In Re Olympic Marine Services, Inc.

186 B.R. 651, 1995 WL 548645
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedJanuary 18, 1995
Docket14-34741
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 186 B.R. 651 (In Re Olympic Marine Services, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy 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 Olympic Marine Services, Inc., 186 B.R. 651, 1995 WL 548645 (Va. 1995).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

DOUGLAS O. TICE, Jr., Bankruptcy Judge.

The law firm of Vandeventer, Black, Meredith & Martin, L.L.P., filed an application for compensation for services the firm rendered as special counsel to the trustee in bankrupt- *652 ey. The amount requested is $103,785.64 for compensation plus expenses of $1,470.91.

An objection to the application was filed by a principal of the debtor. Hearing on the application and objection was held December 15, 1994, at which the court heard evidence and argument.

For reasons stated in this opinion, the court will approve an award of compensation in the amount of $85,355.11 plus the law firm’s expenses incurred postpetition.

Facts

Prior to filing bankruptcy, debtor operated a ship repair business in which it had made repairs under a government contract to the vessel, Cape Anne. For this work debtor had a claim against the United States Department of Transportation, Maritime Administration, in the approximate amount of $750,000.00; the amount of the claim was disputed by the government.

In order to resolve this dispute, debtor engaged the law firm of Vandeventer, Black, Meredith & Martin, L.L.P. (Vandeventer, Black) to pursue the claim. This law firm performed legal services with respect to debtor’s claim beginning in July 1992. Initially, the firm charged debtor on an hourly basis. However, after debtor encountered financial problems during the summer of 1993 and at a time when there were unpaid legal fees outstanding to Vandeventer, Black, the debtor and the law firm entered into a contingency fee agreement for the firm’s legal fees. The law firm requested a contingency fee agreement because of the uncertainty of payment of its fees due to debtor’s financial problems. This uncertainty included the fact that if debtor filed bankruptcy, there were prepetition fees which probably would not be paid.

The letter fee agreement, dated September 15, 1993, provided in part that if the Cape Anne claim was settled prior to the filing of a law suit against the Maritime Administration, debtor would pay Vandeven-ter, Black a fee of 20 percent of the gross amount recovered. The agreement also provided for other higher contingent fees up to 30 percent which would be incurred depending on other circumstances.

Debtor filed a chapter 7 bankruptcy petition on September 22, 1993. Subsequently, debtor’s bankruptcy trustee, Tom C. Smith, agreed to hire Vandeventer, Black as special counsel to pursue the Cape Anne claim on behalf of the bankruptcy estate. The trustee agreed, subject to bankruptcy court approval, to the terms of the earlier prepetition contingent fee arrangement between debtor and the law firm.

On December 14,1993, the trustee filed an application with this court requesting appointment of Vandeventer, Black as special counsel on the contingent fee terms recited above. Anastasios Emmanuelidis, a principal of the debtor who had signed the original letter fee agreement, objected to the application. Hearing on the application and objection was held on February 10, 1994. The objection to the appointment of Vandeventer, Black was directed toward the contingent fee arrangement. This court overruled the objection and on February 17, 1994, entered an order approving the trustee’s employment of Vandeventer, Black as special counsel to pursue the claim based upon the contingent fee agreement. However, in light of the objection to the contingent fee, the court’s order also provided as a condition that any application for compensation by Vandeventer, Black would be “subject to further review of this court....” Order entered February 18, 1994, Docket Item 27.

After its appointment as special counsel, Vandeventer, Black pursued the Cape Anne claim for the trustee and ultimately reached agreement with the Maritime Administration to settle the claim by a payment to debtor’s bankruptcy estate in the amount of $518,-927.71. This court approved the compromise settlement of the claim by order entered September 12, 1994.

On October 26, 1994, Vandeventer, Black filed its application for compensation in the amount of $103,785.54, a sum representing 20 percent of the settlement pursuant to the terms of the retention order of February 17, 1994, and the prior letter agreement. The application also contained a schedule of the law firm’s total billable hours and time *653 charges for services on the Cape Anne claim. This schedule reveals the following breakdown of fee charges, calculated on an hourly basis:

Total unpaid hourly charges (plus costs) on claim $35,190.66

Total unpaid hourly charges to 9-22-93, date of debtor’s petition in bankruptcy $18,430.43

Total hourly charges after the bankruptcy petition filed $15,663.00

A written objection to the attorneys’ fee application was filed by Anastasios Emman-uelidis.

An evidentiary hearing on the application and objection was held on December 15, 1994. The evidence presented at hearing established that Vandeventer, Black in pursuing the claim rendered valuable legal services which significantly benefitted the bankruptcy estate and that pursuit of the claim had involved some degree of financial risk to the firm.

Discussion And Conclusion

In most bankruptcy cases, the fees of attorneys are calculated on a basis of time and hourly charges. In this regard, the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit has held that attorney’s fees are to be evaluated by the lodestar method, applying various factors in determining the reasonable rate and the reasonable number of hours. EEOC v. Service News Co., 898 F.2d 958, 965 (4th Cir.1990). After application of these factors, the product of reasonable hours and a reasonable rate constitutes the lodestar figure. See In re Great Sweats, Inc., 113 B.R. 240, 241-42 (Bankr.E.D.Va.1990). 1

The compensation issue here is out of the ordinary since the attorneys seek payment for a contingent fee basis rather than the usual hourly fee. The law firm represented the debtor prepetition and the trustee post-petition in pursuing a claim of the debtor against the Maritime Administration in the original amount of approximately $750,-000.00. The firm reached a settlement of the claim with a recovery for the trustee in the amount of $518,927.71 and asks the court to approve a 20 percent contingent fee in the amount of $103,785.54. The firm’s fee request is consistent with the contingent fee agreement made with debtor prepetition and which this court conditionally approved in the retention order.

Vandeventer, Black also maintained time records for its services and included with its application a detañed schedule of time charges on the Cape Anne claim. The firm’s records reveal that the complete hourly billing charges for its work on the claim (both pre and postpetition) was $35,190.66 and that the hourly billing charges after the date of the bankruptcy petition were $15,663.00.

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186 B.R. 651, 1995 WL 548645, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-olympic-marine-services-inc-vaeb-1995.