application for approval nunc pro tunc of the employment of three attorneys. The debtors, prior to the filing of their Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition on March 1, 1982, had engaged the services of William L. Needier & Associates, Ltd. [Needier], Heinisch and Bryan Law Office [Heinisch] and Berry, Anderson, Creager & Wittstuck, attorneys at law [Creager]. Heinisch and Creager had previously represented the debtors in agricultural and busi *75 ness dealings, and Needier is an expert in insolvency law.

11 U.S.C. §§ 327 and 1107 require prior court approval before a debtor in possession may employ an attorney or other professional person to assist the bankruptcy estate in a Chapter 11 proceeding. In the present case, the debtors failed to make such application until July 15, 1982, over four months after filing their Chapter 11 petition. On that date they requested an order nunc pro tunc approving employment of Needier, Heinisch and Creager retroactive to March 1, 1982.

On August 12, 1982, the Bankruptcy Court held a hearing on the application and took the matter under advisement. On November 29,1982, he ordered the payment of interim attorney fees to Needier and Hein-isch. Then on March 15,1983, in the course of a hearing on a subsequent application for interim fees, the Bankruptcy Judge discovered that an application for leave to appeal the prior fee award had been filed by O’Neill Production Credit Association [O’Neill PCA] and that this creditor strenuously objected to the authorization of fees to any of the attorneys in question in the absence of court approval of their employment.

O’Neill PCA, appellee herein, contested the authority of the Bankruptcy Court to enter an order nunc pro tunc approving employment of counsel and challenged the qualifications of all of the attorneys in question. Judge Stageman agreed, and by his orders of April 13,1983 and May 2,1983, he denied the debtors’ application for approval of counsel’s employment and vacated his prior award of interim fees.

The Court first finds that the Bankruptcy Judge took an overly restrictive view of his power to enter an order nunc pro tunc approving the employment of counsel for the bankruptcy estate. The Court is persuaded by the well-reasoned and equitable approach expressed in In the Matter of Triangle Chemicals, Inc., 697 F.2d 1280 (5th Cir.1983); In re Bill & Paul’s Sporthaus, Inc., 31 B.R. 345, 347-52 (Bkrtcy.W.D.Mich.1983) and In re Tom’s Variety & Hardware, Inc., 30 B.R. 298, 299 (Bkrtcy.S.D.Ohio 1983). These decisions agree that a bankruptcy court is not precluded by statute or rule from granting an order nunc pro tunc authorizing employment of counsel in a bankruptcy proceeding when valuable services have been rendered.

This result is particularly appropriate in the present case in which the Bankruptcy Judge has expressly acknowledged the tireless efforts of the attorneys in representing the bankruptcy estate. Furthermore, the delay between the application and the denial of employment and further delays on appeal must necessarily have caused expense and prejudice to counsel who properly have remained active on the debtors’ behalf. The Court is satisfied that the explanations provided for the inadvertent delay in seeking approval of employment provide adequate excuse and constitute cause for an order nunc pro tunc.

O’Neill PCA asserts, and the Bankruptcy Court generally agreed as an alternative basis for denial of counsel’s employment, that each of the attorneys held interests adverse to the estate and that each fails to qualify as “disinterested.” See 11 U.S.C. §§ 101(13), 327(a), (e), 1107; Bankruptcy Rule 215(a), (b). This conclusion stems primarily from the relationship among the debtors, their attorneys and Ted Olson Enterprises, Inc. [TOEI], a closely held corporation owned by Ted Olson and his sons. Under a custom farming agreement and at one point a lease arrangement, TOEI has been farming the debtors’ property and has provided the labor and machinery as well as much of the financing for production of the debtors’ 1982 corn crop.

As to Needier, who has never represented TOEI, the charge of adverse interest appears to be premised on his close working relationship with Heinisch and Creager, who had represented TOEI for several years prior to this bankruptcy proceeding. Apparently, all three attorneys as a matter of business judgment have regarded the interests of TOEI and the debtors as at least similar. The attorneys advocated a custom farming agreement between TOEI *76 and the debtors to which O’Neill PCA vigorously objected. In addition, TOEI has provided financing at critical stages of the debtors’ post-petition farming enterprises when little or no funds or credit was otherwise available to them. TOEI also advanced funds to the debtors for living expenses.

This Court cannot review the merits of the custom farming agreement or the services provided the bankruptcy estate by TOEI and has not been asked to do so. However, much more than a general allegation of adverse interest or “appearance of being on TOEI’s side in the courtroom” would be necessary, in the Court’s view, to affirm the disqualification of counsel who, as the Bankruptcy Court noted, “have been tireless advocates” on behalf of the debtors.

One aspect of the relationship between TOEI and debtors’ counsel does concern this Court, i.e., TOEI’s extension of fee advances to the attorneys in the absence of the debtors’ ability to pay pre-petition retainers. However, no specific advantage to TOEI, injury to the estate, prejudice to other creditors or actual conflict arising from the advances is apparent from the record before the Court.

In addition, the Court cannot agree that the relationship between the attorneys and TOEI has been the subject of “seeping disclosure.” Disclosure was late in beginning, but has apparently been full and forthright since that time. The monthly expense report filed in mid-July, 1982, with the debtors’ request to employ counsel disclosed that TOEI had made payments to the three attorneys for services rendered to the debtors. 1 Both this disclosure and the application to employ counsel should have been submitted over four months earlier, but were not, as previously discussed, through inadvertence in light of the demands of the debtors’ farming operation and the complexities of the bankruptcy litigation. Subsequently, in September, 1982, affidavits accompanying the request of Needier and Heinisch for interim compensation set forth the amounts received from TOEI for services by these attorneys to the debtors.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 B.R. 74, 10 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 798, 1983 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-olson-ned-1983.