In Re Rivers

167 B.R. 288
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Georgia
DecidedJune 2, 1994
Docket16-21707
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 167 B.R. 288 (In Re Rivers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Rivers, 167 B.R. 288 (Ga. 1994).

Opinion

DECISION AND ORDER DENYING APPLICATION OF DEBTOR’S COUNSEL FOR COMPENSATION

JAMES E. MASSEY, Bankruptcy Judge.

The Chapter 11 Trustee and the United States Trustee object to the fee application of the attorney representing the Chapter 11 debtor in possession in this ease on several grounds, the most serious of which question that attorney’s integrity and professionalism. Regrettably, part of their objection is meritorious.

*292 On January 5, 1994, the court held a hearing on the fee application and the objections. The court previously postponed hearings on the application and the objections at counsel’s request because he had conflicts in other courts. After hearing some evidence on January 5, the court adjourned the hearing until January 26,1994, to give Debtor’s counsel additional time to respond to the details of the objections to allowance of compensation, even though Debtor’s counsel had been for some time aware of the general nature of the objections. The court has considered the evidence introduced at the hearings, including the testimony of witnesses and the arguments of counsel, as well as the record in this Chapter 11 case, including pleadings filed by the Debtor. Based on that evidence and record, the court makes the following findings of fact and conclusions of law.

FINDINGS OF FACT

A. Rivers’ Pre-Bankruptcy Law Practice and Financial Problems.

A. Herbert Rivers, the Debtor in this case, (“Rivers” or the “Debtor”) is an attorney who has practiced in Georgia since 1969. He specializes in criminal and personal injury law but has never done bankruptcy work. Hirseh Friedman (“Friedman”), court-approved counsel for Rivers, and William Charles Grosse (“Grosse”), an associate attorney in Friedman’s office, prepared and signed Rivers’ proposed disclosure statements filed on April 5, 1993 and amended on July 9, 1993. The disclosure statements provide some information regarding the law practice of Rivers leading up to the filing of the petition initiating this ease. The disclosure statements state that Rivers ceased being the Solicitor of Cobb County, Georgia in 1985 and entered private practice. He is said to have expanded his practice by opening two offices in metro Atlanta as well as several other offices in north Georgia and that he took out yellow page advertising in numerous telephone books and incurred approximately $70,000 in advertising debt. According to the disclosure statements, deteriorating economic conditions prevented the Debtor’s practice from remaining profitable.

The amended disclosure statement discusses the reasons that Rivers filed bankruptcy, including problems arising from Rivers’ reliance on yellow page advertising to sustain his legal practice and his inability to pay the advertising bills in 1992. It states that the primary catalyst for the filing of the Chapter 11 case was a law suit brought against him by Ad’Maginations, Inc., which was the broker Rivers used to obtain yellow page advertising.

The disclosure statements imply that Rivers incorporated his sole proprietorship in January 1992 and thereafter expanded his practice to include not only criminal defense matters but also “domestic matters, personal injury claims, and other civil matters.” The amended disclosure statement also states that at the time of the incorporation, Rivers reduced the amount of advertising expense and “renegotiated the advertising contacts (sic) in the books he retained, and broadened the areas of law in which he practices.” At the January 5 hearing, Friedman indicated that Rivers had not used his professional corporation until after he consulted Friedman about filing bankruptcy.

B. The Commencement of This Case and Engagement of Friedman.

The Debtor filed a petition initiating this case on October 15, 1992. The motion to employ counsel filed by Friedman on the Debtor’s behalf on October 15, 1992, stated succinctly that the Debtor required counsel, that counsel would prepare necessary papers and documents and give advice regarding the case, that counsel held no interest adverse to the estate, that the applicant was competent to represent the Debtor and that “[s]aid attorney proposes to charge the Debtor, and be paid out of the estate, the sum of $150.00 per hour for services provided as an attorney at law, subject to court approval, plus any costs or expenses reasonably incurred by him.” On October 20, 1993, the court entered an order prepared by Friedman granting the motion to employ Friedman as counsel to the Debtor, subject to objection by the United States Trustee filed within twenty days of the entry of the order.

*293 On November 3, 1992, the United States Trustee filed comments on the motion to employ counsel and objected to the motion essentially on the ground that the application failed to provide sufficient information to comply with the Bankruptcy Code and Rules. On November 10, 1992, Friedman & Associates, P.C. filed a pleading styled “Amendment to Debtor’s Motion to Employ Counsel,” which apparently satisfied the concerns of the United States Trustee.

C. Rivers’ Lack of Competency as a Chapter 11 Debtor in Possession.

Friedman stated at the January 5 hearing that Rivers has a “permanent disability” as a result of an automobile accident that occurred over twenty years ago. As a result of the accident, Rivers suffers from a memory loss disorder which adversely affected his ability to conduct his financial affairs during all relevant periods. Rivers could easily be influenced by others regarding his financial affairs and was incapable of making independent judgments regarding his financial affairs both prior to and during this Chapter 11 case.

At the time of the filing of his petition, Rivers was heavily indebted to the Internal Revenue Service for back taxes. He was in arrears on the note secured by his residence. Rivers faced the prospect of being unable to place any yellow page advertisements for the following year, a very unpleasant prospect because he was heavily dependent upon yellow page advertising as a source of clientele. As a result of these pressures, Rivers was vulnerable, open to the power of suggestion and easily manipulated.

Friedman described Rivers’ financial dilemma in terms that underscored the importance to Rivers of his obtaining yellow page advertising:

Mr. Rivers’s entire life, his ability to be able to operate his practice, is based upon ads that he had in the telephone directory. The telephone company would take no further ads, cash or otherwise, outside of him being in a reorganization.

(Tr. of 1/5/94, at 18.)

Friedman explained Rivers’ memory problem to the court as follows:

In this particular case, Mr. Rivers is probably, the Rivers case and one or two other cases we’ve had in the past two years, are the most difficult cases we’ve had, because of the people involved. In Mr. River’s case, as his secretary testified, this gentlemen could not remember things that we had discussed from one day literally to the afternoon. It was a very tragic situation, because of the fact that I liked Mr. Rivers.
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Bluebook (online)
167 B.R. 288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-rivers-ganb-1994.