In Re Saturley

131 B.R. 509, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 1298, 22 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 133, 1991 WL 179290
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Maine
DecidedSeptember 6, 1991
Docket19-20060
StatusPublished
Cited by99 cases

This text of 131 B.R. 509 (In Re Saturley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Saturley, 131 B.R. 509, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 1298, 22 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 133, 1991 WL 179290 (Me. 1991).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION

JAMES B. HAINES, Jr., Bankruptcy Judge.

Pending are the Chapter 7 debtors’ former counsels’ fee application and the trustee’s responsive motion seeking a determination that the fees presently sought, and those previously paid, are excessive. For the reasons set forth below, the fee applica *512 tion is disapproved, with exceptions for certain, limited reimbursement requests; and the applicant is ordered to surrender a portion of its pre-petition fees and all unap-plied retainer funds to the trustee. 1

BACKGROUND

1. Retention, Representation and Reckoning.

In October 1990, Howard and Geraldine Saturley retained Attorney Charles H. Abbott and his firm, Skelton, Taintor & Abbott (“Skelton, Taintor”) of Auburn, Maine. The Saturleys were headed for personal bankruptcy. Casco Northern Bank (“Cas-co”) had called loans to several Saturley-owned corporations and was pursuing the Saturleys’ personal guaranties.

When they first met, Howard Saturley, who had already spoken with other attorneys, told Attorney Abbott that a Chapter 7 filing appeared “inevitable.” Attorney Abbott explored alternatives to straight bankruptcy, including a Chapter 11 filing, negotiating releases of guaranty obligations, and obtaining Casco’s commitment to forbear. He negotiated terms for surrender of the Saturley corporations’ assets to Casco.

Research commenced on bankruptcy issues no later than October 14, 1990. 2 As late as October 29, however, the Saturleys were still searching for options other than Chapter 7. On November 6, Casco attached the Saturleys’ personal assets, including funds held by Skelton, Taintor as its retainer. The die was cast.

On approximately December 20, 1990, Attorney June Z. Schau, a Skelton, Taintor associate, researched dischargeability issues and commenced preparing the Satur-leys’ bankruptcy schedules. 3 She complained that the information Howard Satur-ley gave her was incomplete and that he eventually became uncooperative, failing to return her calls. Attorney Schau found the records relating to the Saturleys’ real estate interests particularly confusing. 4 Ultimately, she ordered title searches at each county deed registry in the state of Maine and in one New Hampshire registry.

Howard Saturley expressed dissatisfaction with Skelton, Taintor’s efforts at completing the bankruptcy schedules. He asserted that documents were lost or misplaced and that the firm’s attorneys and paralegals refused to act upon the information he supplied. He claimed that the information set forth in the schedules unti-mately filed “came right out of” the records he provided to the firm. In the end, having decided to engage new counsel, he ceased returning calls to Attorney Schau and her staff.

2. Fees, Funds and Filings.

Howard and Geraldine Saturley filed their joint Chapter 7 petition on January 29, 1991. Attorney Schau appeared as the Saturleys’ counsel. The petition was unaccompanied by schedules or by a Rule 2016(b) disclosure of attorney compensation. 5 Schedules were filed, but Skelton, *513 Taintor’s Rule 2016(b) statement was not forthcoming. 6 Several weeks later, when another attorney appeared for the Satur-leys, Skelton, Taintor sought leave to withdraw. 7 Leave was granted forthwith. 8

On March 18, 1991, Skelton, Taintor filed its application seeking approval and payment of $27,209.00 in fees for services rendered and reimbursement of $4,584.55 in expenses incurred while representing the Saturleys in the pre-petition and post-petition periods. The application represented that the firm had received and was then holding $26,009.42 as a retainer. The firm subsequently supplemented its application, seeking an additional $768.00 in fees and an additional $2,199.88 in expenses. Thus, the application now addresses $27,977.00 in professional fees and $6,784.43 in expenses.

The fee application references pertinent bankruptcy rules, 9 and represents that the firm commenced representation of the Sa-turleys on November 6, 1990, continuing through February 14, 1991. 10 Although it disclosed the unapplied retainer, it did not indicate that any fees were paid to the firm by the Saturleys in the year preceding the filing. 11 Contemporaneously with the application for compensation, the firm filed a motion “seeking authority to use cash collateral.” 12

The Chapter 7 trustee objected to the fee application and sought a determination that Skelton, Taintor’s fees and expenses were excessive. 13 At the first hearing on the application for compensation and the trustee’s counter-motion, Attorney Schau appeared on behalf of Skelton, Taintor. In response to the court’s inquiries, she acknowledged that the firm had already received $10,371.30 from the debtors 14 and that its retainer had been substantially more than the reported $26,009.42. The court set the application for an evidentiary hearing and ordered Skelton, Taintor to revise its itemized billings to comply with the requirements of the local bankruptcy rule. 15

*514 Skelton, Taintor subsequently filed itemized bills dating back to October 5, rather than November 6, 1990. 16 The evidence disclosed that, through the first week in November, the firm received four separate retainer payments from the Saturleys, to-talling $36,380.72. 17 The firm applied $10,-371.30 to the Saturleys’ bill in four separate transactions prior to November 6. 18

Discussion

1. The Cash Collateral Question.

Contemporaneously with its application for compensation, Skelton Taintor filed a motion seeking leave to use cash collateral so that, notwithstanding Casco’s attachment, it could apply the retainer funds against its fees. The motion alleges that Casco’s attachment lien on the Saturleys’ retainer is junior to the firm’s own possessory lien and, in any event, that Casco’s attachment was preferential. 19 Casco, the debtor, and the Chapter 7 trustee, understandably, have ignored the motion.

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Bluebook (online)
131 B.R. 509, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 1298, 22 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 133, 1991 WL 179290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-saturley-meb-1991.