In Re Stromberg

161 B.R. 510, 11 Colo. Bankr. Ct. Rep. 1, 1993 Bankr. LEXIS 1809, 1993 WL 513360
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Colorado
DecidedDecember 8, 1993
Docket17-20811
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 161 B.R. 510 (In Re Stromberg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Stromberg, 161 B.R. 510, 11 Colo. Bankr. Ct. Rep. 1, 1993 Bankr. LEXIS 1809, 1993 WL 513360 (Colo. 1993).

Opinion

ORDER ALLOWING FEES

CHARLES E. MATHESON, Chief Judge.

This matter is before this Court following a remand of an appeal pertaining to the allowance of attorney’s fees to R. Scott Seho-field, Debtors’ attorney (“Schofield” or “Applicant”). The Order of remand which entered on August 6, 1993, directed this Court to conduct a hearing on the reasonableness of the Applicant’s fees and costs in this case.

Upon receipt of the Order, this Court reviewed pertinent authorities on the requirement of a “hearing” and determined that, under the circumstance of a noncontested fee application, the “hearing” requirement can be satisfied by providing the Applicant with an adequate opportunity to submit affidavits and argument in support of the fees requested. Bee v. Greaves, 910 F.2d 686 (10th Cir. 1990). Thus, a hearing in open court would not be necessary.

Having so concluded, this Court issued an Order For Hearing On Fee Application wherein Applicant was afforded 30 days within which to file “such affidavits and other evidence meeting the requirements of Fed. R.Civ.P. 56(e) as Applicant desire[d] to submit in support of the pending fee application together with a memorandum stating Applicant’s arguments in support of the requested fee.” On September 17,1993, Applicant filed a “Chapter 13 Fee Application” (“Fee Application”) supplemented by a document captioned “Filing of Fee Statement and Supporting Documents To Comply with Order of 18 August 1993” (“Filing”). Attached to that document were the following:

1. Motion For Reconsideration of Attorney Fees and Costs.
2. An article from Newsweek Magazine, September 20, 1993 titled, “Dumber Than We Thought, Literacy: A new study shows why we can’t cope with every day life.”
3. An article from Time, September 20, 1993, titled “Adding up the Under-Skilled.”
4. A compilation of foreclosure fees and costs charged by other attorneys in connection with twelve (12) Chapter 7 clients of the Applicant.
5. An affidavit of Wilbur Frank Barlow.
6. Time Summary.

The Application requests allowance of fees in the amount of “$1,436.84 plus $500” 1 and *512 expenses in the amount of $58.75, of which $650 has been paid. The attorney alleges in the Application that he has billed a total of: 16 hours at $120 per hour; 3.0 hours at $60 per hour; 6.0 hours of paralegal time at $45 per hour; and 1.5 hours of paralegal time at $25 per hour for “babysitting.” These charges aggregate to a total of $2,407.50.

The Application filed substantially conforms to Local Bankruptcy Rule 216.2. That form, a rather simple form, became effective on July 1, 1993, with the advent of this Court’s new local rules and is recommended for use at the time an initial Chapter 13 fee application is filed in the first instance, generally not later than fifteen days after the order of confirmation. In any event, one paragraph in the form solicits “a short statement of any unusual, troublesome or unique aspects of this case which resulted in more than the usual amount of time being expended.” Applicant filled in the lines after that statement with the following: “Children at office visits, multiple office visits to explain details and responsibilities, information provided was supplied over time and was imperfect.” In the “Filing” document, Applicant has averred that the Debtors needed extra explanation, that the Debtors did not deliver all the requested documentation at the first or second visit and counsel had to work from the documents which Debtors had prepared for Consumer Counseling Credit Service. All in all, Counsel attempts to justify a higher fee request because the Debtors did not promptly provide documents to him and they required extra time for explanation.

This is, by no means, this Court’s first foray into the sometimes elusive standards for the allowance of fees in Chapter 13 cases. See, In re Casull, 139 B.R. 525 (Bankr. D.Colo.1992). While Casull remains applicable, the Court will, nonetheless, endeavor once again to articulate the basis upon which fees for debtor’s counsel can properly be allowed in these cases.

I. FACTS OF THE CASE

An evaluation of the fees in this case requires this Court to review the Debtors’ financial picture from the eyes of an experienced consumer bankruptcy attorney at the time of the initial visits. These Debtors have less than a dozen creditors. Four of those are secured creditors and six are unsecured. The liabilities total approximately $43,000. Over half of that figure is debt owed to secured creditors. The unsecured debt is primarily credit card and short term personal/signature loans. There are no large medical or hospital bills or other evidence of an unusual or extraordinary event precipitating the Debtors’ financial demise. In addition, the Debtors owed personal property taxes in a nominal amount which the Applicant has provided for as a priority creditor. On the other side of the balance sheet, the Debtors’ assets total approximately $19,000 consisting primarily of a mobile home (in which they resided), two cars, stereo and TV and a waterbed, all of which partially secure the debts owed to the secured creditors. The Debtors’ combined monthly income is approximately $1,480 or approximately $18,000 per year.

At the time of the filing, the Debtors were three months in arrears on the debts secured by the mobile home and one of two vehicles. They were one month in arrears on the debt secured by the second vehicle and on which the Debtors’ parents are co-obligated. Debtors were eight and ten months in arrears on the debts secured by purchase money security interests in their stereo and TV and waterbed, respectively. These Debtors clearly “consumed” beyond their financial means and it is undoubtedly the arrearage on these *513 consumer goods which precipitated the filing of the case.

This case is a “no asset” case. The assets are either encumbered or exempt. If this were a Chapter 7 case, there would be nothing available to pay unsecured creditors and, in the Chapter 13, that becomes the measure of what the Debtors need to pay the unsecured creditors in order to meet the requirements of section 1325(a)(4) of the Code. Except for the Debtors’ desire to retain, and pay for over time, their consumer goods, this case could have been filed as a Chapter 7. The advantage to the Debtors of a Chapter 13, however, is that because of the nature of some of their secured purchases, the Debtors could “cram down” the secured lenders to the value of their collateral and bring the payments into line with their ability to pay. That is exactly what the plan in this case proposed to do. No defaults were cured. Rather, with respect to each secured creditor, the Debtors proposed to pay them a fraction of the outstanding balance on the debts. For example, in the Plan originally filed, the Debtors valued their mobile home at $5,200, yet they owed the lender almost $12,000. They valued the stereo and TV in the aggregate at $1,300 and their waterbed at $150.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
161 B.R. 510, 11 Colo. Bankr. Ct. Rep. 1, 1993 Bankr. LEXIS 1809, 1993 WL 513360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-stromberg-cob-1993.