In re: Whiteeagle Properties 22 Corp.

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Kansas
DecidedJuly 2, 2026
Docket25-10770
StatusUnknown

This text of In re: Whiteeagle Properties 22 Corp. (In re: Whiteeagle Properties 22 Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re: Whiteeagle Properties 22 Corp., (Kan. 2026).

Opinion

re pankry™ a 1a De 2 S| Sovpye □□ SO ORDERED. \y Sar ARS □□ SIGNED this 2nd day of July, 2026. oN iS a □□ eT > District ay

Mitchell L. Herren Chief United States Bankruptcy Judge

Designated for Online Publication IN THE UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF KANSAS

IN RE: Case No. 25-10770 WHITEEAGLE PROPERTIES 22 CORP., Chapter 11 Debtor.

Memorandum Opinion and Order Granting in Part and Denying in Part First Interim Application for Allowance and Payment of Attorney Fees and Expenses Counsel for Debtor Whiteeagle Properties 22 Corp, the law firm of Mark J. Lazzo, P.A., filed an interim fee application under 11 U.S.C. § 330,1 seeking approval of fees and expenses in this Chapter 11 case. The U.S. Trustee objects to three aspects of the application, objecting to the award of any fees incurred for

1 All future references to “Bankruptcy Code,” “Code,” or “§,” refer to Title 11 of the United States Code. U.S. Trustee appears by Richard A. Kear.

prepetition work, fees for work on a motion to extend the deadline for the filing of a Subchapter V Chapter 11 plan (Debtor has since redesignated and is no longer proceeding under Subchapter V), and fees for multiple office conferences between

two attorneys in the firm, where both attorneys billed their time.. The interim fee application is granted in part and denied in part. Denied are $7140 in fees requested for work billed prepetition. The U.S. Trustee’s objection to the award of fees for the motion to extend and for office conferences is overruled. Those fees were reasonable for the actual, necessary services rendered and are therefore compensable from the estate. I. Procedural History

Debtor Whiteeagle Properties 22 Corp. is 80% owned by David Rendon and 20% owned by Trevor Fischer.3 Debtor’s assets include commercial real and personal property in Lindsborg, Kansas, and an interest in one parcel of residential real property in Arizona.4 Debtor filed its Chapter 11 petition on July 28, 2025, indicating it was a small business debtor under § 101(51D) and electing to proceed under Subchapter V

of Chapter 11.5 No Schedules or supporting documents were filed with the petition and the Court issued an Order to Correct the deficient filing.6

3 Doc. 42. 4 Doc. 41 pp. 2-3, 6. 5 Doc. 1 p. 2. 6 Doc. 12. The same day, July 28, 2025, Mr. Lazzo docketed Debtor’s Application to Employ Attorneys.7 In that Application, Debtor sought to employ Mark J. Lazzo, P.A. as counsel for its bankruptcy estate and proposed compensation of $350 per

hour for both Mr. Lazzo and Mr. Balbierz of that firm.8 Attached to the Application was an “Attorney Affidavit under D. Kan. LBR 2014.1” for each of Mr. Lazzo and Mr. Balbierz. The Affidavits were identical and contained few details. They included bare statements the attorney was disinterested and “does not hold or represent an interest adverse to the estate,” does not represent “a creditor of the Debtor,” understands the continuing duty to disclose any disinterestedness or adverse interest, and that counsel understands approval of employment is not approval of

compensation.9 Neither the Application nor the Affidavits disclosed the existence of a retainer. The next day, on July 29, 2025, Debtor filed a Motion to Allow Monthly Payment of Fees and Expenses to Debtor’s Counsel.10 In that motion, counsel requested “monthly payment of fees and expenses in accordance with the regular billing cycles of its law firm,” with payment of 100% of the fees and expenses and

10% being held in trust “pending the court’s approval of an interim or final fee application.”11

7 Doc. 3. 8 Id. p. 1. 9 Id. p. 2-3. The Applications also say a “copy of the Disclosure of Compensation of Attorney – official Form B203” is attached, id. p. 1, but there are no attachments. 10 Doc. 8. 11 Id. p. 1. Also on July 29, 2025, Debtor filed a “Fee Disclosure.” In the Fee Disclosure, filed “pursuant to bankruptcy Rule 2016(b),”12 Mr. Lazzo disclosed that his law firm “received a retainer payment of $21,738 from Curtis A. Graumann paid on behalf of

the Debtor for fees and expenses to be incurred” in the case.13 The Fee Disclosure further reported the “payment by Graumann to counsel was not a loan to debtor, and there is no obligation by Debtor for repayment.”14 The U.S. Trustee filed objections to both the Application to Employ and the Motion to Allow Monthly Payment. The U.S. Trustee argued the Application to Employ was inadequate under Fed. R. Bankr. P. 2014 because it did not provide necessary details about the $21,738 retainer payment to the law firm, including

what happened to it and when, did not address whether the law firm was a creditor of Debtor, did not explain who Mr. Graumann is or why he paid the retainer or whether he was involved in the case, and did not address whether there were any connections between Mr. Graumann and Debtor. Regarding its objection to the Motion to Allow Monthly Compensation, the U.S. Trustee objected essentially on the same basis: a lack of detail. Debtor had not

yet filed its Schedules or the information required in small business cases and had not responded to U.S. Trustee inquiries for financial information about insurance and banking. As a result, Debtor’s financial situation was opaque, and the U.S.

12 The Fee Disclosure referenced Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure 2016. Future references to these Rules will be to Rule and number only. 13 Doc. 7 p. 1. 14 Id. Trustee was concerned with administrative insolvency, arguing that permitting monthly compensation would favor Debtor’s attorneys over other administrative claimants.

When Debtor’s Schedules and supporting documents had not been filed about six weeks postpetition, the U.S. Trustee filed a motion to dismiss or convert, arguing cause existed based on (1) the lack of Schedules and failure to comply with the Court’s Order to Correct, and (2) the lack of good faith because there was no going concern to preserve and no effort to maximize the value of Debtor’s estate. The Court set a hearing on the U.S. Trustee’s motion for September 25, 2025. Just before the hearing, on September 24 and 25, 2025, which was almost two

months postpetition, Debtor filed multiple documents: (1) an amended petition and Schedules and supporting documents, (2) its list of Equity Security Holders and Corporate Ownership Statement, (3) a response to the U.S. Trustee’s motion to dismiss or convert, (4) an amended creditor matrix and amended Schedules, and (5) an Amended Application to Employ. In the Disclosure of Compensation of Attorney for Debtor filed on September 24, 2025, with the amended Schedules, Mr. Lazzo

reported he had received a retainer of $21,738 that would be billed against at $350 an hour, and that the source of the compensation paid and to be paid was Debtor.15 The Court continued the hearing on the U.S. Trustee’s motion to dismiss or convert, the Application to Employ, and the Motion to Allow Monthly Compensation, and

15 Doc. 41 p. 20. required Debtor to file all missing documents and provide all previously requested information to the U.S. Trustee by October 10, 2025. In the Amended Application to Employ, Debtor again sought employment of

Mark J. Lazzo, P.A. as counsel for its bankruptcy estate and proposed compensation of $350 per hour for both Mr. Lazzo and Mr. Balbierz.16 The Amended Application adds the following paragraph: Mark J. Lazzo, P.A. received a retainer payment of $21,738 from Curtis Graumann on behalf of Debtor. The payment was a gift and no repayment is expected.

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