MEMORANDUM OF DECISION
JAMES B. HAINES, Jr., Bankruptcy Judge.
Invoking § 503(b)(3)(D) and § 503(b)(4), Peter N. Connell, a former shareholder and prepetition creditor of Oxford Homes, Inc., seeks administrative expense treatment for $85,085.00 in counsel fees and $1,830.17 in counsel’s expenses that he incurred in connection with Oxford’s successful reorganization. For the reasons set forth below, I conclude that Connell’s request will not be granted. To do so would subvert the disclosure statement and plan confirmation process and would be fundamentally unfair to Oxford’s creditors, who voted to accept Oxford’s reorganization plan with no inkling that Con-nell would request administrative treatment for any portion of his counsel’s fees.
Procedural History
Oxford filed its voluntary Chapter 11 petition on February 22, 1994. After a rocky beginning, during which the ease nearly converted to Chapter 7, the reorganization proceeded under the supervision of a Chapter 11 trustee.
Along the way, the trustee’s efforts were assisted mightily by Connell. Connell and the trustee jointly devised and proposed Oxford’s reorganization plan. After a series of amendments and modifications, the joint plan was confirmed on December 23, 1994.
Facts
1.
What Connell and His Counsel Did.
No party in interest disputes that Con-nell’s active alliance with the Chapter 11 trustee fostered, indeed fathered, Oxford’s reorganization. From a point soon after the trustee’s appointment, Connell drew upon the assistance of Steven E. Cope, Esq., of Cope & Cope, a Portland, Maine, law firm specializing in bankruptcy matters. Cope
provided comprehensive legal services to Connell, working to negotiate and structure Oxford’s reorganization. Cope authored and reportedly revised the plan and disclosure statement that Connell and the trustee proposed.
Cope asserts that his activities on Con-nell’s behalf substantially contributed to Oxford’s reorganization; reasonably required 486.2 hours of his time, billed at $175.00 per hour; and entailed reasonable expenses and disbursements amounting to $1,880.17. Cope performed additional services for Connell, generating approximately 50 hours of billable legal work, for which Connell does not seek administrative allowance.
2.
Significant Plan and Disclosure Statement Provisions.
Throughout its evolution, the plan proposed by Connell and the trustee defined the class of “administrative expense claims” as including: (1) the Chapter 11 trustee’s fees; (2) attorneys’ fees incurred by the Chapter 11 trustee’s counsel, creditors’ committee’s counsel, counsel for the debtor and any special counsel employed by the debtor; (3) fees of the trustee’s and the debtor’s accountants; (4) post-petition wage claims; (5) quarterly fees due and coming due the U.S. Trustee; and (6) post-petition taxes.
Each version of the plan also separately classified Connell’s claims, calling for mutual releases of certain claims that Connell and Oxford had against one another and providing specific treatment for Connell’s remaining claims. No mention was made of Connell’s intention to seek administrative allowance of any fees he owed his counsel.
The original disclosure statement, and each ensuing version, described in detail the administrative claims category and the Con-nell claims class. Nowhere did they advert to the possibility that Connell might seek to have his attorney’s fees paid “off the top” through the plan as an administrative expense.
Oxford’s confirmed reorganization plan required appointment of a plan trustee who,
inter alia,
holds and administers the reorganized debtor’s promissory note memorializing its obligations to unsecured creditors,
prosecutes certain causes of action principally for the benefit of 'unsecured creditors,
and represents the unsecured creditors in all post-confirmation matters affecting their interests.
3.
Post-Confirmation Developments.
Oxford has operated successfully under the confirmed plan. In the year immediately following confirmation, I ruled on approximately ten applications for compensation filed by various professionals seeking administrative payment of fees for pre-confirmation services, and several motions seeking to compel payment of previously-allowed administrative fees.
On September 6, 1996, I approved a compromise of major fraudulent transfer litigation brought by the plan trustee,
netting approximately $500,000.00 to be paid out under the plan.
On October 29, 1996, more than twenty-two months after confirmation, Connell requested administrative allowance of all fees Cope charged Connell for pre-confirmation legal work.
Discussion
Before discussing in detail my rationale for refusing administrative treatment for Con-nell’s counsel’s fees, two preliminary points require brief discussion.
1.
Administrative Fee Applications by Chapter 11 Creditors: Who’s the Applicant?
The fee application before me is entitled “First and Final Application by Cope and Cope, Attorneys for Peter N. Connell, for Allowance of Compensation for Legal Services and Reimbursement of Expenses.” It straightforwardly invokes § 503(b)(4) as its statutory basis. The problem, however, is that by proceeding directly under § 503(b)(4), the application ignores a necessary precondition to a § 503(b)(4) fee award.
A finding under § 503(b)(3)(D) that Connell, as a creditor, made a substantial contribution to Oxford’s reorganization is a prerequisite to administrative allowance of his counsel’s fees under § 503(b)(4).
In re American Preferred Prescription, Inc.,
194 B.R. 721, 724 (Bankr.E.D.N.Y.1996).
See also Lebron v. Mechem Fin. Inc.,
27 F.3d 937, 943 (3d Cir.1994);
In re Glickman, Berkowitz, Levinson & Weiner, P.C.,
196 B.R. 291, 295 (Bankr.E.D.Pa.1996); 3
Collier on Bankruptcy
¶ 503.04 at 503-71 (Lawrence P. King ed., 15th ed. 1996) (“Section 503(b)(4) is designed to permit reasonable compensation for professional services rendered ...
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MEMORANDUM OF DECISION
JAMES B. HAINES, Jr., Bankruptcy Judge.
Invoking § 503(b)(3)(D) and § 503(b)(4), Peter N. Connell, a former shareholder and prepetition creditor of Oxford Homes, Inc., seeks administrative expense treatment for $85,085.00 in counsel fees and $1,830.17 in counsel’s expenses that he incurred in connection with Oxford’s successful reorganization. For the reasons set forth below, I conclude that Connell’s request will not be granted. To do so would subvert the disclosure statement and plan confirmation process and would be fundamentally unfair to Oxford’s creditors, who voted to accept Oxford’s reorganization plan with no inkling that Con-nell would request administrative treatment for any portion of his counsel’s fees.
Procedural History
Oxford filed its voluntary Chapter 11 petition on February 22, 1994. After a rocky beginning, during which the ease nearly converted to Chapter 7, the reorganization proceeded under the supervision of a Chapter 11 trustee.
Along the way, the trustee’s efforts were assisted mightily by Connell. Connell and the trustee jointly devised and proposed Oxford’s reorganization plan. After a series of amendments and modifications, the joint plan was confirmed on December 23, 1994.
Facts
1.
What Connell and His Counsel Did.
No party in interest disputes that Con-nell’s active alliance with the Chapter 11 trustee fostered, indeed fathered, Oxford’s reorganization. From a point soon after the trustee’s appointment, Connell drew upon the assistance of Steven E. Cope, Esq., of Cope & Cope, a Portland, Maine, law firm specializing in bankruptcy matters. Cope
provided comprehensive legal services to Connell, working to negotiate and structure Oxford’s reorganization. Cope authored and reportedly revised the plan and disclosure statement that Connell and the trustee proposed.
Cope asserts that his activities on Con-nell’s behalf substantially contributed to Oxford’s reorganization; reasonably required 486.2 hours of his time, billed at $175.00 per hour; and entailed reasonable expenses and disbursements amounting to $1,880.17. Cope performed additional services for Connell, generating approximately 50 hours of billable legal work, for which Connell does not seek administrative allowance.
2.
Significant Plan and Disclosure Statement Provisions.
Throughout its evolution, the plan proposed by Connell and the trustee defined the class of “administrative expense claims” as including: (1) the Chapter 11 trustee’s fees; (2) attorneys’ fees incurred by the Chapter 11 trustee’s counsel, creditors’ committee’s counsel, counsel for the debtor and any special counsel employed by the debtor; (3) fees of the trustee’s and the debtor’s accountants; (4) post-petition wage claims; (5) quarterly fees due and coming due the U.S. Trustee; and (6) post-petition taxes.
Each version of the plan also separately classified Connell’s claims, calling for mutual releases of certain claims that Connell and Oxford had against one another and providing specific treatment for Connell’s remaining claims. No mention was made of Connell’s intention to seek administrative allowance of any fees he owed his counsel.
The original disclosure statement, and each ensuing version, described in detail the administrative claims category and the Con-nell claims class. Nowhere did they advert to the possibility that Connell might seek to have his attorney’s fees paid “off the top” through the plan as an administrative expense.
Oxford’s confirmed reorganization plan required appointment of a plan trustee who,
inter alia,
holds and administers the reorganized debtor’s promissory note memorializing its obligations to unsecured creditors,
prosecutes certain causes of action principally for the benefit of 'unsecured creditors,
and represents the unsecured creditors in all post-confirmation matters affecting their interests.
3.
Post-Confirmation Developments.
Oxford has operated successfully under the confirmed plan. In the year immediately following confirmation, I ruled on approximately ten applications for compensation filed by various professionals seeking administrative payment of fees for pre-confirmation services, and several motions seeking to compel payment of previously-allowed administrative fees.
On September 6, 1996, I approved a compromise of major fraudulent transfer litigation brought by the plan trustee,
netting approximately $500,000.00 to be paid out under the plan.
On October 29, 1996, more than twenty-two months after confirmation, Connell requested administrative allowance of all fees Cope charged Connell for pre-confirmation legal work.
Discussion
Before discussing in detail my rationale for refusing administrative treatment for Con-nell’s counsel’s fees, two preliminary points require brief discussion.
1.
Administrative Fee Applications by Chapter 11 Creditors: Who’s the Applicant?
The fee application before me is entitled “First and Final Application by Cope and Cope, Attorneys for Peter N. Connell, for Allowance of Compensation for Legal Services and Reimbursement of Expenses.” It straightforwardly invokes § 503(b)(4) as its statutory basis. The problem, however, is that by proceeding directly under § 503(b)(4), the application ignores a necessary precondition to a § 503(b)(4) fee award.
A finding under § 503(b)(3)(D) that Connell, as a creditor, made a substantial contribution to Oxford’s reorganization is a prerequisite to administrative allowance of his counsel’s fees under § 503(b)(4).
In re American Preferred Prescription, Inc.,
194 B.R. 721, 724 (Bankr.E.D.N.Y.1996).
See also Lebron v. Mechem Fin. Inc.,
27 F.3d 937, 943 (3d Cir.1994);
In re Glickman, Berkowitz, Levinson & Weiner, P.C.,
196 B.R. 291, 295 (Bankr.E.D.Pa.1996); 3
Collier on Bankruptcy
¶ 503.04 at 503-71 (Lawrence P. King ed., 15th ed. 1996) (“Section 503(b)(4) is designed to permit reasonable compensation for professional services rendered ... to an entity whose own actual, necessary expenses are allowable under sections 503(b)(3)(A)-(E).”).
Cope, as Connell’s counsel, is not within the class of persons authorized to have their expenses allowed as administrative expenses under § 503(b)(3). The application should have been filed by Connell, the creditor.
See In re Brown,
147 B.R. 55, 58 (Bankr.D.Mass.1992) (attorney’s entitlement to reasonable compensation as an administrative expense is considered only after it is shown that the creditor’s expenses are actual and necessary and that they make “a sub-
stantial contribution in a case under chapter 11”). Under certain circumstances, it may be appropriate to consider counsel’s application to have been made “on behalf of’ his or her creditor client so that the court may proceed directly to its merits without multiplying proceedings by standing on formalities.
Glickman, Berkowitz, Levinson & Weiner, P.C.,
196 B.R. at 295 n. 3.
Thus, Cope’s fee application necessarily subsumes the question whether Con-nell made a substantial contribution to Oxford’s reorganization.
In this ease there is no dispute that Con-nell made a “substantial contribution” to Oxford’s reorganization within the meaning of § 503(b)(3)(D). In objecting to the fee application, the plan trustee takes no issue with the
fact
of Connell’s contribution, only with the
extent
of related legal fees appropriately allowable as an administrative expense. Noting that Cope’s application comprehends approximately 90% of the time he billed Con-nell in connection with Oxford’s Chapter 11 ease, the trustee asserts (in unhelpfully general terms) that only approximately 50% of Cope’s time in the ease should be allowable as an administrative expense.
3.
Role of the Court.
Notwithstanding tihe plan trustee’s concession that as much as half of the $85,-085.00 fee application is properly allowable as an administrative expense, and notwithstanding the absence of objection from any other quarter, I must review Connell’s request by my own lights. “The bankruptcy judge has an independent duty to examine the propri
ety and reasonableness of fees, even if no party in interest objects to the application.” 2
Chapter 11 Theory and Practice
§ 12.01 at 12:3 (James F. Queenan, Jr. et al. eds., 1994) (footnote omitted) [hereinafter “Queenan”].
See e.g., In re Bolton-Emerson, Inc.,
200 B.R. 725, 730 (D.Mass.1996), and cases cited
supra
n. 16.
Although I am convinced of the necessity, reasonableness, and value of Cope’s work, I am unconvinced of the
propriety
of
any
administrative fee award in this instance.
3.
Why the Application Must be Disallowed.
A plan of reorganization may not be submitted to a debtor’s creditors unless and until a disclosure statement has been approved by the court as containing “adequate information.” 11 U.S.C. § 1125(b). Adequate information is defined in the Code as:
information of a kind, and in sufficient detail, as far as is reasonably practicable in light of the nature and history of the debt- or and the condition of the debtor’s books and records, that would enable a hypothetical reasonable investor typical of holders of claims or interests of the relevant class to make an informed judgment about the plan ...;
11 U.S.C. § 1125(a)(1). As the Third Circuit recently observed:
[Disclosure requirements are crucial to the effective functioning of the federal bankruptcy system. Because creditors and the bankruptcy court rely heavily on the debtor’s disclosure statement in determining whether to approve a proposed reorganization plan, the importance of full and honest disclosure cannot be overstated.
Ryan Operations G.P. v. Santiam-Midwest Lumber Co.,
81 F.3d 355, 362 (3rd Cir.1996). The precise contours of “adequate information” were vaguely drawn by Congress so that bankruptcy courts might exercise their discretion to limn them in view of each case’s peculiar circumstances.
See
4
Queenan
§ 29.06 at 29:23-24 (Code’s definition of adequate information intended to be flexible).
Although what constitutes “adequate information” will vary from case to case, a good faith estimate of administrative expenses, incurred and upcoming, is a virtual constant.
See In re United States Brass Corp.,
194 B.R. 420, 424 (Bankr.E.D.Tex.1996);
In re Ferretti,
128 B.R. 16, 18 (Bankr.D.N.H.1991);
In re Cardinal Congregate I,
121 B.R. 760, 765 (Bankr.S.D.Ohio 1990);
In re Dakota Rail, Inc.,
104 B.R. 138, 142 (Bankr.D.Minn.1989); 4 William L. Norton, Jr.,
Norton Bankruptcy Law and Practice 2d
§ 91:5 at 91-12 (1994). Creditors deserve to be fairly informed of the transaction costs entailed in the reorganization plan they are being asked to back.
As a plan proponent whose counsel was intimately involved in drafting Oxford’s disclosure statement^] and plants], it was incumbent on Connell to reveal any intention he entertained to seek administrative payment of his legal expenses.
Glickman, Berkowitz, Levinson & Weiner, P.C.,
196 B.R. at 298 (weighing against granting law firm’s § 503(b)(3)(D) claim was firm’s failure to advise of intent to seek administrative treatment of fees in the disclosure statement);
In re Diberto,
164 B.R. 1, 3-4 (Bankr.D.N.H.1993) (holding alternatively that if creditors believe they have a § 503(b)(3)(D) claim they must include it in the disclosure statement or waive it). This he failed to do.
At each stage of their evolution, the plan and disclosure statement not only neglected to reveal the possibility that Connell would seek administrative payment of 90% of his attorney’s fees, their comprehensive explanation of the scope of administrative claims and the extent of Connell’s claims seemingly ruled out such a possibility. Connell, who asked creditors to support the plan on that record, may not now ask them to pay his fees before realizing their plan distributions.
The result I reach is based on the need to honor the trust creditors are entitled to repose in the disclosure, solicitation, and confirmation processes that are at the heart of Chapter 11. Because Connell, through Cope, authored the disclosure statement and plan, it is only fair that he be bound by them. To the extent that the principle upon which I base my decision need be further defined, it represents a form of judicial estoppel.
Cf. e.g., Payless Wholesale Distribs., Inc. v. Alberto Culver (P.B.) Inc.,
989 F.2d 570, 571 (1st Cir.) (recognizing doctrine of judicial estoppel applies in bankruptcy proceedings; addressing unscheduled assets),
cert. denied,
510 U.S. 931, 114 S.Ct. 344, 126 L.Ed.2d 309 (1993).
My approach and conclusions here are far from novel. In
In re Seneca Oil Co.,
65 B.R. 902 (Bankr.W.D.Okla.1986), the court denied § 503(b)(3)(D) and § 503(b)(4) requests for reimbursement from the banks who proposed the confirmed plan and from the reorganizing entity. The court held that since none of these parties disclosed that they would be seeking to recover their own costs, they would be barred from so doing. “A plan proponent or purchaser of a debtor’s assets who intends to apply for reimbursement of fees and expenses must specifically estimate its costs in the disclosure statement or they will be disallowed.”
Id.
at 907.
The court allowed for two exceptions to this rule, if “the disclosure is immaterial or the fees and expenses unforeseeable.”
Assuming such exceptions may apply in appropriate circumstances they do not apply here. Administrative allowance of Connell’s
attorney’s fees was not' an immaterial point when the disclosure statement was approved or at confirmation.
It is not today.
Moreover, the fees being sought today were more than just “foreseeable.” As of the date the disclosure statement was finally approved, the lion’s share of them had already accrued.
Conclusion
For the reasons set forth above, Peter Connell’s request that his attorney’s fees and expenses be paid as an administrative claim shall be, and hereby is, DENIED in full.