In Re Wise

365 B.R. 516, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 1142, 2007 WL 987288
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 3, 2007
Docket16-13412
StatusPublished

This text of 365 B.R. 516 (In Re Wise) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Wise, 365 B.R. 516, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 1142, 2007 WL 987288 (Pa. 2007).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION SUPPORTING AND SUPPLEMENTING MARCH 8, 2007 ORDER, WHICH (1) GRANTED, BUT REDUCED, COUNSEL’S APPLICATION FOR ATTORNEYS’ FEES AND (2) SANCTIONED COUNSEL BY FURTHER REDUCING THE FEES AWARDED

RICHARD E. FEHLING, Bankruptcy Judge.

I. BACKGROUND

On March 8, 2007, I issued and entered my written Order, dated March 8, 2007, granting, but reducing, a request for attorneys’ fees for Debtors’ counsel, Eric L. Leinbach, Esquire (“Mr. Leinbach”). I erred in the date that I put into the Order (dating the Order February 8 rather than March 8) and I corrected that mistake by issuing, on March 14, 2007, an Order Revising and Amending the Order (as so amended, the orders are together referred to as the “March 8, 2007 Order”). 1 The March 8, 2007 Order reduced the compensation requested by Debtors’ counsel because he sought payment for three hours of time for a hearing that he did not attend. I reduced the compensation sought by the amount of the requested fee for the hearing. I also reduced counsel’s requested compensation by a like amount as a sanction because this overcharge was not the first of this nature that I have seen from Mr. Leinbach. Mr. Leinbach filed an appeal from the March 8 2007 Order on Monday, March 19, 2007, and I am filing this Opinion supporting and supplementing my March 8, 2007 Order pursuant to Eastern District of Pennsylvania Bankruptcy *518 Court Local Bankruptcy Rule 8001-l(b). 2 The discussion below represents my findings of fact and my conclusions of law.

II. PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Debtors, through their counsel Mr. Leinbach, filed this Chapter 13 bankruptcy case on March 1, 2002. Two weeks after the initial filing, Mr. Leinbach filed his Rule 2016 Disclosure of Compensation by Attorney, disclosing that he had charged Debtors $6,000 as his fee in this case and that he had received a retainer/deposit of $1,000. That is a very high initial fee for a Chapter 13 bankruptcy, particularly in 2002, but Debtors were experienced in bankruptcy and bankruptcy litigation, having filed and failed to complete two previous bankruptcy cases. 3 In the first year and a half of this bankruptcy, Debtors initiated or responded to numerous contested matters and adversary proceedings and either litigated or resolved them through settlement. Through much of that time, the Chapter 13 Trustee filed, and continually pressed, a motion for dismissal because of problems with Debtors’ proposed Chapter 13 Plan. In May 2003, Mr. Leinbach revised his Disclosure of Compensation, increasing it to $10,000. 4 Debtors’ First Amended Chapter 13 Plan was finally confirmed on June 5, 2003.

On February 6, 2004, Mr. Leinbach filed a so-called Second Application for Compensation, requesting approval of $8,955 of fees and no expenses. The Second Application referred to a prior application, which was supposedly for the period February 27, 2002, through May 22, 2002, for a fee of $1,500, which was purportedly granted by an order dated June 5, 2003. The docket for this case reflects no such prior application and no order approving any prior application. Nevertheless, the Court considered the so-called Second Application and approved it in the full amount requested of $8,955 on March 9, 2004. In fact, Mr. Leinbach’s “first” application was *519 not filed until October 17, 2005, and was filed for a flat “no look” fee 5 of $2,000, not $1,500. The “first” fee application, which was actually filed second, was approved on December 2, 2005. As of December 2002, therefore, Mr. Leinbach had fees approved of $10,955, an amount in excess of the May 2003 amended Disclosure of Compensation by $955.

Debtors filed a Motion To Partially Sell Real Property on December 20, 2005. 6 A hearing was scheduled on the Motion To Partially Sell for January 12, 2006, which hearing will be discussed in greater length below. Debtors developed post-confirmation problems through 2006, causing them to amend their plan, seek abatement of plan payments, and face the Chapter 13 Trustee’s motion to dismiss their case, all of which seem to have been resolved by January 2007.

On December 27, 2006, Mr. Leinbach filed his Third Application for Compensation, through which he requested approval of an additional $2,202.50 for fees and $77.40 for expenses on top of the nearly $11,000 he has already received. My review of Mr. Leinbach’s Third Application for fees culminated in a hearing on the fee application, my March 8, 2007 Order, and the appeal that is now pending.

III. REVIEWS OF FEE APPLICATIONS GENERALLY AND OF MR. LEINBACH’S, IN PARTICULAR

A. Review of Fee Applications Generally

I was appointed to sit in the Reading Division of the Eastern District of Pennsylvania in February 2006. Although I had been involved to some extent with consumer debtors’ counsel fees, I did not have substantial experience. Over my first six months or so, I reviewed dozens, certainly more than a hundred, consumer debtors’ fee applications for counsel. In the course of that review I became familiar with the “going rate” charged by consumer debtors’ attorneys and the amount and range of fees that might be charged in Chapter 13 attorney compensation cases. 7 As part of my ongoing responsibility to review fees, even if uncontested, 8 I would review counsels’ lists of their time entries for various tasks they had performed for their debtor-clients. I saw that a large proportion of the fee applications were under the “no look” threshold of $2,000. 9 A very large percentage of fee applications were under $3,500. But some of the fee requests exceeded $3,500. Within the first few months of sitting as a Bankruptcy Judge, I set hearings on otherwise uncontested fee applications in excess of $3,500 for most of the attorneys who regularly practice bankruptcy before me. Initially, I *520 set the hearings sua sponte for fee applications that appeared unusual or that were in excess of $3,500, 10 and I asked counsel to explain what they had done for the fees in those applications. When Mr. Leinbach testified about his fee applications for which I had set a hearing, I was surprised to learn that he had no contemporaneous time-keeping system, either manual with a time-sheet and a pencil or computer software. I will more fully discuss Mr. Lein-bach’s “after-the-fact” creation of time records later in this Opinion.

In the course of my examination of numerous fee applications, I noticed that some fees stood out as aberrations, being higher on average than others for similarly straight-forward or complex cases. When I refer to noticing aberrations on average, I do not mean to imply any precise, methodical, or organized review or calculation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
365 B.R. 516, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 1142, 2007 WL 987288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-wise-paeb-2007.